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thinkingserious
2007-09-10T15:07:53
Do You Submit Articles to Digg.com?
This tool will help ease that process. We take the latest five stories from your favorite RSS feeds and tell you whether that story has been submitted. If it has been submitted, you can click the digg it link, if not, you can click the submit it link.
http://blog.notifir.com/2007/09/10/submission-suggester-is-live/
1
0
null
null
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null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,794
dawie
2007-09-10T15:19:49
20 (Alternate) Ways to Focus on Users
null
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/09/10/20-alternate-ways-to-focus-on-users/
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,796
mattculbreth
2007-09-10T15:24:44
Startup Weekend Atlanta
http://blog.weatherby.net/2007/09/startup-weekend.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,800
transburgh
2007-09-10T15:33:36
Small Business Online Spending To Top $70 Billion
null
http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2007/09/10/small-business-online-spending-to-top-70-billion
1
0
null
null
null
no_error
WebProNews - Digital Marketing, Technology, and Business News
null
Name
DevNews Matt Milano - November 4, 2024 GitHub has released "Octoverse 2024," revealing that Python is now the most popular programming language, and AI is boosting development, not endi... MobileDevPro Matt Milano - November 4, 2024 Just days after banning the iPhone 16, Indonesia has struck again, this time banning Google's Pixel fines for similar reasons as its ban on the iPhone.... Business Matt Milano - November 4, 2024 The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that JPMorgan has been fined $151 million to resolve multiple issues in which the company violated the law... AutoRevolution Matt Milano - November 3, 2024 Hyundai revealed the Initium, a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle that represents the culmination of nearly three decades of the company's research. ... SocialMediaNews Matt Milano - November 3, 2024 Reddit reported its third-quarter earnings, revealing that it turned a profit for the first time in its 19-year history. ... AIDeveloper Matt Milano - November 3, 2024 In a Reddit AMA with OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Kevin Weil, Srinivas Narayanan, and Mark Chen, Altman blamed compute scaling for the lack of newer AI models.... CloudPlatformPro Matt Milano - November 3, 2024 Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella announced the company has recruited Jay Parikh to its senior leadership team after stints as Facebook head of engineering and L... EmailMarketingToday Rich Ord - November 3, 2024 In an era where inboxes are as crowded as city sidewalks, the science behind getting your emails noticed has never been more critical. The 2024 Email Mark... Business Matt Milano - November 3, 2024 Washington lawmakers are growing increasingly worried about Intel's future, even weighing additional bailout options. ... DataDrivenMarketingPro Brian Wallace - November 3, 2024 Businesses are dealing with “big data” - but what they really want is actionable insight from that data. These are the accompanying services of data sc... MobileDevPro Matt Milano - November 2, 2024 Apple has given the MacBook Air a surprise, but welcome, upgrade, increasing the base RAM from 8 to 16GB. ... DataAnalystPro Ryan Gibson - November 2, 2024 In an era marked by rapid technological advancements, the role of a data analyst is evolving at an unprecedented pace. Luke Barousse... TransportationRevolution Matt Milano - November 2, 2024 Skydio, one of the leading US drone makers, announced that China has imposed sanctions on it in response to its business with Taiwan. ... AppDevNews Matt Milano - November 1, 2024 Pixelmator has long been a staple for many Mac designers, and the company is now joining Apple in an effort to widen its reach and appeal. ... DataAnalystPro Rich Ord - November 1, 2024 As the clock strikes 9:45 AM, Agatha Kang, a Business Intelligence Engineer at Amazon Web Services (AWS), be... RemoteWorkingTrends Matt Milano - November 1, 2024 AWS employees are stepping up their efforts to reverse ... ITProNews Matt Milano - November 1, 2024 Microsoft has once again delayed the rollout of its controversial Recall feature, saying it needs more time to get it right. ... SearchNews Matt Milano - November 1, 2024 Google is expanding AI Overviews in Search, rolling out the feature to more than 100 countries, providing access to more than one billion users. ... ElectricVehicleTrends Matt Milano - October 31, 2024 Ford is pausing production of the all-electric F-150 Lightning, the latest indication that consumer demand for EVs is cooling. ... MobileDevPro Matt Milano - October 31, 2024 Google has announced major changes to Android development schedule, saying it will release a major update in Q2 instead of Q3, followed by a minor release ... SearchNews Matt Milano - October 31, 2024 OpenAI's ChatGPT search engine is now live for Plus and Team users, with the company promising it blends the best of natural language with web search. ... MobileDevPro Matt Milano - October 31, 2024 After less than a month in beta, the Thunderbird team has released the official version of Thunderbird for Android. ... EmergingTechUpdate Matt Milano - October 31, 2024 Siemens announced it has reached an agreement to acquire Altair Engineering in a bid to strengthen its industrial software and AI offerings. ... AIDeveloper Matt Milano - October 30, 2024 Alphabet CEO Sunda Pichai made a surprising revelation, saying Google is now using AI to write more than a quarter of all new code. ...
2024-11-08T06:45:10
en
train
52,801
Ultrapreneur
2007-09-10T15:33:49
Being a one in a world full of zeros
it was best said in "Antitrust".. in this business you're either a one or a zero.. alive or dead. <p>if you're an entrepreneur at what point do you give up on an idea? when you see a site that's similar to yours? or when money becomes an issue?<p>share your thoughts...
1
2
[ 52814, 52809 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
52,807
aston
2007-09-10T15:41:16
Hidden method of reading revealed
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6983176.stm
25
7
[ 53219, 53302, 53276, 53256, 52886 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,811
donna
2007-09-10T15:48:35
Making the Most Out of a Time-Crunched Day
http://www.fastcompany.com/resources/marketing/post/time-crunch-day-090507.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,813
rokhayakebe
2007-09-10T15:56:22
Vtap just launched. Mobile video search
null
http://vtap.com
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,816
dawie
2007-09-10T16:01:44
Open-source strategy: Documentation = dollars
null
http://blogs.cnet.com/8301-13505_1-9774567-16.html
6
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,823
anon_coward
2007-09-10T16:12:53
Ask news.yc: How do I break up with my co-founder?
The situation: <p>There are two of us. We are pre-incorporation. I had the original idea. We have done some brainstorming/discussing, and as things start to get more concrete, I'm finding out that my co-founder is not generating the quality of work that I had expected, and the personalities don't match quite right. I don't feel comfortable going forward with this person as my partner.<p>How do I break up with my co-founder?<p>My concerns:<p>a) personal-- not being an asshole.<p>b) operational-- not having this suck the life out of the project<p>c) legal -- I don't want a Facebook/ConnectU situation down the road<p>d) strategic -- not that I expect it to happen, but what's to stop my-soon-to-be-ex-co-founder from taking the idea and finding someone else to execute it? [insert standard boilerplate here about ideas being worth nothing without execution]<p>ideas?<p>(submitted anonymously for obvious reasons)
16
26
[ 52872, 52832, 52830, 52903, 52934, 52869, 53109, 52935, 53480, 52870, 52880, 52912, 52902, 52894 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
52,826
ivankirigin
2007-09-10T16:19:49
Managing Your Reputation Online
null
http://www.technologyreview.com/Biztech/19358/
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,833
transburgh
2007-09-10T16:32:21
Record Industry Proves Again How Much They've Lost The Plot
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/09/10/record-industry-proves-again-how-much-theyve-lost-the-plot/
3
1
[ 52915 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,839
mpfefferle
2007-09-10T16:42:52
Random Acts of Initiative
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2007/09/random-acts-of-.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,844
nreece
2007-09-10T16:51:30
The iPhone to Get TV Out
http://news.softpedia.com/news/The-iPhone-to-Get-TV-Out-65096.shtml
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,849
far33d
2007-09-10T17:17:07
Search for Fossett turns up wrecks of 8 other small planes
http://sfgate.com/flat/archive/2007/09/10/chronicle/archive/2007/09/10/MNF0S2BJT.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,851
transburgh
2007-09-10T17:21:45
Should Apple Burn Its Economics Textbooks?
