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aroaessidhe · 3 months
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Character descriptions in To Shape A Dragon's Breath for fanart reference
main database link + link to author's post of dragon descriptions
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diorsirenskkn · 1 year
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Ultraviolence ~ loki l.
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Chapter One
Desc: You’re a psychiatrist for the Avengers focusing on PTSD and trauma rehabilitation. When Thor's estranged brother gets sentenced to live on earth till Odin sees fit, you find yourself with the job of helping Loki.
————— ୨୧ —————
"Mornin dez" Stark entered the compound's kitchen, immediately heading for the coffee pot as you drank out of your own cup.
"Good morning Anthony." You said irritatedly. Anthony always found a way to rub you the wrong way. No matter what is was, he always pissed you off. Maybe it was the whole big brother little sister relationship you two always had, or just both your sarcastic personalities bouncing off of each other.
"Dez !" Natasha, Your big sister, said running up to you with her wide, pearly, smile. You smiled giving her a big hug in return. One grumpy Yelena followed behind, snatching Anthony's fresh cup of coffee right out of his hand with a smile.
After escaping the red room, you dedicated your time to gaining your psychology degree and fighting crime with the fellow avengers. You had 'superpowers' yourself, probably the only reason you were an avenger in the first place. You acted as a team therapist, as well as specializing in trauma recovery. Today you began to help the dreaded assignment, or at least that's what everyone told you it would be like. You had never met Loki Laufeyson, but you were about to.
"You almost ready?" You snapped out of your trance, watching Fury walk through the door. Him, Anthony, Thor, and Bruce would be helping and supervising you throughout the project.
Loki had been commanded to stay on earth under the avengers custody until Odin, deemed it fit for him to return to his homeland. Thor visited daily, mostly coming back torqued after some argument they had.
"Mhm," you said, gulping the last bit of coffee you had left, grabbing your books, notepad, and pen.
As they all accompanied you down the eerily unoccupied hall; zero words were exchanged as you finally made it to the gods chambers.
Anthony pushed ahead of you all. After swiping a keycard, using his hand print, AND a retinal scan, the door let out a loud series of clicks. He quickly moved out of the way as Thor took lead, pushing the door open walking in unbothered. Anthony and fury followed, you being last in line. As you entered the room, Loki sat chained to an interrogation table. You sighed at the seemingly overprotective security. You had once been in his shoes, except instead of trying to take over a whole city you tried to assassinate the whole team.
This occurred right after you were freed from Dreykov's custody. You failed to believe your sisters were your sisters, and that the avengers had saved you. As you held your own sister cornered against the wall, she said your name. Not your number, not your code. She humanized you. For the first time in your life you heard your given name aloud.
"Does he really have to be chained to the table?" Your accent thick, shocking the man sitting across the table. Anthony rolled his eyes and laughed.
"While we're in here? Uh, yeah. When we leave do whatever floats your boat. Just remember I'm not cleaning up your bloody corpse." You rolled your eyes sitting at the seat already pulled out for you.
"Who's this?" Loki looked over at the three men. Anthony had already started to leave, done with the situation at hand.
"She's a—a friend, who wants to help you.." Thor stuttered out, clearly not good at coming up with something on the spot. Nick rolled his eyes as he crossed his arms impatiently.
Fury was hesitant to even entertain your idea of treating; or at least attempting to treat Laufeyson. He was a full case file waiting to be closed. Another relic in Shield's database.
"I've got it from here, I'll let you know when I want out." You laughed, ushering them along.
As the door clicked shut, you brought your hands out and allowed the magic to flow through your palms and to the cuffs.
"I'm letting you out. And remember these hands aren't just for unlocking cuffs." You smiled as he rolled his wrists, rubbing the faint lines they left with his opposite hand.
"So are you going to tell me what you are?" He snarked. You laughed under your breath, opening your note pad.
"I'm one of them, but I'm also a psychiatrist." You looked up from the yellow pages, staring right into his eyes. His face contorted through plenty emotions, before settling on one. Anger.
"I don't need a fucking psychiatrist." He spat through gritted teeth, anticipating you to be upset.
But you stayed content.
"No, but I'm sure I can help." You shrugged, continuing to remain eye contact. He rolled his eyes and stayed silent.
"Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?" Your brows furrowed, keeping that contact as you clicked your pen.
"I have a feeling your going to ask them anyways." He rolled his eyes, leaning back in his chair and crossing his arms.
You ignored that, letting a sigh escape from your lips.
"So, I have your file here, at least what we were able to obtain from your brother-"
"Adoptive, brother." He cut you off.
"Adoptive, brother," you sighed. "Is there anything you'd like to share before we go through your history?" Quite monotonously said.
"I'll correct you as we go." He replied slouching back in his seat.
After about an hour of back and forth about what Thor had said and Lokis take on it, you finally had your notepad full. But, you hadn't got to current events just yet. You could feel his knee bouncing faster and faster as you neared the present.
"If you wish to stop at anytime please tell me. The only way I can truly help you is if your honest with me, and trust me." You hadn't even bothered bringing Odin up; despite the fact he's the source of it all.
He rolled his eyes and sat upright. 
"I don't need your pity." He sneered once more.
"What makes you think it's pity?" You cocked your head, putting your pen down.
"It's all anyone offers. Pity or hatred. Nothing more, nothing less."
"It's empathy, Loki. And to be fair the hatred is well deserved, you came into these peoples planet, their home, and tried to take over." You took a pause. "But it can be forgiven."
"Do you truly think I'm stupid enough to fall for the fake ideology that 'all can be forgiven?' I am a god you dull Midgardian. I cannot, and WILL not be forgiven for my actions, and I could give two shits if they did." Your eyes widened a bit at the speech, but without fail you had a comeback.
"No, not everyone will forgive you. That is impossible. And something all of us have to cope with. We are not perfect, god or human. And we also have to accept that. I think that's something we should work on; as well as this feeling that you don't deserve forgiveness." You said rather calmly for just being called a dull Midgardian.
He said nothing in response, concluding your session. As you took a peep at your watch realizing it had been about an hour, you flipped you notepad shut, and raised you hand to put his back in cuffs.
"Someone will escort you to your room in a few minutes. I look forward to working with you, Loki." You smiled at him. He frowned, more confused than anything.
As you made your way around stark tower, you arrived at the conference room you were supposed to meet at after the appointment.
"Agent Novikov," Fury greeted you. Anthony gave a nod and Thor gave a smile. A moment of silence passed as you settled into your office chair at the table, cracking open your notes.
"So, how'd it go with reindeer games?" Stark finally broke the silence. His hands intertwined, resting on the glass table top.
You sighed, briefly looking at your notes.
"I have reason to believe he has significant trauma, mostly surrounding his upbringing and parentage. As well as a suicide attempt, that led to his run in with Chitauri. Possibly anger issues, more or likely stemming from childhood. Other than that I've seen worse cases; he's not a lost cause." Your brows furrowed as you glanced over your notes quickly again.
"So, what's your course of action?" Fury questioned.
"Therapy, socialization, possibly medication? Not quite sure about that though; I do think he should be socialized with the team, treated as if he's not a threat. That would be good for him."
"Woah woah there, slow your roll, he is a threat. And I'm not sure it's a good idea to have him outside of his cage until we're sure he's improving." Stark intervened. You nodded in agreement.
"Of course. But as soon as I'm sure he's improving, I'd like to further discuss socialization with the team." You agreed, standing up with your note pad and pen clutched to your chest.
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mamun258 · 3 months
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Three leaps in the growth of data analysts
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“How to become a data analyst quickly” is often a hot topic in searches. However, what about growing up as a data analyst? Where is HE Tuber the future? What is the career endpoint? Few people discuss it in detail. In this article, we will seriously discuss the three leaps in the growth of data analysts.
1. The first leap: mastering number-retrieving tools
The first truth is: Data analysis positions seem to have high salaries, which is entirely due to the IT department. Data analysis positions under the IT department are paid according to programmer standards. Therefore, when you want to be a professional data analyst, mastering SQL data retrieval ability, being familiar with at least one BI tool such as Tableau/Power BI/Fine BI, and having an understanding of Python's data processing and data science packages are the entry tickets.
This is the first leap that must be achieved: mastering the number-retrieving tools.
Often some students in school have fantasies: I want to find a "business analyst", "operations analyst" or "business analyst" who doesn't write code. First of all, fresh graduates, you don’t understand business/business, and you don’t know how to get data, so you can only do the lowest level of organizing Excel, and you get a clerk’s salary, which is ridiculously low.
Therefore, I often advise current students to:
 Go read "Must Know SQL". If you are not interested, you can just give up.
 Go to Niuke.com→Online Programming→SQL Chapter and brush up the questions
 Find a data analysis internship writing SQL and do it for three months
This can effectively avoid "Ye Gong loves dragons"! In fact, if you don’t want to collect data, you can be an operation, product manager, or planner who understands data. There is no need to be a full-time data analyst. When you become proficient in retrieving numbers from the database, you will have achieved your first leap.
2. The second leap: embodying business value
Growth as a data analyst is not linear. It is not that junior data analysts write 500 lines of SQL every day, intermediate data analysts write 1,000 lines of SQL every day, and advanced data analysts write 2,000 lines of SQL every day. The kind of person who writes 2,000 lines of SQL every day, also known as: Number checking girl, SQL boy, human flesh counting machine, data tool man... In short, it is not a good state.
The second truth is: Data analysis positions are essentially service positions and must support business work. Therefore, only by finding ways to reflect your own business value can you take the initiative at work and avoid being passive; only then can you better reflect your performance and get promotions and salary increases.
There are many ways to demonstrate business value:
 Output indicator system to comprehensively monitor business
 Actively discover problems and remind business to pay attention
 Proactively identify opportunities to improve business performance
 Conduct scientific experiments to validate business ideas
 Output analysis reports and provide useful suggestions
This step will be difficult to achieve because:
 There is a lack of reference books and my industry is too unique.
 The company lacks a communication atmosphere and the business is indifferent to you.
 The lack of guidance from your immediate leadership will only make you “think more!”
 I have never seen a successful case, so I don’t know how far it can go.
Therefore, students often get stuck at this stage.
There are ways to break through this stage. The core of this stage is to change your thinking from "learning answers from tutorials" at the entry stage to "training your own logical abilities and finding answers by yourself."
Generally recommended to everyone:
 Communicate more with peers and understand the situation of each company
 Communicate more with business and understand business processes/customary practices
 Train logical skills and think more about how to quantitatively describe business
 Participate in data competitions and learn about analysis practices in various industries/businesses
These are more of an increase in knowledge. There is no standard answer, but if you accumulate more, you can actually improve your ability to deal with problems. When you can skillfully convert the words spoken by the business into an analysis logic tree, you will have successfully passed this stage.
3. The third leap: organizational data projects
The third truth is: Like other IT teams, if you can only work alone, it will be difficult to expand the department and achieve promotion and salary increase. Even data projects are more difficult to do than other IT projects because business expectations are often very high. Under various publicity from the outside world, people always think: "As long as there is data, we can accurately predict and be omniscient and omnipotent..." The contradiction between the business side's excessive expectations and poor infrastructure has always been the number one contradiction in the field of data analysis.
To do a good job in data projects, you need:
 Technically, you are familiar with data acquisition/models/BI tools. Even if you don't do it yourself, you know how to select high-quality partners/reliable suppliers.
 In terms of business, he is familiar with common business problems, can keenly identify demand pitfalls, seize valuable parts, and embody the value of data.
 In terms of management, if you are familiar with project progress management, you will urge the business to clarify requirements/press the front-end to bury the points/press the warehouse team to cooperate/press the leaders to confirm the Kanban design.
