View allAll Photos Tagged Programmers.

Tigger decided that she wanted to write programs, too. Unfortunately, she only knows Cobol and I write in C and C# so she was out of luck.

Programmer event 3-28-2015

Yes, it has only one Filter installed - Room for your own favorite Filter Board to Drop in!

I've been programming a lot of ATtinys for my TinyTX sensors so made up this ZIF programming shield using a scrap of stripboard to make things easier.

I made a one sided pcb of ladyada'a USBtiny avr programmer. It works like a charm, and it's easier to make at home.

The board was made with toner transfer method, also I did the silkscreen by using the same method.

I can provide the eagle project if anybody is interested.

Programmer coding

 

As a reminder, keep in mind that this picture is available only for non-commercial use and that visible attribution is required. If you'd like to use this photo outside these terms, please contact me ahead of time to arrange for a paid license.

BBQ N' Musical Jams at Aaron's

08.07.10

Maclaren Park, SF

Detailed Product Description Programmer keys for MB ("smart key") The new Mercedes device working with smart key (old and new) using in car since 1997 up to 2005

A fashion buyer at her desk.

 

He was once a senior computer programmer, but today he heads an online fashion platform that has 100 million registered female users.

 

Meilishuo CEO Xu Yirong, believes that technology is the driving force in the modern fashion industry. Beijing, China, 12/02/2015

The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard that was published prior to June 1918 by Stengel & Co. Ltd., Post Card Publishers, of London N. The card, which has a divided back, was printed in Saxony.

 

Queen's College Oxford

 

Queen's College Oxford (on the right of the photograph) was founded in 1341 by Robert de Eglesfield in honour of Queen Philippa of Hainaut (wife of King Edward III of England). The college is distinguished by its predominantly neoclassical architecture, which includes buildings designed by Sir Christopher Wren and Nicholas Hawksmoor.

 

In 2015, the college had an endowment of £265 million, making it the fifth wealthiest college (after St. John's, Christ Church, All Souls and Merton).

 

In April 2012, as part of the celebrations of the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II, a series of commemorative stamps were released featuring A-Z pictures of famous British landmarks. Queen's College's front quad was used on the Q stamp, alongside other landmarks such as the Angel of the North on A and the Old Bailey on O.

 

The most famous feast of the College is the Boar's Head Gaudy, which originally was the Christmas Dinner for members of the College who were unable to return home over the Christmas break between terms, but is now a feast for old members of the College on the Saturday before Christmas.

 

Queen's College Alumni

 

Alumni of Queen's include:

 

- Tony Abbott, 28th Prime Minister of Australia

- Rowan Atkinson, actor and comedian, known for Blackadder and Mr. Bean

- Jeremy Bentham, English philosopher, and legal and social reformer

- Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web

- Cory Booker, United States Senator from New Jersey

- Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles

- Leonard Hoffmann, Baron Hoffmann, English jurist and judge

- Edmund Halley, English astronomer

- King Henry V of England

- Edwin Powell Hubble, American astronomer

- Sir John Peel, gynaecologist to H.M. Queen Elizabeth II

- Leopold Stokowski, conductor.

 

'Oxford in War-Time'

 

During the Great War, a man named W. Snow was inspired to write a poem called 'Oxford in War-Time'.

 

Snow prefaces his poem with the following:

 

'The Boat Race will not be held this year (1915).

The whole of last year's Oxford eight and the

great majority of the cricket and football teams

are serving the King'.

 

The poem is as follows:

 

'Under the tow-path past the barges

Never an eight goes flashing by;

Never a blatant coach on the marge is

Urging his crew to do or die;

Never the critic we knew enlarges,

Fluent, on How and Why!

 

Once by the Iffley Road November

Welcomed the Football men aglow,

Covered with mud, as you'll remember,

Eager to vanquish Oxford's foe.

Where are the teams of last December?

Gone - where they had to go!

 

Where are her sons who waged at cricket

Warfare against the foeman-friend?

Far from the Parks, on a harder wicket,

Still they attack and still defend;

Playing a greater game, they'll stick it,

Fearless until the end!

 

Oxford's goodliest children leave her,

Hastily thrusting books aside;

Still the hurrying weeks bereave her,

Filling her heart with joy and pride;

Only the thought of you can grieve her,

You who have fought and died'.

