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whitewalter

Essay - 4 views

I recently turned to EssayShark for assistance with my coursework, and I am delighted with the results. Their service has been nothing short of exceptional, providing me with the support I needed t...

htmlslicemate.com

5 Tips on Picking Great Images for Your Articles - 0 views

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    Articles with pictures accompanying them are proven to get clicked on at a higher rate than text-only articles. Our eyes gravitate to the imagery we spot when we land on a page. This has always been true, dating back centuries. When news was delivered daily inside of newspapers, the papers always featured a prominent and attractive photo on their covers. Today, on the internet, a primarily visual medium, the raw communicative power of imagery has increased exponentially. Picking the right photo, though, can be daunting, difficult, or time-consuming.............................
liza cainz

HP Support for Printers - 1 views

Paper works is one of the many things I have to deal with as a secretary for a top executive in the company I am working for Vancouver. More often than not, printer glitches are one of the major pr...

support service Desktop computer technical services PC tech

started by liza cainz on 06 Dec 10 no follow-up yet
Joel Bennett

.NET Framework Resource Management - 0 views

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    An excellent White Paper on Resource Management in the .NET Framework.  How to handle managed and unmanaged resources, design cleanup code, and handle performance mplications.
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Matteo Spreafico

Joe Duffy's Weblog - OnBeingStateful - 0 views

  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future.
  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future. That seems like an absurd statement, or a naïve one at the very least.  State is everywhere: The values held in memory. Data locally on disk. Data in-flight that is being sent over a network. Data stored in the cloud, including on a database, remote filesystem, etc. Certainly all of these kinds of state will continue to exist far into the future.  Data is king, and is one major factor that will drive the shift to parallel computing.  The question then is how will concurrent programs interact with this state, read and mutate it, and what isolation and synchronization mechanisms are necessary to do so?
  • Many programs have ample gratuitous dependencies, simply because of the habits we’ve grown accustomed to over 30 odd years of imperative programming.  Our education, mental models, books, best-of-breed algorithms, libraries, and languages all push us in this direction.  We like to scribble intermediary state into shared variables because it’s simple to do so and because it maps to our von Neumann model of how the computer works.
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  • We need to get rid of these gratuitous dependencies.  Merely papering over them with a transaction—making them “safe”—doesn’t do anything to improve the natural parallelism that a program contains.  It just ensures it doesn’t crash.  Sure, that’s plenty important, but providing programming models and patterns to eliminate the gratuitous dependencies also achieves the goal of not crashing but with the added benefit of actually improving scalability too.  Transactions have worked so well in enabling automatic parallelism in databases because the basic model itself (without transactions) already implies natural isolation among queries.  Transactions break down and scalability suffers for programs that aren’t architected in this way.  We should learn from the experience of the database community in this regard
  • There will always be hidden mutation of shared state inside lower level system components.  These are often called “benevolent side-effects,” thanks to Hoare, and apply to things like lazy initialization and memorization caches.  These will be done by concurrency ninjas who understand locks.  And their effects will be isolated by convention.
  • Even with all of this support, we’d be left with an ecosystem of libraries like the .NET Framework itself which have been built atop a fundamentally mutable and imperative system.  The path forward here is less clear to me, although having the ability to retain a mutable model within pockets of guaranteed isolation certainly makes me think the libraries are salvageable.  Thankfully, the shift will likely be very gradual, and the pieces that pose substantial problems can be rewritten in place incrementally over time.  But we need the fundamental language and type system support first.
David Corking

Pragmatic Smalltalk (slides) | Feb 2009 | David Chisnall - 0 views

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    Interesting clippings from the slides: "What can we do with it? * Write applications. Melodie uses lots of Smalltalk, first pure-Smalltalk app committed to svn in January. * Write scripts. Corner activation and gesture app uses Smalltalk for scripting. * Modify existing apps... " "We can inspect classes in a code browser, see method names, and write replacements in any running application. In a perfect Free Software system, any user can make any changes. "
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    My comment above might imply that Smalltalk is not modern. The truth is far from it, as Smalltalk is still pushing the boundaries of technology and user interfaces, from Croquet and Qwaq, to Alice, Sophie, Scratch and Etoys.
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    (I fixed Friday's broken link to the PDF.) From what I read so far, this seems to be another attempt at a fully introspecitve integrated and customisable personal computer with a graphical desktop. In other words, it is Dynabook Smalltalk and Lisp workstations all over again, but quite likely with some interesting modern twists.
Fabien Cadet

Computational thinking and thinking about computing | Philosophical Transactions of the... - 4 views

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Mark Smith

Support In Getting Small Cash Loans During Crisis Time - 0 views

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    Small cash loans would come to you by applying online application formalities that would not need much of papers from you. The process of credit check is not followed here and so the interest rate is high. You can meet all your needs without wait.
nisar ahmed

|CelebrityNew|CelebrityProfile|Fashion&Style|Funny Pictures|Photo Gallery|Sports|Wallpa... - 1 views

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    Arguably the first proper job I've ever landed, and hordes of fans and critics alike tuned to see how Kim Kardashian faced co-host Live with Kelly this morning. But what was the verdict on 31 years of age, first attempt at animation of matter not directly related to your own life?
Fabien Cadet

2015: Removing Deprecated Exception Specifications from C++17 | open-std.org - 1 views

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    Good bye `throw(...)`
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