null
http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/09/10/should-apple-burn-its-economics-textbooks/
8
1
[ 52919 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,852
byteCoder
2007-09-10T17:28:59
Why Facebook went west and Boston lost out
http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2007/09/09/why_facebook_went_west/?page=full
18
27
[ 52893, 52895, 53023, 52878, 52871, 52913 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,853
nickb
2007-09-10T17:30:20
Music industry betting on 'ringle' format
null
http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=technologyNews&storyid=2007-09-10T030707Z_01_N09216730_RTRUKOC_0_US-RINGLES.xml
2
1
[ 52859 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,855
dawie
2007-09-10T17:34:37
Comparison of web application frameworks
null
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_application_frameworks
1
0
null
null
null
no_error
Comparison of server-side web frameworks
2007-02-05T23:13:52Z
Contributors to Wikimedia projects
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This is a comparison of notable web frameworks, software used to build and deploy web applications. Basic information about each framework. Systems listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. Project Current stable version Release date License ASP.NET Dynamic Data Base One Foundation Component Library (BFC) 7.51 2018-06-01 Proprietary Component-based Scalable Logical Architecture (CSLA) 4.11.2 2019-07-31[1] MIT MonoRail 2.1 2011-03-17[2] Apache See also: C++ Project Current stable version Release date License CppCMS 1.2.1 2018-05-18[3] MIT Drogon 1.9.5 2024-06-08[4] MIT Poco 1.13.3[5] 2024-04-06[±] Boost Software License Wt 4.10.4 2024-03-06[6] GPL, Proprietary ColdFusion Markup Language (CFML)[edit] Project Current stable version Release date License ColdBox Platform 7.3.0[7] 2024-05-14[±] Apache v2 Project Current stable version Release date License Phoenix 1.7.14[8]  2024-06-18; 4 months ago MIT License Project Current stable version Release date License Snap 1.1.3.2[9] 2023-07-19 BSD-3 Yesod 1.6.24.5[10]  2023-09-14; 13 months ago MIT License Project Current stable version Release date License Apache Click 2.3.0 2011-03-27 Apache 2.0 Apache OFBiz 18.12.16[11]  2024-08-28; 2 months ago Apache 2.0 Apache Shale 1.0.4 2007-12-19 Apache Apache Sling 12 2022-03-18 Apache 2.0 Apache Struts 6.6.0[12]  2024-07-20; 3 months ago Apache 2.0 Apache Tapestry 5.8.4[13]  2024-02-06; 9 months ago Apache 2.0 Apache Wicket 10.0.0[14]  2024-03-11; 7 months ago Apache 2.0 AppFuse 3.5.0 2015-02-20 Apache 2.0 Eclipse RAP 3.11 2019-12-18 Eclipse Grails 6.2.1[15]  2024-10-03; 35 days ago Apache Google Web Toolkit 2.9.0 2020-05-02 Apache 2.0 JavaServer Faces (Mojarra) 4.1.0[16]  2024-06-05; 5 months ago CDDL, GNU GPL 2, Apache 2.0 JBoss Seam 3.1.0 final 2012-01-13 GNU LGPL JWt 4.11.0[17]  2024-10-02; 36 days ago GPL, Proprietary Netty (software) 4.1.114[18]  2024-10-01; 37 days ago Apache License 2.0 OpenLaszlo 4.9.0 2010-10-21 CPL Oracle ADF 12.2.1.4 2019-10-09 Oracle Technology Network Developer License Play 3.0.3[19]  2024-05-07; 6 months ago Apache 2.0 Spring 6.1.4[20]  2024-02-15; 8 months ago Apache 2.0 Stripes 1.6.0 2015-07-23 Apache Vaadin 14.0.3 2019-09-04 Apache 2.0 Wavemaker 11.6.0[21] 2024-03-03 Apache WebObjects 5.4.3 2008-09-15 Proprietary Project Current stable version Release date License Express.js 4.17.1 2019-05-25 MIT License Meteor 3.0[22]  2024-07-22; 3 months ago MIT License Sails.js 1.2.3 2019-06-18 MIT License Next.js 15.0.0[23]  2024-10-21; 17 days ago MIT License Remix 2.8.1 2021-11-22 MIT License Project Current stable version Release date License Catalyst 5.90131[24] 2023-07-20[±] Artistic, GPL Dancer 1.1.1 [25] 2024-07-18[±] Artistic, GPL Maypole 2.13 2008-04-18 Artistic, GPL Mojolicious 9.37[26] 2024-05-13[±] Artistic See also: PHP Project Start date Current stable version Release date License CakePHP 2005-08 5.0.7[27] 2024-04-25[±] MIT CodeIgniter 2006-02-28 4.5.2[28] June 10, 2024; 4 months ago[±] MIT Fat-Free 2009-09 3.8.2[29] 2023-07-24[±] GPLv3 FuelPHP 2011-08 1.9.0[30] 2021-12-28[±] MIT Gyroscope 2008-11-20 20.4[31] 2023-11-24 BSD Jamroom 2003-07-28 7.0.1[32] 2024-01-01[±] MPL Kajona 2006 6.2[33] 2017-06-08 LGPLv2 Laminas (formerly Zend Framework) 2006-03 3.3.3[34] 2022-02-21 New BSD Laravel 2011-07-31 11.3.1[35]  2024-10-15; 23 days ago MIT Li3 (Lithium) 2009-10 2.0.0[36] 2022-12-08[±] BSD Phalcon 2012-11-14 5.8.0[37] 2024-07-09 BSD Pop PHP 2012-03-19 5.4.0[38] 2024-09-10 BSD Licence PRADO 2004-01 4.2.0[39] 2022-04-19[±] New BSD[40] SilverStripe 2007-02-03 5.2.0[41] 2024-04-15[±] BSD Smart.Framework 2015-02-01 svn.1925[42] 2024-01-19[±] BSD Symfony 2005-10 7.0.6[43] 2024-04-03[±] MIT Yii 2008-12-03 2.0.48[44] 2023-05-22[±] New BSD Project Current stable version Release date License BlueBream 1.0[45]  2011-01-18; 13 years ago ZPL CherryPy 18.8.0[46]  2022-07-18; 2 years ago BSD CubicWeb 3.30.0[47]  2021-03-16; 3 years ago LGPL Django 5.1.2[48]  2024-10-08; 30 days ago BSD FastAPI 0.115.2[49]  2024-10-12; 26 days ago MIT Flask 3.0.3[50]  2024-04-07; 7 months ago BSD Google App Engine 1.9.91[51]  2020-05-11; 4 years ago LGPL, Proprietary Grok 5.0[52]  2024-01-29; 9 months ago ZPL Jam.py 5.4.136[53]  2023-11-14; 11 months ago BSD Pyjs 0.8.1a[54]  2012-05-09; 12 years ago Apache Pylons 1.0.2[55]  2015-07-22; 9 years ago BSD Pyramid 2.0.2[56]  2023-08-25; 14 months ago BSD TACTIC 4.8.0.b04[57]  2020-09-25; 4 years ago EPL Tornado 6.4.1[58]  2024-06-06; 5 months ago Apache TurboGears 2.4.3[59]  2020-03-01; 4 years ago MIT, LGPL web2py 2.27.1[60]  2023-11-16; 11 months ago LGPL3 Zope 2 5.6.0[61]  2022-09-09; 2 years ago ZPL Project Current stable version Release date License Padrino 0.14.4 2019-01-14[62] MIT Ruby on Rails 7.2.2[63]  2024-10-31; 7 days ago MIT Sinatra 3.0.2[64]  2022-10-01; 2 years ago MIT Project Current stable version Release date License Lift 3.4.3 2020-11-28 Apache 2.0 Play 2.8.8 2021-04-08 Apache 2.0 Scalatra 2.8.1 2021-09-25 BSD Project Language Current stable version Release date License AIDA/Web Smalltalk 6.7 2014-09-14 MIT Oracle APEX PL/SQL 22.2 2022-11-10 Proprietary freeware Flex ActionScript, MXML 4.16.1 2019-11-23 Apache Grails Groovy (JVM) 4.0.0 2019-07-11 Apache Morfik C#, BASIC, Pascal, Java 3.0.8.1 2010-12-13 Proprietary freeware Opa Opa 1.1.1 2013-04-16[65] MIT and AGPL OpenACS Tcl 5.10.0[66] 2021-09-15 GPL Seaside Smalltalk 3.4.4[67] 2021-02-07 MIT Comparison of features[edit] Project Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) CppCMS Yes Yes Push Yes CppDB No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Wt Yes Yes Push & Pull Yes Wt::Dbo Boost.test Yes Yes No Yes ColdFusion Markup Language (CFML)[edit] Project Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) ColdBox Platform Yes Yes Push-pull Yes Quick & cbORM Yes via TestBox Yes Yes CFML Yes Yes Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Apache Click Java jQuery Page oriented Pull Yes Hibernate, Cayenne Yes pluggable Velocity, JSP Cached templates Built-in validation Apache OFBiz Java, Groovy, XML, jQuery Yes Push-pull Yes Entity Engine (Internal kind of ORM, not really ORM, notably used by Atlassian Jira) JUnit Entity Engine Tools, Data File Tool, CSV Parser, Apache POI Internal Security framework based on OWASP Freemarker (Recommended), Velocity (Support Available), JSP (Support Available) Internal Cache Maintenance with Distributed Cache Clearing for clusters Server side validation, Client Side Validation (JQuery) Apache Sling Java Yes Yes Push-pull Uses JCR content repository Yes Yes Yes Apache Struts Java Yes Yes Push-pull Yes Yes Unit tests Yes Yes Apache Tapestry Java Prototype, jQuery Yes Pull Yes JPA, Hibernate, Cayenne Selenium, TestNG, JUnit Spring Security, Shiro Yes with extensions Native or Bean Validation Apache Wicket Java Extensions for YUI, ExtJS, more No (Modular event-driven) Pull Yes with extensions Mock objects, unit and integration tests via extension Yes Yes Yes Yes Grails Groovy Yes Yes Push Yes GORM, Hibernate Unit tests, integration test, functional test multiple plugins: autobase, dbmigrate, more Spring Security,[68] Apache Shiro[69] Yes Yes Yes JavaServer Faces Java Yes Yes Pull Yes JPA, Hibernate and any other Java EE ORM framework JUnit Yes Facelets, JSP Yes Native validators, integration with Bean Validation Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) JBoss Seam Java Yes Yes Pull Yes JPA, Hibernate JUnit, TestNG JAAS integration, Drools, Hibernate Filters, OpenID, CAPTCHA Facelets JBoss Cache, Ehcache Hibernate Validator JWt Java Yes Yes Push-pull Yes Yes Yes Yes Play Java, Scala Yes Yes Push-pull Yes JPA, Hibernate JUnit, Selenium Yes via Core Security module Yes Yes Server-side validation Spring Java Yes Yes Push Yes Hibernate, iBatis, more Mock objects, unit tests Spring Security (formerly Acegi) JSP, Commons Tiles, Velocity, Thymeleaf, more Ehcache, more Commons validator, Bean Validation Stripes Java Yes Yes Pull Yes JPA, Hibernate Yes framework extension Yes Yes Vaadin Java GWT Push-pull Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Wavemaker JavaScript (client), Java (server) Dojo Toolkit Yes Push Dojo Toolkit Hibernate JUnit Hibernate Spring Security (formerly Acegi), role-based access control Dojo Toolkit Dojo Toolkit Regular expression, schema-driven validation Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) WebObjects Java Yes Yes Push-pull Yes EOF WOUnit (JUnit), TestNG, Selenium in Project WONDER Yes Yes Yes Google Web Toolkit Java, JavaScript Yes Yes JPA with RequestFactory JUnit (too early), jsUnit (too difficult), Selenium (best) via Java Yes Bean Validation ZK Java, ZUML jQuery Yes Push-pull Yes any J2EE ORM framework JUnit, ZATS HibernateUtil, SpringUtil Spring Security Macro components & composition Yes client, server Project Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) AngularJS XHR, JSONP Yes i18n and l10n Karma (unit testing), Protractor (end-to-end testing) Content Security Policy (CSP), XSRF Templates Caching Form validation (client-side) EmberJS Yes Yes Yes Ember Data QUnit Handlebars qooxdoo Yes Data binding i18n Testrunner Form Validation SproutCore Yes Yes Project Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Catalyst Toolkit-independent (REST & JSON support, specific plugins for Prototype JavaScript Framework, more) Yes Push in its most common usage Yes DBIx::Class, Rose::DB::Object, more Supports Perl testing standards, Test Anything Protocol (TAP) ? ACL-based, external engines, more Template::Toolkit, HTML::Template, HTML::Mason, PHP and any extant Perl template engine Cache, Memcached, shared memory, more HTML::FormHandler HTML::FormFu, HTML::FormValidator, more Dancer Yes Yes Push Yes DBIx::Class, ORMesque Yes ? ? Template::Toolkit, HTML::Mason, Text::MicroTemplate, any extant Perl template engine Cache, Memcached, shared memory, more DataFu, any extant Perl form validation software Maypole ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Mojolicious Toolkit-independent (REST & JSON support) No explicit model support though commonly used as MVC Push Yes Commonly used with DBIx::Class Test::Mojo ? Signed session cookie Built-in Perl templating, Template::Toolkit and several others via plugins ? Not explicitly, use any Perl Modules Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Scaffolding RAD Mobility CakePHP PHP >= 7.2[70] Any Yes Yes, Push & Cells Yes ORM, Data Mapper Pattern, SQL Relational Algebra Abstraction Layer Unit tests, object mocking, fixtures, code coverage, memory analysis with PHPUnit and Xdebug and Continuous Integration via Travis Yes CRUD based, ACL-based, Multiple Plugins Themes, Layouts, Cells, Views, Elements, Plugins for Twig, Bootstrap, etc. Memcache, Redis, XCache, APC, File Validation via Contexts (Table (DAO), Entity (VO) & Controller), CSRF Protection Plugin CRUD Cake Bake Mobile Agent Detection, Layouts CodeIgniter PHP >= 7.2[71] (ver 4 and up) or PHP >= 5.6.0[72] (until ver 3.1.11) Any Yes Push Mostly[73] Third party only Ready for next release, Unit tests for v.4 and up Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No[74] Yes Templates Fat-Free Framework PHP >= 5.4[75] Any MVC, RMR Push-pull Yes Data mappers for SQL, MongoDB, Flat-File Built-in Yes Yes Yes APC, Memcache, XCache, WinCache, and Filesystem Yes No ? ? FuelPHP PHP >= 5.3.3[76] Yes MVC, HMVC Push Yes Yes PHPUnit Yes Yes, Plugins available Yes, Plugins available File, Redis, Memcache, more Yes Yes ? ? Gyroscope PHP >= 5.4 nano.js, replaceable[77] LCHH Push-pull Mostly Data-source agnostic No Built-in Schema comparison tool and UDF editor ACL-based, replaceable Implementation-specific; helper functions and theme templates available APC, Memcache Yes Interactive code generator Yes Dedicated mobile and tablet layouts, landscape-portrait transformation Kajona PHP >= 7[78] Any Yes Push Yes Yes PHPUnit, Selenium, Jasmine Yes Yes Yes APC, Database, File Yes Yes Yes Bootstrap Laminas (formerly Zend Framework) PHP >= 7.3[79] Toolkit-independent Yes Push-pull Yes Table and row data gateway or Doctrine Unit tests, PHP Unit or other independent Yes ACL-based Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Zend Platform Yes Yes ? ? Laravel PHP >= 8.0[80] Any Yes Push Yes Eloquent PHPUnit Yes Yes Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Redis Yes Yes Yes Yes Li3 (Lithium) PHP >= 5.3.6 Any Yes Push Yes Yes Unit tests, builtin test framework or other independent No Yes, Plugins available PHP, Twig Plugin available Memcache, Redis, XCache, APC, File Yes, with CSRF Protection and Form Signing No Yes ? Phalcon PHP >= 8.0[81] Any Yes Push Yes Yes Codeception PHPUnit Yes Yes Volt, PHP APC, Memcache, Memory, Redis, Redis Cluster, File Yes Yes Yes ? Pop PHP PHP >= 8.1 Any Yes Push Yes Yes PHPUnit with CI via GitHub Actions Yes ACL-based Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Redis, Session Yes Yes Yes ? PRADO PHP >= 7.3[82] Prototype, script.aculo.us, own components[83] No Push-pull Yes Data access objects (DAO), active record pattern, SQLMap data mapper PHPUnit, SimpleTest, Selenium No Yes XML-based, similar to ASP.NETs[83] APC, Database, eAccelerator, Memcached, XCache Yes[83] Yes[83] ? ? SilverStripe (Sapphire) PHP >= 7.1[84] jQuery, jQuery UI Yes Push-pull Yes Active record pattern Unit tests, Selenium Automatic incl. OpenID Themes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Silex PHP >= 5.3.9 Yes Yes Yes Yes Plugin exists (Doctrine) Yes No Yes PHP, Twig Plugin exists Yes Plugin exists ? ? Smart.Framework PHP >= 7.3[85] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, MongoDB, Solr, others via plugins) Yes No Yes Yes (Markers, Twig, others via plugins) Yes (File, Redis, others via plugins) Yes No Yes Yes, (jQuery mobile, Bootstrap, others via plugins) Symfony PHP >= 8.1[86] Prototype, script.aculo.us, Unobtrusive Ajax with UJS and PJS plugins Yes Push Yes Propel, Doctrine (YAML) Yes Plugin exists (alpha code) Plugin PHP, Twig Yes Yes Yes ? ? TYPO3 PHP >= 7.2[87] Any Yes Push-pull Yes Yes Yes Partial Yes TYPO3 Fluid Yes Yes Plugin exists Plugin exists ? Yii PHP >= 5.4[88] jQuery, jQuery UI, own components, plugins Yes Push-pull Yes Data Access Objects (DAO), Active Record Pattern, Plugins (incl. Doctrine 2.0) PHPUnit, Selenium Yes ACL-based, RBAC-based, plugins PHP-based, PRADO-like, plugins APC, Database, eAccelerator, File, Memcache, Redis, WinCache, XCache, Zend Platform Yes Yes[89] ? ? Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Python 3.* CherryPy Python - - _ - pluggable - - - pluggable - - Yes Django Python Yes Yes Push Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes built-in, Jinja2, Mako, Cheetah Yes Yes Yes FastAPI Python Yes - - - ORM-agnostic via pytest depends on ORM Yes Jinja2 - Yes Yes Flask Python Yes - - Yes ORM-agnostic via unittest depends on ORM Yes Jinja2 Yes Yes Yes Jam.py Python, JavaScript Yes Event driven Yes Yes Yes via pytest and mocha Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Pyjs Python, JavaScript Yes Use PureMVC Python version (compiled to JavaScript) Yes ??, no direct data access No No Pylons Python helpers for Prototype and script.aculo.us controller Push Yes ORM-agnostic via nose depends on ORM pluggable: Mako, Genshi, Myghty, Kid, more native: pluggable: Redis, Beaker (memory, memcached, file, databases) preferred formencode No Pyramid Python Yes Yes Push Yes ORM-agnostic Yes depends on ORM Yes pluggable: Jinja2, Chameleon, Mako, Genshi, more default: native session factory. pluggable: Redis, PyNaCl, Beaker (memory, memcached, file, databases), more deform, formencode, WTForms, more Yes TACTIC Python Yes Yes Pull No Yes Yes Yes Yes Mako No Yes No Tornado Python See Advanced Async Example implements AJAX - - - - - - - - - - Yes TurboGears Python Toolkit-independent, provides support via JSON Full stack, best-of-breed based Push Yes SQLAlchemy nose SQLAlchemy-Migrate Repoze.what & Repoze.who pluggable: Genshi, more Support for memcached, and any WSGI compliant system ToscaWidgets, utilizing FormEncode Yes web2py Python Yes Yes Push Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes[90] BlueBream (Zope 3) Python via add-on products, e.g. Plone w/KSS Yes Pull Yes ZODB, SQLObject, SQLAlchemy Unit tests, functional tests ZODB generations ACL-based Yes Yes Yes No Zope 2 Python Yes Pull Yes ZODB, SQLObject, SQLAlchemy Unit tests ACL-based Yes Yes CMFFormController No Project Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Ruby on Rails Prototype, script.aculo.us, jQuery ActiveRecord, Action Pack Push Yes ActiveRecord Unit Tests, Functional Tests and Integration Tests Yes Plug-in Yes Yes Yes Sinatra No Yes Push No ORM-independent rack-test Yes through Rack middleware Yes through Rack middleware No Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) AIDA/Web Smalltalk Yes Yes Yes Gemstone/S, GLORP, more SUnit Yes Yes Application Express PL/SQL Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Flex ActionScript, MXML Not by name but similar technology[91] FlexUnit Lift Scala Yes Yes Pull Yes Yes ScalaTest, Selenium[92] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Opa Opa Yes Yes MongoDB Yes Yes Yes OpenACS Tcl Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Seaside Smalltalk jQuery, jQuery UI, Prototype JavaScript Framework, script.aculo.us, more Yes Yes GLORP, Gemstone/S, more Unit tests, SUnit No, intentionally Magritte Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s) Security framework(s) Template framework(s) Caching framework(s) Form validation framework(s) Comparison of JavaScript-based web frameworks Comparison of shopping cart software Content management system Java view technologies and frameworks List of content management systems List of rich web application frameworks List of web service frameworks Mobile development framework ^ "Version 4.11.2". Github. Retrieved 4 September 2019. ^ "Download - Castle Project". castleproject.org. ^ "CppCMS Blog". Blog.cppcms.com. Retrieved 2023-11-04. ^ "drogonframework/drogon". GitHub. Retrieved 2024-07-10. ^ "Releases - pocoproject/poco". Retrieved 2024-07-10. ^ "Wt: Release notes". www.webtoolkit.eu. Retrieved 2024-07-10. ^ "ColdBox Platform Versions". forgebox.io. Retrieved 2024-05-14. ^ "phoenixframework/phoenix". ^ "snapframework/snap". github.com. ^ "yesodweb/yesod". ^ "Release 18.12.16". 28 August 2024. Retrieved 20 September 2024. ^ "Release 6.6.0". 20 July 2024. Retrieved 17 August 2024. ^ "Download". ^ https://wicket.apache.org/news/2024/03/. ^ "Release 6.2.1". 3 October 2024. Retrieved 21 October 2024. ^ "Release 4.1.0". 5 June 2024. Retrieved 5 June 2024. ^ "Release 4.11.0". 2 October 2024. Retrieved 22 October 2024. ^ "Release 4.1.114". 1 October 2024. Retrieved 22 October 2024. ^ "Release 3.0.3". 7 May 2024. Retrieved 9 May 2024. ^ "Release v6.1.4". ^ "WaveMaker 11.6.0 - Release date: 03 March 2024 | WaveMaker Docs". www.wavemaker.com. 2024-03-04. Retrieved 2024-03-06. ^ "Meteor.js 3 is officially here!". 22 July 2024. Retrieved 19 August 2024. ^ "Release 15.0.0". 