 

Sir Tim Berners-Lee

 

Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee OM KBE FRS RDI FRSA DFBCS FREng was born on the 8th. June 1955. Also known as TimBL, he is an English computer scientist, best known as the inventor of the World Wide Web, the HTML markup language, the URL system, and HTTP.

 

He is a professorial research fellow at the University of Oxford, and a professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

 

Berners-Lee proposed an information management system on the 12th. March 1989, and implemented the first successful communication between a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) client and server via the Internet in mid-November.

 

He devised and implemented the first Web browser and Web server, and helped foster the Web's subsequent explosive development. He is the founder and director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which oversees the continued development of the Web.

 

Tim co-founded (with Rosemary Leith) the World Wide Web Foundation. In April 2009, he was elected as Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Sciences.

 

Berners-Lee is a senior researcher and holder of the 3Com founder's chair at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). He is a director of the Web Science Research Initiative (WSRI), and a member of the advisory board of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence.

 

In 2011, he was named as a member of the board of trustees of the Ford Foundation. He is a founder and president of the Open Data Institute, and is currently an advisor at social network MeWe.

 

In 2004, Berners-Lee was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his pioneering work. He received the 2016 Turing Award:

 

"... for inventing the World Wide Web, the first

web browser, and the fundamental protocols

and algorithms allowing the Web to scale".

 

He was named in Time magazine's list of the 100 Most Important People of the 20th. century, and has received many other accolades for his invention.

 

-- Tim Berners-Lee - The Early Years

 

Tim Berners-Lee was born in London, the son of mathematicians and computer scientists Mary Lee Woods (1924–2017) and Conway Berners-Lee (1921–2019). His parents were both from Birmingham, and worked on the Ferranti Mark 1, the first commercially-built computer.

 

He has three younger siblings; his brother, Mike, is a professor of ecology and climate change management.

 

Berners-Lee attended Sheen Mount Primary School, then attended Emanuel School (a direct grant grammar school at the time) from 1969 to 1973. A keen trainspotter as a child, he learnt about electronics from tinkering with a model railway.

 

From 1973 to 1976, he studied at The Queen's College, Oxford, where he received a first-class BA in physics. While there, he made a computer out of an old television set he had purchased from a repair shop.

 

-- Tim Berners-Lee's Career and Research

 

After graduation, Berners-Lee worked as an engineer at the telecommunications company Plessey in Poole, Dorset.

 

In 1978, he joined D. G. Nash in Ferndown, Dorset, where he helped create typesetting software for printers.

 

Berners-Lee worked as an independent contractor at CERN from June to December 1980. While in Geneva, he proposed a project based on the concept of hypertext, to facilitate sharing and updating information among researchers.

 

To demonstrate it, he built a prototype system named ENQUIRE.

 

After leaving CERN in late 1980, Tim went to work at John Poole's Image Computer Systems Ltd. in Bournemouth, Dorset, where he ran the company's technical side for three years.

 

The project he worked on was a "real-time remote procedure call" which gave him experience in computer networking. In 1984, he returned to CERN as a fellow.

 

In 1989, CERN was the largest Internet node in Europe, and Berners-Lee saw an opportunity to join hypertext with the Internet:

 

"I just had to take the hypertext idea and

connect it to the TCP and DNS ideas and—

ta-da!—the World Wide Web."

 

Tim also recalled:

 

"Creating the web was really an act of desperation,

because the situation without it was very difficult

when I was working at CERN later.

Most of the technology involved in the web, like the

hypertext, like the Internet, multifont text objects,

had all been designed already.

I just had to put them together. It was a step of

generalising, going to a higher level of abstraction,

thinking about all the documentation systems out

there as being possibly part of a larger imaginary

documentation system."

 

Berners-Lee wrote his proposal in March 1989 and, in 1990, redistributed it. It was accepted by his manager, Mike Sendall, who called his proposals:

 

"Vague, but exciting."

 

Robert Cailliau had independently proposed a project to develop a hypertext system at CERN, and joined Berners-Lee as a partner in his efforts to get the web off the ground. They used similar ideas to those underlying the ENQUIRE system to create the World Wide Web, for which Berners-Lee designed and built the first web browser.

