Go at Google SPLASH, Tucson, Oct 25, 2012 Rob Pike Google, Inc. Preamble 2 What is Go? Go is: open source concurrent garbage-collected efficient scalable simple fun boring (to some) go.dev 3 History Design began in late 2007. Key players: Robert Griesemer, Rob Pike, Ken Thompson Later: Ian Lance Taylor, Russ Cox Became open source in November 2009. Developed entirely in the open; very active commu
The Trecul dataflow library is a C++ library for data processing that is architecturally similar to a data base query engine. The library can be used as an ordinary command line executable for processing file and database data on a single machine. However it primary use is to run in Hadoop as a map reduce component for parallel execution. We are also developing code for running dataflow programs i
About Terminus Font is a clean, fixed width bitmap font, designed for long (8 and more hours per day) work with computers. Version 4.49.1 contains 1356 characters, covers about 120 language sets and supports ISO8859-1/2/5/7/9/13/15/16, Paratype-PT154/PT254, KOI8-R/U/E/F, Esperanto, many IBM, Windows and Macintosh code pages, as well as the IBM VGA, vt100 and xterm pseudographic characters. Sizes:
Tip 914 Printable Monobook Previous Next created 2005 · complexity basic · author Bernhard Leiner · version 6.0 Here are some recommendations for fonts to use in gvim, particularly for writing programs. In console Vim, it is easiest to just change your whole console's font to what suits you best. Just do a search for "<Windows/Ubuntu/etc> change console font". TO DO Should probably have separate t
ProFont is a small bitmap font which is absolutely great for programming. It was made for Macintosh computers, but now it's also available for Windows and Linux/UNIX X Windows. For comments, questions and troubleshooting there is a ProFont/Sheldon forum now. If you've never read my Desperately Seeking ProFont file, you should do that before you go on: Click here to read. Did you read it now? Or do
Home » Blog » Mastering Linear Algebra in 10 Days: Astounding Experiments in Ultra-Learning The MIT Challenge My friend Scott Young recently finished an astounding feat: he completed all 33 courses in MIT’s fabled computer science curriculum, from Linear Algebra to Theory of Computation, in less than one year. More importantly, he did it all on his own, watching the lectures online and evaluating
What I’m about to say is true now, as of July 2012. It wasn’t necessarily true 15 years ago, and it may not be true next year. Right now, for most people, it’s utterly correct– enough that I feel compelled to say it. The current VC-funded startup scene, which I’ve affectionately started calling “VC-istan”, is– not to be soft with it– a total waste of time for most of the people involved. Startups.
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
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