Linux has become a mainstay for many sectors of work, play, and personal life. We depend upon it. With Linux, technology is expanding and evolving faster than anyone could have imagined. That means Linux development is also happening at an exponential rate. Because of this, more and more developers will be hopping on board the open source and Linux dev train in the immediate, near, and far-off future. For that, people will need tools. Fortunately, there are a ton of dev tools available for Linux; so many, in fact, that it can be a bit intimidating to figure out precisely what you need (especially if you’re coming from another platform).
To make that easier, I thought I’d help narrow down the selection a bit for you. But instead of saying you should use Tool X and Tool Y, I’m going to narrow it down to five categories and then offer up an example for each. Just remember, for most categories, there are several available options. And, with that said, let’s get started.
Containers
Let’s face it, in this day and age you need to be working with containers. Not only are they incredibly easy to deploy, they make for great development environments. If you regularly develop for a specific platform, why not do so by creating a container image that includes all of the tools you need to make the process quick and easy. With that image available, you can then develop and roll out numerous instances of whatever software or service you need.
Using containers for development couldn’t be easier than it is with Docker. The advantages of using containers (and Docker) are:
Consistent development environment.
You can trust it will “just work” upon deployment.
Makes it easy to build across platforms.
Docker images available for all types of development environments and languages.
Deploying single containers or container clusters is simple.
Thanks to Docker Hub, you’ll find images for nearly any platform, development environment, server, service… just about anything you need. Using images from Docker Hub means you can skip over the creation of the development environment and go straight to work on developing your app, server, API, or service.
Docker is easily installable of most every Linux platform. For example: To install Docker on Ubuntu, you only have to open a terminal window and issue the command:
sudo apt-get install docker.io
With Docker installed, you’re ready to start pulling down specific images, developing, and deploying (Figure 1).
Version control system
If you’re working on a large project or with a team on a project, you’re going to need a version control system. Why? Because you need to keep track of your code, where your code is, and have an easy means of making commits and merging code from others. Without such a tool, your projects would be nearly impossible to manage. For Linux users, you cannot beat the ease of use and widespread deployment of Git and GitHub. If you’re new to their worlds, Git is the version control system that you install on your local machine and GitHub is the remote repository you use to upload (and then manage) your projects. Git can be installed on most Linux distributions. For example, on a Debian-based system, the install is as simple as:
sudo apt-get install git
Once installed, you are ready to start your journey with version control (Figure 2).
Github requires you to create an account. You can use it for free for non-commercial projects, or you can pay for commercial project housing (for more information check out the price matrix here).
Text editor
Let’s face it, developing on Linux would be a bit of a challenge without a text editor. Of course what a text editor is varies, depending upon who you ask. One person might say vim, emacs, or nano, whereas another might go full-on GUI with their editor. But since we’re talking development, we need a tool that can meet the needs of the modern day developer. And before I mention a couple of text editors, I will say this: Yes, I know that vim is a serious workhorse for serious developers and, if you know it well vim will meet and exceed all of your needs. However, getting up to speed enough that it won’t be in your way, can be a bit of a hurdle for some developers (especially those new to Linux). Considering my goal is to always help win over new users (and not just preach to an already devout choir), I’m taking the GUI route here.
As far as text editors are concerned, you cannot go wrong with the likes of Bluefish. Bluefish can be found in most standard repositories and features project support, multi-threaded support for remote files, search and replace, open files recursively, snippets sidebar, integrates with make, lint, weblint, xmllint, unlimited undo/redo, in-line spell checker, auto-recovery, full screen editing, syntax highlighting (Figure 3), support for numerous languages, and much more.
IDE
Integrated Development Environment (IDE) is a piece of software that includes a comprehensive set of tools that enable a one-stop-shop environment for developing. IDEs not only enable you to code your software, but document and build them as well. There are a number of IDEs for Linux, but one in particular is not only included in the standard repositories it is also very user-friendly and powerful. That tool in question is Geany. Geany features syntax highlighting, code folding, symbol name auto-completion, construct completion/snippets, auto-closing of XML and HTML tags, call tips, many supported filetypes, symbol lists, code navigation, build system to compile and execute your code, simple project management, and a built-in plugin system.
