By now you may have heard that scientists have found evidence of water on Mars. We have the Reuters report for this story. HashiCorp announced the release of two new open source tools, Nomad and Otto. High Scalability gives us an interesting post about how Facebook tells your friends that you are safe in a disaster.
As always, enjoy today’s items, and please participate in the discussions on these sites.
Top Stories
Startups, Career and Process
- This Is Why Public and Private Market Valuations Are Completely Different | Mahesh VC
- How To Create A Systemic View Of An Organization | Gil Zilberfeld
- You Want Disruption? Can You Handle it? | Jeff Nolan
Design and Development
- When Rust Makes Sense, or The State of Typed Languages | No Fun Allowed
- The Beginner’s Guide to Contributing to a GitHub Project | DZone Agile
- Your DI framework is killing your code | Java Code Geeks
- Subversion Merge Limitations That Are Not In Mercurial | Paul Hammant
- One Weird Trick to Write Better Code | Evan Todd
- Designing a DSL to Describe Software Architecture, Part 1 | DZone Integration
- Functional-navigational programming in Clojure(Script) with Specter | thoughts from the red planet
- Writing and running Go api’s in Docker | Ewan Valentine
Concurrency, Performance and Scalability
AI, Machine Learning, Research and Advanced Algorithms
- The Social-Network Illusion That Tricks Your Mind | MIT Technology Review
Big Data, Visualization, SQL and NoSQL
- Bridging Batch and Streaming Data Ingestion with Gobblin | LinkedIn Engineering
- Breaking down a Ford recall with stats | statwonk
Infrastructure, Operations and DevOps
- End-to-End Automation for Docker-based Python with Redis on AWS | DCHQ
- Nomad | HashiCorp
- Otto | HashiCorp
IaaS, PaaS, Saas and *aas
- Creating Your Own EC2 Spot Market | The Netflix Tech Blog
- New – Receive and Process Incoming Email with Amazon SES | AWS Official Blog
Link Collections
- Double Shot #1557 | A Fresh Cup
- Dew Drop – September 29, 2015 (#2100) | Morning Dew