Chainalysis | New York, NY | Software Engineering | Java, Spring, Postgres Chainalysis helps its customers prevent, detect and investigate cryptocurrency money laundering, fraud and compliance violations. We are looking…
Interesting that the dataset only goes from A-Je. I wonder what happened to the rest of the data. Also, I didn't realize the surname Acevedo was so popular...
Not sure what all the hate is about. He presented some interesting anecdotes about the quirks of software engineering and then tied it all together with some concrete lessons. Maybe 5K words without any sort of lists or…
Yeah, but setting up a rails or django server/hosting environment for development is a lot more difficult than a comparable php setup; tools like MAMP, XAMP, et al make it fairly trivial to get going quickly.
If you're not into pen and paper, there are a bunch of cool sites that let you doodle in the browser. I've been using this one for a few weeks and it's actually pretty cool: http://doodle.ly/
I get a blank screen on my blackberry bold 9700 running all the latest updates and with javascript enabled. Sadly, blackberry neglect is common for these "mobile" frameworks.
Deadweight is a very well written Ruby script that performs the same kind of task. Give it a try: http://rdoc.info/projects/aanand/deadweight
Chainalysis | New York, NY | Software Engineering | Java, Spring, Postgres Chainalysis helps its customers prevent, detect and investigate cryptocurrency money laundering, fraud and compliance violations. We are looking…
Interesting that the dataset only goes from A-Je. I wonder what happened to the rest of the data. Also, I didn't realize the surname Acevedo was so popular...
Not sure what all the hate is about. He presented some interesting anecdotes about the quirks of software engineering and then tied it all together with some concrete lessons. Maybe 5K words without any sort of lists or…
Yeah, but setting up a rails or django server/hosting environment for development is a lot more difficult than a comparable php setup; tools like MAMP, XAMP, et al make it fairly trivial to get going quickly.
If you're not into pen and paper, there are a bunch of cool sites that let you doodle in the browser. I've been using this one for a few weeks and it's actually pretty cool: http://doodle.ly/
I get a blank screen on my blackberry bold 9700 running all the latest updates and with javascript enabled. Sadly, blackberry neglect is common for these "mobile" frameworks.
Deadweight is a very well written Ruby script that performs the same kind of task. Give it a try: http://rdoc.info/projects/aanand/deadweight