21 October 2024. Retrieved 22 October 2024. ^ "Catalyst-Runtime". metacpan.org. Retrieved 15 August 2024. ^ "Dancer2 Releases". perldancer.org. Retrieved 2024-08-15. ^ "Mojolicious-9.30". Retrieved 2024-08-15 – via MetaCPAN. ^ "CakePHP 5.0.7 Released". CakePHP Blog. Retrieved 2024-05-05. ^ "CodeIgniter Releases". github.com. Retrieved 2024-06-10. ^ "fatfree/lib/CHANGELOG.md". github.com. Retrieved 2024-04-12. ^ "Releases - fuel/core". github.com. Retrieved 2022-04-14. ^ "Antradar Downloads". antradar.com. 2023-11-24. Retrieved 2023-12-24. ^ "Softaculous". www.softaculous.com. Retrieved 2024-04-12. ^ "Releases". github.com. Retrieved 10 June 2017. ^ "GitHub - laminas/laminas-mvc". 20 March 2019 – via GitHub. ^ "Release 11.3.1". 15 October 2024. Retrieved 21 October 2024. ^ "Releases - UnionOfRAD/lithium". github.com. Retrieved 24 December 2023. ^ "phalcon/cphalcon". github.com. Retrieved 2024-07-09. ^ "Releases - popphp/popphp-framework". github.com. 2019-10-17. Retrieved 2019-05-30. ^ "PRADO PHP Framework". pradoframework.net. Retrieved 23 April 2022. ^ "License of PRADO". pradosoft.com. 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2013-10-16. ^ "Stable Download". silverstripe.org. Retrieved 2024-04-15. ^ "unix-world / Smart.Framework". github.com. Retrieved 2024-04-12. ^ Potencier, Fabien (2024-04-03). "Symfony 7.0.6 released". Blog. symfony.com. Retrieved 2024-04-13. ^ "Yii 2.0.48". yiiframework.com. Retrieved 2023-05-25. ^ "bluebream 1.0". 18 January 2011. Retrieved 18 December 2020. ^ "Release v18.8.0". 18 July 2022. Retrieved 18 July 2022. ^ https://forge.extranet.logilab.fr/cubicweb/cubicweb/-/releases/3.30.0. ^ "Release 5.1.2". 8 October 2024. Retrieved 21 October 2024. ^ "Release 0.115.2". 12 October 2024. Retrieved 21 October 2024. ^ "Release 3.0.3". 7 April 2024. Retrieved 23 April 2024. ^ "Python 2.7 release notes". Retrieved 18 December 2020. ^ "Release 5.0". 29 January 2024. Retrieved 20 February 2024. ^ https://github.com/jam-py/jam-py/releases/tag/5.4.136. ^ "Release 0.8.1a". 9 May 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2018. ^ "Release 1.0.2". 22 July 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2018. ^ "Release 2.0.2". 25 August 2023. Retrieved 19 September 2023. ^ "Release 4.8.0.b04". 25 September 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020. ^ "Release 6.4.1". 6 June 2024. Retrieved 27 June 2024. ^ "Release 2.4.3". 1 March 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2020. ^ "web2py Web Framework". ^ "Change log". 9 September 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2022. ^ "Padrino 0.14.4 release". Padrino. Retrieved 5 September 2019. ^ https://github.com/rails/rails/releases/tag/v7.2.2. ^ https://github.com/sinatra/sinatra/tags. ^ "The Opa Blog: Some great news on Opa". Blog.opalang.org. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "OpenACS Home". openacs.org. Retrieved 2022-04-23. ^ "Releases · SeasideSt/Seaside · GitHub". GitHub. 7 February 2021. Retrieved 19 July 2021. ^ "Grails Plugin: Spring Security Core Plugin". Grails.org. 2012-04-06. Archived from the original on 2013-08-23. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "Grails Plugin: Apache Shiro Integration for Grails". Grails.org. 2012-04-11. Archived from the original on 2013-08-23. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "Installation - 4.x". book.cakephp.org. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Server Requirements — CodeIgniter 4 documentation". codeigniter.com. Retrieved 2020-06-10. ^ "Server Requirements — CodeIgniter 3.1.10 documentation". codeigniter.com. Archived from the original on 2019-07-11. Retrieved 2017-06-23. ^ "Language helper included, must activate & set desired language by parsing HTTP headers". Codeigniter.com. Archived from the original on 2012-11-08. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "Change Log : CodeIgniter User Guide". EllisLab, Inc. Archived from the original on 15 May 2015. Retrieved 19 March 2012. ^ "Getting Started - Fat-Free Framework for PHP". fatfreeframework.com. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Requirements - FuelPHP Documentation". fuelphp.com. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Replacing nano.js in Gyroscope". antradar.com. 2014-05-20. Retrieved 2015-08-20. ^ "Kajona 6.2 shifts the focus to PHP 7". www.kajona.de. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Zend/Laminas Drops PHP support prior to 7.3". GitHub. Retrieved 2021-01-06. ^ "Laravel - The PHP Framework For Web Artisans". laravel.com. Retrieved 2022-04-23. ^ "Phalcon v5.8 supports only PHP 8.0 and above". ^ "PRADO PHP Framework". www.pradoframework.net. Retrieved 2022-04-23. ^ a b c d "PRADO QuickStart Tutorial". Pradosoft.com. Archived from the original on 2013-09-28. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "Server Requirements". docs.silverstripe.org. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Smart.Framework: a practical, modern and high performance PHP / JavaScript Framework for Web featuring Middlewares + MVC". GitHub. 2022-01-07. Retrieved 2022-04-23. ^ "Installing & Setting up the Symfony Framework (Symfony Docs)". symfony.com. Retrieved 2022-09-25. ^ "Download TYPO3 - get.typo3.org". get.typo3.org. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Getting Started: Installing Yii". Yii Framework. Retrieved 2020-12-02. ^ "Initial Prototyping: Scaffolding | Building a Blog System Using Yii | Yii PHP Framework". Yiiframework.com. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "invalid function (default/images)". Web2py.com. Retrieved 2019-03-21. ^ "URLRequest - Adobe ActionScript® 3 (AS3 ) API Reference". Livedocs.adobe.com. 2013-07-01. Archived from the original on 2009-02-12. Retrieved 2013-08-18. ^ "ScalaTest". ScalaTest. Archived from the original on 2013-11-05. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
2024-11-08T02:06:56
en
train
52,857
morpheus
2007-09-10T17:37:49
Get all your friends & web 2.0 services in one place
null
http://www.intuuch.com
6
2
[ 52885, 52865 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,861
nickb
2007-09-10T17:43:51
Fun with :target demo - complete interface done in CSS (no JS!)
null
http://virtuelvis.com/gallery/css3/target/interface.html
8
1
[ 52863 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,862
cglynch
2007-09-10T17:43:59
Seven Wonders of the IT World
The fastest supercomputer. The most intriguing data center. The constantly changing core at the heart of Linux. CIO.com looks at the most impressive and most unusual marvels of the IT world.
http://www.cio.com/article/135700
1
1
[ 52900 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,868
danw
2007-09-10T18:01:40
Mobile Usability Tips #1 - Registration and Login
http://wapreview.com/blog/?p=392
4
1
[ 53003 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,876
markpeterdavis
2007-09-10T18:25:07
Your First VC Meeting: Give Straight Talk
VCs are going to ask you tough questions in the meeting. The answers to some of the questions may not present aspects of your business in the best light. As a result, lots of entrepreneurs try to dodge these quesitons. That's a bad idea.
http://getventure.typepad.com/markpeterdavis/2007/09/give-straight-t.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,881
brett
2007-09-10T18:42:35
TechShop: Geek Heaven
http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2007/09/techshop-geek-h.html
14
4
[ 52929, 52943 ]
null
null
http_404
404 Not Found
null
null
The requested URL was not found on this server. Apache Server at blog.guykawasaki.com Port 80
2024-11-08T14:13:50
null
train
52,883
matbalez
2007-09-10T18:48:28
GPhone: Centerpiece of a New Strategy?
http://www.web1979.com/2007/09/08/gphone-centerpiece-of-a-new-strategy/
7
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,892
lackbeard
2007-09-10T19:04:00
The Trouble With Patents
http://www.sirlin.net/archive/the-trouble-with-patents/
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,898
ph0rque
2007-09-10T19:11:23
millionth iPhone sold
http://www.apple.com/hotnews/
5
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,914
brett
2007-09-10T19:35:46
Bay Area startups seeing "increase in the value of their shares" in recent VC deals
null
http://venturebeat.com/2007/09/10/rosy-conditions-for-raising-vc/
3
1
[ 53071 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,916
SwellJoe
2007-09-10T19:51:27
Virtualmin GPL EC2 image
A quick way to get a sane virtual hosting system with mail, web, DNS, and the LAMP stack running on EC2, plus the Virtualmin GPL Open Source control panel to manage it all.
http://www.webmin.com/ec2.html
17
10
[ 53021, 53235, 52923, 53183 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,917
szczupak
2007-09-10T19:55:12
60+ Web 2.0 Audio Applications you really need to know
null
http://www.businesshackers.com/2007/09/09/60-web-20-audio-applications-you-really-need-to-know/
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,921
dawie
2007-09-10T20:06:44
Been lightboxed lately?
null
http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/592-been-lightboxed-lately
8
2
[ 52931, 53208 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,926
davidw
2007-09-10T20:23:58
What language will mobile phone apps be written in, in the near future?
Beyond simply asking the question, I also created an Inkling Market for it. What do you guys think?
http://journal.dedasys.com/articles/2007/09/10/what-language-will-mobile-phone-apps-be-written-in-in-the-near-future
3
2
[ 52961 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,936
iamyoohoo
2007-09-10T20:44:56
Does anyone in Los Angeles have a startup mentality? Ahhhhh....
I'm having a hard time connecting with fellow hackers/entrepreneurs or wannabe entrepreneurs in Los Angeles. The mentality of most people is to do a day job if they are programmers. No one in tech has a startup mentality - does everyone have that problem where you are? Looks like a move to the valley seems imminent.....
7
23
[ 52955, 52948, 53042, 53081, 53052, 53182, 53059, 52973 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
52,937
abunz
2007-09-10T20:46:55
How Do You Find a Co-Founder/Partner?
