Edward Snowden answered questions after a showing of CITIZENFOUR at the IETF93 meeting; this is a transcript of the video recording.
For more information, see the Internet Society article.
Edward Snowden answered questions after a showing of CITIZENFOUR at the IETF93 meeting; this is a transcript of the video recording.
For more information, see the Internet Society article.
<!doctype html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<meta charset="utf-8"/> | |
<title>Table Accessibility</title> | |
<link href="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/highlight.js/8.6/styles/github.min.css" rel="stylesheet"> | |
<style id="grid-css"> | |
/* make grid elements work like a table */ |
import { Component } from "React"; | |
export var Enhance = ComposedComponent => class extends Component { | |
constructor() { | |
this.state = { data: null }; | |
} | |
componentDidMount() { | |
this.setState({ data: 'Hello' }); | |
} | |
render() { |
#!/bin/bash | |
files=$(git diff --cached --name-only | grep '\.js$') | |
# Prevent ESLint help message if no files matched | |
if [[ $files = "" ]] ; then | |
exit 0 | |
fi | |
echo $files | xargs eslint |
Since 2008 or 2009 I work on Apple hardware and OS: back then I grew tired of Linux desktop (which is going to be MASSIVE NEXT YEAR, at least since 2001), and switched to something that Just Works. Six years later, it less and less Just Works, started turning into spyware and nagware, and doesn't need much less maintenance than Linux desktop — at least for my work, which is system administration and software development, probably it is better for the mythical End User person. Work needed to get software I need running is not less obscure than work I'd need to do on Linux or othe Unix-like system. I am finding myself turning away from GUI programs that I used to appreciate, and most of the time I use OSX to just run a terminal, Firefox, and Emacs. GUI that used to be nice and unintrusive, got annoying. Either I came full circle in the last 15 years of my computer usage, or the OSX experience degraded in last 5 years. Again, this is from a sysadmin/developer ki
" A minimal vimrc for new vim users to start with. | |
" | |
" Referenced here: http://www.benorenstein.com/blog/your-first-vimrc-should-be-nearly-empty/ | |
" Original Author: Bram Moolenaar <[email protected]> | |
" Made more minimal by: Ben Orenstein | |
" Last change: 2012 Jan 20 | |
" | |
" To use it, copy it to | |
" for Unix and OS/2: ~/.vimrc |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
<script type="text/javascript"> | |
(function () { | |
"use strict"; | |
// once cached, the css file is stored on the client forever unless | |
// the URL below is changed. Any change will invalidate the cache | |
var css_href = './index_files/web-fonts.css'; | |
// a simple event handler wrapper | |
function on(el, ev, callback) { | |
if (el.addEventListener) { | |
el.addEventListener(ev, callback, false); |
[ | |
{ "keys": ["super+shift+r"], "command": "reindent" }, | |
{ "keys": ["super+v"], "command": "paste_and_indent" }, | |
{ "keys": ["super+k", "super+d"], "command": "toggle_distraction_free" } | |
] |