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5 Top Trested Web Site Old GitHub Accounts In 2025
Buy GitHub Accounts.If you are a developer, you must have a GitHub account. Buy GitHub accounts. Because GitHub is the world’s biggest code repository. Most developers use GitHub to exchange code and collaborate with others. The old GitHub account works well. You may buy new and existing GitHub accounts from us at extremely affordable prices with complete confidence. Thank you!
#Buy GitHub Accounts#Buy github accounts online#GitHub Free#GitHub Free for organizations#GitHub pricing#GitHub private repository free#GitHub Pro#GitHub Pro pricing#Is a GitHub account free?
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#Buy GitHub Accounts#Buy github accounts online#GitHub Free#GitHub Free for organizations#GitHub pricing#GitHub private repository free#GitHub Pro#GitHub Pro pricing#Is a GitHub account free?
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Offline Library
In light of all the Ao3 issues lately I'm gonna throw this up as something people should consider doing. Make your own library of your favorite fics and any you might like to read in the future/are currently reading.
How do you do this? To start: Calibre & ReadEra app
Calibre is a free ebook management software, available on windows, mac, and linux - but also comes in a portable version you can put on a flash drive. Ebooks are very small files, 100s of fics can easily take less than 1GB of space. You can create categories for everything and all the tags on the fics will stay attached to them. You can download directly through ao3, or you can use the browser extension Ficlab which can make the process a little quicker, plus give you a book cover(or you can add your own cover). Epub or Mobi format is best.
ReadEra, is a free reading app with no ads that you can tell to only access a single file where you keep your ebooks. It's open source and the Privacy Statement and Terms & Conditions are very short and easy to read. You can transfer files from Calibre to your phone, but this is also a good option if you don't have a PC to use Calibre. You can make folders to organize all your fics.
Quality of life plugins for Calibre: Preferences > Plugins > Get New Plugins
Look up: EpubMerge, EpubSplit, FanFicFare, Generate Cover (restart calibre once you've added them all) Fun fact, with FanFicFare, you can download new chapters to update fics that are currently in progress directly in Calibre instead of having to open up ao3.
Also, to be clear - back them up for yourself only, don't you fucking dare repost them anywhere.
You can also backup Kindle books (and you should) with Calibre, though that's a bit more complicated; instructions under the read more
Firstly what is DRM? TLDR: digital rights management (DRM) is meant to prevent piracy, however, this also means you never really own your ebooks. If Amazon decides to take down a book you bought? That's it, it's gone and it doesn't matter that you paid for it.
Removing DRM If you're on PC and don't have a kindle device, you'll want kindle version 2.4.0 or it won't work in Calibre.
In Calibre, navigate to Preferences > Plugins > Load Plugin From File - DeDRM - Use the latest Beta or Alpha release, follow instructions on the github page
Preferences > Plugins > Get New Plugins
Look up: KFX Input
You'll have to restart Calibre once you install so just add them all at once before you restart it.
If you need some troubleshooting help setting anything up just ask and I'll try to help!
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For context, I have been using Firefox since I made my first Myspace theme in 2005. I don't know how many times I can post this but I'm just so fucking sick of Firefox, and particularly Mozilla. A company full of a bunch of 2012 political and social Tumblr activists that will do literally everything except make Firefox better. The degradation in performance over this last year in particular, the slow adoption of web standards (that they advocated for!! when websites don't work on firefox it's because devs don't want to deal with their workarounds!!!), the laughable developer experience, the constant firing of devs while throwing millions at random organizations throughout Africa and constant rebranding efforts, the sudden shift to pushing news (and therefore, ads) directly into the new tab page by default, the further push for AI in the browser...
To top it all off, they suddenly add a ToS out of nowhere (which has been the trend in annoying activist tech circles) that has the most absurd legalese speech ever that goes directly against the entire point of Firefox for decades. from: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/legal/terms/firefox/ "When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox." (something which the Mozilla team made a clarification on, by being extremely vague about what information means) from: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/legal/acceptable-use/ "You may not use any of Mozilla’s services to … Upload, download, transmit, display, or grant access to content that includes graphic depictions of sexuality or violence,"
The second one you can make an argument that Mozilla services does not include Firefox, but things like sync or the VPN for example are - and more importantly it is VAGUE. On purpose I'd wager.
Which was already bad enough, but the icing on the cake is found on the Data Privacy FAQ, where it now says: from: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/privacy/faq/ Mozilla doesn’t sell data about you (in the way that most people think about “selling data“), and we don’t buy data about you. Since we strive for transparency, and the LEGAL definition of “sale of data“ is extremely broad in some places, we’ve had to step back from making the definitive statements you know and love. from: https://github.com/mozilla/bedrock/ Combined with a new push to github, where it USED to clearly state: "Unlike other companies, we don't sell access to your data." "Does firefox sell your personal data? - Nope. Never have, never will. And we protect you from many advertisers who do." for those unaware of how github works, the lines with red backgrounds are removed. ----- The fucking camels back is breaking, and it's entirely because Mozilla is full of performative corporate hacks that don't understand the first thing about development in any capacity. Mozilla would rather put all their efforts into probably money laundering than they would to care about their primary product that not only generates them most of their money (from google, btw), but has most of their userbase. People go on and on about how the Firefox userbase is constantly dwindling and you don't have to look very far into it to understand why. Your marketshare is tanking because you fucking suck. The only people left using firefox are people with principles they believe in, and morons - sometimes I'm not sure which side I fall in with every fucking update they make. The ONLY benefit to still using firefox (especially as a dev tbh) is containers and ublock, and nothing else. Firefox itself has become a garbage product, ran by a completely garbage company that should not be trusted. At least Google admits they're fucking you while they're doing it. So where do I go from here? I'm not sure. Zen Browser is doing extremely good work and is a fork of the Firefox source, I'm going to start daily driving it more. With some luck, they will force Firefox to get back on the correct path but I doubt it. Brave exists too I guess. Ladybird is looking like it has a bright path ahead of it, ditching both Chromium AND Gecko (the engine powering Firefox) but it's in the early stages and not really ready for the average user. The future is not in Firefox. They've been too shitty for too long and they've only gotten worse with every month that passes. I need one of these projects to succeed so I can get off this piece of shit software.
#long post#mozilla#firefox#getting mad about a browser at 11am on a friday#honestly you'd think this got me all riled up but you know what actually did?#the way firefox renders gradients#fucking pisses me the fuck off#so much banding looking like a flash game from 2002 it's PATHETIC
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My partner who knows things about tech suggests making the files available as torrents. You can then keep your folder index available as a free web page with organized links to the torrents, on a site like a GitHub dot io or probably lots of other options.