I have an awesome idea, but no co-founder/partner!?<p>I could crank out the application myself in 4 &#38; 1/2 - 5 &#38; 1/2 months, but that's too long for the 3 month period.<p>Also, having a co-founder (at least I feel)really helps in getting a YC spot.<p>So, how would any of you guys go about finding someone that would share your vision as a coder and would be trustworthy enough not to steal your idea!?<p>--<p>Auston
3
6
[ 52952, 52946, 52999, 52940 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
52,941
null
2007-09-10T20:49:32
null
null
null
null
null
null
[ "true" ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,942
amichail
2007-09-10T20:50:00
Is implementation important to a startup?
http://erikengbrecht.blogspot.com/2007/09/is-implementation-important-to-startup.html
4
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,954
bootload
2007-09-10T21:18:44
Should every app be a platform?
http://www.scripting.com/stories/2007/09/10/shouldEveryAppBeAPlatform.html
3
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,963
nickb
2007-09-10T21:35:44
Wanted: Gullible Lawyers
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=2497
14
6
[ 52971, 52977, 53331, 53067 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,980
nostrademons
2007-09-10T22:20:37
"NBA Syndrome" Helps Fuel Spiralling Inequality
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/62118/
6
14
[ 53024, 52982, 53050, 52994 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,983
nickb
2007-09-10T22:23:16
WebCmd: Command line done in AJAX
null
http://a-i-studio.com/cmd/cmd.html
2
2
[ 53113, 53058 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,984
nickb
2007-09-10T22:23:35
Enough With The Rainbow Tables: What You Need To Know About Secure Password Schemes
null
http://www.matasano.com/log/958/enough-with-the-rainbow-tables-what-you-need-to-know-about-secure-password-schemes/
7
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
52,985
nickb
2007-09-10T22:23:48
Git cheat sheet
null
http://zrusin.blogspot.com/2007/09/git-cheat-sheet.html
3
0
null
null
null
no_error
Git cheat sheet
null
null
Due to the fact that I've been moving I forgot to point out that about three weeks ago I created a small Git cheet sheet. Quoting my email to the Git mailing list: I took a short break from being insanely handsome (which takes a lot of my time - gorgeous doesn't just happen) and based on similar work for Mercurial created a little SVG cheat sheet for Git. I'm not sure if it's going to be useful for anyone else (the target audience was composed of engineers who agreed to move to and work from Norway so you know right of the bat that historically they already made some bad decisions), but the times when I do art are so rare that I feel the need to share. The thing that I took from the Mercurial sheet, besides the idea, is the flow-chart (people dig icecream and flow-charts, the first one is really hard to get into a SVG rendering so I went with the second) so the license is the same as of the Mercurial sheet which was Creative Commons. There's likely a few errors in it and if you have any suggestions or if you sport latex pants and a fancy green hairdo that goes with those pants (which equals the fact that you're an artist) and would like to pimp the sheet out, it would be my pleasure to help you. The SVG is at: http://byte.kde.org/~zrusin/git/git-cheat-sheet.svg Sample png's are here: http://byte.kde.org/~zrusin/git/git-cheat-sheet-medium.png http://byte.kde.org/~zrusin/git/git-cheat-sheet-large.png I also got up to speed on all the latest announcements. I thought that the Novell's Spotlight collaboration announcement was disappointing. I'm referring to the "Microsoft will provide Novell the specifications for Silverlight". Richard Leakey once said "We are human because our ancestors learned to share their food and their skills in an honored network of obligation". I love that quote because it so beautifuly describes what we, so heavly, rely on in the Open Source community. For a company to take from the great ocean of free knowledge, led by an open standard of SVG and end up with a closed specification is just disgusting. Seeing an Open Source company strike a deal to cooperate on that closed technology is just sad to me. I understand why they did it but understanding something doesn't make it morally right. I really hope, pointlessly as it might be, that the work on the Silverlight specification and the specification itself will be open. You obviously thought that SVG isn't good enough for your purposes and you built on top the experiences and ideas taken from SVG. Let us improve SVG based on your experiences and ideas. Once we've done that, you'll be able to repeat that process again. That's the way it works and that's the way our society has always worked. Despite what you might think, you don't own ideas, they belong to us all.
2024-11-08T03:37:51
en
train
52,986
nickb
2007-09-10T22:24:25
Hack: How to give your low-end Canon digital camera RAW support (and a ton of other features!)
http://www.linux.com/feature/118946
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,000
joshwa
2007-09-10T22:51:00
Adblock Plus: what would Jesus do?
null
http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2007/09/adblock_plus_wh.php
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,008
jpalacio486
2007-09-10T23:09:34
Does not being a hacker make you less desirable in YC's eyes?
If you're not a hacker and dont have any idea about programming, does that make you less desirable in YC's eyes?
1
4
[ 53286, 53016 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,009
nickb
2007-09-10T23:10:24
Mini-Maxing Mastermind
null
http://hackerblinks.blogspot.com/2007/09/mini-maxing-mastermind.html
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,018
alex_c
2007-09-10T23:35:25
What RSS reader do you use?
I've been using Live Bookmarks in Firefox, but it gets unwieldy past a number of feeds. Besides, it can be distracting to have it at the top of my browser window.<p>What do you guys use?
12
40
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null
null
invalid_url
null
null
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null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,019
gduffy
2007-09-10T23:37:14
News.ycers in San Francisco! Want to try out Xobni?
Over the next few days, we are looking for Outlook users who are interested in trying out Xobni. Our software will bring you email happiness. An NDA is required, we'll pay for your cab ($30 cash), and we'll give you a beer during install.<p>Please bring a machine with Outlook! We have monitors if you need them for a desktop.<p>Our office is at 211 Sutter St; San Francisco. Please e-mail [email protected] if you'd like to come!
25
25
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null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,027
transburgh
2007-09-10T23:54:20
AOL, Yahoo To Launch New Products At TechCrunch40
null
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/09/10/aol-yahoo-to-launch-new-products-at-techcrunch40/
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,032
charzom
2007-09-11T00:03:08
Logix: Adding macros to Python
http://livelogix.net/logix/index.html
11
30
[ 53056, 53129, 53255 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,039
breck
2007-09-11T00:08:54
Facebook is Down
Facebook is down(well at least duke.facebook.com--confirmed by 6 of my friends)...This is the second time in one month. Anyone else having problems with it? <p>I feel bad for all those companies built on the FB Platform that are earning $0 right now from their ads.
1
2
[ 53040, 53055 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,049
benhoyt
2007-09-11T00:26:50
How do you implement password recovery securely?
Emails are sent clear-text, so how do you implement a password recovery feature that uses email, without resorting to those what-is-your-grandmother's-middle-name security questions?<p>Here's a good way, but it still sends a password via email, so is not good for money-handling sites, and is vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks: <a href="http://blog.moertel.com/articles/2007/02/09/dont-let-password-recovery-keep-you-from-protecting-your-users" rel="nofollow">http://blog.moertel.com/articles/2007/02/09/dont-let-passwor...</a>
null
2
1
[ 53478 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,060
amichail
2007-09-11T00:41:22
Useful for web 2.0: Given pairwise comparisons with some probability of error, how do you sort?
http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.1051
1
1
[ 53063 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,066
karzeem
2007-09-11T00:51:41
Short story from Panic about spending forever to perfect three pixels
null
http://www.cabel.name/2007/09/coda-toolbar-and-three-pixel-conundrum.html
22
9
[ 53078, 53232 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,070
drm237
2007-09-11T00:56:00
This Startup Life: Wellsphere's slam-dunk
Some startups have all the fun. Check out this pic from entrepreneur Ron Gutman's health startup Wellsphere.
http://valleywag.com/tech/this-startup-life/wellspheres-slam+dunk-298378.php
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,087
yamada
2007-09-11T01:24:01
Does the phatic nature of Web 2.0 increase group unity @ the expense of personal productivity?
1
-1
[ 53091 ]
null
true
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,090
transburgh
2007-09-11T01:30:13
Wikipedia, a fact checker's worst nightmare
http://valleywag.com/tech/clips/wikipedia-a-fact-checkers-worst-nightmare-298377.php
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,101
bootload
2007-09-11T02:03:46
Bruce Stirling: Why tech design seems hostile (vid 5.30 min)
http://www.technologyreview.com/player/video/video_compact_leader.aspx?bcpid=79489195&bclid=60818931&bctid=881376740
7
4
[ 53197, 53262 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,112
roysac
2007-09-11T02:18:29
DefCon 15 Session Videos Available Online (Free)
null
http://www.roysac.com/blog/2007/09/all-defcon-15-sessions-and-panels.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,114
roysac
2007-09-11T02:20:31
DefCon 15 Session Videos - Batch II
Contains links to the remaining session videos of track 1.
http://www.roysac.com/blog/2007/09/defcon-session-videos-batch-ii.html
2
0
[ 53123 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,115
nickb
2007-09-11T02:27:08
Password-less login that ONLY requires an email address [pdf]
http://isrl.cs.byu.edu/pubs/pp1001.pdf
8
4
[ 53217, 53244, 53189 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,126
transburgh
2007-09-11T02:43:11
Boston VC who passed on Facebook trashes the Valley
null
http://valleywag.com/tech/east-vs%27-west/boston-vc-who-passed-on-facebook-trashes-the-valley-298346.php
3
1
[ 53161, 53135 ]
null
null
fetch failed
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T00:14:19
null
train
53,137
rms
2007-09-11T03:03:59
Atomic orbital pictures, including the elusive f, g, h, i, j, k, and l orbitals
http://www.orbitals.com/orb/orbtable.htm
14
6
[ 53160, 53401, 53238 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,151
bootload
2007-09-11T03:38:41
What Google Won't Find
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/aaronson/21810/
9
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,154
nreece
2007-09-11T03:40:44
The Utimate Linux File Structure Chart
http://phoja.com/show/559/Is-this-the-ultimate-Linux-file-structure-chart-or-what.html
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,155
ivankirigin
2007-09-11T03:43:35
The Braindead Megaphone: a send-up of today's media. Probaby also relevant to social news sites.
http://www.kottke.org/07/09/the-braindead-megaphone
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,156
seiji
2007-09-11T03:44:15
Startupmatcher: automated co-founder finding
http://startupmatcher.com/
20
7
[ 53357, 53528, 53539, 53794 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,158
dawie
2007-09-11T03:46:30
Feed reading: filtering and delegation
null
http://marshallk.com/feed-reading-filtering-and-delegation
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,167
kkim
2007-09-11T03:58:41
Salt water as fuel?
null
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07252/815920-85.stm
4
4
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null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,170
moses1400
2007-09-11T04:08:38
Meebo adds file sharing - Is it looking to pounce on Pownce?
http://www.centernetworks.com/meebo-adds-file-sharing
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,175
rainsill
2007-09-11T04:56:21
Brittle Machines
Why are computers so easy to crash? If a CPU or hard drive dies, the whole system goes down. What is being done to change this?
http://fishtrain.com/2007/09/10/brittle-machines/
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,177
Readmore
2007-09-11T05:04:04
Wired's take on the 700 Mhz Spectrum Auction
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/news/2007/09/auction_faq
4
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,179
henning
2007-09-11T05:10:00
My favorite Scott Aaronson poem: "H(p) = -plogp - (1-p)log(1-p)"
I wish I had found this in high school.
http://www.scottaaronson.com/writings/plogp.html
2
1
[ 53278 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,180
Alex3917
2007-09-11T05:12:30
Kuro5hin Adopts Pay-For-Comment Model
"I have created here on K5 what might be the internet's first 'Walled Ghetto.' An exclusive preserve of dysfunctional social interaction and semi-undesirable content." -- Rusty Foster
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2007/9/10/13920/3664
3
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,195
altay
2007-09-11T05:58:27
Mark Cuban has officially jumped the shark.
http://www.blogmaverick.com/2007/09/07/dancing-with-the-stars-and-the-meaning-of-life/
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,199
roysac
2007-09-11T06:35:49
DefCon 15 Session Videos - Batch III - Uno Mas
36 more videos are up to complete track 2 and 3. Last 25 videos are also coming soon during the next few days.
http://www.roysac.com/blog/2007/09/defcon-15-session-videos-batch-iii-uno.html
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,201
eusman
2007-09-11T06:41:16
What is the chance YC's investor day could be opened to the YC community?
