Cada nuevo proyecto es un nuevo desafío. Gracias a NavigatorMD comenzamos nuestro primer desarrollo en Big Data dentro de la industria de la salud. http://www.navigatormd.com
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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i don't do bad sauce passes
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#extradirty
YOU ARE THE REASON
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Cada nuevo proyecto es un nuevo desafío. Gracias a NavigatorMD comenzamos nuestro primer desarrollo en Big Data dentro de la industria de la salud. http://www.navigatormd.com
Nixie: La pulsera para alpinistas que se convierte en dron.
Salvador Allende y los orígenes de Big Data.
Robots para el cuidado de la salud.
Interesante discusión sobre diseño de software dirigido por pruebas (TDD). Participan Kent Beck, Martin Fowler y David Heinemeier. #isTDDDead
Agradecemos a la OCDE sus buenos comentarios sobre el Proyecto de Modernización Tecnológica del Registro Público del Estado de Tlaxcala. Controlando los procesos vía software se ha logrado aumentar el ingreso en cerca del 300%.
Coding is becoming the must-have job skill of the 21st century, and it’s not just for computer science majors and other assorted byte heads
I’m not going to weigh in on whether Test-Driven Development is good, bad, or ugly. I do think, though, that the current debate is failing to consider one of its important characteristics. In my opinion, TDD is a design tool first, and a testing tool second. When we write code, we instinctively...
El economista Andrew McAfee sugiere que sí, que probablemente los robots tomarán nuestros trabajos, al menos los tipos de trabajo que ahora conocemos.
En esta clarividente charla, habla de cómo serán nuestros futuros trabajos, y cómo educar a la generaciones futuras para obtenerlos.
¡Hasta siempre Gabo!
Learning to code is the new after-school activity in Hong Kong. A former Goldman Sachs analyst and founder of First Code Academy talks about why coding is just as important as learning Mandarin.
En el futuro la diferencia entre países ricos y pobres estará determinada por los que tienen y los que no tienen software.
Microsoft comienza a apostar fuerte por Open Source. El muy interesante Roslyn ―compilador como servicio―, permite desarrollar software más flexible y robusto. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/vstudio/roslyn.aspx
HAPPENING NOW: Khan Academy’s Sal Khan — 10:30 AM EDT. If you’re in #Pittsburgh, join us on campus in Rashid Auditorium. Anywhere else? #Webcast: http://cmu.li/vmcQ3
Octavio Paz, 100 años.
Leslie Lamport, Premio Turing 2013. El Premio Turing es el equivalente al Nobel de las Ciencias de la Cumputación. http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/news/features/lamport-031814.aspx
Multimillonarios donan e invierten fuertes sumas en proyectos de investigación científica.
Sin duda una de las mejores formas de aplicar el dinero en beneficio de todos.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/16/science/billionaires-with-big-ideas-are-privatizing-american-science.html?hp&_r=0
Today is the web’s 25th birthday. On March 12, 1989, I distributed a proposal to improve information flows: “a ‘web’ of notes with links between them.” Though CERN, as a physics lab, couldn’t justify such a general software project, my boss Mike Sendall allowed me to work on it on the side. In 1990, I wrote the first browser and editor. In 1993, after much urging, CERN declared that WWW technology would be available to all, without paying royalties, forever. The first web server, used by Tim Berners-Lee. Photo via Wikipedia This decision enabled tens of thousands to start working together to build the web. Now, about 40 percent of us are connected and creating online. The web has generated trillions of dollars of economic value, transformed education and healthcare and activated many new movements for democracy around the world. And we’re just getting started. How has this happened? By design, the underlying Internet and the WWW are non-hierarchical, decentralized and radically open. The web can be made to work with any type of information, on any device, with any software, in any language. You can link to any piece of information. You don’t need to ask for permission. What you create is limited only by your imagination. So today is a day to celebrate. But it’s also an occasion to think, discuss—and do. Key decisions on the governance and future of the Internet are looming, and it’s vital for all of us to speak up for the web’s future. How can we ensure that the other 60 percent around the world who are not connected get online fast? How can we make sure that the web supports all languages and cultures, not just the dominant ones? How do we build consensus around open standards to link the coming Internet of Things? Will we allow others to package and restrict our online experience, or will we protect the magic of the open web and the power it gives us to say, discover, and create anything? How can we build systems of checks and balances to hold the groups that can spy on the net accountable to the public? These are some of my questions—what are yours? On the 25th birthday of the web, I ask you to join in—to help us imagine and build the future standards for the web, and to press for every country to develop a digital bill of rights to advance a free and open web for everyone. Learn more at webat25.org and speak up for the sort of web we really want with #web25. Posted by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, Inventor of the World Wide Web