Hmmmm I'd have to first figure out what half of these words mean but intriguing
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Hollow Knight Randomizer Resources Masterpost
(do people on tumblr still create masterposts?)
Lumafly - Current mod installer for Hollow Knight (successor to Scarab)
Randomizer 4 Readme
Randomizer 4 Logic
Small Homothety Organization - Guides, Skips and events/rando news.
Getting set up
Recommended rando mods and how to install them
Fire's guide to modding Hollow Knight
Mod specific guides: itemsync guide, multiworld guide, plando/ICDL guide
Colette's Custom Knight skin list
Full list of mods for 1.5
Mods for 1.4.3.2
For Skip lovers
Blossom's Skip playlist and Google doc
May's Skip playlist
Kama's Skip challenge
Randomizer Wiki
Rando racing
Hollow Knight speedrunning community's vod archives (lots of rando tournaments here!)
HK Speedrunning Twitch!
Common race formats
What is bingo anyway?
Bingosync - Create bingo boards for lots of games!
Byngosink - More complicated boards but limited to Hollow Knight
Multiplayer
Community made guide for HKMP
Fire's video guide
HKMP Website
HKMP Github
Bonus: Grubs are cute
Adopt a grub
Grub maker
Generate a square of dancing grubs
will add to this if I think of anything else! feel free to reblog
#blossom.txt#hollow knight#hollow knight randomizer#speedrunning#blossom plays hollow knight#i like hollow knight yippee#please let me infodump
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VISVIVA PRESENTS: PIRR a simplistic, elegant free theme
what's up everybody! this is visvivacodes, back to share another theme with all you lovely people! this is a simple navigation page for you to store your links and keep your blog organized. I used this one as some more practice with flexbox and transitions, so you'll see it's got a responsive design and the main container changes on hover. I hope you all love it and thanks so much for your support! pirr: noun. a gentle wind
NAVIGATION I: PIRR — join my discord!
PREVIEW: TUMBLR / CODEPEN DOWNLOAD: GITHUB / PASTEBIN / CODEPEN
FEATURES
no coding knowledge needed! fully customize from the comfort of an easily comprehensible root element (tutorial available on my discord)
responsive design that changes dimensions as your screen gets smaller - I am still learning so it doesn't look perfect on phones but it is functional! as time goes on and I learn more about flexbox, I will return to this code to make it more responsive :)
a choice of 16 FONTS for you to change the look of your navigation's written content, including your title, subtitle, and links!
link sections with inner scroll — all link sections will automatically gain a scrollbar if they get long, though I do recommend sticking to the original 18 links as it keeps the tidiness
clean and easy to read code!
if you download this pagee theme, please give this post a like or reblog!
I just had surgery yesterday so I might not be around much to answer any qustions. if you run into any problems at all, please do not hesitate to message me! I am aware of an issue inherent to flexbox where margins and padding do not work as intended in different browsers, so please let me know if this page is looking very strange in your browser!
PRICE & DONATIONS
This theme is a FREE theme! I love to code so my themes will be free for now. If you would like to support me and my work, please consider leaving a tip or buying me a coffee via cashapp ( $visviva ) :)
#rph#rpc#rpt#free page theme#free page#page theme#nav page#navigation page#indie theme#rp theme#free rp theme#free theme#coding cabin#theme hunter#theme network#supportcontentcreators#dearindies#visvivathms#recovering from top surgery so i may not be around much to answer questions!
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Can Open Source Integration Services Speed Up Response Time in Legacy Systems?
Legacy systems are still a key part of essential business operations in industries like banking, logistics, telecom, and manufacturing. However, as these systems get older, they become less efficient—slowing down processes, creating isolated data, and driving up maintenance costs. To stay competitive, many companies are looking for ways to modernize without fully replacing their existing systems. One effective solution is open-source integration, which is already delivering clear business results.
Why Faster Response Time Matters
System response time has a direct impact on business performance. According to a 2024 IDC report, improving system response by just 1.5 seconds led to a 22% increase in user productivity and a 16% rise in transaction completion rates. This means increased revenue, customer satisfaction as well as scalability in industries where time is of great essence.
Open-source integration is prominent in this case. It can minimize latency, enhance data flow and make process automation easier by allowing easier communication between legacy systems and more modern applications. This makes the systems more responsive and quick.
Key Business Benefits of Open-Source Integration
Lower Operational Costs
Open-source tools like Apache Camel and Mule eliminate the need for costly software licenses. A 2024 study by Red Hat showed that companies using open-source integration reduced their IT operating costs by up to 30% within the first year.
Real-Time Data Processing
Traditional legacy systems often depend on delayed, batch-processing methods. With open-source platforms using event-driven tools such as Kafka and RabbitMQ, businesses can achieve real-time messaging and decision-making—improving responsiveness in areas like order fulfillment and inventory updates.
Faster Deployment Cycles: Open-source integration supports modular, container-based deployment. The 2025 GitHub Developer Report found that organizations using containerized open-source integrations shortened deployment times by 43% on average. This accelerates updates and allows faster rollout of new services.
Scalable Integration Without Major Overhauls
Open-source frameworks allow businesses to scale specific parts of their integration stack without modifying the core legacy systems. This flexibility enables growth and upgrades without downtime or the cost of a full system rebuild.
Industry Use Cases with High Impact
Banking
Integrating open-source solutions enhances transaction processing speed and improves fraud detection by linking legacy banking systems with modern analytics tools.
Telecom
Customer service becomes more responsive by synchronizing data across CRM, billing, and support systems in real time.
Manufacturing
Real-time integration with ERP platforms improves production tracking and inventory visibility across multiple facilities.
Why Organizations Outsource Open-Source Integration
Most internal IT teams lack skills and do not have sufficient resources to manage open-source integration in a secure and efficient manner. Businesses can also guarantee trouble-free setup and support as well as improved system performance by outsourcing to established providers. Top open-source integration service providers like Suma Soft, Red Hat Integration, Talend, TIBCO (Flogo Project), and Hitachi Vantara offer customized solutions. These help improve system speed, simplify daily operations, and support digital upgrades—without the high cost of replacing existing systems.
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This Week in Rust 599
Hello and welcome to another issue of This Week in Rust! Rust is a programming language empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software. This is a weekly summary of its progress and community. Want something mentioned? Tag us at @thisweekinrust.bsky.social on Bluesky or @ThisWeekinRust on mastodon.social, or send us a pull request. Want to get involved? We love contributions.
