dwmkerr/hacker-laws:
Kind of fun collection of all the laws, rules etc. that you might come across in our field
Kind of fun collection of all the laws, rules etc. that you might come across in our field
Scaling is an important topic that I care about. Here’s one person’s guide to making it to 100k. It’s a very complicated topic.
This is an amazing tool when you need it. Do queries, merges, filters on json files. You only need it once or twice a year but when you need it, it's a life saver!
A good list. I know every single one and would generally agree with it. Some books are too high in the list and some too low. But an excellent starting point.
Faster than Sinatra? By that much? Hard to believe.
There are many of these building blocks. Use this to mock a web service that your system depends on. That way you can test your system without incurring the costs (in money and time) of calling the service.
Huge collection of images for your hacking pleasure!
Build your own... operating system, programming language, web server, etc.
Well I always look at ProgrammableWeb.com but it's becoming more and more cluttered with ads and whatnot. Also there's so much in it, I think it's totally uncharted.
I hope these are all public domain. Can't check them all. But I assume so because it's on Github
We all live in the shell. (Yes, if you're not geekish that sentence makes no sense). And you can always learn a little more and some special trick to make your day. Here's another reference.
Another good article about Python modularity
Linked is a good addendum to explaining the mysteries of python packages and imports. I’ve read so much about this so many times and still I continue to stub my toe on it!
Great one line explanations of all the millions of AWS services.
Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor. Contribute to aristocratos/bashtop development by creating an account on GitHub.
Friendly, Jupyter-notebook-ish neural nets