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Evolutionary Database Design - 0 views

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    "Over the last decade we've developed and refined a number of techniques that allow a database design to evolve as an application develops. This is a very important capability for agile methodologies. The techniques rely on applying continuous integration and automated refactoring to database development, together with a close collaboration between DBAs and application developers. The techniques work in both pre-production and released systems, in green field projects as well as legacy systems."
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Introduction to the Personal Software Process(sm) 1, Watts S. Humphrey, eBook - Amazon.com - 0 views

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    "Introduction to the Personal Software Process(sm) 1st Edition, Kindle Edition"
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A Discipline for Software Engineering: Watts S. Humphrey: 9780201546101: Amazon.com: Books - 0 views

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    "A Discipline for Software Engineering 1st Edition"
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The USE Method - 0 views

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    "The Utilization Saturation and Errors (USE) Method is a methodology for analyzing the performance of any system. It directs the construction of a checklist, which for server analysis can be used for quickly identifying resource bottlenecks or errors. It begins by posing questions, and then seeks answers, instead of beginning with given metrics (partial answers) and trying to work backwards."
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jamis/castaway: System for building screencasts and video presentations - 0 views

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    "System for building screencasts and video presentations"
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Gaffer on Games | Game Networking - 0 views

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    "Game Networking"
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Machine Learning Crash Course: Part 1 · ML@B - 0 views

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    "Machine Learning Crash Course"
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teamcapybara/capybara: Acceptance test framework for web applications - 0 views

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    "Acceptance test framework for web applications"
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The memory models that underlie programming languages - 0 views

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    " There are about six major conceptualizations of memory, which I'm calling "memory models"², that dominate today's programming. Three of them derive from the three most historically important programming languages of the 1950s - COBOL, LISP, and FORTRAN - and the other three derive from the three historically important data storage systems: magnetic tape, Unix-style hierarchical filesystems, and relational databases."
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