 In terms of reporting, be familiar with reporting routines, draw a big picture before the project starts, control expectations after the project starts, and make a fancy ending after the project ends to reflect the credit.
It can be said that good project organization is the comprehensive application of one's technical/business experience in previous years. Once the project is completed, the leaders will pay attention to the data team and give you more staff. If you can expand the team, you will successfully achieve a management transition.
Many students will be stuck in this link, because many companies have no project opportunities at all. Students who are lucky can start with small projects (usually small special reports) and gradually develop their abilities.
Of course, not all students will make it to the end. Many students are stuck in the second step and find it boring to change careers. In fact, data analysis skills are applicable to many jobs. For example, there are certain opportunities for business positions such as strategic products, user operations, risk control, product management, and sales operations, as well as development positions such as data analysis, transfer warehouses, and algorithms.
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How To Use PHP To Create Dynamic Websites
PHP is a server-side scripting language that is commonly used to create dynamic websites. It is a popular choice for web development because it is easy to learn and use, and it is free and open-source.
To create a dynamic website with PHP, you will need to:
Install PHP on your web server.
Create a database to store your dynamic content.
Write PHP code to interact with the database and generate dynamic HTML pages.
Here is a simple example of how to use PHP to create a dynamic website:
PHP<?php // Connect to the database. $db = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_database', 'root', ''); // Get the current date and time. $date = date('Y-m-d'); $time = date('H:i:s'); // Get the latest news articles from the database. $sql = 'SELECT * FROM news_articles ORDER BY published_at DESC'; $result = $db->query($sql); // Start generating the HTML for the web page. ?> <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <title>My Dynamic Website</title> </head> <body> <h1>My Dynamic Website</h1> <h2>Latest News Articles</h2> <ul> <?php foreach ($result as $article): ?> <li> <h3><a href="<?php echo $article['url']; ?>"><?php echo $article['title']; ?></a></h3> <p><?php echo $article['excerpt']; ?></p> <p>Published on <?php echo $article['published_at']; ?></p> </li> <?php endforeach; ?> </ul> <h2>Current Date and Time</h2> <p>The current date and time is: <?php echo $date . ' ' . $time; ?></p> </body> </html> <?php // Close the database connection. $db = null; ?>
This code will connect to the database, get the latest news articles, and generate a dynamic HTML web page with the list of articles and the current date and time.
You can use PHP to create all sorts of dynamic websites, from simple blogs and news websites to complex e-commerce websites and social networking platforms.
Here are some tips for creating dynamic websites with PHP:
Use a database to store your dynamic content. This will make it easier to manage and update your content.
Use PHP functions to interact with the database and generate dynamic HTML pages.
Use PHP sessions to track user activity and preferences.
Use PHP cookies to store user data on the user's computer.
Use PHP security features to protect your website from attacks.
If you want to learn PHP from scratch must checkout e-Tuitions to learn PHP Language online, They can teach you PHP Language and other coding language also they have some of the best teachers for there students and most important thing you can also Book Free Demo for any class just goo and get your free demo.
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mrkeu · 3 years
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AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate
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Giới thiệu
AWS Certification là chứng chỉ được câp bởi Amazon đánh giá mức độ hiểu biết về aws cloud, cụ thể là các dịch vụ của Amazon Web Services (AWS) cũng như việc áp dụng các dịch vụ đó 1 cách hiệu quả vào trong các bài toán thực tế. Bộ chứng chỉ này được chia thành các phần: Cloud Practitioner, Architect, Developer và Operations, ngoài ra có thêm Specialty. Về độ khó thì có 3 mức:
Foundational
Asociate
Professional
Chi tiết về các chứng chỉ các bạn tham khảo ở hình dưới đây: Tham khảo: https://aws.amazon.com/certification/
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Kế hoạch học thi
Đầu tiên mình chọn mục tiêu là chứng chỉ: AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate. Chứng chỉ này có độ khó trung bình theo mình biết thì ngang tầm 1 năm kinh nghiệm sử dụng AWS, sở dĩ mình chọn chứng chỉ này vì các lý do sau:
Bản thân cũng có 2 năm kinnh nghiệm về Architect nhưng là một cloud khác, ngoài phần infrastrcuture ra thì team mình control toàn bộ, và không có nhiều service support như AWS.
Chứng chỉ với độ khó trung bình trước mắt phù hợp với năng lực bản thân.
Mình chọn khoá học ở https://linuxacademy.com/ và vì chưa từng có kinnh nghiêmh sử dụng AWS nên mình sẽ phải học qua khoá AWS Cloud Practitioner, khoá này mất khoảng 17 giờ học online và thời gian thực tế mình hoàn thành khoá học này mấy khoảng 10 ngày học. Tiếp theo mình sẽ học AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate - khoá học này có thời lượng 57 giờ học online, mình lên plan dự kiến hoàn thành trong một tháng. Mình đã hoàn thành khóa học AWS Cloud Practitioner và AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate trong khoảng 2 tháng, mỗi ngày 1-2h và 2-3h vào cuối tuần.
Đi thi
Sau 2 tháng học và khoảng 1 tuần để ôn tập kiến thức thì mình đi thi, mình đã book lịch thi từ thời điểm bắt đầu khóa Solutions Architect – Associate. Vì vậy ở thời điểm thi mình còn nhiều kiến thức chưa chuyên sâu, mập mờ giữa các service. Kết quả: 674/1000 => FAIL Đề thi có 65, 720/1000 trở lên là điểm pass. Hơi tiết một chút nhưng dù sao nó cũng năm trong dự đoán của mình (từ 650-700). Vì mình có làm một số đề thi thử nhưng cũng chỉ đạt khoảng 50-70%, trong khi đề thi thật thì dài và khó hơn 1 chút.
Các chủ đề ôn tập
Sau khi sumit bài thi thì bạn biết luôn kết quả là PASS hay FAIL, nhưng để biết điểm thì bạn phải vào trang aws training - nơi mà bạn đăng ký online. OK fail rồi, thế thì để rút kinh nghiệm cho lần thi sau mình đã nhớ lại các câu hỏi làm mình mập mờ giữa 2 đáp án, hay những câu mà mình thấy có nhiều phương án đúng nhưng lựa chọn thằng nào là tốt nhất cho trường hợp tiết kiệm chi phí hay là high availbility nhất v.v.., sau đó mình lục lại tài liệu ở khóa học trên trang https://linuxacademy.com/ bản pdf để lướt qua lại một lần và note lại những điểm cần phải tìm hiểu kỹ hơn cũng như so sánh những service giống nhau. Và dưới đây là các chủ đề mà mình note nhanh lại và sẽ lên kế hoạch để cường hóa kiến thức cho lần thi sắp tới. Mình đã book lịch thi vào đầu tháng 8/2020 nhưng do dịch covid-19 bùng phát tại Đà Nẵng nên mình đã dời sang đầu tháng 10/2020.
DataSync
VPN và Direct Connect
on-premise to Cloud
Snowball, Snowball Edge và Snowmobile (chú ý đến dung lượng)
Dung lượng data chuyển lên Cloud
NAT gatewate và NAT Instance
S3
SNS, SQS, (FIFO, Standard)
So sánh Amazon MQ, SQS, SNS
Data từ on-premeise to Cloud thông qua EFS, File Storage gatewate, Volume storage gatewate.
Storage Gateway
EBS Throughput Optimized HDD , provisined, popular purpose
Tìm hiểu về CloudFoudation và Elast ic Beanstalk
CloudFront hạn chế user theo khu vực địa lý : Geo.. và Geoxy...
Athena và Redshift
Tìm hiểu kỹ về DynamoDB, Aurora
Secure
Khi nào dùng NAT, VPC endpoint, VPC privatelink. Best Pract ice and HA
Kiness và Lampda trigger
DB nào cho phép AZ, hay replicate another region
EFS: performance method: General purpose and Max I/O, thoughput model: Bursting Throughput and Provisioned
I/O liên quan đến RAM hay CPU
Cloudfront và OAI
Encryption: S3, DB, bucket
S3: versioning and presigned URL, MFA Delete and Encrypt, Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)
Rout 53: Rout e 53 and Healt h Checks, các loại record
ELB
VPC: NAT gatewate and NAT Insrance, Egress-only int ernet gat eways, VPC Endpoint
Net work Access Cont rol List s (NACLs):
Sercurity group
Bast ion Hosts
ECS: EC2 mode và Fargate Mode
Lamda
các loại Instance trong Ec2
Role and policy
DynamoDB Accelerator (DAX)
auto scaling group is configured with default termination policy
EBS cross region or create snapshot
So sanh Dynamo Redshift Aurora
using standard SQL and existing business intelligence tools
Amazon GuardDuty
CloudWatch Event
VNP Cloudhub
Mình sẽ không viết kỹ về các service vì cái này có nhiều blog khác đã viết (tiếng Việt và tiếng Anh). Mình sẽ nêu ra những điểm cần lưu ý khi nói về các service đó, và đưa link tham khảo để các bạn tìm hiểu kỹ hơn.
S3
Khá nhiều câu hỏi liên quan đến service này, một service kinh điển của AWS. Nguồn: https://www.msp360.com/resources/blog/amazon-s3-storage-classes-guide/
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Lưu ý
S3 Standard: Chi phí lưu trữ cao nhất, tốc độ truy cập nhanh S3 Standard Infrequent Access: Giống như cái tên của nó, khi chúng ta cần lưu trữ dữ liệu nhưng không truy cập thường xuyên, tuy nhiên khi cần truy cập phải được phản hồi ngay lập tức. S3 Intelligent Tiering: có thể nói đây không phải là một storage class, vậy khi nào thì bạn chọn loại này - khi chúng ta không dự đoán được tấn suất truy cập cho những dữ liệu này. AWS sẽ monitor và sẽ chuyển qua chuyển lại giữa các class tùy theo tần suất truy cập đến dữ liệu để đảm bảo tiết kiệm chi phí cho bạn. Amazon Glacier: Đây là class dành cho dữ liệu truy cập không thường xuyên và chi phí rẻ, và tùy thuộc vào thời gian bạn muốn lấy giữ liệu mà nó chia làm các retrieval options như sau (cái này hay hỏi bài thi):
expedite retrieval - 1-5 minutes
standard - 3-5 hours
bulk - 5-12 hours
Amazon Glacier Deep Archive: Đây là class có chi phí lưu trữ rẻ nhất, cùng với đó là thời gian để truy xuất dữ liệu cũng chậm 12 - 48 hours.
Câu hỏi mẫu
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Tài liệu tham khảo
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https://aws.amazon.com/s3/?nc1=h_ls https://aws.amazon.com/s3/storage-classes/?nc=sn&loc=3 https://www.msp360.com/resources/blog/amazon-s3-storage-classes-guide/
EC2
Một số lưu ý để ước tính chi phí Amazon EC2 là: Operating systems, Clock hours of server time, Pricing Model, Instance type and Number of instances
Pricing models for Amazon EC2:
On-Demand Instances
Reserved Instances
Spot Instances
Dedicated Hosts
On-Demand Instances
Không cần trả trước, bạn có thể tăng giảm khả năng compute để đáp ứng như cầu của bạn và bạn sẽ chi trả cho những gì bạn dùng. Phù hợp với các công việc thử nghiệm trong thời gian ngắn và không đoán trước được. Vd cho trường hợp sử dụng On-Demand Instances là khi bạn scale OUT instances để phục vụ lượng request lớn tăng đột ngột ramdom trong ngày mà bạn không đoán trước được thời gian nào.
Reserved Instances
Amazon EC2 Reserved cung cấp cho bạn mức chiếc khấu lên đến 75% so với On-Demand Instance. Khi chúng ta có một ứng dụng chạy dài hạn 1-3 năm và chúng ta có thể dự đoán được khả năng tính toán (compute) của instance thì loại instance này là phù hợp để tiết kiệm chi phí.