This Week in Rust is openly developed on GitHub and archives can be viewed at this-week-in-rust.org. If you find any errors in this week's issue, please submit a PR.
Want TWIR in your inbox? Subscribe here.
Updates from Rust Community
Official
Announcing Google Summer of Code 2025 selected projects
Foundation
10 Years of Stable Rust: An Infrastructure Story
Newsletters
This Month in Rust OSDev: April 2025 | Rust OSDev
The Embedded Rustacean Issue #45
Project/Tooling Updates
Avian Physics 0.3
Two months in Servo: CSS nesting, Shadow DOM, Clipboard API, and more
Cot v0.3: Even Lazier
Streaming data analytics, Fluvio 0.17.3 release
CGP v0.4 is Here: Unlocking Easier Debugging, Extensible Presets, and More
Rama v0.2
Observations/Thoughts
Bad Type Patterns - The Duplicate duck
Rust nightly features you should watch out for
Lock-Free Rust: How to Build a Rollercoaster While It’s on Fire
Simple & type-safe localization in Rust
From Rust to AVR assembly: Dissecting a minimal blinky program
Tarpaulins Week Of Speed
Rustls Server-Side Performance
Is Rust the Future of Programming?
Rust Walkthroughs
Functional asynchronous Rust
The Power of Compile-Time ECS Architecture in Rust
[video] Build with Naz : Spinner animation, lock contention, Ctrl+C handling for TUI and CLI
Miscellaneous
April 2025 Rust Jobs Report
Crate of the Week
This week's crate is brush, a bash compatible shell implemented completely in Rust.
Thanks to Josh Triplett for the suggestion!
Please submit your suggestions and votes for next week!
Calls for Testing
An important step for RFC implementation is for people to experiment with the implementation and give feedback, especially before stabilization.
If you are a feature implementer and would like your RFC to appear in this list, add a call-for-testing label to your RFC along with a comment providing testing instructions and/or guidance on which aspect(s) of the feature need testing.
No calls for testing were issued this week by Rust, Rust language RFCs or Rustup.
Let us know if you would like your feature to be tracked as a part of this list.
RFCs
Rust
Rustup
If you are a feature implementer and would like your RFC to appear on the above list, add the new call-for-testing label to your RFC along with a comment providing testing instructions and/or guidance on which aspect(s) of the feature need testing.
Call for Participation; projects and speakers
CFP - Projects
Always wanted to contribute to open-source projects but did not know where to start? Every week we highlight some tasks from the Rust community for you to pick and get started!
Some of these tasks may also have mentors available, visit the task page for more information.
rama - add ffi/rama-rhai: support ability to use services and layers written in rhai
rama - support akamai h2 passive fingerprint and expose in echo + fp services
If you are a Rust project owner and are looking for contributors, please submit tasks here or through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (formerly Twitter) or Mastodon!
CFP - Events
Are you a new or experienced speaker looking for a place to share something cool? This section highlights events that are being planned and are accepting submissions to join their event as a speaker.
No Calls for papers or presentations were submitted this week.
If you are an event organizer hoping to expand the reach of your event, please submit a link to the website through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (formerly Twitter) or Mastodon!
Updates from the Rust Project
397 pull requests were merged in the last week
Compiler
async drop fix for async_drop_in_place<T> layout for unspecified T
better error message for late/early lifetime param mismatch
perf: make the assertion in Ident::new debug-only
perf: merge typeck loop with static/const item eval loop
Library
implement (part of) ACP 429: add DerefMut to Lazy[Cell/Lock]
implement VecDeque::truncate_front()
Cargo
network: use Retry-After header for HTTP 429 responses
rustc: Don't panic on unknown bins
add glob pattern support for known_hosts
add support for -Zembed-metadata
fix tracking issue template link
make cargo script ignore workspaces
Rustdoc
rustdoc-json: remove newlines from attributes
ensure that temporary doctest folder is correctly removed even if doctests failed
Clippy
clippy: item_name_repetitions: exclude enum variants with identical path components
clippy: return_and_then: only lint returning expressions
clippy: unwrap_used, expect_used: accept macro result as receiver
clippy: add allow_unused config to missing_docs_in_private_items
clippy: add new confusing_method_to_numeric_cast lint
clippy: add new lint: cloned_ref_to_slice_refs
clippy: fix ICE in missing_const_for_fn
clippy: fix integer_division false negative for NonZero denominators
clippy: fix manual_let_else false negative when diverges on simple enum variant
clippy: fix unnecessary_unwrap emitted twice in closure
clippy: fix diagnostic paths printed by dogfood test
clippy: fix false negative for unnecessary_unwrap
clippy: make let_with_type_underscore help message into a suggestion
clippy: resolve through local re-exports in lookup_path
Rust-Analyzer
fix postfix snippets duplicating derefs
resolve doc path from parent module if outer comments exist on module
still complete parentheses & method call arguments if there are existing parentheses, but they are after a newline
Rust Compiler Performance Triage
Lot of changes this week. Overall result is positive, with one large win in type check.
Triage done by @panstromek. Revision range: 62c5f58f..718ddf66
Summary:
(instructions:u) mean range count Regressions ❌ (primary) 0.5% [0.2%, 1.4%] 113 Regressions ❌ (secondary) 0.5% [0.1%, 1.5%] 54 Improvements ✅ (primary) -2.5% [-22.5%, -0.3%] 45 Improvements ✅ (secondary) -0.9% [-2.3%, -0.2%] 10 All ❌✅ (primary) -0.3% [-22.5%, 1.4%] 158
Full report here
Approved RFCs
Changes to Rust follow the Rust RFC (request for comments) process. These are the RFCs that were approved for implementation this week:
No RFCs were approved this week.
Final Comment Period
Every week, the team announces the 'final comment period' for RFCs and key PRs which are reaching a decision. Express your opinions now.
Tracking Issues & PRs
Rust
Tracking Issue for non_null_from_ref
Add std::io::Seek instance for std::io::Take
aarch64-softfloat: forbid enabling the neon target feature
Stabilize the avx512 target features
make std::intrinsics functions actually be intrinsics
Error on recursive opaque ty in HIR typeck
Remove i128 and u128 from improper_ctypes_definitions
Guarantee behavior of transmuting Option::<T>::None subject to NPO
Temporary lifetime extension through tuple struct and tuple variant constructors
Stabilize tcp_quickack
Change the desugaring of assert! for better error output
Make well-formedness predicates no longer coinductive
No Items entered Final Comment Period this week for Cargo, Rust RFCs, Language Reference, Language Team or Unsafe Code Guidelines.