Geany can be easily installed on your system. For example, on a Debian-based distribution, issue the command:
sudo apt-get install geany
Once installed, you’re ready to start using this very powerful tool that includes a user-friendly interface (Figure 4) that has next to no learning curve.
diff tool
There will be times when you have to compare two files to find where they differ. This could be two different copies of what was the same file (only one compiles and the other doesn’t). When that happens, you don’t want to have to do that manually. Instead, you want to employ the power of tool like Meld. Meld is a visual diff and merge tool targeted at developers. With Meld you can make short shrift out of discovering the differences between two files. Although you can use a command line diff tool, when efficiency is the name of the game, you can’t beat Meld.
Meld allows you to open a comparison between to files and it will highlight the differences between each. Meld also allows you to merge comparisons either from the right or the left (as the files are opened side by side – Figure 5).
Meld can be installed from most standard repositories. On a Debian-based system, the installation command is:
sudo apt-get install meld
Working with efficiency
These five tools not only enable you to get your work done, they help to make it quite a bit more efficient. Although there are a ton of developer tools available for Linux, you’re going to want to make sure you have one for each of the above categories (maybe even starting with the suggestions I’ve made).
Learn more about Linux through the free “Introduction to Linux” course from The Linux Foundation and edX.
Welcome to the Weekender, your weekly look at the best new games, sales, and updates. This week’s bounty is the best SimCity-like game on mobile, two very good puzzlers, and updates to some of the better games out there. Not to be outdone, our sales section features Handelabra’s entire catalog (on iOS) and a few of the best games from the last couple years.
City builders on mobile tend to be bad. Shallow simulations bogged down by awful monetization schemes have been the norm. Pocket City, the newly released and much anticipated builder, is not one of those. The game is attractive, entertaining, and fully premium. Gameplay is a lot like SimCity. You build a city from scratch and must balance residential, commercial, and industrial zones to prompt continued growth. As the city grows, so do the wants and needs of its residents from police and a fire department, to schools and hospitals, to parks and other entertainment amenities.
Pocket City couples its tutorial with a series of quests that lead you through the normal arc of city development. Quests provide a bonus upon completion and can be ignored if you want to focus on something else. The game also has some nice menu options including cloud saves, the ability to download ‘public’ cities to play, both screen mode options, five different screen resolution modes, and a slew of battery saver options. It isn’t a perfect game, I wish it pushed back a little more as it feels a little bit easy, but Pocket City is the closest you can get to SimCity on a mobile device and is well worth playing for fans of the genre.
The Sequence [2] is a new puzzle game and the sequel to 2015’s The Sequence. The game is all about building an assembly line to move units from an origin hex to a destination hex. It reminds me a lot of Zachtronics’ PC games, Opus Magnum in particular, and after a slow-starting tutorial becomes very engaging and increasingly challenging with new mechanics and bigger game boards. It’s not on Android yet, but the original game is, so perhaps it’s coming soon.
I’ve got not one but two entertaining new puzzle games to mention. One More Button takes a clever and unique take on the genre by making the movement buttons part of the game itself. You must move them out of your way, place them in specific spots to remove an obstacle, and really plan out your order of operations. Really, my only complaint is a lack of undo button as I’ve had to restart a complicated set of moves more than a couple times due to an accidental button push. This quibble aside, it really is a good puzzle game.
Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files exists in an alternate world where vampires, werewolves, spirits, and the Fae are all real. The books are packed full of the adventures of Harry Dresden taking on the forces of evil, and dangerously neutral, with the help of a large cast of friends, associates, and frenemies. There’s also a tabletop card and dice game brought to digital life by Hidden Achievement. Dresden Files Co-op Card Game has gotten a steady stream of updates since release and now, expansion 4 “Dead on Your Feet?” is out and adds Jared Kincaid and Mortimer Lindquist decks and book decks for both Changes and Ghost Story. It’s available via in-app purchase for $3.99.