With all these people in here exchanging their throughts, sometimes being a little harsh, sometimes with good advice, I begin to get the feeling that the YC News community is transforming into a small extension of the Y Combinator ecosystem, that is actually helping people. <p>Would there be any chance that startups of people comprising this community that fail to get selected for the whole seed funding process, to go through a new application process and if they meet YC's expectations by that time, to have the chance to be among a number of selections to present during the next Y Combinator investor day? <p>Maybe with some percentage trade-off if invenstor is found and some other rules like, that you submitted an application to YC?
2
7
[ 53216, 53722 ]
null
null
invalid_url
null
null
null
null
2024-11-08T16:37:59
null
train
53,224
azgolfer
2007-09-11T09:02:29
208 MPH Model Plane on a String
New world record, check out the video !
http://www.flyrc.org.uk/record/control_line.htm
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,226
nickb
2007-09-11T09:40:56
Smooth scrolling in emacs
null
http://emacs.wordpress.com/2007/09/10/smooth-scrolling/
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,227
nickb
2007-09-11T09:41:05
Honeypot Captcha
null
http://haacked.com/archive/2007/09/11/honeypot-captcha.aspx
4
1
[ 53323 ]
null
null
missing_parsing
Honeypot Captcha
2007-09-11T00:00:00+00:00
Phil Haack
I was thinking about alternative ways to block comment spam the other day and it occurred to me that there’s potentially a simpler solution than the Invisible Captcha approach I wrote about. The Invisible Captcha control plays upon the fact that most comment spam bots don’t evaluate javascript. However there’s another particular behavioral trait that bots have that can be exploited due to the bots inability to support another browser facility. You see, comment spam bots love form fields. When they encounter a form field, they go into a berserker frenzy (+2 to strength, +2 hp per level, etc…) trying to fill out each and every field. It’s like watching someone toss meat to piranhas. At the same time, spam bots tend to ignore CSS. For example, if you use CSS to hide a form field (especially via CSS in a separate file), they have a really hard time knowing that the field is not supposed to be visible. To exploit this, you can create a honeypot form field that should be left blankand then use CSS to hide it from human users, but not bots. When the form is submitted, you check to make sure the value of that form field is blank. For example, I’ll use the form field named body as the honeypot. Assume that the actual body is in another form field named the-real-body or something like that: <div id="honeypotsome-div"> If you see this, leave this form field blank and invest in CSS support. <input type="text" name="body" value="" /> </div> Now in your code, you can just check to make sure that the honeypot field is blank… if(!String.IsNullOrEmpty(Request.Form["body"])) IgnoreComment(); I think the best thing to do in this case is to act like you’ve accepted the comment, but really just ignore it. I did a Google search and discovered I’m not the first to come up with this idea. It turns out that Ned Batchelder wrote about honeypots as a comment spam fighting vehicle a while ago. Fortunately I found that post after I wrote the following code. For you ASP.NET junkies, I wrote a Validator control that encapsulates this honeypot behavior. Just add it to your page like this… <sbk:HoneypotCaptcha ID="body" ErrorMessage="Doh! You are a bot!" runat="server" /> This control renders a text box and when you call Page.Validate, validation fails if the textbox is not empty. This control has no display by default by setting the style attribute to display:none. You can override this behavior by setting the UseInlineStyleToHide property to false, which makes you responsible for hiding the control in some other way (for example, by using CSS defined elsewhere). This also provides a handy way to test the validator. To get your hands on this validator code and see a demo, download the latest Subkismet source from CodePlex. You’ll have to get the code from source control because this is not yet part of any release.
2024-11-08T17:26:29
null
train
53,228
nickb
2007-09-11T09:42:36
Norvig, Google's director of research, talks AI
http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9774501-7.html
8
4
[ 53448, 53314 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,229
nickb
2007-09-11T09:43:38
A Scheme Story
null
http://www.trollope.org/scheme.html
2
0
null
null
null
http_404
Page not found – Anthony Trollope & His Contemporaries
null
null
Oops! That page can’t be found. It looks like nothing was found at this location. Maybe try a search?
2024-11-08T01:24:47
null
train
53,230
nickb
2007-09-11T09:44:12
John Carmack not as interested in Linux (and OpenGL?)
null
http://www.beyond3d.com/content/news/462
4
2
[ 53431, 53279 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,231
cbetta
2007-09-11T09:45:14
Why Apple Does Support In-store (While Others Don't)
Reinier and I were at the Apple Store Regent Street this afternoon, admiring the new iPod line (short review to come soon). Besides finding some new details about the iPods that aren't visible in the adds, we also noticed something about Apple's personal approach to offering support: the Genius Bar.
http://fourstarters.com/2007/09/10/why-apple-does-support-in-store-while-others-dont/
7
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,233
cbetta
2007-09-11T09:47:24
dConstruct07 - My final bits of deconstructivism
The afternoon sessions of dConstruct also contained a lot of interesting stuff which I won't cover in complete detail, but I'll touch on some stuff.
http://fourstarters.com/2007/09/11/my-final-bits-of-deconstructivism/
2
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,237
nickb
2007-09-11T11:05:55
East Vs. West: Boston VC who passed on Facebook trashes the Valley
http://valleywag.com/tech/east-vs'-west/boston-vc-who-passed-on-facebook-trashes-the-valley-298346.php
1
-1
null
null
true
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,250
epi0Bauqu
2007-09-11T11:48:04
Radio frequencies help burn salt water
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070910/ap_on_sc/burning_seawater
6
2
[ 53305, 53388 ]
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,251
ahsonwardak
2007-09-11T11:51:31
Thinking Out of the Box
http://myphdblogged.blogspot.com/2007/09/thinking-out-of-box.html
1
0
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
train
53,252
ahsonwardak
2007-09-11T11:54:27
7 Wonders of the IT World
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/09/10/1849217&from=rss
1
0
null
null
null
no_error
Seven Wonders of the IT World - Slashdot
null
null
From the linked list:Secrecy level: High. Two reporters from the local newspaper are the only media who've been inside the compound and written about it (See "Inside the World of Google"): Google treats any and all details as though they belong to the National Security Agency.Well.... I know they were trying to be funny, but the authors could be more correct that they might have known given the history of Google (startup partially funded by CIA $$s) and how tight they are with NGIA [nga.mil] (Google Earth [google.com] projects), CIA [cia.gov] etc..., it would not surprise me to see Google working intimately with NSA [nsa.gov]. After all, Google has been competing with NSA for PhD mathematicians for some time now (and winning) and it seems like a natural fit. Of course such a "hypothetical" collaboration would raise all sorts of ethical questions, but assuming one could appropriately compartmentalize those concerns, it could certainly be mutually beneficial.Personally, I'd like to think that this little project [utah.edu] (when complete) will certainly contribute to the creation of one or more of the Seven Wonders of the IT world. After all, we all have little wetware parallel supercomputers sitting in the backs of our eyes that can process massive amounts of data, pre-encode it, filter it and more all while dealing with a certain level of data corruption, particularly in disease. Google has in the past had jobs available that required national security clearance. Google has in the past had jobs available that required national security clearance.Sure, but a security clearance can apply to lots of types of data and a diverse group of companies and government agencies. Everything from a basic collateral "secret" clearance (relatively easy to obtain) to "top secret" and compartmentalized programs are being worked on and participated in by people from not just government, but also a number of private companies. No big deal and I would certainly expect Google to have a significant number of folks possessing those clearances. "After all, Google has been competing with NSA for PhD mathematicians for some time now (and winning) and it seems like a natural fit." If only the NSA would offer stock options and a splashy IPO, I'll bet they could get some of those candidates back. The entire US government should IPO in chunks. Really, shareholding is a much more accurate form of representation that what we have now, and would allow corporations to actually and clearly own and control the state instead of doing so tacitly.I mean, it just makes sense. On google being top secret about some things; Aren't they required to disclose everything, and I mean EVERYTHING down to how much they spent on every light bulb in the bathroom on the 3rd floor as a part of the SEC filings?Isn't this exactly the reason that a lot of companies are taking themselves private again lately, disclosing everything is a HUGE hassle. "Google (startup partially funded by CIA $$s)" is extremely different from "has continued to fund Google's spin offs and start ups like Google Earth".You can't claim Google was funded by the CIA in its start up days without some kind of source. Seriously. You're just mongering. If you can't back up sensational claims like "Google was funded by the CIA", then don't make them. You're cheapening Slashdot. Just for a hoot, I looked around, and found this link [prisonplanet.com] out there. I have NO idea if this guy's on the level and/or sane, but he's fairly convinced... Citing prison planet is like citing info wars... It's barely one step above citing the x-files. So, in other words you're still not able to back up anything you said. I don't know much about the history of Google, but Keyhole was a company independent of Google for quite years. I worked for a company that subscribed to its service. Google bought Keyhole years later. Your original post is completely worthless, with a bunch of home page links pretending to be citations. Lemme take a shot at your style of online journalism: Google is a company owned by the Dairy Queen [dairyqueen.com] corporation with the stated goal of infiltrating homes worldwide Radio Shack microphones and transmitters. They are carrying out this nefarious deed at the behest of the Queen of England [royal.gov.uk], and the president of Mexico [www.gob.mx]. There. I'm just as factual as you are. And my references are just as good. People like you are the reason smart people don't trust the internet. take it easy on calling people out who likely *do* know a fair bit more about certain subject matter than you do and let them inform the community. I'm still waiting for you to inform the community. All you've done so far is make baseless accusations with no proof. That's not information, that's rumor. If the proof is so easy to find, why won't you show it to us? Your assertions imply that posting the proof would have taken less time and effort than posting your previous reply. Also, don't assume that having an ID number of 871695 makes me a Slashdot rookie. I've been here almost since the beginning, but under a different ID that I abandoned years ago. Further, the claim (again unsubstantiated) that you have a doctorate doesn't impress me or anyone else. Oh, for the love of.... Use Google to find out. A quick search reveals information from In-Q-Tel's own site [in-q-tel.com] and from Google's own site [google.com] of course these investments are all part of In-Q-Tel's mission [in-q-tel.com] and there is nothing secret about it. They are quite open about their investments and why they make those investments, so what is the big deal? Also, note that there are other companies initially invested in by In-Q-Tel that Google has acquired [in-q-tel.com].Further, the claim (again unsubstantiated) that you have a doctorateOh, come on now.... using Google is not all that hard, nor is clicking the links that I so thoughtfully already have provided for you. But, so you don't have to click twice, here it is [utah.edu]. Semi-off-topic, but Webcam #1 at the north pole reminded me: on Friday the Astronomy Picture of the Day posted a multiple-exposure image of last month's lunar eclipse [nasa.gov] as seen from the south pole. Not an IT-specific wonder, but still seriously impressive, when you think about it, that we've actually got people near the south pole who are in a position to take photos like this.And hey, for once I can use the term "polar opposite" and know that it's literally true! Operating temperature: From a