Let us know if you would like your PRs, Tracking Issues or RFCs to be tracked as a part of this list.
New and Updated RFCs
RFC: Extended Standard Library (ESL)
Upcoming Events
Rusty Events between 2025-05-14 - 2025-06-11 🦀
Virtual
2025-05-15 | Hybrid (Redmond, WA, US) | Seattle Rust User Group
May, 2025 SRUG (Seattle Rust User Group) Meetup
2025-05-15 | Virtual (Girona, ES) | Rust Girona
Sessió setmanal de codificació / Weekly coding session
2025-05-15 | Virtual (Joint Meetup, Europe + Israel) | Rust Berlin + Rust Paris + London Rust Project Group + Rust Zürisee + Rust TLV + Rust Nürnberg + Rust Munich + Rust Aarhus + lunch.rs
🦀 Celebrating 10 years of Rust 1.0 🦀
2025-05-15 | Virtual (Zürich, CH) | Rust Zürisee
🦀 Celebrating 10 years of Rust 1.0 (co-event with berline.rs) 🦀
2025-05-18 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Rust Readers Discord Discussion: Async Rust
2025-05-19 | Virtual (Tel Aviv-yafo, IL) | Rust 🦀 TLV
Tauri: Cross-Platform desktop applications with Rust and web technologies
2025-05-20 | Hybrid (EU/UK) | Rust and C++ Dragons (former Cardiff)
Talk and Connect - Fullstack - with Goetz Markgraf and Ben Wishovich
2025-05-20 | Virtual (London, UK) | Women in Rust
Threading through lifetimes of borrowing - the Rust way
2025-05-20 | Virtual (Tel Aviv, IL) | Code Mavens 🦀 - 🐍 - 🐪
Rust at Work a conversation with Ran Reichman Co-Founder & CEO of Flarion
2025-05-20 | Virtual (Washington, DC, US) | Rust DC
Mid-month Rustful
2025-05-21 | Hybrid (Vancouver, BC, CA) | Vancouver Rust
Linking
2025-05-22 | Virtual (Berlin, DE) | Rust Berlin
Rust Hack and Learn
2025-05-22 | Virtual (Girona, ES) | Rust Girona
Sessió setmanal de codificació / Weekly coding session
2025-05-25 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Rust Readers Discord Discussion: Async Rust
2025-05-27 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Fourth Tuesday
2025-05-27 | Virtual (Tel Aviv, IL) | Code Mavens 🦀 - 🐍 - 🐪
Rust at Work - conversation with Eli Shalom & Igal Tabachnik of Eureka Labs
2025-05-29 | Virtual (Nürnberg, DE) | Rust Nuremberg
Rust Nürnberg online
2025-05-29 | Virtual (Tel Aviv-yafo, IL) | Rust 🦀 TLV
שיחה חופשית ווירטואלית על ראסט
2025-06-01 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Rust Readers Discord Discussion: Async Rust
2025-06-03 | Virtual (Tel Aviv-yafo, IL) | Rust 🦀 TLV
Why Rust? למה ראסט? -
2025-06-04 | Virtual (Indianapolis, IN, US) | Indy Rust
Indy.rs - with Social Distancing
2025-06-05 | Virtual (Berlin, DE) | Rust Berlin
Rust Hack and Learn
2025-06-07 | Virtual (Kampala, UG) | Rust Circle Meetup
Rust Circle Meetup
2025-06-08 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Rust Readers Discord Discussion: Async Rust
2025-06-10 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust User Meetup
Second Tuesday
2025-06-10 | Virtual (London, UK) | Women in Rust
👋 Community Catch Up
Asia
2025-05-17 | Delhi, IN | Rust Delhi
Rust Delhi Meetup #10
2025-05-24 | Bangalore/Bengaluru, IN | Rust Bangalore
May 2025 Rustacean meetup
2025-06-08 | Tel Aviv-yafo, IL | Rust 🦀 TLV
In person Rust June 2025 at AWS in Tel Aviv
Europe
2025-05-13 - 2025-05-17 | Utrecht, NL | Rust NL
RustWeek 2025
2025-05-14 | Reading, UK | Reading Rust Workshop
Reading Rust Meetup
2025-05-15 | Berlin, DE | Rust Berlin
10 years anniversary of Rust 1.0
2025-05-15 | Oslo, NO | Rust Oslo
Rust 10-year anniversary @ Appear
2025-05-16 | Amsterdam, NL | RustNL
Rust Week Hackathon
2025-05-16 | Utrecht, NL | Rust NL Meetup Group
RustWeek Hackathon
2025-05-17 | Amsterdam, NL | RustNL
Walking Tour around Utrecht - Saturday
2025-05-20 | Dortmund, DE | Rust Dortmund
Talk and Connect - Fullstack - with Goetz Markgraf and Ben Wishovich
2025-05-20 | Aarhus, DK | Rust Aarhus
Hack Night - Robot Edition
2025-05-20 | Leipzig, SN, DE | Rust - Modern Systems Programming in Leipzig
Topic TBD
2025-05-22 | Augsburg, DE | Rust Augsburg
Rust meetup #13:A Practical Guide to Telemetry in Rust
2025-05-22 | Bern, CH | Rust Bern
2025 Rust Talks Bern #3 @zentroom
2025-05-22 | Paris, FR | Rust Paris
Rust meetup #77
2025-05-22 | Stockholm, SE | Stockholm Rust
Rust Meetup @UXStream
2025-05-27 | Basel, CH | Rust Basel
Rust Meetup #11 @ Letsboot Basel
2025-05-27 | Vienna, AT | Rust Vienna
Rust Vienna - May at Bitcredit 🦀
2025-05-29 | Oslo, NO | Rust Oslo
Rust Hack'n'Learn at Kampen Bistro
2025-05-31 | Stockholm, SE | Stockholm Rust
Ferris' Fika Forum #12
2025-06-04 | Ghent, BE | Systems Programming Ghent
Grow smarter with embedded Rust
2025-06-04 | München, DE | Rust Munich
Rust Munich 2025 / 2 - Hacking Evening
2025-06-04 | Oxford, UK | Oxford Rust Meetup Group
Oxford Rust and C++ social
2025-06-05 | München, DE | Rust Munich
Rust Munich 2025 / 2 - Hacking Evening
2025-06-11 | Reading, UK | Reading Rust Workshop
Reading Rust Meetup
North America
2025-05-15 | Hybrid (Redmond, WA, US) | Seattle Rust User Group
May, 2025 SRUG (Seattle Rust User Group) Meetup
2025-05-15 | Mountain View, CA, US | Hacker Dojo
RUST MEETUP at HACKER DOJO
2025-05-15 | Nashville, TN, US | Music City Rust Developers
Using Rust For Web Series 2 : Why you, Yes You. Should use Hyperscript!
