Yes, but you can certainly automate the process to a large extent. For example, many sites simply don't have the functionality allow copyright infringement. Also many sites will have >99% false positives, whereas…
The only reason to use polymer is if you need the L style UIs they discussed at Google I/O. While Google's really good at Java apis, they're really terrible at JS apis. I love Google, but I would be very hesitant to use…
StackOverflow, Wikipedia, and other creative commons sites provide good starting data sets because all you need to do is attribute to them. No expensive licensing things, or anything like that. Often you can write a…
Yes, but you can certainly automate the process to a large extent. For example, many sites simply don't have the functionality allow copyright infringement. Also many sites will have >99% false positives, whereas…
The only reason to use polymer is if you need the L style UIs they discussed at Google I/O. While Google's really good at Java apis, they're really terrible at JS apis. I love Google, but I would be very hesitant to use…
StackOverflow, Wikipedia, and other creative commons sites provide good starting data sets because all you need to do is attribute to them. No expensive licensing things, or anything like that. Often you can write a…