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One Deck Dungeon: Forest of Shadows Expansion (iPad and Android)
One Deck Dungeon is among my favorite games of 2018 and you can find out why in my five-star review. Handelabra Games did an excellent job of transitioning the game to digital and continues to do a great job pouring new content into it. The Forest of Shadows expansion is a great example. It adds 5 new heroes, 5 dungeons, and 44 encounter cards to the game. The dungeons range from the relatively easy Mudlands, featuring a Mud Golem boss, to the Smoldering Lands, home of a Fire Giant. The new heroes are Alchemist, Druid, Hunter, Slayer, and Warden and really up the opportunity to optimize your team. The Forest of Shadows expansion is available via in-app purchase for $9.99. The base game is on sale for $7.99 as well.
The latest and greatest Star Realms expansion is out and available for your gaming pleasure. The third of four expansions in the “United” series will set you back $1.99 and get you twelve new cards. You can check out a lot more about it in our recent news post earlier in the week.
Handelabra Games are three for three in bringing great tabletop games to digital life. All three of said games are currently on sale in the App Store (only one is on sale on Android as of this writing).
Tabletop card game The Game‘s digital version is a one-player affair and is a lot of fun. It’s just a buck on iOS (and normally $1.99 on Android) and worth picking up for fans of solo card games.
Motorsport Manager Mobile 2 (iOS Universal and Android) $1.99 (Review)
Get your race on with one of the better racing sims on mobile. Motorsport Manager Mobile 2 puts you in control of every aspect of a racing team. You recruit, hire, and train drivers, mechanics, and engineers. You improve your headquarters and supplier networks. You build and upgrade your cars and, last but not least, you manage how your drivers run each race from what tires to use, to how aggressively they drive, to when to fit in the pit stops. I don’t know much about racing, but I do know that there aren’t many better sports simulation games on mobile.
A heartwarming role-playing game is a bit of a rarity, but that’s what you get in To the Moon. It’s the tale of two doctors who travel through an old man’s memories to make his deathbed wish come true. It’s an emotional story, with great music and atmosphere to match, along with deep and powerful characters. It’s not perfect, the controls leave a little to be desired, but it will leave an impression on you.
Dungeons & Dragons based board game D&D Lords of Waterdeep is available for a solid discount on both the App and Google Play stores. You play as a masked Lord of the city and must out wrangle your opponents to recruit adventurers to complete quests and thus increase your political power.
Speaking of best games, Steamworld Heist was near the top of a crowded field of great games in 2016 and earned four well-deserved stars from JP. It’s also half off right now.
Seen anything else you liked? Played any of the above? Let us know in the comments!
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Your adventure starts when you get stranded on a tropical island. This is your island, your adventure. Do whatever you like! It?s the ultimate sandbox sim.
In the year 2232, World War IV is coming to an end. Humans are fighting a losing battle against aggressive machines. The only way to survive is to attack. Tomorrow morning, you will intercept a cargo train bound for the global capital, Mexico City, and ride it deep inside the enemy territory.
Shenmue 1 And 2 Release Date / Pre-Order Guide For The US: PS4, Xbox One, PC
A collection of Shenmue I & II is heading to PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC on August 21. This collection contains the original Shenmue, which launched on the Dreamcast in 1999, as well as the 2001 sequel, which came out on both Dreamcast and the original Xbox. The suggested retail price for the collection is $30.
While these aren't true HD remakes or remasters of the games, they do come with some advantages over the originals beyond being playable on modern hardware. You'll be able to choose between classic or modern controls, they have scalable screen resolution, and for the first time in the US, you can play with Japanese audio.
