How Pete Carroll manages player psyche in a way that many other coaches don’t - Field Gulls
I always look back at 2010 with an irrational fondness. A year earlier, the Seattle Seahawks were coached by Jim Mora and it started out fine. We knew the team wasn’t actually very good so most of...
Our Favorite Mechanical Keyboards | The Wirecutter
If you spend a lot of time typing, a mechanical keyboard can be a great quality-of-life improvement, and we have recommendations for just about every budget.
No, I have no side code projects to show you | Ezekiel Buchheit | Pulse | LinkedIn
I know the exact moment in the interview I lost the job for a boutique app firm in downtown Austin. They wanted to see some of my code, and, of course, they understood I couldn't show them anything from my current or past companies.
Little Git-wide library to keep private files hosted on AWS S3 synced in Git Repos - GitHub - sihrc/privvy: Little Git-wide library to keep private files hosted on AWS S3 synced in Git Repos
Programming language experts like to claim that syntax doesn't matter, that semantics is all that counts. Don't believe them! They're overrotating on a common, pre-rigorous misunderstanding of language design as superficially aesthetic. The study of semantics does provide deep insights into the mechanics of languages—but the mechanism is not
mcjurij/ferret: An easy to use and fast build system for Linux and C/C++ users
An easy to use and fast build system for Linux and C/C++ users - GitHub - mcjurij/ferret: An easy to use and fast build system for Linux and C/C++ users
System for containerized apps management. From build to scaling. - GitHub - lastbackend/lastbackend: System for containerized apps management. From build to scaling.
Do You Really Have to Name Everything in Software? – Java, SQL and jOOQ.
This is one of software engineering’s oldest battles. No, I’m not talking about where to put curly braces, or whether to use tabs or spaces. I mean the eternal battle between nominal ty…
Systems We Love: How the Past Informs Our Present - The New Stack
It started with a July tweet asking if there was interest — and after dozens of responses (and 161 "likes") — it was on. By mid-October, organizers for the first-ever "Systems We Love" conference had received 162 submissions for just 19 speaking slots, and "I marked 70 as 'would love to see'," committee member and…