 

Tim's software also functioned as an editor (called WorldWideWeb, running on the NeXTSTEP operating system), and the first Web server, CERN HTTPd (short for Hypertext Transfer Protocol daemon).

 

Berners-Lee published the first web site, which described the project itself, on the 20th. December 1990; it was available to the Internet from the CERN network.

 

The site provided an explanation of what the World Wide Web was, and how people could use a browser and set up a web server, as well as how to get started with your own website.

 

On the 6th. August 1991, Berners-Lee first posted, on Usenet, a public invitation for collaboration with the WorldWideWeb project.

 

In a list of 80 cultural moments that shaped the world, chosen by a panel of 25 eminent scientists, academics, writers and world leaders, the invention of the World Wide Web was ranked number one, with the entry stating:

 

"The fastest growing communications medium

of all time, the Internet has changed the shape

of modern life forever. We can connect with

each other instantly, all over the world."

 

In 1994, Berners-Lee founded the W3C at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It comprised various companies that were willing to create standards and recommendations to improve the quality of the Web.

 

Berners-Lee made his idea available freely, with no patent and no royalties due. The World Wide Web Consortium decided that its standards should be based on royalty-free technology, so that they easily could be adopted by anyone.

 

In 2001, Berners-Lee became a patron of the East Dorset Heritage Trust, having previously lived in Colehill in Wimborne, East Dorset. In December 2004, he accepted a chair in computer science at the School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Hampshire, to work on the Semantic Web.

 

In a Times article in October 2009, Berners-Lee admitted that the initial pair of slashes ("//") in a web address were "unnecessary". He told the newspaper that he easily could have designed web addresses without the slashes. In his lighthearted apology he said:

 

"There you go, it seemed like

a good idea at the time."

 

-- Tim Berners-Lee's Policy Work

 

In June 2009, then-British prime minister Gordon Brown announced that Berners-Lee would work with the UK government in order to help make data more open and accessible on the Web, building on the work of the Power of Information Task Force.

 

Berners-Lee and Professor Nigel Shadbolt are the two key figures behind data.gov.uk, a UK government project to open up almost all data acquired for official purposes for free re-use.

 

Commenting on the opening up of Ordnance Survey data in April 2010, Berners-Lee said:

 

"The changes signal a wider cultural change

in government, based on an assumption that

information should be in the public domain

unless there is a good reason not to — not

the other way around."

 

He went on to say:

 

"Greater openness, accountability and

transparency in Government will give

people greater choice and make it

easier for individuals to get more

directly involved in issues that matter

to them."

 

In November 2009, Berners-Lee launched the World Wide Web Foundation (WWWF) in order to campaign:

 

"To advance the Web to empower humanity

by launching transformative programs that

build local capacity to leverage the Web as

a medium for positive change".

 

Berners-Lee is one of the pioneer voices in favour of net neutrality, and has expressed the view that:

 

"ISPs should supply connectivity with no strings

attached, and should neither control nor monitor

the browsing activities of customers without their

expressed consent."

 

Tim advocates the idea that net neutrality is a kind of human network right:

 

"Threats to the Internet, such as companies

or governments that interfere with or snoop

on Internet traffic, compromise basic human

network rights."

 

As of May 2012, Tim is president of the Open Data Institute, which he co-founded with Nigel Shadbolt in 2012.

 

The Alliance for Affordable Internet (A4AI) was launched in October 2013, and Berners-Lee is leading the coalition of public and private organisations that includes Google, Facebook, Intel and Microsoft.

 

The A4AI seeks to make Internet access more affordable, so that access is broadened in the developing world, where only 31% of people are online. Berners-Lee is working with those aiming to decrease Internet access prices so that they fall below the UN Broadband Commission's worldwide target of 5% of monthly income.

 

Berners-Lee holds the founders chair in Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he heads the Decentralized Information Group and is leading Solid, a joint project with the Qatar Computing Research Institute that aims to radically change the way Web applications work today, resulting in true data ownership as well as improved privacy.

 

In October 2016, he joined the Department of Computer Science at Oxford University as a professorial research fellow, and as a fellow of Christ Church, one of the Oxford colleges.

 

From the mid-2010's Berners-Lee initially remained neutral on the emerging Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) proposal with its controversial digital rights management (DRM) implications.

