At FreeCodeCamp I am into a comprehensive report of the several social media as well as publishing platforms that FreeCodeCamp uses, to advise about user management as well as user performance
This document outlines the main activities and data processes for an organization conducting market research projects across multiple countries. It describes data collection from various sources, transformation and analysis using tools like SPSS, Excel and SQL, and reporting outputs to clients through SaaS hosting and standard or ad hoc reports. Key activities include fieldwork monitoring, data management and quality checks, analytics, and tool development to enable projections and efficiency improvements across various research projects.
David Yang has successfully completed the Bootcamp Prep course at Fullstack Academy. The CEO of Fullstack Academy, Aryeh Harris, has issued David Yang a Certificate of Completion to recognize his achievement in finishing the course. The document is a certificate dated September 29, 2016 acknowledging David Yang's accomplishment.
Startup Pirates began in 2011 as an idea to support entrepreneurs and has since grown to become a global accelerator program. It runs intensive one-week programs in cities around the world to help early-stage startups launch through workshops, mentoring, and community building. Since starting, Startup Pirates has supported over 950 participants from 80 startups across 29 cities and 17 countries. The program connects entrepreneurs, helps startups raise funding, and has led to the creation of over 190 jobs. Organizers in different cities plan local programs with support from Startup Pirates' global network of mentors, speakers, and resources.
Priscilla Rodriguez wants to create a community website for the Miami tech scene to address the problems of people not knowing about local tech events and talent leaving for better opportunities elsewhere. The website would serve as a central hub where the community can share and find information on Miami's tech networking events, jobs, and resources using technologies like Materialize, Devise, Carrierwave, Simple Calendar, Geocoder, and Google Maps for Rail.
This document provides an overview of a UX design bootcamp. It begins with introductions from the instructor, Jacklyn Burgan. The bootcamp will cover the basics of UX design through building a mobile grocery shopping app, including competitive analysis, user research, wireframing, and user testing. Key topics that will be covered include defining UX design and usability, discussing the UX process and lean UX, conducting user interviews and analyzing research findings to create personas. Challenges with personas and an introduction to wireframing are also summarized.
This document summarizes a freeCodeCamp Tokyo meetup on July 20, 2016. The meetup was held at Fork Inc and included an opening, pair programming sessions, a presentation on modern JavaScript features like arrows and classes, challenges from freeCodeCamp, and a drinking party. The schedule also included a discussion of pair programming benefits like improved code readability and maintainability. Sample solutions to the challenges were shared via GitHub gists.
The document summarizes the history and growth of SEOmoz, an SEO software company founded in 2001 by Rand Fishkin and his mother Gillian. It details how SEOmoz grew from a small consultancy into a profitable software company with over 10,000 subscribers. The document outlines SEOmoz's plans to raise $20-25 million in funding to expand its product suite, team, and marketing in order to serve a wider audience and become the leading software for organic marketers. The goal is for SEOmoz to become Seattle's next billion dollar company.
This document outlines the main activities and data processes for an organization conducting market research projects across multiple countries. It describes data collection from various sources, transformation and analysis using tools like SPSS, Excel and SQL, and reporting outputs to clients through SaaS hosting and standard or ad hoc reports. Key activities include fieldwork monitoring, data management and quality checks, analytics, and tool development to enable projections and efficiency improvements across various research projects.
David Yang has successfully completed the Bootcamp Prep course at Fullstack Academy. The CEO of Fullstack Academy, Aryeh Harris, has issued David Yang a Certificate of Completion to recognize his achievement in finishing the course. The document is a certificate dated September 29, 2016 acknowledging David Yang's accomplishment.
Startup Pirates began in 2011 as an idea to support entrepreneurs and has since grown to become a global accelerator program. It runs intensive one-week programs in cities around the world to help early-stage startups launch through workshops, mentoring, and community building. Since starting, Startup Pirates has supported over 950 participants from 80 startups across 29 cities and 17 countries. The program connects entrepreneurs, helps startups raise funding, and has led to the creation of over 190 jobs. Organizers in different cities plan local programs with support from Startup Pirates' global network of mentors, speakers, and resources.
Priscilla Rodriguez wants to create a community website for the Miami tech scene to address the problems of people not knowing about local tech events and talent leaving for better opportunities elsewhere. The website would serve as a central hub where the community can share and find information on Miami's tech networking events, jobs, and resources using technologies like Materialize, Devise, Carrierwave, Simple Calendar, Geocoder, and Google Maps for Rail.
This document provides an overview of a UX design bootcamp. It begins with introductions from the instructor, Jacklyn Burgan. The bootcamp will cover the basics of UX design through building a mobile grocery shopping app, including competitive analysis, user research, wireframing, and user testing. Key topics that will be covered include defining UX design and usability, discussing the UX process and lean UX, conducting user interviews and analyzing research findings to create personas. Challenges with personas and an introduction to wireframing are also summarized.