Spot Instances
Amazon EC2 Spot instances allow you to request spare Amazon EC2 computing capacity for up to 90% off the On-Demand price.
Amazon EC2 Spot Instances cho phép bạn tận dụng EC2 capacity chưa được sử dụng trên AWS cloud. Nói cách khác, là có thể sử dụng hàng ngon với giá rẻ. Khi sử dụng loại instance này, bạn phải chấp nhận việc các xử lý có thể bị gián đoạn (interrupted). và EC2 bị terminated. Tham khảo thêm tại: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/using-spot-instances.html https://docs.aws.amazon.com/whitepapers/latest/cost-optimization-leveraging-ec2-spot-instances/when-to-use-spot-instances.html
Dedicated Hosts
Giống như cái tên, Nó là một physical EC2 server dành riêng cho bạn. Dedicated Hosts giúp bạn giảm chi phí bằng cách cho phép bạn sử dụng các software licenses như Windows server, SQL server v.v... đang có. Tìm hiểu thêm tại: https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/dedicated-hosts/
Tài liệu tham khảo
https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/pricing/?nc1=h_ls https://cuongquach.com/tim-hieu-ve-amazon-ec2-amazon-elastic-compute-cloud.html
Câu hỏi mẫu
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Migrating Data to the Cloud
Trong rất nhiều tình huống được đưa ra, đa phần sẽ có các caai hỏi liên quan đến việc migrate data từ on-premise lên AWS cloud. Mình sẽ tổng hợp lại một số cách thức và chỉ ra điểm lưu ý ở các service này.
Online data transferAWS Virtual Private Network
Thiết lập nhanh
Chi phí thấp
Không đảm bảo băng thông ổn định, và mức độ bảo mật không cao
AWS Database Migration Service
Database của bạn vẫn hoạt động bình thường trong lúc tranfer
Chuyển và phân tích data nhạy cảm
Đơn giản, tự động và tăng tốc
AWS Direct Connect
Thiết lâp kết nối private chuyên dụng với cáp quang 1G hoặc 10G
Sử dụng khi chúng ta cần 1 kênh nhanh, tin cậy và bảo mật để truyền dữ liệu
Tốn chi phí và mất nhiều thời gian set up hơn so với VPN
Với chi phí và thời gian cần thiết để thiết lập, nó không phải là một tùy chọn truyền dữ liệu lý tưởng nếu bạn chỉ cần nó để thực hiện di chuyển một lần.
AWS S3 Transfer Acceleration
Nếu bạn đang chuyển dữ liệu của mình sang nền tảng lưu trữ AWS phổ biến S3 ở một khoảng cách xa, thì AWS S3 Transfer Acceleration giúp bạn thực hiện nhanh hơn: trung bình nhanh hơn 171%, theo AWS.
Nhanh chóng, an toàn thông qua public internet
Tiết kiệm thời gian khi chuyển data từ các location khác nhau
Dữ liệu được truyền thông qua Amazon CloudFront - tối đa hóa băng thông
AWS DataSync
Nguồn: https://aws.amazon.com/datasync/?whats-new-cards.sort-by=item.additionalFields.postDateTime&whats-new-cards.sort-order=desc
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Offline data transferAWS Snowball
AWS Snowball là em bé của gia đình Snowball: một thiết bị siêu bền, có kích thước bằng vali, có thể được tải lên tới 80TB dữ liệu.
50 - 80TB
Mã hóa 256 bit
Encryption keys được quản lý thông qua AWS Key Management Service (KMS)
AWS Snowball Edge
Có kích thước lớn lơn Snowball với khả năng tải lên tới 100TB. Snowball Edge cũng có thể chạy các ứng dụng dựa trên Lambda và EC2, ngay cả khi không có kết nối mạng.
Điều này làm cho nó lý tưởng cho các trường hợp sử dụng cần xử lý hoặc phân tích cục bộ trước khi dữ liệu được đưa lên AWS Cloud. Giá của nó dĩ nhiên sẽ đắt hơn Snowball.
AWS Snowmobile
AWS Snowmobile là một giải pháp di chuyển dữ liệu quy mô exabyte, đóng gói tương đương với 1.250 thiết bị AWS Snowball vào container vận chuyển dài 45ft.
AWS Snowmobile có thể vận chuyển tới 100PB dữ liệu trong một chuyến đi, với chi phí chỉ bằng 1/5 chi phí chuyển dữ liệu qua kết nối internet tốc độ cao. Snowmobile không chỉ là cách nhanh nhất và rẻ nhất để chuyển lượng dữ liệu khổng lồ lên cloud, nó còn có tính bảo mật cao. Nhân viên an ninh chuyên dụng, theo dõi GPS, giám sát báo động và giám sát video 24/7 phối hợp với nhau để giữ an toàn cho dữ liệu của bạn trong suốt hành trình. Dữ liệu được mã hóa bằng các khóa mã hóa 256 bit.
Tài liệu tham khảo
https://www.jeffersonfrank.com/aws-blog/aws-data-transfer-costs/#AWSDC https://www.slideshare.net/AmazonWebServices/migrating-data-to-the-cloud-exploring-your-options-from-aws-stg205r1-aws-reinvent-2018
Câu hỏi mẫu
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Lời kết
Ở phần 1 này mình tạm thời memo lại bấy nhiêu thôi, mình không chắc những cái mình memo ở đây đầy đủ và chính xác, quan điểm của mình là đưa ra các chủ đề có trong bài thi và những điểm mập mờ cần làm rõ để phân biệt các service và khi nào nên sử dụng cái nào. Lượng kiến thức dành cho bài thi này không đến mức chuyên sâu nhưng trãi đều các nội dung. Nắm vững khái niệm, khi nào sử dụng và một số lưu ý để so sánh giữa các service giống nhau sẽ là chìa khóa để bạn chinh phục bài test này. Trên cả việc pass chứng chỉ hay không pass chứng chỉ đó là kiến thức bạn nắm được, hiểu được để có thể vận dụng trong thực tế, vì vậy sẽ hoàn hảo hơn khi chúng ta tìm hiểu các service này ở một mức độ tương đối chứ không qua loa. Nếu các bạn có gặp các câu hỏi nào hay service này cần thảo luận, hãy để lại comment và chúng ta cùng thảo luận nhé.
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readerbkksa117 · 3 years
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*Read Online* The Soulmate Equation BY : Christina Lauren
The Soulmate Equation
By : Christina Lauren
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  DOWNLOAD OR READ THIS BOOKS
  DESC:
Single mom Jess Davis is a data and statistics wizard, but no amount of number crunching can convince her to step back into the dating world. Raised by her grandparents--who now help raise her seven-year-old daughter, Juno--Jess has been left behind too often to feel comfortable letting anyone in. After all, her father's never been around, her hard-partying mother disappeared when she was six, and her ex decided he wasn't "father material" before Juno was even born. Jess holds her loved ones close, but working constantly to stay afloat is hard...and lonely.But then Jess hears about GeneticAlly, a buzzy new DNA-based matchmaking company that's predicted to change dating forever. Finding a soulmate through DNA? The reliability of numbers: This Jess understands. At least she thought she did, until her test shows an unheard-of 98% compatibility with another subject in the database: GeneticAlly's founder, Dr. River Pena. This is one number she can't wrap her head around, because she
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nardilajihan · 3 years
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*E-Book* The Soulmate Equation BY : Christina Lauren
The Soulmate Equation
By : Christina Lauren
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  ==>>DOWNLOAD OR READ THIS BOOKS<<==
  DESC:
Single mom Jess Davis is a data and statistics wizard, but no amount of number crunching can convince her to step back into the dating world. Raised by her grandparents--who now help raise her seven-year-old daughter, Juno--Jess has been left behind too often to feel comfortable letting anyone in. After all, her father's never been around, her hard-partying mother disappeared when she was six, and her ex decided he wasn't "father material" before Juno was even born. Jess holds her loved ones close, but working constantly to stay afloat is hard...and lonely.But then Jess hears about GeneticAlly, a buzzy new DNA-based matchmaking company that's predicted to change dating forever. Finding a soulmate through DNA? The reliability of numbers: This Jess understands. At least she thought she did, until her test shows an unheard-of 98% compatibility with another subject in the database: GeneticAlly's founder, Dr. River Pena. This is one number she can't wrap her head around, because she
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adigung11 · 3 years
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~(PDF)~ Books The Soulmate Equation BY : Christina Lauren
The Soulmate Equation
By : Christina Lauren
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  DOWNLOAD THIS BOOKS
  DESC:
Single mom Jess Davis is a data and statistics wizard, but no amount of number crunching can convince her to step back into the dating world. Raised by her grandparents--who now help raise her seven-year-old daughter, Juno--Jess has been left behind too often to feel comfortable letting anyone in. After all, her father's never been around, her hard-partying mother disappeared when she was six, and her ex decided he wasn't "father material" before Juno was even born. Jess holds her loved ones close, but working constantly to stay afloat is hard...and lonely.But then Jess hears about GeneticAlly, a buzzy new DNA-based matchmaking company that's predicted to change dating forever. Finding a soulmate through DNA? The reliability of numbers: This Jess understands. At least she thought she did, until her test shows an unheard-of 98% compatibility with another subject in the database: GeneticAlly's founder, Dr. River Pena. This is one number she can't wrap her head around, because she
0 notes
krisbie1 · 3 years
Text
*PDF Download* The Soulmate Equation BY : Christina Lauren
The Soulmate Equation
By : Christina Lauren
Tumblr media
  DOWNLOAD OR READ THIS BOOKS
  DESC:
Single mom Jess Davis is a data and statistics wizard, but no amount of number crunching can convince her to step back into the dating world. Raised by her grandparents--who now help raise her seven-year-old daughter, Juno--Jess has been left behind too often to feel comfortable letting anyone in. After all, her father's never been around, her hard-partying mother disappeared when she was six, and her ex decided he wasn't "father material" before Juno was even born. Jess holds her loved ones close, but working constantly to stay afloat is hard...and lonely.But then Jess hears about GeneticAlly, a buzzy new DNA-based matchmaking company that's predicted to change dating forever. Finding a soulmate through DNA? The reliability of numbers: This Jess understands. At least she thought she did, until her test shows an unheard-of 98% compatibility with another subject in the database: GeneticAlly's founder, Dr. River Pena. This is one number she can't wrap her head around, because she
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aroaessidhe · 1 year
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Lucha of the Night Forest character descriptions for fanart.
Full entry (including spoilers) and database link in pinned post!
-----------------------------------
Lucha
a long bone knife strapped to her belt, boots
slim as a sword in the moonlight. Two braids streamed down her back, her lightly freckled face turned upward
The neat line of stitches extended along her cheekbone farther than she’d expected
Lucha hung the sharp, terrible thing [beak] alongside her knife and filled the pouch at her waist with talons to sell or trade.
Some impulse led Lucha to pull one of the sombralado’s talons from the pouch on her belt.
She could feel the bone blade strapped to her thigh.
Lucha dressed in one of several white robes
With steady hands and dry eyes, Lucha pulled one of the deep green cloaks on, covering as much of her telltale white robe as she could. Thus disguised,
Lucha stood in the center of the glade, wind whipping her hair from her braids
Lis
Lis wore a short skirt and their mother’s favorite scarf tied into a top that left her shoulders bare. Her hair was loose, eyes lined with something dark.
They were near the same height now. It surprised her. But she still grabbed her sister’s upper arm hard enough to pinch and dragged her from the scene.
We’ll blend in, I bet. We’re lighter than most Puertanos, but only because of all these gloomy shadows. I bet we’d brown right up after a few days in the sun.” Lucha laughed at her fair sister, her dark hair and eyes. It was easy to picture her sun-kissed and healthy, too.
