In this episode of Dev Interrupted, we follow United Masters' Pablo Jablonski as he goes through his career at Twitter, leading Spaces into the music industry.
The article suggests some tactics for programmers to accelerate learning, stay current with the evolving technology landscape and remain competitive in the IT industry.
Like learning a foreign language, you have to write original code if you want to master Java deeply. Make your examples fun, and life-like. They'll stick with you.
Here we will see what challenges a scrum master faces in the world of digital assurance and how they bring out a quick fix to each day-to-day incident.
"Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity" is a beginner-friendly guide that demystifies game development coding and equips readers with versatile programming skills.
Ensure success in web development for 2023 with this comprehensive checklist. From responsive design to security and SEO, cover all essential considerations.
Improve developer productivity using the SPACE framework and software engineering intelligence, a multi-dimensional approach for modern software teams.
This article covers the importance of KPIs and which 10 KPIs engineering leaders should know for better project delivery, progress updates, and productive work.
Check out John's interview with Dave West at the ALM Forum as well Remember SETI@home -- the screensaver that uses your idle CPU cycles to find an extraterrestrial needle in a radio-noise haystack? Well, now you can volunteer your CPU time for loads of other scientific projects. One of the coolest is folding@home -- coolest, I think, because Turing machines are great at double-helixes but not so great when degrees of freedom are determined by the interaction of huge, complicated molecules plus environmental chemistry -- like, say, folding proteins. So that's cool science stuff, saving lives, finding aliens, whatever. But everyday development needs lots of computing power too. What if you could use the same distributed system -- leveraging whatever idle CPU time is available on your local network -- for builds? Okay, of course that was a rhetorical question. Of course you can. Easily, it turns out. But how? At the last ALM Forum I spoke with Dori Exterman, CTO of Incredibuild, a tool that turns your local network into a distributed supercomputer for pretty much any compute-heavy dev tasks. We talked about how such a tool can help you -- but also about how it works, and the answers are pretty neat. This was one of the most exciting interviews I've conducted in a while. Dori is a really smart guy with a really powerful product. Check it out and let us know what you think.
Here are the top ways to improve your IT budget during periods of economic uncertainty. The guidelines should help you examine and optimize your organization’s budget.
There are different kinds of engineering leaders, and you must figure out which one you are or most enjoy. I am definitely not the day-to-day operations person.