Building software for yourself with Linus Lee (Changelog Interviews #455)https://changelog.com/podcast/455
base sort of HTTP networking interface, and things like that, to be able to run servers and save files. There isn’t a database driver or anything like that. I’ve thought about bui
Today we're talking to Linus Lee about the practice of building software for yourself. Linus has several side projects we could talk about, but today's show is focused on L
School Will Never End: On Infantilization in Digital Environments - Amplifying Empowerment or Propagating Stupidity?http://sigwait.tk/~alex/doc/bunz%2Cmercedes__school-will-never-end/
the buzzing social networking service for digital native online entertainment. But let us pause for a moment, and ask ourselves: Is this assemblage of animals associated with onli
2019 - Strange Loophttps://thestrangeloop.com/2019/sessions.html
Maude Lemaire Slack Networking and Go: An Engineer's Journey Sneha Inguva DigitalOcean Alda's dynamic relationship with Clojure Dave Yarwood Adzerk Digital and Social Resilience t
Strange Loop is a conference for software developers covering programming langs, databases, distributed systems, security, machine learning, creativity, and more!
The small web is beautifulhttps://benhoyt.com/writings/the-small-web-is-beautiful/
code, API definitions, networking, deployment, server infrastructure, monitoring, database transactions – just about every aspect of a system is made more complex. Why is that? Co
A vision for the "small web", small software, and small architectures.
What Is The Cloud?http://toastytech.com/about/thecloud.html
"cloud" originated from networking diagrams that used a cloud to represent unknown or vaguely defined infrastructure. Typically this was used to represent outsourced external infr
jessamyn.com : 07 : Valley News Article "Everybody's Interesting"http://jessamyn.com/me/realme8.html
called the Federal Networking Council defined the term "internet" for the first time, paving the way for easier use by the public. "I remember seeing it and thinking, oh my god, t
The Kernel Hacker's Bookshelf: Ultimate Physical Limits of Computation [LWN.net]https://lwn.net/Articles/286233/
obscure bugs in obscure networking protocols for a while. Power usage? Posted Jun 19, 2008 8:37 UTC (Thu) by epa (subscriber, #39769) [ Link ] (3 responses) As you mentioned, thes
Moore's Law - we all know it (or at least think we do). To be annoyingly exact, Moore's Law i [...]
joshua steinhttp://jcs.org/
tags debugging , mac , networking , and retrocomputing Over the past year or so, I've been working with other BlueSCSI developers to add Wi-Fi functionality to their open-hardware
TELNET: The Mother of All (Application) Protocolshttps://XeNT.com/4K-Associates/IEEE-L7-v2.html
entire research group; networking would allow the Nation's researchers to work together off of specialized machines. Ma Bell, of course, already could install dedicated data circu
The Boykin Familyhttp://www.theboykins.com/family.html
developing social networking software for the mobile industry. Before that I was co-founder and Vice President of Product Development at UbqC (Pronounced as the word "Ubiquicy").
OS-9 Frequently Asked Questionshttps://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~pruyne/os9faq.html
which is a local-area networking protocol for small networks of strictly OS-9 based computers. NFM runs on virtually any network interface, including direct serial links, ARCnet,
Let's Decentralizehttps://letsdecentralize.org/
"the cryptography-based networking stack for building local and wide-area networks with readily available hardware. Reticulum can continue to operate even in adverse conditions wi
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