Heroku allows users to run Ruby 2.0 on their platform. Users can specify Ruby 2.0 as the runtime in their Gemfile or use a custom buildpack. Heroku has already provided a sandbox for evaluating Ruby 2.0. The document demonstrates how to create a Ruby 2.0 app on Heroku by specifying the Ruby version and dependencies in the Gemfile, committing, and pushing to Heroku. Users are encouraged to try Ruby 2.0 on Heroku now and attend Heroku's Waza developer event in February 2013.
Dart (https://www.dartlang.org/) is a general-purpose programming language to build web, server, IoT and mobile applications.
AngularDart (https://webdev.dartlang.org/angular) - also called Angular 2 for Dart or simply Angular - is a web app framework that focuses on productivity, performance, and stability. Hundreds of Google engineers use AngularDart to build the sophisticated, mission-critical apps that bring in much of Google’s revenue.
Flutter (https://www.flutter.io/) is a promising project to build mobile apps for iOS and Android from a single codebase in Dart.
Dart, AngularDart and Flutter significantly increase the productivity of the developers.
Slides from following meetup
https://www.meetup.com/Luxembourg-Dart-Lang-Meetup/events/237012072/
A look at the versatility of flutter.io in speed and creation of highly scalable apps. In particular this presentation also looks at the comparisons between Flutter and React-Native
Dart (https://www.dartlang.org/) is a general-purpose programming language to build web, server, IoT and mobile applications.
AngularDart (https://webdev.dartlang.org/angular) - also called Angular 2 for Dart or simply Angular - is a web app framework that focuses on productivity, performance, and stability. Hundreds of Google engineers use AngularDart to build the sophisticated, mission-critical apps that bring in much of Google’s revenue.
Flutter (https://www.flutter.io/) is a promising project to build mobile apps for iOS and Android from a single codebase in Dart.
Dart, AngularDart and Flutter significantly increase the productivity of the developers.
Slides from following meetup
https://www.meetup.com/Luxembourg-Dart-Lang-Meetup/events/237012072/
A look at the versatility of flutter.io in speed and creation of highly scalable apps. In particular this presentation also looks at the comparisons between Flutter and React-Native
Kotlin Basics & Introduction to Jetpack Compose.pptxtakshilkunadia
In our fast and ever-changing world of tech, creating a great UI is not just indispensable but also an obligation as a developer. A great UI makes the whole experience of accessing the products/services an absolute pleasure.
Hour 1: Basics of Kotlin
Hour 2: Introduction to Jetpack Compose Development Kit
Why Users Are Moving on from Docker and Leaving Its Security Risks Behind (Sp...Amazon Web Services
In this session you will learn what the motivations were for a dockerless approach and how Podman and Buildah enhance Red Hat OpenShift. With so many distributions of Kubernetes it’s important to know when and why you should decide to use Red Hat OpenShift in a world where having choices, while maintaining confidence, is becoming more critical than ever.
Groovy is a well established player in the JVM since a few years ago. It's increased popularity across the years has spawned several projects that conform the Groovy Ecosystem. You've probably heard of Grails, Gradle, Griffon and Spock. But what about the rest of projects that are just waiting around the corner to be discovered and make your life easier? This talk presents them tools and libraries that use Groovy as the main driving force to get the job done.
Here are the slides from Gareth Rushgrove's PuppetConf 2016 presentation called Running Puppet Software in Docker Containers. Watch the videos at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLV86BgbREluVjwwt-9UL8u2Uy8xnzpIqa
Building a private CI/CD pipeline with Java and Docker in the Cloud as presen...Baruch Sadogursky
A private Java (Maven or Gradle) repository as a service can be setup in the cloud. A private Docker registry as a service can be easily setup in the cloud. But what if you want to build a holistic CI/CD pipeline, and on the cloud of YOUR choice?
In this talk Baruch will take you through steps of setting up a universal artifact repository, which can serve for both Java and Docker. You’ll learn how to build a CI/CD pipeline with traceable metadata from the Java source files all the way to Docker images. Amazon, Azure, and Google Cloud (do you have setup that works on these?) will be used as an example although the recipes shown would be applicable to other cloud as well.