 

In March 2017 he felt he had to take a position which was to support the EME proposal. He reasoned EME's virtues whilst noting DRM was inevitable. As W3C director, he went on to approve the finalised specification in July 2017.

 

Tim's stance was opposed by some, including Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the anti-DRM campaign, Defective by Design, and the Free Software Foundation. Varied concerns raised included being not supportive of the Internet's open philosophy against commercial interests, and risks of users being forced to use a particular web browser to view specific DRM content.

 

The EFF raised a formal appeal which did not succeed, and the EME specification became a formal W3C recommendation in September 2017.

 

On the 30th. September 2018, Berners-Lee announced his new open-source startup Inrupt to fuel a commercial ecosystem around the Solid project, which aims to give users more control over their personal data and lets them choose where the data goes, who's allowed to see certain elements and which apps are allowed to see that data.

 

In November 2019 at the Internet Governance Forum in Berlin Berners-Lee and the WWWF launched Contract for the Web, a campaign initiative to persuade governments, companies and citizens to commit to nine principles to stop "misuse", with the warning that:

 

"Ff we don't act now – and act together –

to prevent the web being misused by

those who want to exploit, divide and

undermine, we are at risk of squandering

its potential for good."

 

-- Tim Berners-Lee's Awards and Honours

 

Tim Berners-Lee's entry in Time magazine's list of the 100 Most Important People of the 20th century (March 1999) reads as follows:

 

"He wove the World Wide Web and created a mass

medium for the 21st century. The World Wide Web

is Berners-Lee's alone. He designed it. He loosed it

on the world. And he more than anyone else has

fought to keep it open, nonproprietary and free."

 

Berners-Lee has received many awards and honours. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in the 2004 New Year Honours:

 

"For services to the global development

of the Internet."

 

On the 13th. June 2007, he was appointed to the Order of Merit (OM), an order restricted to 24 living members, plus any honorary members. Bestowing membership of the Order of Merit is within the personal purview of the Sovereign, and does not require recommendation by ministers or the Prime Minister.

 

Tim was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2001. He was also elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in 2004 and the National Academy of Engineering in 2007.

 

He has been conferred honorary degrees from a number of universities around the world, including Manchester (his parents worked on the Manchester Mark 1 in the 1940's), Harvard and Yale.

 

In 2012, Berners-Lee was among the British cultural icons selected by artist Sir Peter Blake to appear in a new version of his most famous artwork – the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover – to celebrate the British cultural figures of his life that he most admires to mark his 80th. birthday.

 

In 2013, he was awarded the inaugural Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering. On the 4th. April 2017, Tim received the 2016 Association for Computing Machinery's Turing Award for his invention of the World Wide Web, the first web browser, and their fundamental protocols and algorithms.

 

-- Tim Berners-Lee's Personal Life

 

Berners-Lee has said

 

"I like to keep work and

personal life separate."

 

Berners-Lee married Nancy Carlson, an American computer programmer, in 1990. She was also working in Switzerland at the World Health Organization. They had two children and divorced in 2011.

 

In 2014, he married Rosemary Leith at the Chapel Royal, St. James's Palace in London. Leith is a Canadian Internet and banking entrepreneur, and a founding director of Berners-Lee's World Wide Web Foundation. The couple also collaborate on venture capital to support artificial intelligence companies.

 

Berners-Lee was raised as an Anglican, but he turned away from religion in his youth. After he became a parent, he became a Unitarian Universalist (UU). When asked whether he believes in God, he stated:

 

"Not in the sense of most people, I'm

atheist and Unitarian Universalist."

 

The web's source code was auctioned by Sotheby's in London in 2021, as a non-fungible token (NFT) by TimBL. Selling for US$5,434,500, it was reported the proceeds would be used to fund initiatives by TimBL and Leith.

We have a Team of practiced, proficient and knowledgeable PHP developers/PHP Programmers in our offshore PHP development /PHP Programming hub in India. Our PHP Development Team Outsource the PHP development Service from past 10 years and they have outsoure LAMP Technology, WAMP Technology, Magento Based Service, Drupal Projects

San Francisco for Frankenstein Ballet, 26 Feb 2017

 

The San Francisco Ballet presented a ballet based on Mary Shelly's Frankenstein and Elizabeth and I went to see it.