2025-05-15 | Hybrid (Redmond, WA, US) | Seattle Rust User Group
May, 2025 SRUG (Seattle Rust User Group) Meetup
2025-05-18 | Albuquerque, NM, US | Ideas and Coffee
Intro Level Rust Get-together
2025-05-20 | San Francisco, CA, US | San Francisco Rust Study Group
Rust Hacking in Person
2025-05-21 | Hybrid (Vancouver, BC, CA) | Vancouver Rust
Linking
2025-05-28 | Austin, TX, US | Rust ATX
Rust Lunch - Fareground
2025-05-29 | Atlanta, GA, US | Rust Atlanta
Rust-Atl
2025-06-05 | Saint Louis, MO, US | STL Rust
Leptos web framework
South America
2025-05-28 | Montevideo, DE, UY | Rust Meetup Uruguay
Primera meetup de Rust de 2025!
2025-05-31 | São Paulo, BR | Rust São Paulo Meetup
Encontro do Rust-SP na WillBank
If you are running a Rust event please add it to the calendar to get it mentioned here. Please remember to add a link to the event too. Email the Rust Community Team for access.
Jobs
Please see the latest Who's Hiring thread on r/rust
Quote of the Week
If a Pin drops in a room, and nobody around understands it, does it make an unsound? #rustlang
– Josh Triplett on fedi
Thanks to Josh Triplett for the self-suggestion!
Please submit quotes and vote for next week!
This Week in Rust is edited by: nellshamrell, llogiq, cdmistman, ericseppanen, extrawurst, U007D, joelmarcey, mariannegoldin, bennyvasquez, bdillo
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How to Transition from Biotechnology to Bioinformatics: A Step-by-Step Guide
Biotechnology and bioinformatics are closely linked fields, but shifting from a wet lab environment to a computational approach requires strategic planning. Whether you are a student or a professional looking to make the transition, this guide will provide a step-by-step roadmap to help you navigate the shift from biotechnology to bioinformatics.
Why Transition from Biotechnology to Bioinformatics?
Bioinformatics is revolutionizing life sciences by integrating biological data with computational tools to uncover insights in genomics, proteomics, and drug discovery. The field offers diverse career opportunities in research, pharmaceuticals, healthcare, and AI-driven biological data analysis.
If you are skilled in laboratory techniques but wish to expand your expertise into data-driven biological research, bioinformatics is a rewarding career choice.
Step-by-Step Guide to Transition from Biotechnology to Bioinformatics
Step 1: Understand the Basics of Bioinformatics
Before making the switch, it’s crucial to gain a foundational understanding of bioinformatics. Here are key areas to explore:
Biological Databases – Learn about major databases like GenBank, UniProt, and Ensembl.
Genomics and Proteomics – Understand how computational methods analyze genes and proteins.
Sequence Analysis – Familiarize yourself with tools like BLAST, Clustal Omega, and FASTA.
🔹 Recommended Resources:
Online courses on Coursera, edX, or Khan Academy
Books like Bioinformatics for Dummies or Understanding Bioinformatics
Websites like NCBI, EMBL-EBI, and Expasy
Step 2: Develop Computational and Programming Skills
Bioinformatics heavily relies on coding and data analysis. You should start learning:
Python – Widely used in bioinformatics for data manipulation and analysis.
R – Great for statistical computing and visualization in genomics.
Linux/Unix – Basic command-line skills are essential for working with large datasets.
SQL – Useful for querying biological databases.
🔹 Recommended Online Courses:
Python for Bioinformatics (Udemy, DataCamp)
R for Genomics (HarvardX)
Linux Command Line Basics (Codecademy)
Step 3: Learn Bioinformatics Tools and Software
To become proficient in bioinformatics, you should practice using industry-standard tools:
Bioconductor – R-based tool for genomic data analysis.
Biopython – A powerful Python library for handling biological data.
GROMACS – Molecular dynamics simulation tool.
Rosetta – Protein modeling software.
🔹 How to Learn?
Join open-source projects on GitHub
Take part in hackathons or bioinformatics challenges on Kaggle
Explore free platforms like Galaxy Project for hands-on experience
Step 4: Work on Bioinformatics Projects
Practical experience is key. Start working on small projects such as:
✅ Analyzing gene sequences from NCBI databases ✅ Predicting protein structures using AlphaFold ✅ Visualizing genomic variations using R and Python
You can find datasets on:
NCBI GEO
1000 Genomes Project
TCGA (The Cancer Genome Atlas)
Create a GitHub portfolio to showcase your bioinformatics projects, as employers value practical work over theoretical knowledge.
Step 5: Gain Hands-on Experience with Internships
Many organizations and research institutes offer bioinformatics internships. Check opportunities at:
NCBI, EMBL-EBI, NIH (government research institutes)
Biotech and pharma companies (Roche, Pfizer, Illumina)
Academic research labs (Look for university-funded projects)
💡 Pro Tip: Join online bioinformatics communities like Biostars, Reddit r/bioinformatics, and SEQanswers to network and find opportunities.
Step 6: Earn a Certification or Higher Education
If you want to strengthen your credentials, consider:
🎓 Bioinformatics Certifications:
Coursera – Genomic Data Science (Johns Hopkins University)
edX – Bioinformatics MicroMasters (UMGC)
EMBO – Bioinformatics training courses
🎓 Master’s in Bioinformatics (optional but beneficial)
Top universities include Harvard, Stanford, ETH Zurich, University of Toronto
Step 7: Apply for Bioinformatics Jobs
Once you have gained enough skills and experience, start applying for bioinformatics roles such as:
Bioinformatics Analyst
Computational Biologist
Genomics Data Scientist
Machine Learning Scientist (Biotech)
💡 Where to Find Jobs?
LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor
Biotech job boards (BioSpace, Science Careers)
Company career pages (Illumina, Thermo Fisher)
Final Thoughts
Transitioning from biotechnology to bioinformatics requires effort, but with the right skills and dedication, it is entirely achievable. Start with fundamental knowledge, build computational skills, and work on projects to gain practical experience.
Are you ready to make the switch? 🚀 Start today by exploring free online courses and practicing with real-world datasets!
