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Go is an open source programming environment that makes it easy to build simple, reliable, and efficient software.
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Jef Claes: How a web application can download and store over 2GB without you even knowing it
I have been experimenting with the HTML5 offline application cache some more over the last few days, doing boundary tests in an attempt to learn more about browser behaviour in edge cases.
One of these experiments was testing the cache quota.
Two weeks ago, I blogged about generating and serving an offline application manifest using ASP.NET MVC. I reused that code to add hundreds of 7MB PDF files to the cache. -
#topquestion - How do I enable security (SSL) for my Storefront transactions? | Intuit Community
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Who is the Route 29 Batman? This guy. - Rosenwald, Md. - The Washington Post
Police pulled a man over on Route 29 in Silver Spring last week because of a problem with his plates. This would not ordinarily make international news, but the car was a black Lamborghini, the license plate was the Batman symbol, and the driver was Batman, dressed head-to-toe in his full superhero uniform.
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Fort Bragg wont let us feed homeless vets at the atheist festival
I fought very hard for this to happen at the festival this weekend. We went back and forth for several months. The ‘pro-starvation’ camp has prevailed.
The idea was simple. -
The Game of Distributed Systems Programming. Which Level Are You? « Incubaid Research
When programming distributed systems becomes part of your life, you go through a learning curve. This article tries to describe my current level of understanding of the field, and hopefully points out enough mistakes for you to be able follow the most optimal path to enlightenment: learning from the mistakes of others.
For the record: I entered Level 1 in 1995, and I’m currently Level 3. Where do you see yourself? -
Once you start working with the Varnish source code, you will notice that Varnish is not your average run of the mill application.
That is not a coincidence.
I have spent many years working on the FreeBSD kernel, and only rarely did I venture into userland programming, but when I had occation to do so, I invariably found that people programmed like it was still 1975.
So when I was approached about the Varnish project I wasn't really interested until I realized that this would be a good opportunity to try to put some of all my knowledge of how hardware and kernels work to good use, and now that we have reached alpha stage, I can say I have really enjoyed it. -
BrowserQuest: Mozilla's Massively Multiplayer HTML5 Experiment
posted by azarbayejani (51 comments total) 15 users marked this as a favorite
Thursday, March 29, 2012
load01 03/29/2012
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