If you want to re-play these games--or see why so many fans contributed over $6 million to Shenmue III's Kickstarter--you might be looking to pre-order the collection. Here's everything you need to know to pre-order Shenmue I & II.
No Pre-Order Bonus
Sorry, no pre-order bonuses here. All you'll get for pre-ordering Shenmue I & II is a copy of the game when it comes out on August 21. But physical copies do come with a double-sided poster, so that's something.
Where to Pre-Order Shenmue I & II
Below, you'll find links to the major retailers currently offering Shenmue I & II pre-orders. As you can see, Amazon Prime members can get the best deal on the game. If you're not a Prime member, you can save 10% by pre-ordering the game from the PlayStation Store or Steam. Just note that digital copies don't come with the poster.
Amazon -- $30 ($24 with Amazon Prime) -- PS4 | Xbox One
EdgeX Adds Security and Reduces Footprint with “California” Release
The Linux Foundation’sEdgeX Foundry announced its second major EdgeX release of its EdgeX IoT middleware for edge computing. The “California” release adds security features including reverse proxy and secure credentials storage. It’s also rewritten in Go to offer a smaller footprint This makes it possible to run EdgeX on the Raspberry Pi 3, which has been chosen as the official target platform for California.
EdgeX Foundry was announced in late July 2017, with a goal of developing a standardized, open source interoperability framework for Internet of Things edge computing. EdgeX Foundry is creating and certifying an ecosystem of interoperable, plug-and-play components to create an open source EdgeX stack that will mediate between multiple sensor network messaging protocols as well as cloud and analytics platforms.
The framework facilitates interoperability code that spans edge analytics, security, system management, and services. It also eases the integration of pre-certified software for IoT gateways and smart edge devices.
Security and flexibility
“Our goal is to decouple connectivity standards and device interfaces from applications,” said Dell developer and major EdgeX contributor Jason A. Shepherd in an email interview with Linux.com. “EdgeX will enable flexibility and scalability through platform independence, loosely-coupled microservices, and the ability to bring together services written in different languages through common APIs. These cloud-native tenets are absolutely required at the edge to scale in an inherently fragmented, multi-edge and multi-cloud world.”
EdgeX is based on Dell’s seminal FUSE IoT middleware framework, with inputs from a similar AllJoyn-compliant project called IoTX. Dell is one of three Platinum members alongside Analog Devices, and Samsung. EdgeX Foundry now has 61 members overall, including AMD, Canonical, Cloud Foundry, Linaro, Mocana, NetFoundry, Opto 22, RFMicron, and VMware.
The California release follows the initial Barcelona release, which arrived last October. Barcelona provided reference Device Services supporting BACNet, Modbus, Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), MQTT, SNMP, and Fischertechnik, as well as connectors to Azure IoT Suite and Google IoT Core.
The major new features in in EdgeX California aim to improve security. A new reverse proxy based on Kong helps protect REST API communications and secrets storage. The reverse proxy requires any external client of an EdgeX microservice to first authenticate itself before loading an EdgeX API.
The new secure storage facility for secrets is based on HashiCorp’s open source Vault. It lets you securely store sensitive data such as username/password credentials, certificates, and tokens within EdgeX for performing tasks such as encryption, making HTTPS calls to the enterprise, or securely connecting EdgeX to a cloud provider.
“Our Barcelona release had no security features because we wanted all the security layers to be defined by a community of industry experts such as RSA, Analog Devices, Thales, ForgeRock, and Mocana, rather than only from Dell,” said Shepherd. “The Reverse Proxy and Secrets Store is the foundation from which everything else is built.”
Shift to Go
The other major change in California was that the code was rebuilt from the original Java with the Go programming language. The process delayed the release by several months, but as a result, California has a significantly reduced footprint, startup time, memory, and CPU usage. It fits into 42MB — or 68MB with container – and can now boot in less than a second per service compared to about 35 seconds (see chart below).
