Thursday 7 March 2013

Pictures from a developer's life: part 3


Most of them are originally from The coding love - thanks to Nicolas Lecointre for permission to post them here. A couple of bonus pictures included as well.

When I see someone commit 500 files to fix one bug

When I notice I was editing production code and I quickly correct my errors

When I try a solution without reading the docs first

When I am asked about something from the 900 pages of documentation


/* by gmajoulet */

When after a big update I test the new site with IE


/* by tic_le_kiwi */

When I am the only one to notice a bug on friday night


/* by dup */

When they me ask if I have tested it


/* by ponpon */

Ninja-fixing a bug 10 minutes before the demo for client


/* by mikel */

When they tell me the website has to be supported by IE6


/* by manu91 */

When a misformed sql query actually returns me the correct results


/* by yanism38 */

When I find out that someone has accidentally overwritten my changes in git

When after a productive day I'm so confident that I think I can handle parkour tricks on the way home

When I start coding without doing analysis first

When project manager thinks that I can handle whole project all by myself

When I did a good job and the client is happy

Pictures from a developer's life: part 2


When a thing that worked on Friday no longer works on Monday

When I return to development of my code that wasn't commented

When a bug goes unnoticed during a presentation

When a newbie suggests to add a new feature to project

When the boss announces a bonus if the project is completed before the deadline

When I realize that I have been blocked for two hours because of a forgotten semicolon

When asked to lend a hand on a Friday afternoon

When the project manager suddenly looks on my screen

When the client tries to click on the mockups

When customer wants to change specification 2 days before pushing to production

When my script finally worked

When I am asked to continue work of a newbie colleague

When I'm told that my code is broken in production

When I find a solution without searching Google

When the intern tells me that "the tests are for those who can not program"

When I manage to replace 200 lines of the algorithm by only 10 lines

The pictures are originally from blogs The coding love (en) and Les joies du code (fr), so if you liked them, make sure to visit these sites for more!

This is the second part of the post Pictures from a developer's life.

Pictures from a developer's life


Yesterday I stumbled upon this collection on a Spanish blog and almost cried with laughter... So I translated it and posted here. Do you find yourself in any of these situations? :)
EDIT: As I later found out, the pictures are originally from blogs The coding love (en) and Les joies du code (fr).

When I show the boss that I have finally fixed this bug

When the project manager enters the office

When I'm deploying code to production

When I try to fix a bug at 3 in the morning

When my regex returned exactly what I expected

When a friend of mine asks me to fix his website built with Joomla

When I'm told that the module on which I have worked all the week will never be used

When the code that I have not tested on dev works perfectly in production

When the sales people announce they have sold our product to the customer

When I apply a new CSS for the first time

When sysadmin finally gives us the root access

When I launch my script for the first time after several hours of development

When I go off for the weekend while everyone else is still trying to fix bugs

When the app goes into beta and the first bug reports arrive

When the boss is looking for someone to urgently fix a difficult bug

Want to see more?

There is a second part of this post: Pictures from a developer's life: part 2.

Sunday 3 March 2013

Mark Shuttleworth: Serious people are saying Ubuntu is better than Windows 8 on tablets


