Pretty sure he wrote absinthe.
Carbon Five | Chattanooga, TN. | Onsite Carbon Five Web Developers have 2 or more years of professional web development experience and already understand that deploying untested code to production is betting against the…
Angular 2.0 has similar optimizations but sacrifices backwards compatibility. Glimmer is still backwards compatible with Ember 1.x.
I'm surprised to not see OpenTable on here. Several of their back end services are written in Clojure.
Also Flipboard is no less accessible then it already was as a native application. The problems with making an app rendered in canvas can be solved (largely because they open sourced their work).
> It would be really, really interesting if there was a lot of flux to Go from Ruby, but not from Python and Node. What exactly would this tell you?
As a former software engineer at Walmart I can tell you that a few months for something like that is nothing to them. They employ several thousand devs at the home office. Having one of them focus on a bug like this…
This. Valve is a business and it sounds like they didn't think her ideas were going to provide value. In the end she got to walk away with all of the IP that she had developed on company time (and probably severance). I…
It probably has more to do with the maturity of the framework and less to do with audience popularity (although I'm sure that is a factor). That's just the nature of SO. The ios graph demonstrates this.
Pretty sure he wrote absinthe.
Carbon Five | Chattanooga, TN. | Onsite Carbon Five Web Developers have 2 or more years of professional web development experience and already understand that deploying untested code to production is betting against the…
Angular 2.0 has similar optimizations but sacrifices backwards compatibility. Glimmer is still backwards compatible with Ember 1.x.
I'm surprised to not see OpenTable on here. Several of their back end services are written in Clojure.
Also Flipboard is no less accessible then it already was as a native application. The problems with making an app rendered in canvas can be solved (largely because they open sourced their work).
> It would be really, really interesting if there was a lot of flux to Go from Ruby, but not from Python and Node. What exactly would this tell you?
As a former software engineer at Walmart I can tell you that a few months for something like that is nothing to them. They employ several thousand devs at the home office. Having one of them focus on a bug like this…
This. Valve is a business and it sounds like they didn't think her ideas were going to provide value. In the end she got to walk away with all of the IP that she had developed on company time (and probably severance). I…
It probably has more to do with the maturity of the framework and less to do with audience popularity (although I'm sure that is a factor). That's just the nature of SO. The ios graph demonstrates this.