Additional new features in the California release include:
Export services additions for “northbound” connectivity to the XMPP messaging standard, the ThingsBoard IoT platform for device management, data collection, processing, and visualization, and Samsung’s Brightics IoT IoT interoperability platform,
Improved documentation, now available in Github
Full support for Arm 64
Blackbox tests for all micro services within build and continuous integration processes
Improved continuous integration to streamline developer contributions
According to Dell’s Shepherd, the switch to Go was not only about reducing footprint, but to avoid the need for vendors to pay a Java license fee for commercial deployments. In addition, Go has expanded EdgeX’s developer base.
“Go’s concurrency model is superior to most programming languages, has the support of Google, is used by Docker, Kubernetes and many other large software development efforts, and is growing broadly in IoT circles,” said Shepherd. “We doubled our community in the months after the January Go-Lang Preview. There is a learning curve associated with getting a typical object (Java, C++) developer to move to Go (a functional versus object language), but overall the move has been good for fostering more enthusiasm about the platform as well as improving it.”
Shepherd noted that Go is only a baseline reference language. Developers can use the same APIs with other languages, and the project will support C in addition to Go for the Device Service SDKs. Because C can reduce the footprint even further than Go, it may be the better choice for applications built on a low-end “thin edge” gateway with a lot of Device Services, such as many different sensor protocols, said Shepherd. However, EdgeX Foundry chose Go because it is more platform independent in terms of hardware and OS.
Next up: Delhi and beyond
The upcoming Delhi release due in October will include components such as manageability services, Device Service SDKs, improved unit and performance testing, and a basic EdgeX UI for demos. It will also add more security features including improved security service bootstrapping of Kong and Vault.
According to Shepherd, other security enhancements planned for Delhi include “tying Kong and potentially other security services to an access control system providing access control lists for granting access to various services.” Future versions of EdgeX will also establish a Chain of Trust API for systems that don’t have something like TPM. “We want to build out an API that allows EdgeX to establish a root of trust with the platform it rides on,” said Shepherd.
Other plans call for automating security testing, including “building an entire security testing apparatus and look at pen-testing type of needs,” said Shepherd. The project will also enhance the Vault-based secure storage system. “Today, EdgeX microservices get their configuration and secrets from the Consul configuration/registry service, but the secrets, such as passwords for database connections, are not secure. We want application secrets to come from Vault. Vault and Consul are provided by HashiCorp and we think there is a good way to use the two together.”
Looking forward to future releases, EdgeX plans to reduce the footprint even more to run in 128MB or lower. There are also roadmap items for “more integration to edge analytics, rules engines, and CEPs,” said Shepherd. “We are currently working with NodeRed as an example. “
When asked about the potential for integrating with other cloud-driven IoT platforms such as AWS Greengrass or Google’s new Cloud IoT Edgeplatform, Shepherd had this to say:
“Our ability to work with some of the proprietary cloud stacks depends on their openness and architecture, but we are certainly exploring the opportunities. The whole point is that a developer or end user can use their choice of edge analytics and backend services without having to reinvent the foundational elements for data ingestion, security and manageability.”
Separately, Shepherd noted: “Our completely open APIs — managed by the vendor-neutral Technical Steering Committee (TSC) to ensure stability and transparency — decouple developers’ choice of standards and application/cloud services to prevent them from being locked in via one particular provider’s proprietary APIs when the data meter starts spinning.”
Posted by: xSicKxBot - 08-03-2018, 04:41 AM - Forum: Lounge
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New To Hulu (August 2018): More Movies And TV Shows This Month
If you're looking to escape the scorching heat, catch up on some shows, or you're just a binging addict like me, you'll want to know what's going to be on Hulu this August. Here's the breakdown of all the movies and TV shows arriving on the streaming service next month.
There are quite a lot of movies that arrived on the streaming site on August 1, including 10 Things I Hate About You, The Hunt For The Red October, Shaun Of The Dead, and Teen Wolf. There are even a few classics like High Noon.
