Видео с CurryOn по-тихонечку выкладываются, хотя и пока без must-see. Ну про Reflex можно зазырить, или там про Елехсир:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-WICcSW1k3HsScuXxDrp0w/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-WICcSW1k3HsScuXxDrp0w/videos
О, а вот это интересно — «Proactive Software-Update Transparency via
Collectively Signed Skipchains and Verified Builds»:
http://eprint.iacr.org/2017/648.pdf
Collectively Signed Skipchains and Verified Builds»:
http://eprint.iacr.org/2017/648.pdf
Есть определенный шарм в том, чтобы делиться документами с такого домена:
https://wikileaks.org/vault7/document/Gyrfalcon-1_0-User_Manual/Gyrfalcon-1_0-User_Manual.pdf
https://wikileaks.org/vault7/document/Gyrfalcon-1_0-User_Manual/Gyrfalcon-1_0-User_Manual.pdf
А может быть и не будет дженериков :) В принципе не похуй ли?
Видео с Gophercon кажется еще нет, но че-как можно почитать вот тут:
https://about.sourcegraph.com/go/the-future-of-go
Видео с Gophercon кажется еще нет, но че-как можно почитать вот тут:
https://about.sourcegraph.com/go/the-future-of-go
Sourcegraph
The Future of Go
Find and fix things across all of your code with Sourcegraph universal code search.
На дворе 2017 год. В Emacs занесли нативные line numbers.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2017-07/msg00236.html
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2017-07/msg00236.html
Тут, кстати, Рома Лютиков (святой человек 💚) занес демку серверного рендеринга и code-splitting для ClojureScript, смотрите скорее, и 🌟 ставьте на гитхабчике:
https://twitter.com/roman01la/status/885937204178149377
https://twitter.com/roman01la/status/885937204178149377
Twitter
Roman Liutikov
Hacker News clone web app with server side rendering and code splitting built in ClojureScript https://t.co/rpPfMLLTyc https://t.co/Ixas5t98DU
Наткнулся на курс «Advanced Algorithms» от Гарварда, который ведет чувак похожий на Waka Flocka Flame (посмотрите первую лекцию, всёравно вас не хватит на большее)
http://people.seas.harvard.edu/~minilek/cs224/fall14/lec.html
http://people.seas.harvard.edu/~minilek/cs224/fall14/lec.html
A list of commonly asked questions, design decisions, reasons why Clojure is the way it is as they were answered directly by Rich (even when from many years ago, those answers are pretty much valid today!). Feel free to point friends and colleagues here next time they ask (again). Answers are pasted verbatim (I've made small adjustments for readibility, but never changed a sentence) from mailing lists, articles, chats. The link points back at them.
https://gist.github.com/reborg/dc8b0c96c397a56668905e2767fd697f
https://gist.github.com/reborg/dc8b0c96c397a56668905e2767fd697f
Gist
A curated collection of answers that Rich gave throughout the history of Clojure
A curated collection of answers that Rich gave throughout the history of Clojure - rich-already-answered-that.md