This document summarizes a freeCodeCamp Tokyo meetup on July 20, 2016. The meetup was held at Fork Inc and included an opening, pair programming sessions, a presentation on modern JavaScript features like arrows and classes, challenges from freeCodeCamp, and a drinking party. The schedule also included a discussion of pair programming benefits like improved code readability and maintainability. Sample solutions to the challenges were shared via GitHub gists.
The document summarizes the history and growth of SEOmoz, an SEO software company founded in 2001 by Rand Fishkin and his mother Gillian. It details how SEOmoz grew from a small consultancy into a profitable software company with over 10,000 subscribers. The document outlines SEOmoz's plans to raise $20-25 million in funding to expand its product suite, team, and marketing in order to serve a wider audience and become the leading software for organic marketers. The goal is for SEOmoz to become Seattle's next billion dollar company.
The slide deck we used to raise half a million dollarsBuffer
This is the pitchdeck we used to raise half a million dollars from Angel investors. More here:
http://onstartups.com/tabid/3339/bid/98034/The-Pitch-Deck-We-Used-To-Raise-500-000-For-Our-Startup.aspx
This document discusses how emojis, emoticons, and text speak can be used to teach students. It provides background on the origins of emoticons in 1982 as ways to convey tone and feelings in text communications. It then suggests that with text speak and emojis, students can translate, decode, summarize, play with language, and add emotion to language. A number of websites and apps that can be used for emoji-related activities, lessons, and discussions are also listed.
The document summarizes key takeaways from the SXSW conference. Some of the main topics discussed include: 1) The importance of designing technology with purpose and creating positive human experiences. 2) How collaboration between companies can drive innovation. 3) The value of not being constrained by audiences and taking creative risks. 4) The growing role of virtual and augmented reality. 5) How the rate of technological change is accelerating exponentially. 6) How cognitive computing is being applied across many domains to solve problems. 7) Emerging technologies like self-driving cars that are closer to widespread use than perceived. 8) How ubiquitous computing is already integrating technology into many aspects of life. 9) The growing role of robots and focus on
What does the future look like? Is it a dark space where we’re suffering from varying degrees of techamphetamine or are we heading towards a Utopian fantasy of abundance and harmony?
Understanding that our basic human needs and wants barely change, we explore the future state of a range of topics; from our need for physical sustenance through to our age-long fascination of transcending the limitations of our biology.
Looking at the future from a human perspective, our potential for greatness is teetering on a fine line between darkness and hope. We’re banking on the latter.
In this update of his past presentations on Mobile Eating the World -- delivered most recently at The Guardian's Changing Media Summit -- a16z’s Benedict Evans takes us through how technology is universal through mobile. How mobile is not a subset of the internet anymore. And how mobile (and accompanying trends of cloud and AI) is also driving new productivity tools.
In fact, mobile -- which encompasses everything from drones to cars -- is everything.
Mobile-First SEO - The Marketers Edition #3XEDigitalAleyda Solís
How to target your SEO process to a reality of more people searching on mobile devices than desktop and an upcoming mobile first Google index? Check it out.
"Financial Odyssey: Navigating Past Performance Through Diverse Analytical Lens"sameer shah
Embark on a captivating financial journey with 'Financial Odyssey,' our hackathon project. Delve deep into the past performance of two companies as we employ an array of financial statement analysis techniques. From ratio analysis to trend analysis, uncover insights crucial for informed decision-making in the dynamic world of finance."
ViewShift: Hassle-free Dynamic Policy Enforcement for Every Data LakeWalaa Eldin Moustafa
Dynamic policy enforcement is becoming an increasingly important topic in today’s world where data privacy and compliance is a top priority for companies, individuals, and regulators alike. In these slides, we discuss how LinkedIn implements a powerful dynamic policy enforcement engine, called ViewShift, and integrates it within its data lake. We show the query engine architecture and how catalog implementations can automatically route table resolutions to compliance-enforcing SQL views. Such views have a set of very interesting properties: (1) They are auto-generated from declarative data annotations. (2) They respect user-level consent and preferences (3) They are context-aware, encoding a different set of transformations for different use cases (4) They are portable; while the SQL logic is only implemented in one SQL dialect, it is accessible in all engines.
#SQL #Views #Privacy #Compliance #DataLake
The slide deck we used to raise half a million dollarsBuffer
This is the pitchdeck we used to raise half a million dollars from Angel investors. More here:
http://onstartups.com/tabid/3339/bid/98034/The-Pitch-Deck-We-Used-To-Raise-500-000-For-Our-Startup.aspx
This document discusses how emojis, emoticons, and text speak can be used to teach students. It provides background on the origins of emoticons in 1982 as ways to convey tone and feelings in text communications. It then suggests that with text speak and emojis, students can translate, decode, summarize, play with language, and add emotion to language. A number of websites and apps that can be used for emoji-related activities, lessons, and discussions are also listed.
