the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic A generalised solution to distributed consensus Howard & Mortier, arXiv’19 This is a draft paper that Heidi Howard recently shared with the world via Twitter, and here’s the accompanying blog post. It caught my eye for promising a generalised solution to the consensus problem, and
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic Towards a theory of software development expertise Baltes et al., ESEC/FSE’18 This is the last paper we’ll be looking at this year, so I’ve chosen something a little more reflective to leave you with (The Morning Paper will return on Monday 7th January, 2019). The question Baltes
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic Debugging data flows in reactive programs Banken et al., ICSE’18 To round off our look at papers from ICSE, here’s a really interesting look at the challenges of debugging reactive applications (with a certain Erik Meijer credited among the authors). … in recent years the use of R
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic Deep code search Gu et al., ICSE’18 The problem with searching for code is that the query, e.g. “read an object from xml,” doesn’t look very much like the source code snippets that are the intended results, e.g.: * That’s why we have Stack Overflow! Stack Overflow can help with ‘h
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic Some thoughts on security after ten years of qmail 1.0 Bernstein, 2007 I find security much more important than speed. We need invulnerable software systems, and we need them today, even if they are ten times slower than our current systems. Tomorrow we can start working on making
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic On the design of distributed programming models Meiklejohn, arXiv 2017. Today’s choice is a lovely thought piece by Christopher Meiklejohn, making the case for distributed programming models. We’ve witnessed a progression in data structures from sequential (non-thread safe) to con
the morning paper a random walk through Computer Science research, by Adrian Colyer Made delightfully fast by strattic Automatic database management system tuning through large-scale machine learning Aken et al. , SIGMOD’17 Achieving good performance in DBMSs is non-trivial as they are complex systems with many tunable options that control nearly all aspects of their runtime operation. OtterTune u
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