サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
アメリカ大統領選
ontwik.com
You may have heard the controversy about CoffeeScript becoming the default client-side language in Rails 3.1. We’ll tackle CoffeeScript (and JavaScript) from a Rubyist’s perspective, comparing object models, closures, syntax and more. Learning about CoffeeScript can help highlight the Ruby-ish parts of JavaScript. Jeremy Ashkenas is part of the Interactive News team at the New York Times, as well
O’Reilly OSCON Java 2011, Raffi Krikorian, “Twitter: From Ruby on Rails to the JVM”
A short talk on what makes Functional Programming – and especially Haskell – different. We’ll take a quick overview of Haskell’s features and coding style, and then work through a short but complete example of using it for a Real World problem.
JavaScript remains one of the most popular and important programming languages in history. Web Developer and Chrome Engineer Alex Russell exposes the timeless strengths of the JavaScript language and why it is a vital part of the open web platform. Come hear what’s next for the JavaScript standard and how to get the most out of the new features coming soon in V8 and Chrome.
You know Python. You should know Javascript. The two aren’t so different, but this talk will explain exactly how they are different — lists, dicts, objects, functions, loops and all the other details of Javascript described in terms of Python.
Rockdove is the backend service that powers the geospatial features on Twitter.com and the Twitter API ("Twitter Places"). It provides a datastore for places and a geospatial search engine to find them. To throw out some buzzwords, it is: a distributed system realtime (immediately indexes updates and changes) horizontally scalable fault tolerant Rockdove is written entirely in Scala and was develo
Rasmus Lerdorf takes a close look at WordPress and Facebook’s HipHop PHP compiler as examples in teaching a systematic approach to benchmarking, profiling, and optimizing web applications.
Dropbox is a startup company located in San Francisco that has probably one of the most popular file synchronization and sharing tools in the world, shipping Python on the desktop and supporting millions of users and growing every day. Dropbox uses Python on the client-side and server side as well. This talk will give an overview of the first two years of Dropbox, the team formation, our early gui
Disqus, one of the largest Django applications in the world, will explain how they deal with scaling complexities in a small startup. There are many benefits to keeping a lightweight stack. At Disqus, keeping the stack thin helps us scale Django to reach over 125 million unique visitors a month with just a small team of engineers. Avoiding complicated software packages until needed reduces unneces
So you’ve written a Django site… now what? Writing the application is just the beginning; now you’ve got to put it into production! In this hands-on workshop we’ll walk through the creation of a full Django deployment environment running on a cluster of (virtual) machines. This class will introduce you to a wide variety of technologies, including Amazon’s EC2 and S3, Fabric, Varnish, nginx, mod_ws
This talk is about the Zen of Python, monkey patching (several times), the Ruby community’s reckless hastiness, the syntax of RSpec and cucumber, beauty and ugliness in languages and testing tools, the complexity of the languages’ grammars, syntactic vs. semantic complexity, the relative taste of grasshoppers and tree bark, etc.,
This is a Vim Introduction to be watched by those looking to start using Vim or are curious about what it can do, or whatever. Slow movement – Character-wise movements with the home keys: h, j, k and l. The lesson here: DON'T use the arrow keys. Line terminus – Beginning of line and end of line movements: 0 and $. The different types of "words" words – represent a sequence of characters in the 'is
description Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto gives us a brief overview of what's in store for Ruby 2.0 and where Ruby is headed in the near future. This was shot at an event hosted at Twilio in San Francisco on Oct. 7, 2010, where Matz gave his presentation "Ruby 2.0: What We Want to Accomplish in the Near Future"
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『OTK Tech Info』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く