She was dressed in black, but barely. A skirt that skimmed her wasted thighs. A top that showed midriff and shoulders both. The jutting bones of her lowermost ribs protruded, jabbing at her sallow skin. In the front of her hair—lustrous and black like their mother’s—was a white streak, wide as three fingers.
Across the arm Alán had been holding, a ladder of scars became visible. Some were shining and white against the tan of her skin. Some were much newer, barely scabbing over
Her hood obscured her face, but no one was looking at her. Inside, Lis sat up in bed. Her cheeks were pink, and her eyes sparkled. There was a tiny yellow-eyed kitten in her lap. She wore the pale green robes of a second-ring devotee, and around her three healers teased the kitten
Paz
honey-brown skin glowed in the light of the tiny phosphorescent plants lining the raised beds.
sepia skin
It was the top of a deep green tattoo, which Lucha knew would extend down past the girl’s navel. It wasn’t just any tattoo. It was the mark of the forest goddess, and it was forbidden in Robado—along with any mention of her existence. The branches of her tattoo were still just barely visible above the neck of her shirt
skirts, rucksack
Paz bent over her, saying soothing things as she pulled tins and bottles out of the pouch at her waist
full lips
For a moment, Lucha didn’t recognize the woman holding the bow. Her hair was pulled back into a severe braid, her robe the deep green of the inner sanctum. Her expression was determined and fierce, but not afraid. This was not her first time holding a weapon. If she killed Lucha, here and now, that wouldn’t be a first either. And then, slowly, the rest came into focus. The shape of her beneath the robe. The light in those eyes, behind her narrowed gaze.
A familiar awareness flared to life as Paz climbed out of the pool, clad only in weapons and undergarments—a knife at her thigh. The bow on her back.
Paz’s curls danced free of their braid. The sunlight illuminated the brown of her skin so that she seemed to glow.
Salvador
In some, later burned, a man walked behind them—black cloak open like wings. But art never told the whole truth.
pale face
Hair in his eyes. Those sharp cheekbones; that perpetual scowl.
A curtain of black hair. Eyes, obsidian coins in a face like a mask. An expression that said he would stalk the places that promised her death until one of them kept its vow.
the forest goddess
A beautiful woman, her sepia skin seeming to generate its own light
Her hair fell in inky waves down her back, her dress like shifting moonlight on a pond
It depicted a woman with glowing brown skin, raven hair falling in waves to her waist. Her palms were open, golden light streaming from them. Lucha had seen her, of course. The weeping woman from her vision. The goddess had an immortal beauty that dazzled—but that was not what made it impossible to look away from her
Alán
jacket, lots of rings
Francisca
Coppery-red hair, her pale face spotted with freckles much lighter than Lucha’s
Juana
The other woman stared for a moment with piercing blue eyes, then let go of her sword hilt, muttering something in a harsh, severe tone that sounded familiar.
Obispo Río
The speaker’s robe was so dark green it was nearly black—far darker than the robes of the others in the room.
The woman wore her gray hair cropped short. Her skin was paler even than Lucha’s after decades in this holy shade. Her eyes were lined in a way that suggested a lot of wise squinting was done in this room.
-----
a few extras on the database post!
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denisesimmom · 4 years
Text
MySQL Homework Help
MySQL Assignment Help Topics
Database Design and SQL Query Structure of XML Data
Procedural Extensions   Authorizations in SQL
Structured Types and Inheritance in SQL Relational Databases
Relational Model            SQL and Advanced SQL, PL/SQL, MySQL
Transaction Controls      MySQL Databases
Querying MySQL             MySQL Table Types
Configuring MySQL         Optimizing MySQL
SQL Injection     MySQL Connection
MySQL Assignment Solution Example
Question 1: Create a new table to track the Library location.
LIBRARY (lib_id, lib_name,  lib_address, lib_city, lib_state, lib_zip)  
LIB_ID is the primary key and should be numeric.
LIB_NAME, LIB_ADDRESS, and LIB_CITY  is between 1 and 35 characters. – These should not be null.
LIB_STATE is 2 characters – default to TX.
LIB_ZIP is 5 numbers.  Check for one of the following zip codes – 75081, 75080, 75082, 75079, 75078
SQL STATEMENT
CREATE TABLE LIBRARY
(
LIB_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LIB_NAME VARCHAR(35) NOT NULL,
LIB_ADDRESS VARCHAR(35) NOT NULL,
LIB_CITY VARCHAR(35) NOT NULL,
LIB_STATE VARCHAR(2) default 'TX',
LIB_ZIP NUMBER(5),
PRIMARY KEY (LIB_ID)
);
 Question 2: Insert the following records into the LIBRARY table 1000, JFK Library, 800 West Campbell Road, Richardson, 75080 1001, MLK Library, 105 King Blvd., Richardson, TX, 75081 1002, Hoover Library, 932 Arapaho St., Richardson, TX, 75080
 SQL Statement
insert into LIBRARY (LIB_ID, LIB_NAME, LIB_ADDRESS, LIB_CITY, LIB_ZIP) values (1000, 'JFK Library', '800 West Campbell Road', 'Richardson',75080);
insert into LIBRARY values (1001, 'MLK Library', '105 King Blvd.', 'Richardson', 'TX', 75081);
insert into LIBRARY values (1002, 'Hoover Library', '932 Arapaho St.', 'Richardson', 'TX', 75080);
Question 3: Write a query that will display all the Books that were published in 2016. Display the book year, book title, book subject, author last name, and author first. Sort the records by book subject and then by book title
 SQL Statement
select CONCAT(CONCAT(Concat(b.book_title,'('),b.book_year),')') "Book Title",b.BOOK_SUBJECT,CONCAT(CONCAT(a.au_LName,' '),a.au_Fname) "Author Name" from BOOK b,Writesw,Author a where b.book_num=w.Book_num and w.au_id=a.au_id and b.book_year=2016 order by book_subject,book_title;
Question 4: Which books have been checked out more than 7 times? Show the book title, book num and number of times checked out. Order by times checked out in descending order.
 SQL Statement
SELECT BOOK.BOOK_TITLE, sum(CHECKOUT.CHECK_NUM) AS "Times Checked Out"
FROM BOOK, CHECKOUT
WHERE CHECKOUT.BOOK_NUM=BOOK.BOOK_NUM
GROUP BY BOOK.BOOK_TITLE, CHECKOUT.BOOK_NUM HAVING COUNT(CHECKOUT.CHECK_NUM)>7
order by COUNT(CHECKOUT.CHECK_NUM) desc ;
Get the best MySQL assignment help only from https://www.bestassignmentsupport.com/. Order now!
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globalmediacampaign · 4 years
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ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN – MySQL Shell Python style
We all know as SQL professionals that a common use of the ALTER TABLE command is that we can change a tables’ structure in a myriad number of ways. And, that’s a good thing too because chances are, you won’t always nail down the initial structure. Due to changing business or application requirements, you may even have to add additional columns that were not considered during the schema design phase. Suppose you have many tables that are structured similarly and they all need a specific column added to their already-existing design. Under certain circumstances, using the MySQL Shell in Python mode (py), can reduce the number of manual ALTER TABLE statements you have to type. Continue reading to see examples in the MySQL Shell… Photo by elCarito on Unsplash OS, Software, and DB used: OpenSuse Leap 15.1 MySQL 8.0.21 Self-Promotion: If you enjoy the content written here, by all means, share this blog and your favorite post(s) with others who may benefit from or like it as well. Since coffee is my favorite drink, you can even buy me one if you would like! If you have read the post, MySQL Shell Python mode for multiple ALTER TABLE statements – easily, then you might recall I used these 3 tables, all of which have similar columns and structure: 1234567891011121314151617181920212223  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_1;+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int  | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+1 row in set (0.0027 sec)  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_2;+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int  | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+1 row in set (0.0027 sec)  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_3;+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int  | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+------+------+-----+---------+-------+1 row in set (0.0027 sec) (If you have not read, MySQL Shell Python mode for multiple ALTER TABLE statements – easily, then I highly recommend doing so. It covers how you can use the powerful MySQL shell in Python (py) mode and a few lines of Python to execute multiple ALTER TABLE commands with the end goal of renaming and changing the datatype/length of an identical column across all tables.) For demonstration purposes, suppose I want to add an additional column to each of the 3 demo tables. Granted there are only 3 of them, and re-typing the below ALTER TABLE statement manually for each table is feasible and not too cumbersome: 1  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > ALTER TABLE [appropriate_table] ADD COLUMN a_val VARCHAR(10) AFTER an_age; However, what if you have 10 tables and all of them require an additional identical column? Or, you need to include multiple new columns in all of the tables due to changing requirements? Now all of those similar ALTER TABLE statements become more of an issue than previously thought. Again your worries are for naught. The powerful MySQL Shell in Python mode (py) makes these types of tasks all too easy. First, I need to establish a list of all the tables present in the ‘practice’ database. The get_tables() method does just that: 1234567  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  Py > tables = db.get_tables()  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  Py > tables[     ,     ,     ] In order to execute an ALTER TABLE type of MySQL statement in MySQL Shell, I need to use the .sql() method, as there is not a direct ALTER TABLE method to my knowledge at the time of writing. Therefore, a session object must be used on the .sql() method call. We can use the get_session() method for that: 123  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  Py > session = db.get_session()  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  Py > session Then, I simply use a for loop and iterate through the ‘tables’ list, applying the ALTER TABLE statement to each table. The get_name() method includes the actual string table name – instead of the Shell object name (see the mentioned post for the specific error returned in this case) – in the ALTER TABLE statement using the format() method: 12  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  Py > for table in tables:                                           ->     session.sql('ALTER TABLE {} ADD COLUMN a_val VARCHAR(10) AFTER an_age'.format(table.get_name())).execute() As shown in the below DESC commands, all 3 tables now have an ‘a_val’ column of datatype VARCHAR(10) after the ‘an_age’ column: 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_1;+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type        | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int         | YES  |     | NULL    |       || a_val  | varchar(10) | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+2 rows in set (0.0034 sec)  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_2;+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type        | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int         | YES  |     | NULL    |       || a_val  | varchar(10) | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+2 rows in set (0.0029 sec)  MySQL  localhost:33060+ ssl  practice  SQL > DESC ages_3;+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| Field  | Type        | Null | Key | Default | Extra |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+| an_age | int         | YES  |     | NULL    |       || a_val  | varchar(10) | YES  |     | NULL    |       |+--------+-------------+------+-----+---------+-------+2 rows in set (0.0029 sec) Again, all too easy using the MySQL Shell in Python mode. What are your favorite MySQL Shell tricks? Have any special Python ones you like in particular? Tell me all about them in the comments below and thanks for reading! Like what you have read? See anything incorrect? Please comment below and thanks for reading!!! A Call To Action! Thank you for taking the time to read this post. I truly hope you discovered something interesting and enlightening. Please share your findings here, with someone else you know who would get the same value out of it as well. Visit the Portfolio-Projects page to see blog post/technical writing I have completed for clients. Have I mentioned how much I love a cup of coffee?!?! To receive email notifications (Never Spam) from this blog (“Digital Owl’s Prose”) for the latest blog posts as they are published, please subscribe (of your own volition) by clicking the ‘Click To Subscribe!’ button in the sidebar on the homepage! (Feel free at any time to review the Digital Owl’s Prose Privacy Policy Page for any questions you may have about: email updates, opt-in, opt-out, contact forms, etc…) Be sure and visit the “Best Of” page for a collection of my best blog posts. Josh Otwell has a passion to study and grow as a SQL Developer and blogger. Other favorite activities find him with his nose buried in a good book, article, or the Linux command line. Among those, he shares a love of tabletop RPG games, reading fantasy novels, and spending time with his wife and two daughters. Disclaimer: The examples presented in this post are hypothetical ideas of how to achieve similar types of results. They are not the utmost best solution(s). The majority, if not all, of the examples provided, is performed on a personal development/learning workstation-environment and should not be considered production quality or ready. Your particular goals and needs may vary. Use those practices that best benefit your needs and goals. Opinions are my own. The post ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN – MySQL Shell Python style appeared first on Digital Owl's Prose. https://joshuaotwell.com/alter-table-add-column-mysql-shell-python-style/
