Read it or Throw it
Yaron Wittenstein's Newsletter
Friday, October 28, 2016
Read it or Throw it #192
1.
The Guts n’ Glory of Database Internals Series (by Ayende)
2.
Awesome Programmers
3.
10 Modern Software Over-Engineering Mistakes
4.
Artificial Neural Networks, Elixir, and You
5.
Need a Second Opinion on Your Ruby Code? Ask Crystal (by Pat Shaughnessy)
6.
Monitoring Anomalies in the Experimentation Platform
7.
PostgreSQL: PostgreSQL 9.6 Released!
8.
Stack Match
9.
Fluency vs Mastery: Can You Be Fluent Without Being Good (by Scott H. Young)
10.
funny Tweet: There are only two hard problems in distributed systems ...
"The shorter way to do many things is to do only one thing at a time"
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Thursday, October 13, 2016
Read it or Throw it #191
1.
Amazon ElastiCache for Redis Adds Sharding Support with Redis Cluster
2.
Why's that company so big? I could do that in a weekend
3.
Elasticsearch Will Soon Get Machine Learning with Elastic's Prelert Acquisition
4.
Reflections of an "Old" Programmer
5.
On the limits of TDD, and the limits of studies of TDD
6.
Entity Component Systems (in Elixir)
7.
A Famous Rabbi’s Advice for Getting Important Things Done (Cal Newport)
8.
Is Facebook’s Massive Open Office Scaring Away Developers? (Cal Newport)
9.
Choice and Truth: 8th Grade Exam From 1912 Shows How Much Education Has Been Dumbed Down
10.
Recommended Book: Release It!
Saturday, October 1, 2016
Read it or Throw it #190
1.
The Guts n’ Glory of Database Internals: B+Tree (by Ayende)
2.
Pushing Database Scalability Up And Out With GPUs
3.
Distributed Transactions: The Icebergs of Microservices
4.
Writing Redis Modules
5.
How Envelope Encryption Works with Supported AWS Services
6.
InfluxData closes $16 million Series B
7.
To tell someone they're wrong, first tell them how they're right
8.
Recommended Book: The Little Schemer
9.
Recommended Video: What Other Languages Can Learn From Rust (by Yehuda Katz)
10.
Recommended Video: ElixirConf 2016 - Keynote by José Valim
"There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation and naming things."
Phil Karlton
Newer Posts
Older Posts
Home
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)