#bioinformatics#biopractify#biotechcareers#biotechnology#biotech#aiinbiotech#machinelearning#bioinformaticstools#datascience#genomics#Biotechnology
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Best WebSite In 2025 Old GitHub Accounts Purchase Now Quickly
Buy GitHub Accounts.If you are a developer, you must have a GitHub account. Buy GitHub accounts. Because GitHub is the world’s biggest code repository. Most developers use GitHub to exchange code and collaborate with others. The old GitHub account works well. You may buy new and existing GitHub accounts from us at extremely affordable prices with complete confidence. Thank you!
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Buy GitHub Accounts
Buy GitHub Accounts.If you are a developer, you must have a GitHub account. Buy GitHub accounts. Because GitHub is the world’s biggest code repository. Most developers use GitHub to exchange code and collaborate with others. The old GitHub account works well. You may buy new and existing GitHub accounts from us at extremely affordable prices with complete confidence. Thank you!
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found this WowWee Roboraptor at a thrift store. There were actually two of them on the shelf. According to the sticker it came from RadioShack.


Something had really gnawed one of the claws and there was green paint, and it was full of dust, so I took the whole thing apart and cleaned it thoroughly. The design is pretty cool.





There are too many things for me to list. There's hidden buttons everywhere, and this board. I have never seen a toy PCB have trim pots in any decade. What is there to adjust? And a giant exposed copper diamond. And a blob chip, on a breakout board with labelled pins. Doesn't that cost more? This thing is mechanically and electronically complicated for a toy, and there seem to be a lot of corners uncut. Very interesting. Also there are so many different kinds of screw that you have to go to great lengths to keep them organized.



After cleaning it I made an attempt at retrobrighting the plastic. It may have done something. I 3D modeled and printed a new claw, and put it on the arm. I might paint it later. There was also a broken spring anchor that I fixed.
Now there is an app to control this guy. But it relies on specific hardware and an older Android version. I found this on GitHub
Which contains raw IR data for the basic direction controls, and later they figure out how to decode all the signals. I tried transmitting with one of my ESP8266s, but had no luck. However, I found I could transmit the raw signals with a Flipper Zero through the CLI, and I put them in an IR remote file. Now I have a controller for it, though I can't control the moods or anything.
I still wonder what's up with that PCB. With the chips so easily accessible, maybe I can do some hacking?
Tbh this is way more fun for me than if I just bought this toy new and it worked. Buying it damaged with no controller was like getting a free puzzle
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Obsidian And RTX AI PCs For Advanced Large Language Model

How to Utilize Obsidian‘s Generative AI Tools. Two plug-ins created by the community demonstrate how RTX AI PCs can support large language models for the next generation of app developers.
Obsidian Meaning
Obsidian is a note-taking and personal knowledge base program that works with Markdown files. Users may create internal linkages for notes using it, and they can see the relationships as a graph. It is intended to assist users in flexible, non-linearly structuring and organizing their ideas and information. Commercial licenses are available for purchase, however personal usage of the program is free.
Obsidian Features
Electron is the foundation of Obsidian. It is a cross-platform program that works on mobile operating systems like iOS and Android in addition to Windows, Linux, and macOS. The program does not have a web-based version. By installing plugins and themes, users may expand the functionality of Obsidian across all platforms by integrating it with other tools or adding new capabilities.
Obsidian distinguishes between community plugins, which are submitted by users and made available as open-source software via GitHub, and core plugins, which are made available and maintained by the Obsidian team. A calendar widget and a task board in the Kanban style are two examples of community plugins. The software comes with more than 200 community-made themes.
Every new note in Obsidian creates a new text document, and all of the documents are searchable inside the app. Obsidian works with a folder of text documents. Obsidian generates an interactive graph that illustrates the connections between notes and permits internal connectivity between notes. While Markdown is used to accomplish text formatting in Obsidian, Obsidian offers quick previewing of produced content.
Generative AI Tools In Obsidian
A group of AI aficionados is exploring with methods to incorporate the potent technology into standard productivity practices as generative AI develops and speeds up industry.
Community plug-in-supporting applications empower users to investigate the ways in which large language models (LLMs) might improve a range of activities. Users using RTX AI PCs may easily incorporate local LLMs by employing local inference servers that are powered by the NVIDIA RTX-accelerated llama.cpp software library.
It previously examined how consumers might maximize their online surfing experience by using Leo AI in the Brave web browser. Today, it examine Obsidian, a well-known writing and note-taking tool that uses the Markdown markup language and is helpful for managing intricate and connected records for many projects. Several of the community-developed plug-ins that add functionality to the app allow users to connect Obsidian to a local inferencing server, such as LM Studio or Ollama.
To connect Obsidian to LM Studio, just select the “Developer” button on the left panel, load any downloaded model, enable the CORS toggle, and click “Start.” This will enable LM Studio’s local server capabilities. Because the plug-ins will need this information to connect, make a note of the chat completion URL from the “Developer” log console (“http://localhost:1234/v1/chat/completions” by default).
Next, visit the “Settings” tab after launching Obsidian. After selecting “Community plug-ins,” choose “Browse.” Although there are a number of LLM-related community plug-ins, Text Generator and Smart Connections are two well-liked choices.
For creating notes and summaries on a study subject, for example, Text Generator is useful in an Obsidian vault.
Asking queries about the contents of an Obsidian vault, such the solution to a trivia question that was stored years ago, is made easier using Smart Connections.
Open the Text Generator settings, choose “Custom” under “Provider profile,” and then enter the whole URL in the “Endpoint” section. After turning on the plug-in, adjust the settings for Smart Connections. For the model platform, choose “Custom Local (OpenAI Format)” from the options panel on the right side of the screen. Next, as they appear in LM Studio, type the model name (for example, “gemma-2-27b-instruct”) and the URL into the corresponding fields.
The plug-ins will work when the fields are completed. If users are interested in what’s going on on the local server side, the LM Studio user interface will also display recorded activities.
Transforming Workflows With Obsidian AI Plug-Ins
Consider a scenario where a user want to organize a trip to the made-up city of Lunar City and come up with suggestions for things to do there. “What to Do in Lunar City” would be the title of the new note that the user would begin. A few more instructions must be included in the query submitted to the LLM in order to direct the results, since Lunar City is not an actual location. The model will create a list of things to do while traveling if you click the Text Generator plug-in button.
Obsidian will ask LM Studio to provide a response using the Text Generator plug-in, and LM Studio will then execute the Gemma 2 27B model. The model can rapidly provide a list of tasks if the user’s machine has RTX GPU acceleration.
