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A checklist for designing and developing internet scale services, inspired by James Hamilton's 2007 paper "On Desgining and Deploying Internet-Scale Services."
List of resources recommended or mentioned by the speakers at Deconstruct 2017
Deconstruct 2017 Bibliography
Here are all of the resources mentioned by Deconstruct 2017 speakers, along with who recommended what. Please post a comment if I missed something or have an error!
DC 2017 Speakers' Choice Gold Medalist
Seeing Like a State by James Scott
Books
Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann (Evan Czaplicki)
A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander (Brian Marick)
It's now here, in The Programmer's Compendium.
The content is the same as before, but being part of the compendium means that it's actively maintained.
This is a list inspired by some of our current or potential lines of work at the World Bank Innovation Labs. The “Innovations in Big Data Analytics” program helps to strengthen the World Bank capabilities to effectively use big data in its operational and strategic work.
This is a list inspired by some of our current or potential lines of work at the World Bank Innovation Labs. The “Innovations in Big Data Analytics” program helps to strengthen the World Bank capabilities to effectively use big data in its operational and strategic work.
We are always looking for great Data Scientists. If you can solve any of these [using open software], you'll be heads down helping us from day one. Email us to [email protected]
(This list is updated frequently).
1. Nightlights from Satellite
We are building an open stack to process nightly data from satellite and query light output from all known villages. Currently we are doing 20 years of nightly data for 600,000 villages in India.
Reminders to myself to help me get better at programming. I don't always manage to do these things, but I try. Please feel free to add your own reminders to yourself in the comments below!
I imagine each of these chapters being about 2,000 words, making the whole book about the size of a small novel.
For comparison, articles in large papers like the New York Times average about 1,200 words.
Each topic gets whatever level of detail I can fit into that space.
For simple topics, that's a lot of space: I can probably walk through a very basic, but working, implementation of the IP protocol.
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