 

Mary Shelly wrote Frankenstein during the rainy summer of 1816, when she, her husband Percy and Lord Byron were staying in Geneva. They challenged each other to write a ghost story and Mary's Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus was the only story of the three to be completed.

 

The book launched more horror movies than Helen's face launched ships, as well as such send ups as Abbot and Costello meet Frankenstein, the Munsters, Rocky Horror, and Young Frankenstein, so if you've ever danced the Time Warp, or know who Eye-gore is, you can thank the wet summer of 1816 and a woman with a fertile imagination.

 

Frankenstein was also one of the first Gothic novels, and Byron was the guy who invented the Byronic hero, eventually becoming one himself, when he went to Greece to help the Greeks fight for independence from Turkey and wound up getting sick and dying without seeing combat. Emily Bronte was probably inspired by Byron's characters in creating Heathcliff and Wuthering Heights.

 

Byron's daughter was Ada, Countess of Lovelace, who worked with Charles Babbage on his calculating machine and is credited as being the first computer programmer.

 

It is all enough to inspire an episode of James Burke's old show "Connections"!

 

We discussed some of this on the train ride to Oakland after checking out the Sacramento station which has just had a dedication after several years of restoration and looks good.

 

The water in the rivers is still high after the recent rains, but we had a beautiful day for our trip.

 

We took the train to Oakland, and the ferry across the bay to San Francisco, where we ate outside at the Ferry Building as PCCs on the Muni E and F lines passed by in a steady parade. After lunch we caught PCC 1050 in Muni green and cream to Van Ness and walked a couple of blocks to the Opera House for the show.

 

The ballet was stayed fairly close to Mary Shelly's story, rather than the Boris Karloff movie that took Shelly's story's name and creature and mostly invented a new story. A great tragedy, most of the main characters were dead by the time the final curtain fell.

 

After dinner we caught BART to east bay and Amtrak back to Sacramento from there. Elizabeth did some homework on the ride back and I snoozed.

 

A great day out.

My dad just mailed me two really really old pics from my childhood

NEC PROGRAMMER

 

Keterangan :

 

COM konektor dan dukungan konektor USB juga,Mileage koreksi º C reset jarak tempuh Anda dengan langsung input data;

Bekerja pada CPU menggunakan papan NEC, dukungan userself upgration.

 

Berlaku model :

• Citroen Xsara Picasso( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen Xsara 2000-2001 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Citroen Berlingo 2003 ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen Saxo ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen- X-Picasso ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Peugeot Partner 2003 ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Peugeot 307 all ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai- Terrcan JEEP ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai- KIA ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai Terracan ( NEC MCU in dash)

• Hyundai Elantra ( NEC MCU in dash)

• Hyundai Sonata ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Honda Civic 2002 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Honda accord 3.0 (NEC MCU in dash)

• Suzuki Wagon-R ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault Clio Sagem Mod2000 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault- Scenic ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault Megane Sagem Mod2000 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel Movano Sagem ab Mod2002 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel Agila ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel- Corsa ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Alfa 147 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Chevrolet Caprice-LT2 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Chevrolet Explore SUV ( NEC MCU in dash)

 

Description:

 

COM connector and support USB connector as well, Mileage correction ºC reset your the mileage by directly input the data;

Works on CPUs use NEC board, support userself upgration.

 

Applicable models :

• Citroen Xsara Picasso( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen Xsara 2000-2001 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Citroen Berlingo 2003 ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen Saxo ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Citroen- X-Picasso ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Peugeot Partner 2003 ( NEC MCU in BSI )

• Peugeot 307 all ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai- Terrcan JEEP ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai- KIA ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Hyundai Terracan ( NEC MCU in dash)

• Hyundai Elantra ( NEC MCU in dash)

• Hyundai Sonata ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Honda Civic 2002 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Honda accord 3.0 (NEC MCU in dash)

• Suzuki Wagon-R ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault Clio Sagem Mod2000 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault- Scenic ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Renault Megane Sagem Mod2000 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel Movano Sagem ab Mod2002 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel Agila ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Opel- Corsa ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Alfa 147 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Chevrolet Caprice-LT2 ( NEC MCU in dash )

