Rob Janssen

STOP! Having Trouble?

My concerns started when I opened the box. To the left of the H10 was a plastic bag with the manual etc. On the top of the plastic bag, plain to see was a bright orange piece of paper with:

A Gentle Introduction to Application Security - Paragon Initiative Enterpri

Developers Who Can Build Things from Scratch – Aaronontheweb

There's lots of different types of developers you're going to need to work with over the span of your career in the software business, but the one I want to talk about today is the kind you need when you're trying to build something new.

Kodak’s First Digital Moment

Imagine a world where photography is a slow process that is impossible to master without years of study or apprenticeship. A world without iPhones or Instagram, where one company reigned supreme. Such a world existed in 1973, when Steven Sasson, a young engineer, went to work for Eastman Kodak.

For 40 years, computer scientists looked for a solution that doesn’t exist

For 40 years, computer scientists have tried in vain to find a faster way to do an important calculation known as “edit distance.

5 Types of Programming Comments to Avoid

Blog

And I bet you’re wasting your time, missing the real point. Let’s take a step back for a second and pretend that your database is a phone book organized by last name, first name.

Even when told not to, Windows 10 just can’t stop talking to Microsoft

Windows 10 uses the Internet a lot to support many of its features. The operating system also sports numerous knobs to twiddle that are supposed to disable most of these features, and the potentially privacy-compromising connections that go with them.

7 realities of software development that your boss doesn’t understand

Developers are more than aware that certain aspects of their job are considered unchartered territory by their boss – but what about the parts of software development that they shouldn’t be so clueless about? John Sonmez has put together a comprehensive list.

If You Haven't Done It Before, All Bets Are Off

I've been on one side or the other of most approaches to managing software development: from hyper-detailed used of specs and flowcharts to variants of agile to not having any kind of planning or scheduling at all.

This Read-It-Later-list is just that, bookmarks of stuff I intend to read or have read. I do not necessarily agree with opinions or statements in the bookmarked articles.

This list is compiled from my Pocket list.