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• A computer chatted to itself in alarm as it noticed an airlock open and close itself for no apparent reason. This was because Reason was in fact out to lunch. – Douglas Adams • A computer does not substitute for judgment any more than a pencil substitutes for literacy. But writing without a pencil is no particular advantage. – Robert McNamara • A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. – Emo Philips • A computer shall not waste your time or require you to do more work than is strictly necessary. – Jef Raskin • A computer will do what you tell it to do, but that may be much different from what you had in mind. – Joseph Weizenbaum • A computer would deserve to be called intelligent if it could deceive a human into believing that it was human. – Alan Turing • A final word: I am not knowledgeable about the internet. I do not have a computer. I guess that at 74 years of age, I don’t have the patience to learn. – David Wilkerson • A terrorist doesn’t let strangers into her flat because they might be undercover police or intelligence agents, but her children bring their mates home and they run all over the place The terrorist doesn’t know that one of these kids has bugged every room in her house, made copies of all her computer files and stolen her address book. The kid works for CHERUB CHERUB agents are aged between 10 and 17. They live in the real world, slipping under adult radar and getting information that sends criminals and terrorists to jail. – Robert Muchamore • A wonderful thing about a book, in contrast to a computer screen, is that you can take it to bed with you. – Daniel J. Boorstin • Access to computers and the Internet has become a basic need for education in our society. – Kent Conrad • All of the biggest technological inventions created by man – the airplane, the automobile, the computer – says little about his intelligence, but speaks volumes about his laziness. – Mark Kennedy • All programmers are optimists. Perhaps this modern sorcery especially attracts those who believe in happy endings and fairy godmothers. Perhaps the hundreds of nitty frustrations drive away all but those who habitually focus on the end goal. Perhaps it is merely that computers are young, programmers are younger, and the young are always optimists. – Fred Brooks • All sorts of computer errors are now turning up. You’d be surprised to know the number of doctors who claim they are treating pregnant men. – Isaac Asimov • Any fool can use a computer. Many do. – Ted Nelson • Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that humans can understand. – Martin Fowler • Anyone who has lost track of time when using a computer knows the propensity to dream, the urge to make dreams come true and the tendency to miss lunch. – Tim Berners-Lee • At the risk of being a fuddy-duddy I don’t have a computer; I don’t have e-mail; and I really don’t need something in my house that I would be sitting in front of for hours. – Marian McPartland • At the source of every error which is blamed on the computer, you will find at least two human errors, one of which is the error of blaming it on the computer. – Tom Gilb • At this present time, matter is still the best way to think of architecture, but I’m not so sure for very long. The computer is radicalizing the way we think about our world. – Ben Nicholson
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• Because I believe that humans are computers, I conjectured that computers, like people, can have left- and right-handed versions. – Philip Emeagwali • Because we do not understand the brain very well we are constantly tempted to use the latest technology as a model for trying to understand it. In my childhood we were always assured that the brain was a telephone switchboard…Sherrington, the great British neuroscientist, thought the brain worked like a telegraph system. Freud often compared the brain to hydraulic and electromagnetic systems. Leibniz compared it to a mill…At present, obviously, the metaphor is the digital computer. – John Searle • Before I published my first book, I worked for a while as a documentary and wedding/bar mitzvah videographer, and a part of me still mourns the lost filmmaker I’ll never be. Working on a documentary is nearly the opposite artistic process to writing: as a writer you are always trying to fill out a world to fit your story, but as a documentarian your work is to carve a story out of the world. Sometimes, when I’m feeling particularly blocked at my computer, I miss the days when I could just point my camera at something interesting and wait to see what happens. – Stefan Merrill Block • Bill Gates is the pope of the personal computer industry. He decides who is going to build. – Larry Ellison • Buying the right computer and getting it to work properly is no more complicated than building a nuclear reactor from wristwatch parts in a darkened room using only your teeth. – Dave Barry • Chess is one thing, but if we get to the point computers can best humans in the arts-those splendid, millennia-old expressions of the heart and soul of human existence-then why bother existing? to produce human art a computer would have to find, feel, absorb reality to the point it is overcome, to the point it sobs for release. A computer perhaps could replicate every possibility but could never transfer the energy art requires to exist in the first place. – Jonny Lee Miller • Children want the challenge of difficult tasks – just look how much better they are than their parents on a computer. – James Dyson • Computer dating is fine, if you’re a computer. – Rita Mae Brown • Computer games don’t affect kids; I mean if Pac-Man affected us as kids, we’d all be running around in darkened rooms, munching magic pills and listening to repetitive electronic music. – Kristen Wilson • Computer languages differ not so much in what they make possible, but in what they make easy. – Larry Wall • Computer Science is embarrassed by the computer. – Alan Perlis • Computer science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes. – Edsger Dijkstra • Computer science only indicates the retrospective omnipotence of our technologies. In other words, an infinite capacity to process data (but only data — i.e. the already given) and in no sense a new vision. With that science, we are entering an era of exhaustivity, which is also an era of exhaustion. – Jean Baudrillard • Computers are famous for being able to do complicated things starting from simple programs. – Seth Lloyd • Computers are getting smarter all the time. Scientists tell us that soon they will be able to talk to us. (And by ‘they’, I mean ‘computers’. I doubt scientists will ever be able to talk to us.) – Dave Barry • Computers are good at following instructions, but not at reading your mind. – Donald Knuth • Computers are like Old Testament gods; lots of rules and no mercy. – Joseph Campbell • Computers are magnificent tools for the realization of our dreams, but no machine can replace the human spark of spirit, compassion, love, and understanding. – Lou Gerstner • Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. – Pablo Picasso • Computers have become more friendly, understandable, and lots of years and thought have been put into developing software to convince people that they want and need a computer. – Roberta Williams • Computers have virtually replaced tape recorders. – Tony Visconti • Computers in classrooms are the filmstrips of the 1990s. – Clifford Stoll • Computers make it easier to do a lot of things, but most of the things they make it easier to do don’t need to be done. – Andy Rooney • Computers may save time but they sure waste a lot of paper. About 98 percent of everything printed out by a computer is garbage that no one ever reads. – Andy Rooney • Computing is not about computers any more. It is about living. – Nicholas Negroponte • Considering what human beings do and have done to human beings (and to other living things as well) … I can never imagine what the devil people think computers can add to the horrors. – Isaac Asimov • Controlling complexity is the essence of computer programming. – Brian Kernighan • Design is the fundamental soul of a man-made creation that ends up expressing itself in successive outer layers of the product or service. The iMac is not just the color or translucence or the shape of the shell. The essence of the iMac is to be the finest possible consumer computer in which each element plays together. – Steve Jobs • Electronic aids, particularly domestic computers, will help the inner migration, the opting out of reality. Reality is no longer going to be the stuff out there, but the stuff inside your head. It’s going to be commercial and nasty at the same time. – J. G. Ballard • Even in the developing parts of the world, kids take to computers like fish to water. – Nicholas Negroponte • Even when I work with computers, with high technology, I always try to put in the touch of the hand. – Issey Miyake • Experts agree that the best type of computer for your individual needs is one that comes on the market about two days after you actually purchase some other computer. – Dave Barry • For a long time it puzzled me how something so expensive, so leading edge, could be so useless. And then it occurred to me that a computer is a stupid machine with the ability to do incredibly smart things, while computer programmers are smart people with the ability to do incredibly stupid things. They are, in short, a perfect match. – Bill Bryson • Gee, I wish I had spent more time alone with my computer. – Danielle Bunten Berry • Getting out of the hospital is a lot like resigning from a book club. You’re not out of it until the computer says you’re out of it. – Erma Bombeck • Here’s my library, where I don’t do a lot of reading but mostly play Angry Birds on the computer. – J. Lynn • Home computers are being called upon to perform many new functions, including the consumption of homework formerly eaten by the dog. – Doug Larson • I always say that my favorite game was Original Adventure, published by both Microsoft and Apple Computer back in 1980. – Roberta Williams • I am not the only person who uses his computer mainly for the purpose of diddling with his computer. – Dave Barry • I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them. – Isaac Asimov • I do two things. I design mobile computers and I study brains. – Jeff Hawkins • I don’t have a computer. I don’t know anything about that. I don’t even know what a website is. – Michael Biehn • I don’t know anything about computers. – Adam Carolla • I don’t know when they first had feeds. Like maybe, fifty or a hundred years ago. Before that, they had to use their hands and their eyes. Computers were all outside the body. They carried them around outside of them, in their hands, like if you carried your lungs in a briefcase and opened it to breathe. – Matthew Tobin Anderson • I got interested in computers and how they could be enslaved to the megalomaniac impulses of a teenager. – Eugene Jarvis • I had a TV set and a typewriter and that made me think a computer should be laid out like a typewriter with a video screen. – Steve Wozniak • I happen to think that computers are the most important thing to happen to musicians since the invention of cat-gut which was a long time ago. – Robert Moog • I read reviews of critics I respect and feel I can learn something from. Right now there are a lot of bottom-feeder critics who just have access to a computer and don’t necessarily have an academic or cinema background that I can detect, so I tend to ignore that and stay with the same top-tier critics that I’ve come to respect. I like reading a good review – it doesn’t have to be favorable, but a well-thought-out one – because I very much appreciate the relationship of directors and critics. – Alexander Payne • I should prefer to have a politician who regularly went to a massage parlour than one who promised a laptop computer for every teacher. – A. N. Wilson • I started on an Apple II, which I had bought at the very end of 1978 for half of my annual income. I made $4,500 a year, and I spent half of it on the computer. – Bill Budge • I think computer viruses should count as life … I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We’ve created life in our own image. – Stephen Hawking • I think computer viruses should count as life. – Stephen Hawking • I think computers have changed things tremendously. At one time, you tended to take the rough with the smooth. But now, because you can go back and stop and start, and have a limitless amount of tracks if anything looks remotely good, we keep it. You’ve got to go through the agony of sounding very human at first, and then you work on it with the aid of technology. Computers have revolutionized things in many ways allowing me to work to a standard I could have only joked about fourty years ago. – Steve Hackett • I think games are starting to branch out. It’s not just guys sitting at their computer stations. Games are so fun, that everybody gets into them a little bit. – Christian Slater • I think it’s fair to say that personal computers have become the most empowering tool we’ve ever created. They’re tools of communication, they’re tools of creativity, and they can be shaped by their user. – Bill Gates • I think that an artist is a bit like a computer. He receives information from the world around him and from his past and from his own experiences. And it all goes into the brain. – Gerald Scarfe • I visited a scientist who had a helmet with magnetic fields controlled by computer sequences that could profoundly affect your mood and your perceptions. – Douglas Trumbull • I want to be sitting in front of my computer, where you can press a button to block out your junk mail. These two are my junk mail. – Melina Marchetta • I was on one of my fruitarian diets” Steve Jobs recalled “I had just comeback from the apple farm. It sounded fun, spirited, and not intimidating. Apple took the edge of the word ‘computer’, plus it would get us a head of Atari in the phone book. He told Wozniak if a better name did not hit them by the next afternoon, they would just stick with apple and they did. 1 Apr 1976 – Walter Isaacson • I was planning on starting a new file on my computer with the title “Phrases That Sound One Way to Witches but Mean Something Else to Vampires. – Deborah Harkness • I wouldn’t know how to find eBay on the computer if my life depended on it. – Marc Jacobs • I wrote an ad for Apple Computer: “Macintosh – We might not get everything right, but at least we knew the century was going to end”. – Douglas Adams • If GM had kept up with technology like the computer industry has, we would all be driving $25 cars that got 1,000 MPG. – Bill Gates • If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them. – Steve Jobs • If more women