• Chevrolet Explore SUV ( NEC MCU in dash)

The Key Pro M8 Auto Key Programmer is the most powerful and cost effective tool for you to add keys and make new keys. It support full range of car models, support online update and very easy to operate. Choosing the Key Pro M8 Auto Key Programmer is a worthwhile asset and generates an excellent return on investment, by providing an additional income stream for your business. www.aobd2shop.com/wholesale/the-key-pro-m8-auto-key-progr...

ak500-key-programmer,car-tool

My career as a computer programmer/analyst gives me an occasional chance to prepare charts and graphs. There is a much an art as there is a science to preparing these; a good one should give a complete and accurate picture on its own. The most famous example of this is French mapmaker Charles Joseph Minard’s map of Napoleon’s unsuccessful campaign into Russia; it not only shows the route Napoleon’s into Russia and back, but the number of Napoleon’s troops, distance, temperature, location, and direction relative to specific dates.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Joseph_Minard

 

Back in 2013, I thought it would be neat to take my lineup of Taurus models, and grow it into a “3-D chart” that shows the evolution of Ford cars going back to 1903, in roughly 1/64 scale.

 

It is hard to see the bands of color; but they represent various eras of Ford design evolution, from the Brass era and Vintage era of the Model T, through the pre- and post-World War II era; on up to the Kinetic Design era of today. The gradual shading shows that design changes did not occur overnight, but through succeeding releases of different models. My breaking up of the timeline to fit on three matts had an unexpected outcome – the first matt shows the early history of Ford cars when Henry Ford was alive, the latter the “Jellybean years”, and the one in the middle represents when Ford stopped placing its trademark blue oval on its cars, and instead used a herald and/or the F O R D name in all caps. Hence, the logos in the corner of each matt. The different rows show the rise of Ford of Europe and the Mustang, along with the various models through the years. The vertical component are the cars themselves; showing how they evolved in style and size over the years; for example, the SUVs/CUVs of today are roughly the same height as Fords prior to 1955.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/75105572@N08/15971293049/

 

What was most amazing about the project was the availability of so many models and marks. There are some I actually had to leave out because of space constraints – a 2002 Ranger by Motor Max and an EXP by Etrl, just to name two – because there simply was not enough space. There are also 15 paper models; see if you can spot all 15 of them.

Atmega8 based usb-programmer for avr microcontrollers.

 

More infos at blog.gut-man.de/2009/10/04/usbasp-usb-avr-programmer/

Genuinely and wholly supporting keys programming of all BMW from 1995-2007 year. Support Type: 1 series: E87 3 series: E36/E46/E83/E90/E91/E92 5 series: E34/E39/E53/E60/E61 6 series: E63/E64 7 series: E38/E65/E66 8 series: E52 M series: R50/R52/R53 Z series: E85/E86

Frances Elizabeth Holberton (1917 – 2001) was one of the six original programmers of the computer, ENIAC. The other five ENIAC programmers were Jean Bartik, Ruth Teitelbaum, Kathleen Antonelli, Marlyn Meltzer, and Frances Spence.

 

Holberton invented breakpoints in computer debugging. In software development, a breakpoint is an intentional stopping or pausing place in a program, put in place for debugging purposes. It is also sometimes simply referred to as a pause.

 

More generally, a breakpoint is a means of acquiring knowledge about a program during its execution. During the interruption, the programmer inspects the test environment (general purpose registers, memory, logs, files, etc.) to find out whether the program is functioning as expected. In practice, a breakpoint consists of one or more conditions that determine when a program's execution should be interrupted. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Holberton

 

Public domain image of the ENIAC by the US Army via Wikimedia Commons w.wiki/3Kpo

 

Data IO Unisite Universal Programmer Teardown

Programmer Raymond Phathanavirangoon interviews Chris Chong, director of Karaoke, after the screening. Chong studied and worked in Toronto, and apparently became friends with Raymond then; he thanks the latter in the closing credits of the film.

LEGO Minifig Series 7

 

Data IO Unisite Universal Programmer Teardown

LEGO 71025 Minifigures Series 19

This set was released in 2019

#02 Shower Guy

Top two teams of the 2nd annual Zeropoint.IT programming competition

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