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Creepy 'Save Jobs Profile' on GitHub

 

When I look at that green button I see 'Steve Jobs' popping out. Weird isn't it?

I hooked GitHub's stoplight up to their build system via Arduino, some relays, and an ethernet shield. Read about the process here:

 

www.urbanhonking.com/ideasfordozens/2010/05/the_github_st...

Almond Granita with capers, coffee cream and bergamot.

 

At Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy. During GitHub Destination: Tuscany.

Code:

github.com/rtanglao/rth5/blob/master/vancouver-emerges...

 

Try it out yourself! (may take some time for photos to appear since dots are only added when photos are uploaded to flickr geotagged in the city of vancouver):

dl.dropbox.com/u/361757/CCC/vancouver-emerges-d3.html

 

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 22.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

7 June 2017 - OECD Forum 2017: BLI: Coding the Law with Alain Hélaïli, Solutions Engineer, Github www.oecd.org/bli

 

Photo: OECD/ Salome Suarez

7 June 2017 - OECD Forum 2017: BLI: Coding the Law with Alain Hélaïli, Solutions Engineer, Github www.oecd.org/bli

 

Photo: OECD/ Salome Suarez

Macaron with Oysters and Macaron with Anchovies.

 

At Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy. During GitHub Destination: Tuscany.

ZoomCharts at DevClub.lv: Developing a Javascript SDK

 

On January 15, 2015, ZoomCharts Co-Founder and CTO Viesturs Zariņš presented at DevClub.lv - a community of Latvian IT specialists that gather monthly and host free talks, presentations, and events to allow the local IT community to share knowledge, network, and communicate. Zariņš discussed the unique challenges faced in developing JavaScript SDK.

 

Here is a brief overview of his PowerPoint presentation on ZoomCharts, the world’s most interactive data visualization software that will support all your data presentation needs with incredible speed.

 

What is ZoomCharts?

 

What defines ZoomCharts advanced data visualization software? It is NOT another HTML5 charts library. It is:

 

- Interactive

- Fast

- Touch enabled

- Supports big data

 

A long time ago

 

DOS 6.2 allowed for:

 

- 320x240x8bpp

- Direct access to pixels on screen

- Assembler for performance

 

Today, the Web has finally caught up in the graphics department. Now, we have access to:

 

- Multiple browsers and rendering technologies

- Multiple resolutions

- Performance that varies by browser and device

 

Development setup:

 

- We write in JavaScript

- Commit to GitHub

- Build system in JavaScript

- Debug in Chrome

- Run automated tests

- Like WebStorm (and Vim)

 

Graphics:

 

Canvas (fast)

SVG (slow)

WebGL (>50%)

 

Interactive animations:

 

Zoom in and out of the graph, drag and drop data, all with your mouse or trackpad.

 

Graceful degradation:

 

High FPS (frames per second) lets you scale graphics with low image degradation.

 

Third party libraries:

 

- Raphael

- Hammer.js

- Leaflet

- Moment.js

 

Challenges:

 

- Responsive design: layouts can shift and look nice on desktop screens vs. not so nice on vertical, mobile screens

- Big screen resolutions: uses devicePixelRatio for sharp rendering, but no hardware acceleration beyond 2048x2048

- Safari compatibility: with 100% CPU, input events are blocked and browser locks up; strange code offers fixes

- HTML on canvas: DOM is slow; basic HTML markup must be parsed and rendered manually; text caching helps

 

Support:

 

- Process: TrialSupportBuy

- 1 day issue resolution

- #1 Tell me what I did wrong

- #2 Can you do…

 

Testing:

 

- Automated tests on every GIT push

 

Automatically:

 

- Compare images

- Record performance

- View errors in console

 

Interactive testing:

 

- Next step: record and playback

 

BrowserStack:

 

- Interactive mode

- Automated: Selenium API

 

Debugging:

 

Chrome Developer tools (F12)

 

- Debugging

- Profiling

- Timeline

 

Remote debugging available: developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/remote-debugging

 

Future:

 

- More charts

- Extension API

- Memory allocation tracking

- WebGL

 

We are looking for statically-typed language:

 

- Error checking

- Performance

- Superior minification

 

- Easy to write and read

- Easy to call from JS

 

Building

 

Custom build script:

 

- Compile

- Minify

- Extract documentation

- Embed customer data

 

Check out ZoomCharts products:

 

Network Chart

Big network exploration

Explore linked data sets. Highlight relevant data with dynamic filters and visual styles. Incremental data loading. Exploration with focus nodes.

 

Time Chart

Time navigation and exploration tool

Browse activity logs, select time ranges. Multiple data series and value axes. Switch between time units.

 

Pie Chart

Amazingly intuitive hierarchical data exploration

Get quick overview of your data and drill down when necessary. All in a single easy to use chart.