chilly minus 40 degrees F to a balmy 120 degrees F. That was the most impressive thing to me. I had no idea that it gets up to 120 degrees Fahrenheit at the north pole. And I thought our string of 100+ degree F days this summer was bad! that is the operating temperature for the camera, not the actual temperature at the north pole...at least i hope....maybe i need to start riding my bike to work! Maybe it's the temperature achieved in the inside of the camera enclosure since it receives direct sunlight for months on end. Maybe it's 30 degrees outside, and 120 inside after baking for that long. That's a fantastic picture, thanks. I'm fairly sure Antarctica is populated all year round. It is far easier to get to than the ISS, and I'm sure most scientists would feel a similar thrill staying at either one. So I checked, and according to the Australian Antarctic Division [aad.gov.au]:No more than a few thousand in the height of summer, going down to hundreds over winter. The most populous antarctic centre is McMurdo Base on Ross Island, south of New Zealand, operated by the United States. Australia's four stations have winter-time populations totalling around 80 in winter, rising to perhaps 200 in summer. In addition, marine scientists spend a lot of time on research boats in the Southern Ocean during the summer months.So there you have it. Thanks again for the pic, and don't fret, APOD is never off-topic! Steve "Monkeyboy" Ballmer and his Flying Chair Routine. Steve "Monkeyboy" Ballmer and his Flying Chair Routine.The article said WONDERS, not HORRORS. I dont know about other slashdotters but I was rather unimpressed with the 7 wonders of the IT world. Not much on there in the way of impressive other than my boy blue. What about impressive symbolic marvels like The Teapot [computerhistory.org] which were the icons of modern Graphics shaping science and technology. Or code that drives technology like C++ or Perl, or dare I even say it, BASIC. These current wonders are very temporary whereas the original wonders are a bit more timeless, more representative of human innovation than just something that looks cool. The lamest one was "small computer that runs Vista". The lamest one was "small computer that runs Vista". I agree as well, although a better wonder, and slightly more in touch with reality, would have been "any computer that runs Vista well" I'd imagine there are computers inside Microsoft running Windows Vista Internal Edition well. Windows Vista IE is like normal Vista, with one small change [gpf-comics.com]. Disappointed, too.But only because they missed something I think should apply - the Storm Trojan network. I mean, come on! Arguably the world's most powerful centrally-controlled computing resource, and it's all comprised of horked computers? How is that not a wonder?You should hate its existence. But it's still quite amazing. My feeling on the matter is that there should be some permanence to the achievement. The Storm Trojan network is merely the latest stage and it's being used (AFAIK) for spam and maybe cracking encryption. Will it be around in ten years or a century? Will it mark an acheivement that holds up well even when more capable worm network systems come around? I don't think so. In comparison, I think the SETI@HOME project has some potential for being a "wonder". Inspiring purpose, pervasive reach, and was an early I agree with you. Storm Trojan hasn't yet shown its true power and when it does, lets see how long it lasts... SETI@HOME is a grear project, but does not have the huge computing power of the EGEE but is quite similar... So the fact that they included *one* Grid project is a good start! :) -- Honestly, I had that adrenaline rush when I thought "but would they count the Grid as a wonder?!" and was quite relieved to see it on the list -- Not that the list matters, I suppose... (It also probably means, I sh I dont know about other slashdotters but I was rather unimpressed with the 7 wonders of the IT worldI agree. My name isn't on the list ANYWHERE!!! Geez, come on, people! Voyager One won't continue functioning for much longer, but as a piece of space junk it'll outlast the Pyramids. That puts it solidly in Wonder of the World material. It might outlast Earth.Repeat after me:Matter cannot be created nor destroyed.Matter cannot be created nor destroyed.Matter cannot be created nor destroyed.Your "We're destroying the earth!" is not merely run-of-the-mill religious global destruction fantasy. It's also inherently un-scientific and thus qualifies as FUD. Ditch that bullshit! Matter cannot be created nor destroyed. Actually it can. An electron and positron can collide to form gamma rays. There you go from having matter (the mass of the positron is the samee as the electron) to having no mass. Similarly, a sufficiently powerful gamma can spontaneously spin off particle anti-particle pairs, losing energy in the process.So more accurately, mass-energy cannot be created or destroyed.Then as the other replier notes, the Earth is not mass/energy, it is a lable for an aggregatio Considering that both Voyagers each carry a mechanical device and a gold disk that bears lots of rich data about Earth and Humanity, I'd say that the best damned Backup/DR data storage effort we've made so far in the history of mankind. /P And, taking into account some of the concepts of RFC 1149 [wikipedia.org], we can reasonably assume that Voyager's data transfer to whoever/whatever/if anything receives it should be infinitely faster and higher-volume than anything we can even imagine. But the data on it are horribly outdated! our world has changed so much since Voyager was launched.Personally, If I was to launch a new spacecraft for this reason, I would put all versions of Microsoft Windows on it. Best security for Earth ever. No aliens will dare to come over here!!! I'd be interested to know how often, if at all, the "V-Ger" computer has been rebooted,... It's hard to imagine having to push the reset button from millions of miles away, but I suppose they've probably already figured it out,... Still, if the voyager probes were running windows, they wouldn't even have gotten out of LEO without crashing! ;-) Voyager One won't continue functioning for much longer, but as a piece of space junk it'll outlast the Pyramids. That puts it solidly in Wonder of the World material. A wonder it may be, but it is now so far away (and keeps getting further) that I truly doubt we can consider it part of our world anymore. At least the pyramids are still part of the planet we live on. I thought about that, but there's no reason the "world" of IT has to correspond to the physical boundaries of the real world. I was amazed the internet wasn't on the list. Maybe I misunderstood what the rules of the list? I would've liked to see TCP/IP up there. I seem to recall that she addressed one of the SIGGRAPH conventions, back around '01 or '02 I think it was. How many image processing and computer vision nerds' dreams were shattered that day? She was in her 60s! ;P WOW! A small really small computer runs Vista! This is groundbreaking! Seriously, though, the only "wonderous" things on there were the Voyager and the supercomputer. Most of the other stuff is not the most groundbreaking or superlative for its kind out there. I thought the idea of a "wonder" was something that we can only try and imagine how they managed to do it or how they came up with the idea. Seriously, though, the only "wonderous" things on there were the Voyager and the supercomputer. I agree although I wouldn't even class the supercomputer as that impressive. Its not like any number of large companies/organisations couldn't build something bigger/faster/better if they really wanted to (the NSA probably has). The Voyager computer is the only one that will still be impressive in 5 years. I would think wonders of the world would be something that would still be considered impressive to a later The Voyager computer is the only one that will still be impressive in 5 years. Just wait. In ~250 years when it comes back home [wikipedia.org] it will be even more impressive! The 7 Wonders of 7 Wonders ListsReally- is there any more tired and lame excuse to grab eyeballs out there? Please, lets end these. I agree...So I'm compiling a top ten list of reasons to stop making 7 Wonders of the world lists1. Wasted bandwidth2. They're only for pageview whores3. Most of the items are only 'wondrous' because people wonder why the hell its on the list.4. If anything really is that wondrous, humans will probably destroy it.5. Google will sell the #1 spot to someone else.6. I.T. is moving so fast that in a few months, most will be obsolete.thats as far as I got. I agree... So I'm compiling a top ten list of reasons to stop making 7 Wonders of the world lists 1. Wasted bandwidth2. They're only for pageview whores3. Most of the items are only 'wondrous' because people wonder why the hell its on the list.4. If anything really is that wondrous, humans will probably destroy it.5. Google will sell the #1 spot to someone else.6. I.T. is moving so fast that in a few months, most will be obsolete. thats as far as I got. Ok, I'll finish it for you: 7. It will suffer from the Slashdot effect.8. Most Slashdot posters won't read it anyway.9. ???10. Profit! 7. It will suffer from the Slashdot effect.8. Most Slashdot posters won't read it anyway.Now imagine if everyone actually RTFA for once... >1. North Pole webcam >Operating temperature: From a chilly minus 40 degrees F to a balmy 120 degrees F. How can it get to 120F in North Pole? Webcam's rated temperature, not the temperature at the North Pole. I'm also quite sad it get's "disposed" of every year by letting it sink to the bottom. That kind of sucks. That's when Chuck Norris tracks fugitives there. It can't be 120F in North Pole, it is outside US. If something it would be 49C. Last I checked, the book "Fahrenheit 451" doesn't change names when it's printed outside the united states. For the most part, the list is unimpressive. Voyager is hardly "IT," wonder that it is. The whole story reeks of that article from Copyblogger about which headlines get the most Diggs. Voyager is hardly "IT," wonder that it is. I was also not impressed and that was my initial reaction too...but then I thought. Is the impressive thing that we shot a tin can out of the solar system or that it can tell us what it is seeing out there? I think it is really the latter so it really is a information technology marvel in the most basic sense of the term. Well said from a very philosophical point of view. :) Voyager 1 launched in 1977, about a dozen years prior to the coining of the term "information technology".There is a deeper, underlying beef here. IT is about boring business data and came to dominate an industry that previously was the domain of science (often but obviously not always for military purposes). CIO is trying to make its readers feel good about themselves by co-opting non-business domains of computer use. I don't see why Voyager 1 doesn't count as IT. It is a piece of technology and it receives commands and returns information on command. Oxford English Dictionary: information technology (abbr.: IT)nounthe study or use of systems (esp. computers and telecommunications) for storing, retrieving, and sending information. Though I find it funny that the V1 picture was captioned as: "NASA's Voyager satellite computes at the edge of space as we know it". Voyager 1 is not a satellite, it's not in any specific orbit u Would Charles Babbage then be considered an "information technology practitioner"? Information Technology [tiscali.co.uk]Collective term for the various technologies involved in processing and transmitting information. They include computing, telecommunications, and microelectronics. The term became popular in the UK after the Government's Information Technology Year in 1972. After doing some Google searches, I'm pretty sure that the "Information Technology Year" was really 1982, not 1972. From the article I pretty much got the impression that it was meant to make CIO's think they actually understand IT by making it seem like some things they probably DO understand are the pinnacle of IT. It's basically meant to make CIO's feel good about reading the articles. Personally I found the north-pole thing interresting but lost interrest soon after that. The sheer lack of details and facts is appaling. They provide no good reasons for most of the "wonders" they picked. Is the Google datacenter really 1. Webcam #12. Voyager 13. Google's Datacenter4. EGEE-II5. Blue Gene/L6. OQO7. Linux kernel Some of those, especially Voyager, are quite impressive. I'm I the only one that thinks the OQO is really out of place? No; I for one thought CueCat belonged in that slot. I would have put "The Internet" on the list, personally. It gives you a research lab in all your cities too :-) Thanks, I was looking for this "noise reducer" post.This article has one THE worst noise overheads I have ever seen. Voyager 1: "Places it's dropped by: Juniper and Saturn" Hey, if the Voyager's the first one there, it can call it whatever it wants!