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Sandeep Garg

Hacking. An introduction to git-svn for Subversion/SVK users and deserters. This article is aimed at people who want to contribute to projects which are using Subversion as their code-wiki . It is particularly targeted at SVK users, who are already used to a work-flow that involves disconnected operation, though this is a tiny subset of the workflows supported by the git suite. Subversion users can skip SVK and move straight onto git-svn with this tutorial. People who are responsible for Subversion servers and are converting them to git in order to lay them down to die are advised to consider the one-off git-svnimport , which is useful for bespoke conversions where you don't necessarily want to leave SVN/CVS/etc breadcrumbs behind.

I'll mention bespoke conversions at the end of the tutorial, and the sort of thing that you end up doing with them. This is quite different from the Git - SVN Crash Course on the Git home page, which is intended for people who are familiar with Subversion who want to work with Git mastered projects using Git. Sam Vilain Contents: What!? Professional Screencast Tutorials for Web Developers and Alpha Geeks.

Meet Sinatra | PeepCode Screencasts for Web Developers and Alpha Geeks. Preview Download Free Preview With technical assistance from Sinatra creator Blake Mizerany. As a developer, you’re always looking for ways to write faster applications with less code. The Sinatra framework hits a sweet spot for writing small, fast web applications and web services with Ruby. In our 64 minute Sinatra tutorial, Dan Benjamin teaches the basics of Sinatra: configuration, handlers, blocks, and templates. You’ll master these techniques by writing a simple ad server to manage and deliver images, Javascript, and HTML. You’ll enhance the application to track clicks using DataMapper and Sqlite3 to store and manage the data. This screencast is for you whether you’re a beginning programmer with knowledge of Ruby or an experienced Rails developer looking to explore the Sinatra framework!

Chapters include: Available as part of a PeepCode Unlimited subscription (including streaming on our iOS app!) Skills Assumes basic knowledge of the Ruby programming language. Life after Google: Brad Neuberg's HTML5 start-up | Deep Tech. LONDON--For someone interested in capitalizing on the new era of advanced Web standards, you'd think Google would be a pretty good employer. After all, it's got an up-and coming browser, some of the world's most influential Web applications, and plenty of money to invest in both. But in the culture of Silicon Valley, sometimes there's a time to strike off on one's own, and that's what Brad Neuberg, a very visible Web programmer at Google, decided to do. He announced his departure on the eve of a speech last week at the Future of Web Apps conference here.

In an interview with CNET afterward, Neuberg said he plans to launch a San Francisco start-up in November focusing on the same suite of Web technology he's been steeped in at Google. He's cagey on details, but he said he plans to focus on Web applications for consumers. Plus, he didn't like spending three hours a day commuting from San Francisco to Google's Mountain View, Calif., offices and back for two years and nine months of his life. New. The Greatest Elevator Pitch You’ve Ever Seen. Tiled Map Editor. What we can learn from procrastination. Some years ago, the economist George Akerlof found himself faced with a simple task: mailing a box of clothes from India, where he was living, to the United States. The clothes belonged to his friend and colleague Joseph Stiglitz, who had left them behind when visiting, so Akerlof was eager to send the box off. But there was a problem. The combination of Indian bureaucracy and what Akerlof called “my own ineptitude in such matters” meant that doing so was going to be a hassle—indeed, he estimated that it would take an entire workday.

So he put off dealing with it, week after week. There’s something comforting about this story: even Nobel-winning economists procrastinate! Academics, who work for long periods in a self-directed fashion, may be especially prone to putting things off: surveys suggest that the vast majority of college students procrastinate, and articles in the literature of procrastination often allude to the author’s own problems with finishing the piece.

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