Throughout the rest of the month, there are also movies like The Terminator and Baby Driver coming to the streaming site, along with some Hulu originals like Crime and Punishment, a documentary which looks into some discriminatory practices of the NYPD.
As far as shows, the premiere of the Season 5 of Bachelor in Paradise will be coming to Hulu, as well as some HBO premieres like Season 3 of Insecure and Season 4 of Ballers.
There are also a good amount of titles leaving Hulu in August, including A Beautiful Mind, Hellboy, Rainman, and Trainspotting. Look below for the complete list of everything arriving and leaving Hulu in August 2018.
Arriving On Hulu In August
August 1
Heartland: Complete Season 10 (Content Media)
10 Things I Hate About You (1999) (*Showtime)
A Conspiracy to Rule: The Illuminati (2017)
American Gigolo (1980)
American Ninja (1985)
American Ninja III: Blood Hunt (1989)
Babe (1995)
Be Cool (2005)
The Beatles: Made on Merseyside (2017)
Black Hawk Down (2001)
Black Mask (1996)
Black Rain (1989)
Bluefin (2018)
Boomerang (1992)
The Brady Bunch Movie (1995)
Bratz: The Movie (2007)
Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007)
Bring It On: Fight to the Finish (2009)
Cheri (2009)
Cold War (2012)
CSNY/Deja Vu (2008)
Curse of the Starving Class (1995)
Double Whammy (2002)
The Elephant Man (1980)
Extract (2009)
Fled (1996)
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009)
Get Shorty (1995)
Halloween H20: 20 Years Later (1998)
Heartbreakers (2001)
Hey Arnold! The Movie (2002) (*Showtime)
Hidalgo (2004)
High Noon (1952)
Hoosiers (1986)
The Hunt for Red October (1990)
The Hurricane (2000)
The Hurt Locker (2008)
I Went Down (1997)
In & Out (1997)
Jackie Brown (1997)
Jacob’s Ladder (1990)
Joe (2014)
John Grisham’s The Rainmaker (1997)
Kazaam (1996)
Leaving Las Vegas (1995) (*Showtime)
Loser (2000)
Lost in Translation (2003) (*Showtime)
The Nasty Girl (1990)
The Ninth Gate (2000)
No Way Out (1987)
Original Sin (2001)
Out of Time (2003)
Point Break (1991)
Pretty Woman (1990)
Private Parts (1997)
The Rock (1996)
Scary Movie 3 (2003)
Shanghai Knights (2003)
Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Sheep and Wolves (2018)
Species (1995)
Species II (1998)
Species III (2004)
Stir of Echoes (1999)
Stir of Echoes 2: The Homecoming (2007)
The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale (2014)
The Swan Princess: Princess Tomorrow, Pirate Today (2016)
Swan Princess: Royally Undercover (2017)
Teen Wolf (1985)
Teen Wolf Too (1987)
The Time Machine (2002)
The Thomas Crown Affair (1999) (*Showtime)
True Colors (1991)
Urban Legend (1998) (*Showtime)
The Usual Suspects (1995)
Young Guns (1998)
Young Guns II (1990)
August 2
All at Once (2016)
America Divided: 201 (Epix Series)
The China Hustle (2018)
Ismael’s Ghost (2018)
August 3
Animals: Seasons 3 Premiere (*HBO)
En Otra Piel: Complete Series (Telemundo)
Sharp Edges (1986)
August 4
Marshall (2017) (*Showtime)
August 7
Dating My Mother (2017)
Perfect Bid: The Contestant Who Knew Too Much (2017)
Wraith (2017)
August 8
Bachelor in Paradise: Season 5 Premiere (ABC)
Castaways: Series Premiere (ABC)
Blood Ties (2013)
August 9
America Divided: 202 (Epix Series)
Baskin (2016)
Desolation (2018)
Terminal (2018)
August 10
Rosa Diamante: Complete Series (Telemundo)
Tim & Eric Bedtime Stories: Complete Season 2 (Adult Swim)
Borg Vs McEnroe (2018)
August 11
Baby Driver (2017) (*Showtime)
The Cage Fighter (2013)
August 12
Ballers: Season 4 Premiere (*HBO)
Insecure: Season 3 Premiere (*HBO)
