Mozilla leads us off with a nice post on the net neutrality vote. While the vote was considered positive, it will be interesting to see how companies find loopholes for their own purposes. Microsoft talks about the new rendering engine that will be used for both IE and the new Project Spartan. Stress, anxiety and depression have been very popular topics in the IT industry. Geeky Boy gives us a post about some of that anxiety never really leaves us. The key there is to recognize what is going on and take steps to feel better and be healthy.
As always, enjoy today’s items, and please participate in the discussions on these sites.
Top Stories
- A Major Victory for the Open Web | The Mozilla Blog
- A break from the past: the birth of Microsoft’s new web rendering engine | IEBlog
Career and Process
- Delayed anxiety, never forgotten | Geeky Boy
Development
- Pass Streams Instead of Lists | Java Code Geeks
- Dropwizard, MongoDB and Gradle Experimenting | Java Code Geeks
- Introducing gRPC, a new open source HTTP/2 RPC Framework | Google Developers Blog
Concurrency, Performance and Scalability
- Linux, Debts and Out Of Memory Killer | Ayende @ Rahien
AI, Machine Learning, Research and Advanced Algorithms
- Resolve coreference using Stanford CoreNLP | Java Code Geeks
Big Data, Visualization, SQL and NoSQL
- Every NBA team’s chances of winning, by game minute | Flowing Data
- Embracing SQL In Postgres | Rob Conery
- ‘Indexing’ JSON Documents for Efficient MySQL Queries Over JSON Data | Javalobby
- Elasticsearch analyzers (or how I learned to stop worrying and love custom filters) | tryo labs
Infrastructure, Operations and DevOps
- Five Key Components of Application Release Automation (ARA) | DevOps.com
- Docker Launches Its Container Orchestration Tools | TechCrunch
Security, Encryption and Cryptography
- Excuse me Sir, Your WebRTC is Leaking | Golgi
- Safe Browsing and Google Analytics: Keeping More Users Safe, Together | Google Online Security Blog
IaaS, PaaS and Saas
- Custom ODBC/JDBC Drivers and Query Visualization for Amazon Redshift | AWS Official Blog