Presenting "Surviving the Apocalypse: Disaster Recovery and Mirroring" at @javazone tomorrow, Thu 8 Sep, 14:20, room 4. Hope to see you there! https://t.co/4rfxDrnpR0
Just completed all 25 days of Advent of Code 2021. https://t.co/fEYkH2zr15 #AdventOfCode Great fun this year as well, kudos to @ericwastl for an excellent set of brain teasers.
@einarwh@AdamBien pointed out a while back that the Impl anti-pattern of having a separate interface and implementation class for each service isn't needed: https://t.co/7M52S759sF
Just like in earlier years of #AdventOfCode, reading Peter Norvig's solutions in Python is an edifying exercise. See https://t.co/iKOCbQ8xnP for his solutions of Advent of Code 2020 (with the second parts of day 20 and day 23 missing yet).
"The Pragmatic Programmer" by @pragdave and @PragmaticAndy just got a 20th-anniversary edition. Interview with the authors on what's new and not: https://t.co/Tc0xMtksEg
JavaZone VR will have 4 parallel tracks which will be streamed live & for free for everyone! Check the program here: https://t.co/rKqbVIZoJG & create your own unique #JavaZone experience!
Twitter is funding a small independent team of up to five open source architects, engineers, and designers to develop an open and decentralized standard for social media. The goal is for Twitter to ultimately be a client of this standard. 🧵
@sjbrodwall The original paper by Winston Royce describing waterfall (https://t.co/diDDNog9Md) described the need for iteration and feedback loops. It's luckily been a long while since my last waterfall project, but they all had something like Change Orders to request spec changes.
We have a monster post we published on Lighthouse this weekend: 12 Things You Didn't Plan for When You Hired Remote Employees
https://t.co/r5GuVeMZaA
It's the culmination of a lot of work...