84 private links
A collection of programming notebooks (bash, go, Python, etc) collected from stackoverflow discussions
"There are plenty of reasons why people who DO have the knowledge would not admit to it. By asking, you're asking for more than what you think you're asking.
You're asking people to take responsibility. You're questioning people's confidence in their abilities. You're also unnecessarily walling other people out. I often answer questions related to languages or libraries I have never used, because the answers are (in a programmer kind of way) common sense."
tmux setup for session sharing, window sharing but also session sharing with independent window usage, quite neat
Create reverse proxy pointing to your pc. Somewhat of a servei / ngrok replacement, still functioning and free as far as I can see.
lsync can act as a repeatable rsync replacement. Under the hood it utilizes rsync (though there is an advanced rsyncssh integration available which does not re-transfer files over rsync that already exist on the target machine).
Ideal for local-remote scenarios, where changes occur on one machine and should be replicated on another (e.g. mirroring project directory and code changes, automatically pushing them to remote development environment for compilation/testing/building)
DigitalOcean guide here
An absolutely amazing guide and introduction into NodeRED programming (and the idea of flow-based and IoT programming in general).
It is sorted by examples and the chapters go deep into creating useful flows. Really, really good.
(In)famous manual for asking technical questions - what to provide, what to leave out, and how to phrase it.
Can, with some implementation changes, conceivably be adapted to many more situations.
Lens IDE for Kubernetes. The only system you’ll ever need to take control of your Kubernetes clusters. It's open source and free. Download it today!
StackExchange alternative - open-source, smaller, and more free from drama.
Unfortunately (naturally) missing the large archives of knowledge on SE so far.
Fundamental talk about the problem with increasingly bloating websites, as well as some finely placed repercussions in between. Very funny on top.
"Complexity is a bug-lamp for smart people."
Artificial Intelligence gives us a uniquely fascinating and clear perspective at the nature of our minds and our relationship to reality. We will discuss perception, mental representation, agency, consciousness, selfhood, and how they can arise in a computational system, like our brain.
An interesting approach to a coherent epistemology of: identity, attention, consciousness, and the universe's state correlations
Mostly adequate guide to FP (in javascript).
In-depth guide to principles of functional programming
An open source mapping platform for custom designed maps. Our APIs and SDKs are the building blocks to integrate location into any mobile or web app.
Simple maximizers versus reason-based maximizing.
Considers trust in relationships and how to translate that into metrics and ultimately perhaps approach building reason-based (and inherently trust-based) algorithms
Storing passwords is a pretty simple problem in software development, right? Wrong! Storing passwords correctly is pretty complicated. With that said, it’s very simple to just lean on work someone else has done, and the libraries available for your language of choice.
Interesting writeup of password storing strategies and pitfalls.
Authentication & Storage are built on the blockchain & smart contracts, can be used to build any decentralized application
Understanding the process of practice, the idea of iterative improvement, and what it takes to become an expert at python, programming, or anything really.
Basics of various linux and commandline based tools
Reproducing images with geometric primitives. Contribute to fogleman
In this article, we will look at one of the many ways to keep an application behaviour closely under watch. In this case we are going to look at Monitoring.
Full in-depth example of application monitoring, from the code itself to its interaction on the cli, to network setup, to prometheus monitoring to grafana visualization. Well written!