want to be a part of the computer industry today, they have to do more to put themselves there. Nobody is keeping them out. – Roberta Williams • If the automobile had followed the same development as the computer, a Rolls Royce would today cost $100 and get a million miles per gallon, and explode once a year killing everyone inside. – Robert X. Cringely • If you could utilize the resources of the end users’ computers, you could do things much more efficiently. – Niklas Zennstrom • If you don’t want to be replaced by a computer, don’t act like one. – Arno Allan Penzias • If you put tomfoolery into a computer, nothing comes out of it but tomfoolery. But this tomfoolery, having passed through a very expensive machine, is somehow enobled and no-one dares criticize it. – Pierre Marie Gallois • If your computer speaks English, it was probably made in Japan. – Alan Perlis • If you’re a doctor, or a scientist, or a computer programmer, it shouldn’t matter whether you come from Nigeria, or Norway, or any other country on this earth. Today though we have a system that rewards ties of blood, ties of kin, ties of clan. That’s one of the most un-American immigration systems I can imagine. – Tom Cotton • If you’re working on a computer and you’re editing bass, it looks like a warm curvy, sort of feminine object. – Colin Greenwood • I’m a ’70s mom, and my daughter is a ’90s mom. I know a lot of women my age who are real computer freaks. – Florence Henderson • I’m bullish on writing. Movies, radio, television, and now digital media – everything was supposed to push us away from text, to video or “back” to speech. First, there’s no going back. We’re always stumbling forward. Second, writing is invincible. Thirty years ago, we thought we’d all be talking to our computers; instead, we’re all typing on our phones. – Tim Carmody • I’m too old-fashioned to use a computer. I’m too old-fashioned to use a quill. – Christopher Plummer • Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of complaining. – Jef Raskin • In a chemistry class there was a guy sitting in front of me doing what looked like a jigsaw puzzle or some really weird kind of thing. He told me he was writing a computer program. – Jon Postel • In all large corporations, there is a pervasive fear that someone, somewhere is having fun with a computer on company time. Networks help alleviate that fear. – John C. Dvorak • It was a black and white only computer at the time, but it kept me fascinated. – Buffy Sainte-Marie • It was very difficult to startle or surprise someone with a particular sound during the family computer era. – Nobuo Uematsu • It’s hardware that makes a machine fast. It’s software that makes a fast machine slow. – Craig Reucassel • It’s not computer literacy that we should be working on, but sort of human-literacy. Computers have to become human-literate. – Nicholas Negroponte • I’ve got a computer, but I won’t go near it. – Jo Stafford • I’ve never been able to arouse any interest in myself for digitally produced sound, and so the computer turns me off. – David Tudor • Ive never really been anywhere, and now I get to go everywhere. I just have to make sure theres enough memory on my computer to hold all my pictures. – Carrie Underwood • Just remember: you’re not a ‘dummy,’ no matter what those computer books claim. The real dummies are the people who-though technically expert-couldn’t design hardware and software that’s usable by normal consumers if their lives depended upon it. – Walt Mossberg • Ladies and gentlemen.” He [Jabba] sighed. “Meet the kamikaze of computer invaders…the worm. – Dan Brown • Let us change our traditional attitude to the construction of programs. Instead of imagining that our main task is to instruct a computer what to do, let us concentrate rather on explaining to human beings what we want a computer to do. – Donald Knuth • Making duplicate copies and computer printouts of things no one wanted even one of in the first place is giving America a new sense of purpose. – Andy Rooney • Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all. – John F. Kennedy • Man, I don’t want to have nothing to do with computers. I don’t want the government in my business. – Erykah Badu • Many of our own people here in this country do not ask about computers, telephones and television sets. They ask – when will we get a road to our village. – Thabo Mbeki • Modern people are only willing to believe in their computers, while I believe in myself. – Alain Robert • My computer beat me at checkers, but I sure beat it at kickboxing.- Emo Philips • My instructors in science and technology have taught us about how the brain works. It’s full of electrical impulses. It’s like a computer. If you stimulate one part of the brain with an electrode, it… – They know nothing. – Lois Lowry • My tax return in the United States has to be kept on a special computer because their normal computers can’t deal with the numbers. So I am constantly getting these notices telling me I haven’t paid something when really it is just on the wrong computer. – Bill Gates • Nanotechnology will let us build computers that are incredibly powerful. We’ll have more power in the volume of a sugar cube than exists in the entire world today. – Ralph Merkle • Never trust a computer you can’t throw out a window. – Steve Wozniak • No one will need more than 637Kb of memory for a personal computer – Bill Gates • No operational commander should have to assign a soldier a task that could be done as well by a computer, a remote sensor, or an unmanned airplane. – Richard Perle • Not even computers will replace committees, because committees buy computers. – Shepherd Mead • Now they can do all these magic things with computers. So you think you get to do something in a movie and you find out you don’t get to really do it. – Angelina Jolie • Now, what does a vampire do with a computer? Keep track of investments? Send e-mail to other vampires as you all plot to take over the world?” “I spend a lot of time on Wikipedia making corrections to the entries of historical figures I’ve known.” I blinked at him. “Really?” “No, Kitty. That was a joke. – Carrie Vaughn • On the molecular scale, you find it’s reasonable to have a machine that does a million steps per second, a mechanical system that works at computer speeds. – K. Eric Drexler • One day ladies will take their computers for walks in the park and tell each other, “My little computer said such a funny thing this morning”. – Alan Turing • One of the best things to come out of the home computer revolution could be the general and widespread understanding of how severely limited logic really is. – Frank Herbert • One of the most feared expressions in modern times is ‘The computer is down.’ – Norman Ralph Augustine • Part of the inhumanity of the computer is that, once it is competently programmed and working smoothly, it is completely honest. – Isaac Asimov • People think computers will keep them from making mistakes. They’re wrong. With computers you make mistakes faster. – Adam Osborne • People think that computer science is the art of geniuses but the actual reality is the opposite, just many people doing things that build on each other, like a wall of mini stones. – Donald Knuth • Personally, I rather look forward to a computer program winning the world chess championship. Humanity needs a lesson in humility. – Richard Dawkins • Putting a computer in front of a child and expecting it to teach him is like putting a book under his pillow, only more expensive – Joseph Weizenbaum • Rarely is it possible to study all of the instructions to a game before beginning to play, or to memorize the manual before turning on the computer. The excitement of improvisation lies not only in the risk of being involved but in the new ideas, as heady as the adrenaline of performance, that seems to come from nowhere. – Mary Catherine Bateson • Reading computer manuals without the hardware is as frustrating as reading sex manuals without the software. – Arthur C. Clarke • Right now, computers, which are supposed to be our servant, are oppressing us. – Jef Raskin • Run for your lives-the computers are invading. Awesomely powerful computers tackling ever more important tasks with awkward, old-fashioned interfaces. As these machines leak into every corner of our lives, they will annoy us, infuriate us, and even kill a few of us. In turn, we will be tempted to kill our computers, but we won’t dare because we are already utterly, irreversibly dependent on these hopeful monsters that make modern life possible. – Alan Cooper • Science is what we understand well enough to explain to a computer. Art is everything else we do. – Donald Knuth • Security is, I would say, our top priority because for all the exciting things you will be able to do with computers – organizing your lives, staying in touch with people, being creative – if we don’t solve these security problems, then people will hold back. – Bill Gates • Supercomputers will achieve one human brain capacity by 2010, and personal computers will do so by about 2020. – Ray Kurzweil • Talking about his first computer Like all kids we not only fooled around with our toys, we changed them. If you’ve ever watched a child with a cardboard carton and a box of crayons create a spaceship with cool control panels, or listened to their improvised rules, such as “Red cars can jump all others,” then you know that this impulse to make a toy do more is at the heart of innovative childhood play. It is also the essence of creativity. – Bill Gates • Telling computer guys that they need to have permission to quote things is like having to tell little children about Death. – Ted Nelson • That’s the thing about people who think they hate computers. What they really hate is lousy programmers. – Larry Niven • The basis of computer work is predicated on the idea that only the brain makes decisions and only the index finger does the work. – Brian Eno • The best computer is a man, and it’s the only one that can be mass-produced by unskilled labor. – Wernher von Braun • The best way to prepare [to be a programmer] is to write programs, and to study great programs that other people have written. In my case, I went to the garbage cans at the Computer Science Center and I fished out listings of their operating systems. – Bill Gates • The breakup of Bell laid the foundation for every important communications revolution since the 1980s onward. There was no way of knowing that thirty years on we would have an Internet, handheld computers, and social networking, but it is hard to imagine their coming when they did, had the company that bured the answering machine remained intact. – Tim Wu • The cloning of humans is on most of the lists of things to worry about from Science, along with behaviour control, genetic engineering, transplanted heads, computer poetry and the unrestrained growth of plastic flowers. – Lewis Thomas • The computer beeped as the upload completed. A moment later, Ian Kabra appeared on the screen. Dan was surprised. “Hey, Ian, isn’t it, like, two in the morning back there?” “It’s called jet lag,” Ian informed him. “I’m still on London time. I don’t suppose you savages have any tea in this mausoleum.” “There’s a diet Snapple in the fridge.” Ian shuddered. “I thought not. – Gordon Korman • The computer can’t tell you the emotional story. It can give you the exact mathematical design, but what’s missing is the eyebrows. – Frank Zappa • The computer is a moron. – Peter Drucker • The computer saves man a lot of guesswork, but so does the bikini. – Evan Esar • The computer was born to solve problems that did not exist before. – Bill Gates • The computer would do anything you programmed it to do. – Vinton Cerf • The future lies in designing and selling computers that people don’t realize are computers at all. – Adam Osborne • The good news about computers is that they do what you tell them to do. The bad news is that they do what you tell them to do. – Ted Nelson • The great thing about a computer notebook is that no matter how much you stuff into it, it doesn’t get bigger or heavier. – Bill Gates • The inside of a computer is as dumb as hell but it goes like mad! – Richard P. Feynman • The kitchen was also messy–delightfully so, thought Jane–and it didn’t look as though lots of cooking went on there. There was a laptop computer on the counter with duck stickers on it, the spice cabinet was full of Ben’s toy trucks, and Jane couldn’t spot a cookbook anywhere. This is the kitchen of a Thinker, she decided, and promised herself that she’d never bother with cooking, either. – Jeanne Birdsall • The most amazing achievement of the computer software industry is its continuing cancellation of the steady and staggering gains made by the computer hardware industry. – Henry Petroski • The most compelling reason for most people to buy a computer for the home will be to link it to a nationwide communications network. We’re just in the beginning stages of what will be a truly remarkable breakthrough for most people – as remarkable as the telephone. – Steve Jobs • The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That’s where we come in; we’re computer professionals. We cause accidents. – Nathaniel Borenstein • The next major explosion is going to be when genetics and computers come together. I’m talking about an organic computer – about biological substances that can function like a semiconductor. – Alvin Toffler • The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games. – Eugene Jarvis • The power of the computer is starting to spread. – Bill Budge • The protean nature of the computer is such that it can act like a machine or like a language to be shaped and exploited. – Alan Kay • The question of whether computers can think is like the question of whether submarines can swim. – Edsger Dijkstra • The real danger is not that computers will begin to think like men, but that men will begin to think like computers. – Sydney J. Harris • The word user is the word used by the computer professional when they mean idiot. – Dave Barry • There is a computer disease that anybody who works with computers knows about. It’s a very serious disease and it interferes completely with the work. The trouble with computers is that you ‘play’ with them! – Richard P. Feynman • There is a popular cliché … which says that you cannot get out of computers any more than you have put in…, that computers can only do exactly what you tell them to, and that therefore computers are never creative. This cliché is true only in a crashingly trivial sense, the same sense in which Shakespeare never wrote anything except what his first