Or let’s say that years later, the user’s buddy is visiting Lunar City and is looking for a place to dine. Although the user may not be able to recall the names of the restaurants they visited, they can review the notes in their vault Obsidian‘s word for a collection of notes to see whether they have any written notes.
A user may ask inquiries about their vault of notes and other material using the Smart Connections plug-in instead of going through all of the notes by hand. In order to help with the process, the plug-in retrieves pertinent information from the user’s notes and responds to the request using the same LM Studio server. The plug-in uses a method known as retrieval-augmented generation to do this.
Although these are entertaining examples, users may see the true advantages and enhancements in daily productivity after experimenting with these features for a while. Two examples of how community developers and AI fans are using AI to enhance their PC experiences are Obsidian plug-ins.
Thousands of open-source models are available for developers to include into their Windows programs using NVIDIA GeForce RTX technology.
Read more on Govindhtech.com
#Obsidian#RTXAIPCs#LLM#LargeLanguageModel#AI#GenerativeAI#NVIDIARTX#LMStudio#RTXGPU#News#Technews#Technology#Technologynews#Technologytrends#govindhtech
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Education_Developer Project Lifecycle
I see a lot of people here on codeblr want to start some project but, not really know the best way to get started. To rectify this, hear is my very in depth guide on how to get started. Read this entire post (some of these are started early but its milestone is later).
Note, I highly suggest the use of Github and will be referencing some things that are specific to it (like Wikipedia pages). If you prefer some other method that's fine just be aware you may be making your life harder than it needs to be.
Milestone 1: Form Teams
Find your people, exchange contact information and determine a time to meet up, consistently. If you are working solo, ignore some of the instructions for this section. That is not to say ignore the parts about consistency and time management. In fact, because you are working solo that should be even more important.
At the first meeting establish chat service (teams, slack, google chat, discord). Establish the frequency of the meetings and how often everyone should check their messages (ex: every 24 hours). Discuss the options about the project.
Platform: Android, django, iOS, react native, etc.
IDE: Xcode, WebStorm, VSCode, etc. Note that modern IDEs now have built-in methods for sharing your editor view with teammates: code together, code with me, etc.
Backend: firebase, postgresql, not needed, etc.
Libraries
APIs you will access
Package manager: npm, yarn, gradle, etc.
Finally, discuss the roles you all want on the team, what should one person focus on, who is the manager, editor, client rep, tester, researcher, repo master, master of specific tech, analyst etc.
Deliverables:
Add a wiki page (or more) to your repo titled "Team Organization" and list there the decisions you made from above, along with any pother pertinent information for the team.
Add a page to your wiki titled "Project Description" which should be kept updated as you make decisions about your project. It should contain these sections:
Description: a short description of your project,
Technologies: a list of the technologies you plan to use: frameworks, libraries, hosting services, etc.
Client: your client's name and contact info, if you have one, otherwise just say "Startup."
Milestone 2: Personas and User Stories
If you have a client who wants you to build the app, or you have identified a group of users for your app, then try to meet with them. Ask them what they do? (that is relevant to why they will use the app), why they want the app? how do they currently do the things they want the app to do? etc. If this is a startup answer those questions and more.
The point of this section is to better understand the users of this website. You need to make personas and user stories and record them so that you can reference them as you complete this project. It is very easy to loose sight of who will be using your product and assume they know more than they actually do.
Deliverables:
Add at least three personas to your wiki. These should cover 3 distinct user-types for your app. Each Persona must have a name, photo, and personal history.
Add a "User Stories" wiki page with at least 9 user stories covering the most common use cases for your app. They should all be of the form: As <the name of one of your personas> I want a <feature> so that I can <satisfy a need>.
Milestone 3: Design
For those that are more artsy than everyone else, now is your time to shine. Use a tool like Pencil, figma, justinmind, balsamiq, mockflow.com to design your product.
Your design should include:
An image for each of the major screens and dialogs of your app. Show all the widgets in their proper placement. Name each screen and write some text to explain how actions in one screen will lead to other screens.
In the case of a widget-free apps, you should include diagrams for all the major 'areas', animation stills that detail the most common animations and game mechanics (for example, Super Mario would have a set of drawings showing Mario jumping, punching up, and landing on a Goomba's head), as well as story boards if they are more relevant to your game.
A goal of the design is for you to think about the usability of your app. Try to 'use' the app in your mind: simulate how a user might use the app. Printing the screens into sheets of paper of the correct size and shuffling them as you pretend to use the app is a very common way to test the usability.
Another goal is to save you time. Remember that making a change now, like adding or deleting a screen, is a thousand times easier than if you wait until after you have written the code.
Deliverable: Add one page to your wiki called "Design" and add the images of your design here, along with some textual description of each screen and what it is used for.
Milestone 4: Requirements
This will be the main requirements document for your project. If you were charging a client for your work, this document would form part of that contract, specifying exactly what features your software will implement. The other part of the contract would be the payment details.
The document includes the design you made before (so, embed or add links to those images) but extends on that with detailed descriptions of all the desired features.
You will also mark each feature with one of:
Required: Core functionality of the app. Must have these for it to even start working.
Desired: Added functionality, usability, features, cosmetic features.
Aspirational: Other cool stuff you would like to add
Remember: all good programmers should understate what can be done and then over deliver. If you think something is going to take you 4 weeks, tell the client it will take 8. Then, when it inevitably takes you 6 weeks, you will seem ahead of schedule. On a similar note, if the client is asking for a lot of shit, say no. Now is not the time to be a people pleaser. If you want to please them, do it as a surprise addition, after basic functionality has been achieved.
Roughly the required features are those that need to get done first before anything else can even get started: things like logins, navigation menu, connection to backend, etc. They lay the foundation for building the app. An app that only implements the required features will at most get a passing grade in the class: 70.
The desired features are what make your app worth using. They make the app functional, attractive, and easy to use. Roughly, an app that implements all the desired features gets a 90 in the class.
The aspirational features make your app a professional-quality app. Implementing some of these moves it towards 100.
Deliverables:
Make a Requirements wiki page and list your requirements there.
Each item should succinctly explain a feature.
Each one will have a number. You can add sub-numbering, 1.1, 1.2, 1.2.1, etc. if you want.
Each one will be marked as either: Required, Desired, or Aspirational.
Add all the Proof of Concept Issues to your GitHub Issues with label:enhancement, milestone:Proof Of Concept. These are what you will implement first.
