engineering-blogs
posts
engineering-blogs | posts | |
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19 | 6 | |
29,188 | 12 | |
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2.4 | 9.1 | |
26 days ago | 25 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
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Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
engineering-blogs
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The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves 🌊📊
View on GitHub
- A curated list of engineering blogs
- List of engineering blogs
- How Discord Stores Trillions of Messages
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suggest tech content on internet
kilimchoi/engineering-blogs
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Ask HN: Do you maintain a list of RSS links of GOAT programming blogs?
I don't, but here is a nice (or just big) list if someone has focus to spare:
https://github.com/kilimchoi/engineering-blogs
- Trabalho remoto europa e salários
- Ask HN: Where can I see many examples of real companies' software architecture?
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How do you stay up to date with the latest trends and technologies?
For which feeds here is a list of engineering blogs https://github.com/kilimchoi/engineering-blogs
posts
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The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves 🌊📊
Arkency http://blog.arkency.com/
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Recommendations for great Ruby on Rails blog writers
I'd recommend Jason Swett. I listen to his podcast more often than I read his blog, but I might need to go back and read some more of his blog articles. I've also found Honeybadger.io's blog to be really informative. I'd also recommend Arkency, with some caveats. They promote a pretty specific architecture style using concepts from Domain Driven Design, Event Driven architecture, and CQRS. I believe these styles are powerful and can help tame a large, complex project, but I wouldn't recommend them in every case, so IMO, keep that in mind when reading their stuff.
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5 days 5 blogposts - the summary of the Arkademy.dev blogging challenge
I'm an indivudual but I love being part of the team where we can support each other. That's why the success of the Arkency blog (listed as top-10 ruby blogs in the world) - we help each other, we trust each other, we embrace our differences.
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Gradual Automation aka Do-Nothing Scripting aka Puts-Driven Automation
Thanks for commenting, because I think I didn't make it clear enough in the original post — that it's not meant to stay a do-nothing script, but gradually transition towards a do-something script. I have now updated the blogpost. It also assures me that do-nothing script is a bad name for it. I now think I prefer Puts-First Automation.
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Gradual automation in Ruby (aka Do-Nothing Scripting, aka Puts-Driven Automation)
I updated the post to make it clearer since.
What are some alternatives?
Zuul - Zuul is a gateway service that provides dynamic routing, monitoring, resiliency, security, and more.
awesome-podcasts - Collection of awesome podcasts
movfuscator - The single instruction C compiler
awesome-newsletters - A list of amazing Newsletters
esProc - esProc SPL is a scripting language for data processing, with well-designed rich library functions and powerful syntax, which can be executed in a Java program through JDBC interface and computing independently.
web-dev-feeds - A collection of over 1000 RSS feeds for web developers, updated monthly
Lazylead - Eliminate the annoying work within ticketing systems (Jira, GitHub, Trello). Allows automating (without admin access) daily actions like tickets fields verification, email notifications by JQL/GQL, meeting requests to your (or teammates) calendar.