Summary: The Ubuntu OS on smartphones and tablets has been grabbing headlines and gaining support quickly since the plans were formally unveiled at the beginning of 2013. ZDNet met the man behind Ubuntu to see what he had to say about the project.
Mark Shuttlework
Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth shows off Ubuntu on a Nexus 10 tablet
ZDNet met with Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, at Mobile World Congress to talk about Ubuntu across tablets, smartphones and more.
Ubuntu OS on the desktop is becoming an increasingly recognisable brand and has a long heritage in the open source community, but rather than confine itself to the one platform, Canonical set out on the path to use the same core kernel and deliver the same platform across smartphones, tablets, the desktop and TVs.
Clearly not one to turn down a challenge, Shuttleworth was one of the first space tourists, 2013 has gotten off to a flying start for the ambitious South African entrepreneur and has already seen the unveiling of the platform on smartphones and tablets.
Q: There's been a lot of buzz around Ubuntu and its device strategy ahead of Mobile World Congress, are there more announcements on the horizon?
A: This is a big one for us. We have a silicon partner that we'll announce after the show, but they are a very significant force in the mobile ecosystem and they are optimising prototypes.
It feels like it has been quite a long road, with hints of what was to come with launch of Ubuntu for Android.
Around four years ago we mapped out the vision — phone, tablet, PC, TV — and we built a design team and took that on as the challenge. The result you see is really elegant. This [the tablet version] is the missing link, the bridge, between what we showed you six weeks ago and the PC stuff. In a sense we've been hiding in plain sight. You can go back to 2009 and look at things that landed in the distro and see now why those pieces came together.
It seems like each form factor for Ubuntu could essentially act as a companion device for another, for example, with tablets and smartphones. Given that, do you foresee retailers bundling Ubuntu tablets with Ubuntu smartphones?
In one version of the vision, you just get a smartphone and then you dock it to a bigger piece of glass and you get a tablet and you undock it and you have a smartphone. It's just one device.
What's the enterprise angle?
We have some unique stories for the enterprise, full disk encryption for the enterprise and separately encryption of each user session, and this is Ubuntu so all of that can be tied into LDAP or Active Directory, so from an enterprise perspective this becomes the first truly secure tablet that can be used for military purposes, finance, medical — sensitive, compliance-intensive uses.
Do you see Ubuntu OS tablets creeping into the enterprise through the BYOD route, or do you envisage companies rolling out a fleet of them?
Either/or: there are some good reasons why enterprises would choose this. For security, malware on Android is a real problem and this is a much cleaner environment. I can [also] see why consumers might choose it too, what we've done is really quite beautiful from the consumer point of view.
What did you have to drop, that you really didn't want to, or plan to re-introduce?
That's an interesting question. We had to drop lots of good ideas, and that's the thing with design — you're constantly having good ideas. We had to say, okay, of each idea, where does it stack on the priority list, how useful is it, is it important enough an idea that might land only on the PC interface, like a delta between them. Is it an idea we can find an expression of in the different form factors?
So when will I be able to get my hands on an Ubuntu phone or tablet?
I think phones in January, tablets in April [2014]. This is the developer version right now, you can't really use it as your every day driver, but in a couple of weeks you'll be able to.
You only released it a few days ago, though.
We released it for the four Nexus devices and now we have 20 work-in-progress ports from the community already, and some of them are to older devices.
Do you know how many people downloaded it?
I know that in the first six hours we have 75,000 hits on the download, which is pretty cool.
We've got a lot of work to do but we've got some great partners kicking in and the team is really motivated. We have a chance to profoundly change the historical balance of Linux as a follower of PCs. This is better than Windows 8 as an experience, that's not a crazy thing to say, serious people in industry are saying 'that's better than Windows 8' [on tablets].