 

Facet Chart

Scrollable bar chart with drill-down

Compare values side by side and provide easy access to the long tail.

 

ZoomCharts

www.zoomcharts.com

The world’s most interactive data visualization software

 

#zoomcharts #interactive #data #interactivedata #datavisualization #interactivedatavisualization #chart #graph #charts #graphs #Javascript #JavascriptSDK #DevClubIV #Latvia #PowerPoint #PowerPointpresentation #fast #bigdata

7 June 2017 - OECD Forum 2017: BLI: Coding the Law with Alain Hélaïli, Solutions Engineer, Github www.oecd.org/bli

 

Photo: OECD/ Salome Suarez

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 31.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

This dude allowed me to try out his beautiful f/1.2 lens (see exif). It takes very nice shots, but I was having some trouble getting it to stabilize. He's trying out my f/1.4 regular lens in this shot, which he said he was very impressed with. It's a lot lighter than the 1.2, costs almost an order of magnitude less, and takes great pictures.

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 7.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 6.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 18.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 18.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 6.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 5.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

wuipdesign.github.io

 

Free photos. Set 33.

Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.

 

CC-License

 

Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io

Black Saturday +day38

 

Cappuccino & Objective-J problem with test app using git repo source

On Feb 22, 9:50 pm, Thomas Balthazar wrote:

> In Firefox, by default, local documents don't have access to all other

> local documents. Follow this procedure to develop locally in Firefox

 

http://wiki.github.com/280north/cappuccino/developing-locally-in-firefox-3

 

Thanks for writing this problem up. After following the video & comments on "Build Cappuccino from the source" at Cappuccinocasts

 

- cappuccinocasts.com/2009/02/09/2-build-cappuccino-from-th...

 

I ran into this simple problem. I've added a quick link to the "cappuccinocasts" post for future reference.

 

Regs PR

 

a bit later

If you run into a problem running your application using Firefox 3, developing locally along the lines of

 

“Objective-J.js (line 2178) CPObject is not defined”

 

and the code will not render, please check this post problem with test app using git repo source (Cappuccino & Objective-J) on google groups by Bakki Kudva ~ is.gd/nuDl

 

The solution is documented here ~ wiki.github.com/280north/cappuccino/developing-locally-in...

 

the next day...

On Mon, 2009-03-16 at 19:54 -0700, Chandler Kent wrote:

> So I tried making a change to the AppController.j as described in

> Thomas's 2nd cappuccino cast "building from the source" and now

> Firebug gives me an error even in index-debug.html. The error is:

> "a is not defined file:///home/kentcc/test_app/Frameworks/Debug/Objective-J/Objective-J.js

> Line 2175"

>

I wrote about this yesterday on the list after finding the solution on

google objectivej group asked by "bakki" & answered by "Thomas Balthazar". It's a trivial problem "modifying the security permissions" & the solution is here:

 

wiki.github.com/280north/cappuccino/developing-locally-in...

 

1.- Type about:config into the Location Bar (address bar) & press Enter.

2.- Click the “I’ll be carefull, I promise” button xD

3.- Change the security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy: (click False)

 

> When I load index.html I get the same error as before.

> This is strange. Thoughts?

 

Try searching groups.google.com/group/objectivej first because

the solution was there. I also pointed out this problem on the tutorial

you mention in the comments so it will be easier to find in the future:

 

the next day

On Tue, 2009-03-17 at 04:40 -0700, Chandler Kent wrote:

> My security permissions were correct. I forgot to mention that I had

> already changed them so that security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy was

> false. Just to be sure, I changed it to true and got the errors that

> have been previously documented.

>

Ok.

>I have been developing with Cappuccino on this machine for some time

> and it has worked until now when I tried to build my project against

> the source.

>

Meaning the problem could be with the STEAM_BUILD path to the Frameworks libs. The error you get indicates the Frameworks libs are not seen.

 

A) Could it be the paths? When setting the STEAM_BUILD path in .bash_profile did you check to see if it was visible in the bash shell?

 

$ echo $STEAM_BUILD

/foo/bar/

 

If you have created a new project using the tute using

 

$ steam create foo -l

 

then check the symbolic links to the Frameworks libs point to where you set them?

 

B) Did you update the STEAM_BUILD path and forget to update it in the shell?

 

$ source ~/.bash_profile

 

>Any other suggestions?

Another thing I can think of is the problem with "ant" accepting sudo on installation?

 

C) Did you use sudo and pass the sudo command to ant when installing to avoid the "ant" sudo bug?

$ sudo echo

password:

 

$ ant bootstrap

Can't think of any other causes but I do think it's a "path" to Frameworks problem. Follow the video again, checking the "environment variables" and "sudo" on installation.

 

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