Very Good Girls (2013)
August 13
The Powerpuff Girls (2016): Complete Season 2 (Cartoon Network)
August 15
The Actors (2003)
America’s Sweethearts (2001)
Duplex (2003)
The Monkey King 3 (2018)
August 16
11 Minutes (2016)
America Divided: 203 (Epix Series)
Marrowbone (2018)
Role Models (2008)
August 17
Minding the Gap (Hulu Documentary)
Perro Amor: Complete Series (Telemundo)
Stan Against Evil: Complete Season 2 (IFC)
August 21
Eva La Trailera: Complete Series (Telemundo)
To The Moon and Back (2016)
August 23
America Divided: 204 (Epix Series)
Jiro Dreams of Sushi (2011)
August 24
Crime & Punishment (Hulu Documentary)
August 26
Captain Fantastic (2016) (*Showtime)
Gangs of New York (2002)
Mother! (2017)
Available August 28
Pasion Pohibida: Complete Series (Telemundo)
August 30
Deuces Wild (2002) (*Showtime)
August 31
The Terminator (1984)
Leaving Hulu in August
August 31
1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992)
2 Days in the Valley (1996)
52 Pick-Up (1986)
A Beautiful Mind (2001)
A Guy Thing (2003)
Across the Universe (2007)
Analyze That (2002)
Analyze This (1999)
Baby Mama (2008)
Bad Influence (1990)
Barnyard (2006)
Beer for my Horse (2008)
Blue Like Jazz (2012)
Bowfinger (1999)
Brokeback Mountain (2005)
The Brothers Grimm (2005)
The Burbs (1989)
Chinese Box (1997)
Clue (1985)
Criminal Law (1989)
Dead Man Walking (1995)
Doctor Dolittle (1997)
Drive Me Crazy (1999)
Drop Zone (1994)
East is East (1999)
End of Days (1999)
Escape from Alcatraz (1979)
Event Horizon (1997)
Fatal Instinct (1993)
The Frozen Ground (2013)
Hard Rain (1998)
Hellboy (2004)
Hot Boyz (2000)
House of D (2005)
Immigration Tango (2011)
Into the West (2005)
Men with Brooms (2002)
Mindhunters (2004)
Mr. Majestyk (1974)
Mutant Species (1995)
My Left Foot (1989)
Nanny Mcphee (2006)
Nurse 3D (2014)
Over the Top (1987)
Panic (2000)
Prancer (1989)
Primal Fear (1996)
Rain Man (1988)
Remember the Goal (2016)
Restoration (2016)
Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978)
Spawn (1997)
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007)
Michelle Noorali: Helping Users and Developers Consume Open Source
Open source events create the best interaction points between developers and users, and one person you’re likely to meet at these events is Michelle Noorali, one of the most visible and recognizable faces in one of the biggest open source communities: Kubernetes.
Most modern software development, which is by default open source, is done by people spread across the globe, many of whom have never met in person. That’s why events like Open Source Summit are extremely important in creating opportunities for interaction for the people who are managing, developing, and using these open source projects.
Noorali, Senior Software Engineer at Microsoft, says she loves meeting people at events and learning about how they are using cloud-native tools and what they need. “I am trying to see if those tools that I work on can also meet other people’s needs,” she said.
This direct interaction gives Noorali a unique perspective for understanding the pain points. For example, “It’s really hard to pick from all of the cloud native technologies and figure out how they work together because at the end of the day, you are trying to deploy and run applications in the cloud or on bare metal,” she said. “The second point is how do I expose my developers, my teams to this stuff and get them to actually use cloud native tools, without having to learn about everything from scratch.”