Milestone 5: Research
As a developer, you need to be intimately familiar with the technologies you are or could be using. You need to understand the pros, cons, and requirements of each library and platform that is relevant to your project. Thus, you need to be up to date on technology and, since technology seems to be always changing, this will be something you need to do throughout your career.
Specifically, you need to
Know about the various platforms available to you: their options and limitations.
Know about the various libraries that you can use to make your work easier.
Download, install, and build sample 'Hello world' apps using the most promising technologies. It is not enough to just read about it, you have to do it in order to learn.
Learn how to use the specific framework+libraries you choose to use for the project by building little apps with them.
Learn to use your package manager.
All of the above needs to be done before you start coding together with your team. Do not assume your teammates will teach you. You are responsible for learning.
This milestone will take a lot of time and work, which is why you should start working on this milestone as soon as that first meeting occurs where you discussion options.
Deliverable: Create a separate repo (I suggest naming it research-<projectname>) where you will place your sample project built using your team's chosen framework. The project will be more than just "hello world", or cut-n-paste from a tutorial. Start with tutorial code but, add you own code to their code. The app should have some minimal interactivity: user enters some data, program does something with it and shows the user.
Milestone 6: Architecture
Now that you are comfortable working with your chosen framework, you will write a document that roughly describes the big parts of your code. The structure will depend a lot on your chosen framework.
If you are building a webapp then you will probably list the set of database tables (models, for example: rails:ActiveRecords, meteor:Collections, etc), the set Views, and the set of Controllers. For webapps you should also list the of your URLs app, and what lives at each one.
If you are building an Android app then you will list your Activities or Fragments, along with their corresponding Views, as well as your model Java classes. You will also list your database tables (firebase, sqlite, localStorage, etc) if you need persistence, which almost everyone does.
Think deeply about your design. Go over the most common use-cases and check how those will be accomplished in code: which methods will be invoked? do the methods have references to all the objects they need in order to perform their job? Remember that your main goal is *de-coupling** the various classes: the fewer references (method arguments, global variables) they need, the easier your life will be.
Deliverable: Add architecture document to the wiki containing:
List all the languages/frameworks/libraries/services/APIs you plan to use. Explain how they will tie together. For example: This will be a native Android app written in Kotlin, using the android.graphics library, using firebase real-time database for cloud data, and firebase authentication for user accounts.
What package/build manager will you use? npm, gradle, yarn, flutter, pipenv, etc.
List what each person will work on. Everyone must make significant code contributions, or they will fail the class, see Syllabus.
Make sure all the images (if any) are embedded in the wiki page and hosted at GitHub.
Make sure the wiki page is easy to read.
If you are building a webapp:
Deployment How will you deploy? Which hosting provider(s)? Automation? Scripts? Explain.
Are you using Virtual Machines (vmware, vbox, etc) or Containers (docker) for development or deployment? Explain.
Is it a SPA or traditional? or mix? Explain. (My web application development lectures explain the difference.)
List of URLs you will implement. Explain any search arguments in English. Link (actual hyperlink) each URL to the page it shows in your Detailed Design milestone.
If implementing a REST API, document it. List all methods, parameters, and give English description of what they do.
The Views of your app. Embed the images from your Design Milestone. Typically, a webpage includes multiple views. For example, this webpage has a Header, Menu, and Content views (at least).
The Database schema: set of tables/documents with list of attributes and their types. Describe each table and attribute in English.
List of common queries you expect will be needed. Do any of then need to join tables?
If you are building a mobile or desktop app:
Release: How will you create and deliver a binary to testers? Explain. Note that the testers include us (the teachers of this class, when we grade your app). You must deliver a simple to install app: double-click to install.
Are you using Virtual Machines (vmware, vbox, etc) or Containers (docker) for development? If so, explain.
The Models for your app. These could be UML class diagrams, or just models with attributes (with type) and descriptions (in English).
How will your app maintain state? in memory? or database? or both? Note this in your Model Classes.
If you are using a db-backend (say firebase) then include the Database schema: set of tables/documents with list of attributes and their types.
List of common queries you expect will be needed. Do any of then need to join tables?
The Views of your app: name, describe. Embed the images from your Design Milestone. Typically, one page in the app is composed of multiple View elements.
Below will be complete as I do for my Capstone project.
Source Control
Ethical, Legal, and Security Considerations
Proof of Concept (PoC)
PoC Demo
Testing
Beta Release
RC1 Release
Quality Assurance
Website
1.0 Release
Final Demo Video
#erozcodes#studyblr#codeblr#education#self study#production cycle#scrum#devlifecycle#this shit can be so painful and I hope this can help
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ins Etui na iPhone'a z animowanym misiem

Greetings! As a computer science graduate student, I would like to share with you an idea for an application. I believe there's a potential market for an application that will help computer science students as well as professionals to collaborate and support each other in their learning and working process. This app would be designed with features geared towards problem-solving, networking, sharing resources, and providing mentorship.\n\nHere's a more detailed breakdown of the application and how it would function:\n\n1. Community forums: Users can ask questions or share knowledge about computer science topics, allowing for interactive learning and knowledge exchange. Users can also branch into specific subcategories for discussions related to various programming languages, methodologies, algorithms, data structures, and more. \n\n2. Collaborative project space: Users can create, join or invite others to participate in collaborative projects, fostering a sense of camaraderie and teamwork which is essential to field's growth. \n\n3. Resource library: The app will feature a comprehensive library of resources such as articles, research papers, tutorials, and open-source projects that computer science enthusiasts can access. Users can also contribute by suggesting resources or uploading their own documents. \n\n4. Mentorship program: Establishing a mentorship program where experienced professionals can act as mentors to computer science students or newcomers would greatly benefit their learning process. Mentees can reach out to mentors for guidance on specific topics, advice on career paths, or general support while navigating the field.\n\n5. Real-Time Code Sharing and Review: With a real-time code sharing feature, users can work together on code and provide critiques or suggestions for improvements in real-time, simulating a real-world work experience.\n\n6. User Profiles: Users can build their own profiles where they can track their progress, share their achievements, and display their skills. This personal touch may also help users to connect with potential employers or collaborators.\n\n7. Integration with popular tools: Integrate popular tools and platforms that computer scientists use such as GitHub, LinkedIn, StackOverflow, and more to provide a streamlined experience for users. \n\n8. Coding Challenges and Competitions: Regular coding challenges and hackathons would be organized within the application to allow users to practice and showcase their skills.\n\nThe development of such an app could foster a supportive and collaborative community in the field of computer science. Industry experts, students, and hobbyists alike could benefit from joining forces and growing together in this dynamic field.
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