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guarda in GRANDE!!

Impressions from Skills Matter's FullStack Conference 2014.

 

MISSED THE CONFERENCE?

 

All talks have been recorded as SkillsCasts (film/code/slides) and are available to watch by Skills Matter's Community here: skillsmatter.com/conferences/6361-fullstack-node-and-java...

 

Joining the Skills Matter community is free, and it only takes a few minutes to sign up.

 

FULLSTACK 2015 - LONDON, JUNE 25-26TH

We are proud to announce FullStack 2015 – the conference on Node, JavaScript and hackable electronics. This year, we will bring the world's top innovators, hackers and experts together with our amazing developer community in London to learn and share skills, gain insights and drive innovation. Join to experience three days jam-packed with talks, demos, and coding.

 

Join us at FullStack 2015 in London on June 25-26th!

The FullStack 2015 will kick off with two days of talks and discussions over 4 tracks each day covering JavaScript, Node, hackable electronics and other topics you may tell us you wish to see.

 

Each track will feature talks by some of the world's top hackers and makers who are helping evolve technologies and practices in the exciting world of web, mobile, servers, drones and robots. In addition, each track will feature a Park Bench Panel discussion and 5 lightning talks by some of the great engineering teams in our community who use FullStack technologies and practices daily and will demo their projects.

 

Following two days of talks, we'll continue with a Saturday featuring hands-on Tutorials, so that you can gain some hands-on experience and practical skills to implement new ideas from the talks you attended and the people you met during the first 2 days!

 

Like the sound of that? Find out more here: skillsmatter.com/conferences/6612-fullstack-the-conferenc...

 

CALL FOR THOUGHTS NOW OPEN - SHARE YOUR IDEAS!

Skills Matter's community conferences are made possible thanks to our passionate community - who constantly feed us with their ideas. Who are the experts you would like to learn and share skills with next year? What topics would you like to see covered? How can we improve on 2014's conference? Help us create a great 3 days by submitting your thoughts, ideas, dreams and requirements through our Call For Thoughts Program (www.surveymonkey.com/s/VFGCDQ9) - and we'll start working on these straight away!

Straps hang on to the Barkley Canyon node frame prior to recovery

 

Credit: Ocean Exploration Trust/ Ocean Networks Canada/ UVic

 

 

- Camera phone upload powered by ShoZu

Ocean Networks Canada's spare node being hoisted into the test tank. Jonathan Zand and Jonathan Miller supervise.

 

Credit: Ocean Networks Canada

 

a little bit of steel

In the course of Ars Electronica Home Delivery and under the title “Node.Linz” Fadi Dorninger not only deliverd current pieces in the Ars Electronica Center's Deep Space 8K but also timeless works from the late 80s and 2001. Photo taken durings WIPEOUT'S (Fadi Dorninger + Didi Bruckmayr) performance “Da ist nichts”.

 

Find out more about Ars Electronica Home Delivery:

ars.electronica.art/homedelivery/en/

 

Credit: Ars Electronica - Robert Bauernhansl

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

hand-draw network freeform

node, nodejs, node.js, nodecamp, san francisco

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/44722

 

This image was scanned from a photograph in the University's historical photographic collection held by Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia.

 

If you have any information about this photograph, or would like a higher resolution copy, please contact us or leave a comment.

The most significant part of a square does not exist. It is its center.

www.steelcase.es

Moverse: node es móvil y flexible, permite girarse y cambiar de orientación con facilidad.

Sostenibilidad: node es reciclable en un 75% en peso.

© 2012 The University of Queensland

 

Taken as a part of a collaboration with Artist in Residence Joannah Underhill and Dr. Nick Hamilton, this is a thin section of the lymph node. Most of the cells visible in this image are immune cells.

 

This sample was stained with hematoxylin to show nuclei and eosin to show proteins, and imaged on an Olympus BX-51 with a DP-70 camera. The image was adjusted and artfully manipulated to remove detail and then add it back in using Adobe Photoshop CS3. I am interested in this removal and superimposing of detail as way of exploring the functioning of the microscope and it's contribution to our understanding.

NODE concert, 15 March 2011, Samuel Beckett Theatre, Trinity College Dublin

I have no idea what this bud-like node is, but it’s immediately below the fruiting pineapple.

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

node, nodejs, node.js, nodecamp, san francisco

Classroom work in progress.

connection point is the source of community living!!!

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

Node.js Knockout Prep in San Francisco, August 27th

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

Credit: Ocean Exploration Trust/ Ocean Networks Canada/ UVic

Parasitic nodes on a plant,

Martxoak 17ko ikuskizunak. 2021eko dFERIA.

Espectáculos del 17 de marzo.

Argazkia / fotografia: Gorka Bravo

the space where i work got infested by these chairs on wheels called nodes. they look cool, but they are chairs on wheels. and the room is filled with active teenagers. the nodes got swapped out today for more stable seats. i'm hoping the non-nodal mood will be somewhat less frenetic. oh yeah, this is the new space where i work.

This photo appeared in the following ideotrope albums:

 

Betty Bear 2006 - Julie and I and 12 others spent the weekend of February 4, 2006 at the Betty Bear hut in the Sawatch Range between Aspen and Leadville. The weekend didn't get off to a very good start. I was a bit sick the last few days of the week. Then late Friday night the phone rang, and I learned that a good friend of mine from high school, Lance, (though I hadn't seen him much since high school) was admitted to the hospital (and straight into ICU) that morning in San Clemente, CA. Lance was dying of organ failure due to alcoholism.

The next morning my sister, Megan, was waiting for us at the trailhead. In Basalt she realized that she would arrive quite early at the trailhead so she stopped at a coffee shop, picked up a newspaper, and read: Peace Corps worker killed by shark in Tonga. It was Tessa, a ski patrol colleague of hers at the Santa Fe Ski Basin. In the summer they worked as guides for rival rafting companies on the Rio Grande and Chama. It was the 3rd ever recorded fatal shark attack in Tonga. She was swimming with a local in a place where locals regularly swim.

The ~7-mile ski to the hut was uneventful though I was brooding over Lance. Our group consisted of some people I knew: Megan, Krista, Kurt, Coy, Dan, Richard, Mike; some people I didn't know: Wendy, Bob, Sue, Bruce; and one person who Julie and I had probably met before: Peter. During the weekend we never could figure out how we know Peter. The best guess was that we met in Tibet or Nepal in late 1994 since we were all there at the same time. However, we don't remember a specific meeting.

I felt crappy at the hut. It wasn't surprising given my sickness, the altitude (11,100'), lack of sleep the night before, and emotional distress. I spent Sunday resting, thinking of Lance, and reading Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being, the book I happened to choose a couple days earlier when I packed for the trip. Most people spent Sunday skiing the fresh powder and making some good turns.

Early Monday evening Julie and I weren't home 10 minutes before the phone rang with news of Lance. He was still alive, but the prognosis was grim. The liver and kidney still weren't functioning. Dialysis worked Saturday but not Monday. Lance died the following morning. He was 37.

  

on stage at Goose Festival (VR), 06/07/08th august 2010

node, nodejs, node.js, nodecamp, san francisco

node, nodejs, node.js, nodecamp, san francisco

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