(I noticed that too, though.) Why anyone pays money for anything from IBM, Microsoft. Oracle or MySQL AB. Biggest Paradigm Change in Enterprise Software: Linux kernel Don't get me wrong: I love Linus and I love Linux. But don't forget what RMS likes to remind us at every opportunity: Linux is part of the GNU system. And GNU predated Linux by a long shot. Stallman started the GNU project in 1983 and founded the Free Software Foundation in 1985. The Linux kernel appeared in 1991. Where did Torvalds get his compiler? Where did Torvalds get his editor? Where did Torvalds find people to work on his kernel? I understand that it can be pedantic to argue about big, abstract ideas like ``When did the paradigm shift really happen?'' Maybe the paradigm didn't ``shift'' until the Linux kernel came out. But Torvalds wasn't out to change paradigms. Stallman was. If we're going to hail the concept of free software, we should acknowledge the alphabet soup of RMS, the FSF, GNU, ETC. that gave it legs to stand on. Maybe the paradigm didn't ``shift'' until the Linux kernel came out. But Torvalds wasn't out to change paradigms. Stallman was.Community development was Torvalds' innovation, not Stallman's. Prior to Linux, the FSF was a GPL cathedral cranking out utilities to run on Sun OS. Ah, pissing contest. OK. I was involved in porting X10 to new hardware, and X11 when it came out. I do TeX development since 1981. I made gcc backend ports to new architectures back in 1983. I ran some of the largest ftp archives in the world (if you still remember the C++ collection on Walnot Creek CDs in the early 90s, that was from me.) Since these days, I have been actively involved in development of free and open source software. And let me tell, the GP is right. Linux triggered a revolution in the wa The straw that breaks the camel's back may just be one straw. It may not even be the heaviest or biggest straw. It may owe it's entire fame to all the straws that came before it. But it's still the straw that broke the camel's back. The first straw didn't, the straw just before the last straw didn't, just the one straw. The last straw. Thats the straw that gets remembered. How many people attempted to fly solo transatlantic before Charles? Can you name any, and if so, do you consider it an acheivement or a mat That isn't to belittle RMS or his works, but for all he put into it, it would have come to naught if Linus or someone else hadn't come along and given the final push.I guess I didn't make my point clear enough. Why was Linus even pushing at all? The FSF did more than write software. It fostered a community. It created a public license so folks wouldn't have to write their own. It established a list of goals: software that the GNU system sorely needed. Torvalds didn't come up with the paradigm of using open source software nor did he establish the basic rules by which open source projects would operate. The fact that his kernel was the last component to be written befo I don't understand why you choose to only go back far enough to acknowledge RMS' contributions. What about before RMS? [wikipedia.org] The truth is, no one could do it alone. Anyway, to me it seems there was first a "paradigm shift" to proprietary software, and now free and open software is making a comeback. But don't forget what RMS likes to remind us at every opportunity: Linux is part of the GNU system Just because he has convinced a few newbies of this does not make it true. The hurd is part of the GNU system - linux is something else even if it does have glibc to talk to. Well, as far as embedded software development is concerned, the rise of the Linux kernel was a huge blow to existing embedded OS kernels. How many people still remember pSOS, VRTX, VxWorks (which was largely based on GNU development tools but with a proprietary real-time kernel) and a few others that were popular till the late 90s ? Of course, when you need a tiny, real-time kernel, Linux doesn't cut it yet, although that is also about to change. But on the whole, you now have countless Linux-based embedd is that IT works at all considering that the stakeholders and implementers have little common ground or understanding or sympathy for the other.-I'm just sayin... TFA: "Pioneers knew The Dalles as the end of the Oregon trail." I was just in Seaside this weekend, and they had a big sign next to a statue of Lewis and Clark proclaiming that that was the end of the Oregon Trail... The oceanside makes more sense IMO. I woulda thought that the core DNS servers.... the ones that keep the internet going, would have made the list. Without them, everyone would have to resort to numbers (which a lot of us here can do, but not the general public). Ya figure they do massive amounts of work, replying to millions of requests per minute, keep the internet going [which is critical to most developed nations economies]... yet didn't receive any attention here :( I'm all for NASA with the Voyager probe... but in all reality, its a sa That's not that much load. Keep in mind that DNS is firstly distributed. So those servers receive only a minute portion of the total DNS load. And you can spread what they do get across a number of servers. The Google server farms are more impressive. They handle much higher loads, do significant data mining and processing, and cache some where around a billion or two webpages. Google makes money with their farm, which makes it far less impressive to me. It takes some serious money and engineering to keep the various root server clusters up 24/7, and it's done basically by a volunteer community.They also do have a pretty remarkable amount of load, given how rarely they "ought" to be used. http://h.root-servers.org/128.63.2.53_2.html [root-servers.org] The H server averaged 5 megabytes/sec of inbound traffic over the last month. Given how small DNS queries are, that's an awful lot of queries! O The guys over at Three Sixty Information Security [360is.com] have published the results of their analysis on 7 of the most popular security tools in common use [360is.com] by systems administrators. The articles examines the tools on their merits and attempts to pull together common threads running through each. Finally they put forward their answer to the question "What makes this software so uncommonly good?" NH NASA's Deep Space Network - the Voyager spacecraft still function because of this. The Granite Mountain Record Vault [longnow.org] at Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. Maintained by the Church of Latter Day Saints.Google's server farms. I believe they got that one correct.SETI@HOME - my "grid computing" exampleLinux OS/GNU tools. Got that one partially correct.the US's early warning system for detecting nuclear explosions, missile launches, etc. Yea, the DEW network was an amazing thing for the day... The first application of real time computing, and networked RADAR installations as well! SABRE was the next big commercial system, if you believe IBM. I could do no right here. At least, it's more accurate than just "Mormon". What is that doing in the mix with Google, Blue Gene, and Voyager. It's not even useful. It's too small to be used as a regular office PC, and too large to be a bring everywhere gadget. It should be replaced with like, Ethernet or something similar. What's OQO doing? Paying for bandwidth. I was also disappointed by the list. Mostly because of content, but also because it contained a link to the New 7 Wonders [new7wonders.com] website, which has simply got to be a joke. A list that some place put together to "represent global heritage throughout history" and the pyramids at Giza was simply a runner up?!?!? How lame do you have to be to put together a "seven wonders of the world" list where the pyramids don't warrant a place on the list, especially considering that they're the only thing still around from th They list The Dalles Data Center as one of the 7 wonders in the IT world, but they admit themselves that they have no idea what's inside of it? Those warehouses may be full of hay, for all we know. The design of it may be terrible and inefficient, even if it has servers. It's a pretty cheeky thing to claim on zero evidence. Which is only par for the course. That was one of the worst signal-to-noise ratios of any news site, besides, oh, the last time /. linked to a CIO World article. Seriously, can we in fact the story on /. was probably from a shill for them in the first place In fact, it absolutely was. Check the guy's email address on the linked submission; it goes to @cio.com; and the article was written by the same user. Please. I know it's was a fad and is now passe to complain about the editors on /., but can we have some more review of the articles that are posted than this? Not linking to the same domain as the submitter's email address would be start, especially if that's coupled with a They list The Dalles Data Center as one of the 7 wonders in the IT world, but they admit themselves that they have no idea what's inside of it? Well, to be fair, we're not really sure what's inside the great pyramid, either, . . . or what the Sphinx does? How can you possibly put together a list of the IT wonders of the world with out including the world wide web - especially when you put the article on a website! "Number of servers: Google's mum." The correct phrase is "keeping mum". "Google's mum" is what you would say when implying intimate knowledge of Mrs Google, or perhaps her tendency to wear sturdy footwear. The Seti@Home project. Registered in the Guiness Book of Records as the largest computation ever made. It was an amazing concept. Who would have thought to make a personal music player using a pocket sized playback device that you listened to through headphones? A truly revolutionary device. If it didn't, there'd be a lot less single slashdotters... >.>
2024-11-07T22:45:47
en
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ahsonwardak
2007-09-11T11:57:17
One Million iPhones Sold
http://technologyexpert.blogspot.com/2007/09/apple-one-million-iphones-sold.html
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ahsonwardak
2007-09-11T12:07:41
People Skills - The Character Traits of an Entrepreneur
In a previous post and many similar posts, the community has talked about the characteristics of an entrepreneur. What about people skills? Let's be honest - hackers aren't known for having great people skills either.<p>This also reminds me of a chapter in Founders at Work. One interview highlighted changing the culture of hackers to be more professional, but this interviewee gave up that idea.<p>Thoughts? Anecdotes? How do hackers and co-founders develop people skills?
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2024-11-08T16:37:59
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53,265
Ultrapreneur
2007-09-11T12:54:05
Don't quit your day job (a YC survey)
As stated most people selected to be funded by YC are in their mid 20's. so I thought I'd post a quick survey to find out a little more about who's all applying for YC funding.<p><pre><code> 1). Name 2). Age 3). Location 4). What's your day job It's that simple. </code></pre> William 24 (almost 25) Kitchener/Waterloo Ontario Canada Sr. PCB Designer
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[ 53321, 53294 ]
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invalid_url
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2024-11-08T16:37:59
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nickb
2007-09-11T12:57:28
Using Vista even the mouse is dangerous (pic)
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http://images.wikia.com/uncyclopedia/images/9/96/Vistaohlord.png
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[ 53367, 53351, 53395 ]
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2024-11-08T14:03:32
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nickb
2007-09-11T13:01:48
Linus Torvalds: "Linux Is Much Bigger Than Me!"
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http://www.efytimes.com/archive/144/news.htm
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nickb
2007-09-11T13:10:02
I Didn't Know You Could Do That! - Worse Than Failure
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http://worsethanfailure.com/Articles/I-DidnaEURXt-Know-You-Could-Do-That!.aspx
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transburgh
2007-09-11T13:33:34
3 Operating benchmarks founders should bear in mind now.
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http://www.foundread.com/view/3-operating
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transburgh
2007-09-11T13:47:33
Top 10 programming languages of the future - you voted!
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http://www.foundread.com/view/top-10-programming
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[ 53430, 53283, 53328, 53316, 53436, 53311, 53453, 53295, 53560, 53289, 53292, 53375 ]
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gibsonf1
2007-09-11T13:51:08
Top Tech Consultancy Touts Google Office Suite
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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,296277,00.html
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charzom
2007-09-11T14:02:41
Bloom Filters: A Powerful Tool
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http://www.rubyinside.com/bloom-filters-a-powerful-tool-599.html
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