Friday 1 March 2013

SBE Non-EU Scholarship at Maastricht University in Netherlands, 2013


The School of Business and Economics (SBE) offers one scholarship for its three-year undergraduate programmes at Maastricht University in Netherlands. Students must be accepted to a SBE bachelor’s programme. Students must not be older than 35 years at the start of the academic year and have an overall GPA of at least 70%. The scholarship covers allowance, health and liability insurance, visa costs, tuition fee waiver, refund of travel expenses. The scholarship is renewable every year for the duration of the bachelor’s programme. The scholarship is provided to study in International Business, Economics and Business Economics, Econometrics and Operations Research, Fiscal Economics. Send application electronically.
Study Subject(s): The scholarship is provided to study in International Business, Economics and Business Economics, Econometrics and Operations Research, Fiscal Economics.
Course Level: This scholarship is for pursuing undergraduate degree level.
Scholarship Provider: Maastricht University
Scholarship can be taken at: Netherlands
Eligibility: If applicants wish to apply for the SBE Scholarship, there are several requirements. They must:
-Be accepted to a SBE bachelor’s programme;
-BSc International Business: admission through the decentralized selection procedure;
-BSc Economics and Business Economics: admission through the decentralized selection procedure;
-BSc Econometrics and Operations Research: admission through the regular admission procedure;
-BSc Fiscal Economics: admission through the regular admission procedure;
-Not be older than 35 years at the start of the academic year (1 September 2013);
-Have an overall GPA of at least 70%.
Scholarship Open for Students of Following Countries: The students of Non-EU/EEA countries can apply for this scholarship.
Scholarship DescriptionMaastricht-UniversityThe School of Business and Economics (SBE) offers one scholarship for its three-year bachelor’s programmes to talented students with the interest to expand their global education who originate from a non-EU/EEA country.
Number of awards offered: One scholarship is offered.
Duration of award(s): Scholarship is offered for 3 years.
What does it cover? For a non-EU/EEA student, the amount of the scholarship is € 11,500 per academic year. The scholarship is renewable every year for the duration of the bachelor’s programme on the express condition that scholarship awarded students.
Allowance € 900 One-ti

2013 RMIT Irana Turynska Undergraduate and Master’s Scholarships in Australia


RMIT offers Irana Turynska undergraduate and masters scholarships in Australia. Scholarships are provided in the field of architecture. Scholarship is awarded to a female and a current full-time third year bachelor of architectural design or fourth year masters of architecture student within the school of architecture and design. The students of Australia can apply for this scholarship.  Two Scholarships are offered for one year. The application deadline is 19 March 2013.
Study Subject(s): Scholarships are provided in the field of architecture.
Course Level: This scholarship is available for pursuing  third year bachelor of architectural design or fourth year masters of architecture student.
Scholarship Provider: RMIT
Scholarship can be taken at: Australia
Eligibility:To be eligible for this scholarship you must:
-be female
-have resided in Australia for less than 10 years
-be studying full time in your third year of the Bachelor of Architectural Design or fourth year of the Masters of Architecture in 2013
-have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or greater in the Bachelor of Architectural Design.
Scholarship Open for International Students: The students of Australia can apply for this scholarship.
Scholarship Description: RMIT provides Irana Turynska Undergraduate and Masters Scholarships in Australia. If you are female RIMT Universityand a current full-time third year Bachelor of Architectural Design or fourth year Masters of Architecture student within the School of Architecture and Design, this scholarship can provide you with financial assistance. This scholarship is made available by the generous donation of Irana Turynska, an RMIT alumnus who studied architecture. To apply for this scholarship, you need to be commencing your third year of BP250 Bachelor of Architectural Design or fourth year of MC163 Masters of Architecture in 2013. This scholarship is only open to females who have been in Australia for less than 10 years and have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or greater in the Bachelor of Architectural Design.
Number of award(s): Two Scholarships are offered.
Duration of award(s): Scholarship is offered for one year.
What does it cover? The scholarship provides up to $5,000 for one year.
Selection criteria: Not Known
Notification:  Not Known
How to Apply: Application should be submitted : - in person at any RMIT Hub or by post.
Scholarship Application Deadline: The application deadline is 19th March 2013.
- See more at: http://scholarship-positions.com/2013-rmit-irana-turynska-undergraduate-and-masters-scholarships-in-australia/2013/02/20/#sthash.7vd0Yy1U.dpuf - See more at: http://scholarship-positions.com/2013-rmit-irana-turynska-undergraduate-and-masters-scholarships-in-australia/2013/02/20/#sthash.7vd0Yy1U.dpuf

Read more: RIMT Undergraduate and Masters Scholarships in Australia : 2013 2014 Scholarship Positions
http://scholarship-positions.com 

 

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