schoolteacher taught him to write-words. – Richard Dawkins • There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their home. – Ken Olsen • There’s a lot of music that sounds like it’s literally computer-generated, totally divorced from a guy sitting down at an instrument. – Aimee Mann • They have computers, and they may have other weapons of mass destruction. – Janet Reno • Think? Why think! We have computers to do that for us. – Jean Rostand • This will surprise some of your readers, but my primary interest is not with computer security. I am primarily interested in writing software that works as intended. – Wietse Venema • To better understand why you need a personal computer, let’s take a look at the pathetic mess you call your life. – Dave Barry • To err is human – and to blame it on a computer is even more so. – Robert Orben • To err is human, but to really foul things up you need a computer. – Paul R. Ehrlich • To our human minds, computers behave less like rocks and trees than they do like humans, so we unconsciously treat them like people…. In other words, humans have special instincts that tell them how to behave around other sentient beings, and as soon as any object exhibits sufficient cognitive function, those instincts kick in and we react as though we were interacting with another sentient human being. – Alan Cooper • Unless mankind redesigns itself by changing our DNA through altering our genetic makeup, computer-genera ted robots will take over our world. – Stephen Hawking • We believe that within five years, 96 percent of British consumers will have access to the Internet, whether it be through a personal computer, a set-top box or a mobile phone. – Richard Branson • We can do things that we never could before. Stop-motion lets you build tiny little worlds, and computers make that world even more believable. – Nick Park • We demand privacy, yet we glorify those that break into computers. – Bill McCollum • We live in an age where technology is so powerful that we can make change without even leaving our computers or cell phones. – Sadie Calvano • We think that computers are the most remarkable tools that humankind has ever come up with, and we think that people are basically tool users. So if we can just get lots of computers to lots of people, it will make some qualitative difference to the world. – Steve Jobs • We used to have lots of questions to which there were no answers. Now, with the computer, there are lots of answers to which we haven’t thought up questions. – Peter Ustinov • We’ve created life in our own image. – Stephen Hawking • What do we want our kids to do? Sweep up around Japanese computers? – Walter F. Mondale • What I was proud of was that I used very few parts to build a computer that could actually speak words on a screen and type words on a keyboard and run a programming language that could play games. And I did all this myself. – Steve Wozniak • When I was at college there were two things I vowed I’d never do. One was go to a funeral and the other was deal with computers. And then I ended up being a computer programmer in a morgue. – Patricia Cornwell • When I write a new draft, I don’t like to feel I’m tied to any previous version. That’s why I don’t use a computer to write. The text looks, on the screen, too much like a book. It’s not a book – it’s a bad first draft of something that could one day be a book. – Lauren Groff • Why is it that drug addicts and computer aficionados are both called users? – Clifford Stoll • With both people and computers on the job, computer error can be more quickly tracked down and corrected by people and, conversely, human error can be more quickly corrected by computers. What it amounts to is that nothing serious can happen unless human error and computer error take place simultaneously. And that hardly ever happens. – Isaac Asimov • With the fight scenes, they would take a video camera and shoot alongside the camera so we would piece it together on the computer and had an extremely rough cut of what we were doing. – Kelly Hu • You couldn’t have fed the ’50s into a computer and come out with the ’60s. – Paul Kantner
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equitiesstocks · 4 years
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Computer Quotes
Official Website: Computer Quotes
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• A computer chatted to itself in alarm as it noticed an airlock open and close itself for no apparent reason. This was because Reason was in fact out to lunch. – Douglas Adams • A computer does not substitute for judgment any more than a pencil substitutes for literacy. But writing without a pencil is no particular advantage. – Robert McNamara • A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. – Emo Philips • A computer shall not waste your time or require you to do more work than is strictly necessary. – Jef Raskin • A computer will do what you tell it to do, but that may be much different from what you had in mind. – Joseph Weizenbaum • A computer would deserve to be called intelligent if it could deceive a human into believing that it was human. – Alan Turing • A final word: I am not knowledgeable about the internet. I do not have a computer. I guess that at 74 years of age, I don’t have the patience to learn. – David Wilkerson • A terrorist doesn’t let strangers into her flat because they might be undercover police or intelligence agents, but her children bring their mates home and they run all over the place The terrorist doesn’t know that one of these kids has bugged every room in her house, made copies of all her computer files and stolen her address book. The kid works for CHERUB CHERUB agents are aged between 10 and 17. They live in the real world, slipping under adult radar and getting information that sends criminals and terrorists to jail. – Robert Muchamore • A wonderful thing about a book, in contrast to a computer screen, is that you can take it to bed with you. – Daniel J. Boorstin • Access to computers and the Internet has become a basic need for education in our society. – Kent Conrad • All of the biggest technological inventions created by man – the airplane, the automobile, the computer – says little about his intelligence, but speaks volumes about his laziness. – Mark Kennedy • All programmers are optimists. Perhaps this modern sorcery especially attracts those who believe in happy endings and fairy godmothers. Perhaps the hundreds of nitty frustrations drive away all but those who habitually focus on the end goal. Perhaps it is merely that computers are young, programmers are younger, and the young are always optimists. – Fred Brooks • All sorts of computer errors are now turning up. You’d be surprised to know the number of doctors who claim they are treating pregnant men. – Isaac Asimov • Any fool can use a computer. Many do. – Ted Nelson • Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that humans can understand. – Martin Fowler • Anyone who has lost track of time when using a computer knows the propensity to dream, the urge to make dreams come true and the tendency to miss lunch. – Tim Berners-Lee • At the risk of being a fuddy-duddy I don’t have a computer; I don’t have e-mail; and I really don’t need something in my house that I would be sitting in front of for hours. – Marian McPartland • At the source of every error which is blamed on the computer, you will find at least two human errors, one of which is the error of blaming it on the computer. – Tom Gilb • At this present time, matter is still the best way to think of architecture, but I’m not so sure for very long. The computer is radicalizing the way we think about our world. – Ben Nicholson
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• Because I believe that humans are computers, I conjectured that computers, like people, can have left- and right-handed versions. – Philip Emeagwali • Because we do not understand the brain very well we are constantly tempted to use the latest technology as a model for trying to understand it. In my childhood we were always assured that the brain was a telephone switchboard…Sherrington, the great British neuroscientist, thought the brain worked like a telegraph system. Freud often compared the brain to hydraulic and electromagnetic systems. Leibniz compared it to a mill…At present, obviously, the metaphor is the digital computer. – John Searle • Before I published my first book, I worked for a while as a documentary and wedding/bar mitzvah videographer, and a part of me still mourns the lost filmmaker I’ll never be. Working on a documentary is nearly the opposite artistic process to writing: as a writer you are always trying to fill out a world to fit your story, but as a documentarian your work is to carve a story out of the world. Sometimes, when I’m feeling particularly blocked at my computer, I miss the days when I could just point my camera at something interesting and wait to see what happens. – Stefan Merrill Block • Bill Gates is the pope of the personal computer industry. He decides who is going to build. – Larry Ellison • Buying the right computer and getting it to work properly is no more complicated than building a nuclear reactor from wristwatch parts in a darkened room using only your teeth. – Dave Barry • Chess is one thing, but if we get to the point computers can best humans in the arts-those splendid, millennia-old expressions of the heart and soul of human existence-then why bother existing? to produce human art a computer would have to find, feel, absorb reality to the point it is overcome, to the point it sobs for release. A computer perhaps could replicate every possibility but could never transfer the energy art requires to exist in the first place. – Jonny Lee Miller • Children want the challenge of difficult tasks – just look how much better they are than their parents on a computer. – James Dyson • Computer dating is fine, if you’re a computer. – Rita Mae Brown • Computer games don’t affect kids; I mean if Pac-Man affected us as kids, we’d all be running around in darkened rooms, munching magic pills and listening to repetitive electronic music. – Kristen Wilson • Computer languages differ not so much in what they make possible, but in what they make easy. – Larry Wall • Computer Science is embarrassed by the computer. – Alan Perlis • Computer science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes. – Edsger Dijkstra • Computer science only indicates the retrospective omnipotence of our technologies. In other words, an infinite capacity to process data (but only data — i.e. the already given) and in no sense a new vision. With that science, we are entering an era of exhaustivity, which is also an era of exhaustion. – Jean Baudrillard • Computers are famous for being able to do complicated things starting from simple programs. – Seth Lloyd • Computers are getting smarter all the time. Scientists tell us that soon they will be able to talk to us. (And by ‘they’, I mean ‘computers’. I doubt scientists will ever be able to talk to us.) – Dave Barry • Computers are good at following instructions, but not at reading your mind. – Donald Knuth • Computers are like Old Testament gods; lots of rules and no mercy. – Joseph Campbell • Computers are magnificent tools for the realization of our dreams, but no machine can replace the human spark of spirit, compassion, love, and understanding. – Lou Gerstner • Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. – Pablo Picasso • Computers have become more friendly, understandable, and lots of years and thought have been put into developing software to convince people that they want and need a computer. – Roberta Williams • Computers have virtually replaced tape recorders. – Tony Visconti • Computers in classrooms are the filmstrips of the 1990s. – Clifford Stoll • Computers make it easier to do a lot of things, but most of the things they make it easier to do don’t need to be done. – Andy Rooney • Computers may save time but they sure waste a lot of paper. About 98 percent of everything printed out by a computer is garbage that no one ever reads. – Andy Rooney • Computing is not about computers any more. It is about living. – Nicholas Negroponte • Considering what human beings do and have done to human beings (and to other living things as well) … I can never imagine what the devil people think computers can add to the horrors. – Isaac Asimov • Controlling complexity is the essence of computer programming. – Brian Kernighan • Design is the fundamental soul of a man-made creation that ends up expressing itself in successive outer layers of the product or service. The iMac is not just the color or translucence or the shape of the shell. The essence of the iMac is to be the finest possible consumer computer in which each element plays together. – Steve Jobs • Electronic aids, particularly domestic computers, will help the inner migration, the opting out of reality. Reality is no longer going to be the stuff out there, but the stuff inside your head. It’s going to be commercial and nasty at the same time. – J. G. Ballard • Even in the developing parts of the world, kids take to computers like fish to water. – Nicholas Negroponte • Even when I work with computers, with high technology, I always try to put in the touch of the hand. – Issey Miyake • Experts agree that the best type of computer for your individual needs is one that comes on the market about two days after you actually purchase some other computer. – Dave Barry • For a long time it puzzled me how something so expensive, so leading edge, could be so useless. And then it occurred to me that a computer is a stupid machine with the ability to do incredibly smart things, while computer programmers are smart people with the ability to do incredibly stupid things. They are, in short, a perfect match. – Bill Bryson • Gee, I wish I had spent more time alone with my computer. – Danielle Bunten Berry • Getting out of the hospital is a lot like resigning from a book club. You’re not out of it until the computer says you’re out of it. – Erma Bombeck • Here’s my library, where I don’t do a lot of reading but mostly play Angry Birds on the computer. – J. Lynn • Home computers are being called upon to perform many new functions, including the consumption of homework formerly eaten by the dog. – Doug Larson • I always say that my favorite game was Original Adventure, published by both Microsoft and Apple Computer back in 1980. – Roberta Williams • I am not the only person who uses his computer mainly for the purpose of diddling with his computer. – Dave Barry • I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them. – Isaac