What is Kubernetes?
- Deploy a Kubernetes cluster on Digital Ocean using kubeadm
--> Star this gist if you want to see it on the Reactive 2016 conference <--
Writing React.js is fun... But being able to draw React components, design responsive layouts and create entire app flows visually can be even more fun! (Especially for those non-coder members of your team who think ECMAScript 6 is a skin disease. They should see the light of React too.)
In this lightning talk, we'll give you a world premiere sneak peek at React Studio (www.reactstudio.com), a GUI tool built specifically for React. We'll explain how React's functional design makes it a great fit for visual tools. Also we will show how React Studio's plugin approach makes it a really powerful meta-programming system. Want to switch your app from Redux to Alt.js or vice versa? Just swap the state plugin and export again! That's just one of the joys of using a visual system for your Reactified visual design.
A curated list of AWS resources to prepare for the AWS Certifications
A curated list of awesome AWS resources you need to prepare for the all 5 AWS Certifications. This gist will include: open source repos, blogs & blogposts, ebooks, PDF, whitepapers, video courses, free lecture, slides, sample test and many other resources.
by Bjørn Friese
Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit.
I frequently deal with collections of things in the programs I write. Collections of droids, jedis, planets, lightsabers, starfighters, etc. When programming in Python, these collections of things are usually represented as lists, sets and dictionaries. Oftentimes, what I want to do with collections is to transform them in various ways. Comprehensions is a powerful syntax for doing just that. I use them extensively, and it's one of the things that keep me coming back to Python. Let me show you a few examples of the incredible usefulness of comprehensions.
Just a quickie test in Python 3 (using Requests) to see if Google Cloud Vision can be used to effectively OCR a scanned data table and preserve its structure, in the way that products such as ABBYY FineReader can OCR an image and provide Excel-ready output.
The short answer: No. While Cloud Vision provides bounding polygon coordinates in its output, it doesn't provide it at the word or region level, which would be needed to then calculate the data delimiters.
On the other hand, the OCR quality is pretty good, if you just need to identify text anywhere in an image, without regards to its physical coordinates. I've included two examples:
####### 1. A low-resolution photo of road signs
# You don't need Fog in Ruby or some other library to upload to S3 -- shell works perfectly fine | |
# This is how I upload my new Sol Trader builds (http://soltrader.net) | |
# Based on a modified script from here: http://tmont.com/blargh/2014/1/uploading-to-s3-in-bash | |
S3KEY="my aws key" | |
S3SECRET="my aws secret" # pass these in | |
function putS3 | |
{ | |
path=$1 |
> curl http://tarantool.org/dist/public.key |apt-key add - | |
> echo "deb http://tarantool.org/dist/master/ubuntu/ trusty main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/tarantool.list | |
> apt-get update | |
> apt-get install tarantool luarocks rlwrap | |
> mkdir ~/.luarocks | |
> echo "rocks_servers = {[[http://rocks.tarantool.org/]]}" >> ~/.luarocks/config.lua | |
> luarocks install queue | |
```lua |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Hacked together by JeroenJanssens.com on 2013-12-10 | |
# Requires: https://github.com/joewalnes/websocketd | |
# Run: websocketd --devconsole --port 8080 ./chat.sh | |
echo "Please enter your name:"; read USER | |
echo "[$(date)] ${USER} joined the chat" >> chat.log | |
echo "[$(date)] Welcome to the chat ${USER}!" | |
tail -n 0 -f chat.log --pid=$$ | grep --line-buffered -v "] ${USER}>" & | |
while read MSG; do echo "[$(date)] ${USER}> ${MSG}" >> chat.log; done |
/* Flatten das boostrap */ | |
.well, .navbar-inner, .popover, .btn, .tooltip, input, select, textarea, pre, .progress, .modal, .add-on, .alert, .table-bordered, .nav>.active>a, .dropdown-menu, .tooltip-inner, .badge, .label, .img-polaroid { | |
-moz-box-shadow: none !important; | |
-webkit-box-shadow: none !important; | |
box-shadow: none !important; | |
-webkit-border-radius: 0px !important; | |
-moz-border-radius: 0px !important; | |
border-radius: 0px !important; | |
border-collapse: collapse !important; | |
background-image: none !important; |