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Today, the maker of another open source database, MongoDB, plans to introduce a license of its own to deal with the issue cited by Redis: cloud service providers that sell hosted versions of open-source programs – such as Redis and MongoDB database servers – without offering anything in return. It no longer wants to be pawn in game of life
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What a bunch of tools: "How dare you use our free product for free!"
We should set up a table outside of MongoDB headquarters with "free cookies". But, every time someone takes a free cookie, we slap it out of their hands and call them freeloading bastards.
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MonogDB has 355 contributors at this point (of which 1/10th is actually MongoDB employee)...
As a lot of open source projects it became mature and prime-time ready by those contributions, not because of the one started it...
In the case of MongoDB the idea wasn't that original at all...
Look around you - you have endless solutions for the very same problem... One goes up and the second vanishes... The reason has a lot of factors, like quality and cost... In case the cost goes up people will put their effort in the next project in line...
Writing code is not simple, but only a small part of an application life-cycle...
"The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge". Stephen Hawking, 1942- 2018
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Perennially popular programming language Python may be a fan favorite, but can you make a living as a Python developer? I got two minutes for my last "hockey stick moment"
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Waiting for the headline "Python has choke hold on top language spot." or "Python squeezing out the competition". Does it "scale" well? I suppose thats enough bad snake jokes for today. Don't want to ruin my rep...tile.
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Even though the worm-inspired network only consists of 12 neurons, it can be trained to steer a rover robot to a given spot. What does this say about those of us who cannot park a car?
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A few billion other neurons micro-managing those dozen neurons trying to do the actual work seems to be not-so-good an idea.
Oh sanctissimi Wilhelmus, Theodorus, et Fredericus!
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The possibility of life on Mars has been a tantalizing possibility for years, and recent discoveries have only increased excitement about whether we'll find life on the red planet. Now, a new study in Nature Geoscience posits that it's possible that Mars may have enough oxygen to harbor life under its surface. I remember this from that documentary with Arnold
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If funded studies are happy with 'possible' results, send me money! I've got a lot of investigations I'll get to documenting upon receipt!
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How silly, we know there's water on Mars because of the biographies of John Carter by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
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Wojcicki goes on to say that Article 13 could lead to some users not being allowed to upload content on YouTube and that it could block European Union users from watching certain content. Not my cat videos, nooOOooOooo!
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With the release of the Linux kernel 4.19 came not just new features and bug fixes, but the new Linux Code of Conduct as well. It's the Year of Linux Being Nice
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A recent study found that devices based on the Android operating system send data back to Google servers 10 times as often as iPhones contact Apple servers. Google tracking what we do? When did that start?
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Since I was told that iOS devices are SUPER SECURE and no data sent out of phone.
make iOS = 0.
And this aritlce claims Android calls home x10 more.
so
iOS = 0; //number of time iOS devices call home.
GoG = iOS * 10;
output(GoG);
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Repairnator is a bot that identifies bugs in open source software integration and creates patches without human intervention, submitting them to the open source project's maintainers under an assumed human identity; it has succeeded in having five of its patches accepted so far. Then they came for our bugs, and I did nothing (as that was kind of nice of them)
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Scientists of AI at Google's Google Brain and DeepMind units acknowledge machine learning is falling short of human cognition and propose that using models of networks might be a way to find relations between things that allow computers to generalize more broadly about the world. No Skynet yet!
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It should read, "Scientists of AI at Google's Google Brain and DeepMind units acknowledge machine learning is falling short of anything more than simple pattern recognition and kind of sucks at that too."
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China is planning to launch its own 'artificial moon' by 2020 to replace streetlamps and lower electricity costs in urban areas, state media reported Friday. Do your own, "That's no moon" item here. I'm just not that lazy
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So they are going to unfurl a square miles wide reflective surface in an orbit of some kind? As pointed out in the comments, this is probably BS that phys.org fell for. Or the Chinese government is using it as an excuse to cover some other expenses.
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It’s time for the world to start building a canon of the most significant websites of all time I do believe they missed one
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The first one. Thank you!
TTFN - Kent
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Of the thousands of plugins for the jQuery framework, one of the most popular of them harbored for at least three years an oversight in code that eluded the security community, despite public availability of tutorials that explained how it could be exploited. Then I'm sure no one exploited it
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For the first time in Windows Server history, Microsoft went straight from testing to general availability without RTMing its Windows Server 2019 release. See other article on testing
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