The document summarizes key takeaways from the SXSW conference. Some of the main topics discussed include: 1) The importance of designing technology with purpose and creating positive human experiences. 2) How collaboration between companies can drive innovation. 3) The value of not being constrained by audiences and taking creative risks. 4) The growing role of virtual and augmented reality. 5) How the rate of technological change is accelerating exponentially. 6) How cognitive computing is being applied across many domains to solve problems. 7) Emerging technologies like self-driving cars that are closer to widespread use than perceived. 8) How ubiquitous computing is already integrating technology into many aspects of life. 9) The growing role of robots and focus on
What does the future look like? Is it a dark space where we’re suffering from varying degrees of techamphetamine or are we heading towards a Utopian fantasy of abundance and harmony?
Understanding that our basic human needs and wants barely change, we explore the future state of a range of topics; from our need for physical sustenance through to our age-long fascination of transcending the limitations of our biology.
Looking at the future from a human perspective, our potential for greatness is teetering on a fine line between darkness and hope. We’re banking on the latter.
In this update of his past presentations on Mobile Eating the World -- delivered most recently at The Guardian's Changing Media Summit -- a16z’s Benedict Evans takes us through how technology is universal through mobile. How mobile is not a subset of the internet anymore. And how mobile (and accompanying trends of cloud and AI) is also driving new productivity tools.
In fact, mobile -- which encompasses everything from drones to cars -- is everything.
Mobile-First SEO - The Marketers Edition #3XEDigitalAleyda Solís
How to target your SEO process to a reality of more people searching on mobile devices than desktop and an upcoming mobile first Google index? Check it out.
"Financial Odyssey: Navigating Past Performance Through Diverse Analytical Lens"sameer shah
Embark on a captivating financial journey with 'Financial Odyssey,' our hackathon project. Delve deep into the past performance of two companies as we employ an array of financial statement analysis techniques. From ratio analysis to trend analysis, uncover insights crucial for informed decision-making in the dynamic world of finance."
ViewShift: Hassle-free Dynamic Policy Enforcement for Every Data LakeWalaa Eldin Moustafa
Dynamic policy enforcement is becoming an increasingly important topic in today’s world where data privacy and compliance is a top priority for companies, individuals, and regulators alike. In these slides, we discuss how LinkedIn implements a powerful dynamic policy enforcement engine, called ViewShift, and integrates it within its data lake. We show the query engine architecture and how catalog implementations can automatically route table resolutions to compliance-enforcing SQL views. Such views have a set of very interesting properties: (1) They are auto-generated from declarative data annotations. (2) They respect user-level consent and preferences (3) They are context-aware, encoding a different set of transformations for different use cases (4) They are portable; while the SQL logic is only implemented in one SQL dialect, it is accessible in all engines.
#SQL #Views #Privacy #Compliance #DataLake
End-to-end pipeline agility - Berlin Buzzwords 2024Lars Albertsson
We describe how we achieve high change agility in data engineering by eliminating the fear of breaking downstream data pipelines through end-to-end pipeline testing, and by using schema metaprogramming to safely eliminate boilerplate involved in changes that affect whole pipelines.
A quick poll on agility in changing pipelines from end to end indicated a huge span in capabilities. For the question "How long time does it take for all downstream pipelines to be adapted to an upstream change," the median response was 6 months, but some respondents could do it in less than a day. When quantitative data engineering differences between the best and worst are measured, the span is often 100x-1000x, sometimes even more.
A long time ago, we suffered at Spotify from fear of changing pipelines due to not knowing what the impact might be downstream. We made plans for a technical solution to test pipelines end-to-end to mitigate that fear, but the effort failed for cultural reasons. We eventually solved this challenge, but in a different context. In this presentation we will describe how we test full pipelines effectively by manipulating workflow orchestration, which enables us to make changes in pipelines without fear of breaking downstream.
Making schema changes that affect many jobs also involves a lot of toil and boilerplate. Using schema-on-read mitigates some of it, but has drawbacks since it makes it more difficult to detect errors early. We will describe how we have rejected this tradeoff by applying schema metaprogramming, eliminating boilerplate but keeping the protection of static typing, thereby further improving agility to quickly modify data pipelines without fear.
1. FreeCodeCamper
Waypoints
Challenges
Twicht.tv
(coding sessions)
Youtube
(videos)
Recommended sources
(books ref, training sites, etc)
Other internal created material
(wiki, news, apps, etc)
Other
Sources
CMS or similar (medium,
quora, reddit, etc)
Gitter
Social Media
linked to FCC github or repos
Codepen, heroku
WHAT IS AFFECTING
PERFORMANCE, AND HOW?
What makes them to
come in…?
… and what to go
away?
Pairing? Other
collarborative?