Asimov • I do two things. I design mobile computers and I study brains. – Jeff Hawkins • I don’t have a computer. I don’t know anything about that. I don’t even know what a website is. – Michael Biehn • I don’t know anything about computers. – Adam Carolla • I don’t know when they first had feeds. Like maybe, fifty or a hundred years ago. Before that, they had to use their hands and their eyes. Computers were all outside the body. They carried them around outside of them, in their hands, like if you carried your lungs in a briefcase and opened it to breathe. – Matthew Tobin Anderson • I got interested in computers and how they could be enslaved to the megalomaniac impulses of a teenager. – Eugene Jarvis • I had a TV set and a typewriter and that made me think a computer should be laid out like a typewriter with a video screen. – Steve Wozniak • I happen to think that computers are the most important thing to happen to musicians since the invention of cat-gut which was a long time ago. – Robert Moog • I read reviews of critics I respect and feel I can learn something from. Right now there are a lot of bottom-feeder critics who just have access to a computer and don’t necessarily have an academic or cinema background that I can detect, so I tend to ignore that and stay with the same top-tier critics that I’ve come to respect. I like reading a good review – it doesn’t have to be favorable, but a well-thought-out one – because I very much appreciate the relationship of directors and critics. – Alexander Payne • I should prefer to have a politician who regularly went to a massage parlour than one who promised a laptop computer for every teacher. – A. N. Wilson • I started on an Apple II, which I had bought at the very end of 1978 for half of my annual income. I made $4,500 a year, and I spent half of it on the computer. – Bill Budge • I think computer viruses should count as life … I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We’ve created life in our own image. – Stephen Hawking • I think computer viruses should count as life. – Stephen Hawking • I think computers have changed things tremendously. At one time, you tended to take the rough with the smooth. But now, because you can go back and stop and start, and have a limitless amount of tracks if anything looks remotely good, we keep it. You’ve got to go through the agony of sounding very human at first, and then you work on it with the aid of technology. Computers have revolutionized things in many ways allowing me to work to a standard I could have only joked about fourty years ago. – Steve Hackett • I think games are starting to branch out. It’s not just guys sitting at their computer stations. Games are so fun, that everybody gets into them a little bit. – Christian Slater • I think it’s fair to say that personal computers have become the most empowering tool we’ve ever created. They’re tools of communication, they’re tools of creativity, and they can be shaped by their user. – Bill Gates • I think that an artist is a bit like a computer. He receives information from the world around him and from his past and from his own experiences. And it all goes into the brain. – Gerald Scarfe • I visited a scientist who had a helmet with magnetic fields controlled by computer sequences that could profoundly affect your mood and your perceptions. – Douglas Trumbull • I want to be sitting in front of my computer, where you can press a button to block out your junk mail. These two are my junk mail. – Melina Marchetta • I was on one of my fruitarian diets” Steve Jobs recalled “I had just comeback from the apple farm. It sounded fun, spirited, and not intimidating. Apple took the edge of the word ‘computer’, plus it would get us a head of Atari in the phone book. He told Wozniak if a better name did not hit them by the next afternoon, they would just stick with apple and they did. 1 Apr 1976 – Walter Isaacson • I was planning on starting a new file on my computer with the title “Phrases That Sound One Way to Witches but Mean Something Else to Vampires. – Deborah Harkness • I wouldn’t know how to find eBay on the computer if my life depended on it. – Marc Jacobs • I wrote an ad for Apple Computer: “Macintosh – We might not get everything right, but at least we knew the century was going to end”. – Douglas Adams • If GM had kept up with technology like the computer industry has, we would all be driving $25 cars that got 1,000 MPG. – Bill Gates • If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them. – Steve Jobs • If more women want to be a part of the computer industry today, they have to do more to put themselves there. Nobody is keeping them out. – Roberta Williams • If the automobile had followed the same development as the computer, a Rolls Royce would today cost $100 and get a million miles per gallon, and explode once a year killing everyone inside. – Robert X. Cringely • If you could utilize the resources of the end users’ computers, you could do things much more efficiently. – Niklas Zennstrom • If you don’t want to be replaced by a computer, don’t act like one. – Arno Allan Penzias • If you put tomfoolery into a computer, nothing comes out of it but tomfoolery. But this tomfoolery, having passed through a very expensive machine, is somehow enobled and no-one dares criticize it. – Pierre Marie Gallois • If your computer speaks English, it was probably made in Japan. – Alan Perlis • If you’re a doctor, or a scientist, or a computer programmer, it shouldn’t matter whether you come from Nigeria, or Norway, or any other country on this earth. Today though we have a system that rewards ties of blood, ties of kin, ties of clan. That’s one of the most un-American immigration systems I can imagine. – Tom Cotton • If you’re working on a computer and you’re editing bass, it looks like a warm curvy, sort of feminine object. – Colin Greenwood • I’m a ’70s mom, and my daughter is a ’90s mom. I know a lot of women my age who are real computer freaks. – Florence Henderson • I’m bullish on writing. Movies, radio, television, and now digital media – everything was supposed to push us away from text, to video or “back” to speech. First, there’s no going back. We’re always stumbling forward. Second, writing is invincible. Thirty years ago, we thought we’d all be talking to our computers; instead, we’re all typing on our phones. – Tim Carmody • I’m too old-fashioned to use a computer. I’m too old-fashioned to use a quill. – Christopher Plummer • Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of complaining. – Jef Raskin • In a chemistry class there was a guy sitting in front of me doing what looked like a jigsaw puzzle or some really weird kind of thing. He told me he was writing a computer program. – Jon Postel • In all large corporations, there is a pervasive fear that someone, somewhere is having fun with a computer on company time. Networks help alleviate that fear. – John C. Dvorak • It was a black and white only computer at the time, but it kept me fascinated. – Buffy Sainte-Marie • It was very difficult to startle or surprise someone with a particular sound during the family computer era. – Nobuo Uematsu • It’s hardware that makes a machine fast. It’s software that makes a fast machine slow. – Craig Reucassel • It’s not computer literacy that we should be working on, but sort of human-literacy. Computers have to become human-literate. – Nicholas Negroponte • I’ve got a computer, but I won’t go near it. – Jo Stafford • I’ve never been able to arouse any interest in myself for digitally produced sound, and so the computer turns me off. – David Tudor • Ive never really been anywhere, and now I get to go everywhere. I just have to make sure theres enough memory on my computer to hold all my pictures. – Carrie Underwood • Just remember: you’re not a ‘dummy,’ no matter what those computer books claim. The real dummies are the people who-though technically expert-couldn’t design hardware and software that’s usable by normal consumers if their lives depended upon it. – Walt Mossberg • Ladies and gentlemen.” He [Jabba] sighed. “Meet the kamikaze of computer invaders…the worm. – Dan Brown • Let us change our traditional attitude to the construction of programs. Instead of imagining that our main task is to instruct a computer what to do, let us concentrate rather on explaining to human beings what we want a computer to do. – Donald Knuth • Making duplicate copies and computer printouts of things no one wanted even one of in the first place is giving America a new sense of purpose. – Andy Rooney • Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all. – John F. Kennedy • Man, I don’t want to have nothing to do with computers. I don’t want the government in my business. – Erykah Badu • Many of our own people here in this country do not ask about computers, telephones and television sets. They ask – when will we get a road to our village. – Thabo Mbeki • Modern people are only willing to believe in their computers, while I believe in myself. – Alain Robert • My computer beat me at checkers, but I sure beat it at kickboxing.- Emo Philips • My instructors in science and technology have taught us about how the brain works. It’s full of electrical impulses. It’s like a computer. If you stimulate one part of the brain with an electrode, it… – They know nothing. – Lois Lowry • My tax return in the United States has to be kept on a special computer because their normal computers can’t deal with the numbers. So I am constantly getting these notices telling me I haven’t paid something when really it is just on the wrong computer. – Bill Gates • Nanotechnology will let us build computers that are incredibly powerful. We’ll have more power in the volume of a sugar cube than exists in the entire world today. – Ralph Merkle • Never trust a computer you can’t throw out a window. – Steve Wozniak • No one will need more than 637Kb of memory for a personal computer – Bill Gates • No operational commander should have to assign a soldier a task that could be done as well by a computer, a remote sensor, or an unmanned airplane. – Richard Perle • Not even computers will replace committees, because committees buy computers. – Shepherd Mead • Now they can do all these magic things with computers. So you think you get to do something in a movie and you find out you don’t get to really do it. – Angelina Jolie • Now, what does a vampire do with a computer? Keep track of investments? Send e-mail to other vampires as you all plot to take over the world?” “I spend a lot of time on Wikipedia making corrections to the entries of historical figures I’ve known.” I blinked at him. “Really?” “No, Kitty. That was a joke. – Carrie Vaughn • On the molecular scale, you find it’s reasonable to have a machine that does a million steps per second, a mechanical system that works at computer speeds. – K. Eric Drexler • One day ladies will take their computers for walks in the park and tell each other, “My little computer said such a funny thing this morning”. – Alan Turing • One of the best things to come out of the home computer revolution could be the general and widespread understanding of how severely limited logic really is. – Frank Herbert • One of the most feared expressions in modern times is ‘The computer is down.’ – Norman Ralph Augustine • Part of the inhumanity of the computer is that, once it is competently programmed and working smoothly, it is completely honest. – Isaac Asimov • People think computers will keep them from making mistakes. They’re wrong. With computers you make mistakes faster. – Adam Osborne • People think that computer science is the art of geniuses but the actual reality is the opposite, just many people doing things that build on each other, like a wall of mini stones. – Donald Knuth • Personally, I rather look forward to a computer program winning the world chess championship. Humanity needs a lesson in humility. – Richard Dawkins • Putting a computer in front of a child and expecting it to teach him is like putting a book under his pillow, only more expensive – Joseph Weizenbaum • Rarely is it possible to study all of the instructions to a game before beginning to play, or to memorize the manual before turning on the computer. The excitement of improvisation lies not only in the risk of being involved but in the new ideas, as heady as the adrenaline of performance, that seems to come from nowhere. – Mary Catherine Bateson • Reading computer manuals without the hardware is as frustrating as reading sex manuals without the software. – Arthur C. Clarke • Right now, computers, which are supposed to be our servant, are oppressing us. – Jef Raskin • Run for your lives-the computers are invading. Awesomely powerful computers tackling ever more important tasks with awkward, old-fashioned interfaces. As these machines leak into every corner of our lives, they will annoy us, infuriate us, and even kill a few of us. In turn, we will be tempted to kill our computers, but we won’t dare because we are already utterly, irreversibly dependent on these hopeful monsters that make modern life possible. – Alan Cooper • Science is what we understand well enough to explain to a computer. Art is everything else we do. – Donald Knuth • Security is, I would say, our top priority because for all the exciting things you will be able to do with computers – organizing your lives, staying in touch with people, being creative – if we don’t solve these security problems, then people will hold back. – Bill Gates • Supercomputers will achieve one human brain capacity by 2010, and personal computers will do so by about 2020. – Ray Kurzweil • Talking about his first computer Like all kids we not only fooled around with our toys, we changed them. If you’ve ever watched a child with a cardboard carton and a box of crayons create a spaceship with cool control panels, or listened to their improvised rules, such as “Red cars can jump all others,” then you know that this impulse to make a toy do more is at the heart of innovative childhood play. It is also the essence of creativity. – Bill Gates • Telling computer guys that they need to have permission to quote things is like having to tell little children about Death. – Ted Nelson • That’s the thing about people who think they hate computers. What they really hate is lousy programmers. – Larry Niven • The basis of computer work is predicated on the idea that only the brain makes decisions and only the index finger does the work. – Brian Eno • The best computer is a man, and it’s the only one that can be mass-produced by unskilled labor. – Wernher von Braun • The best way to prepare [to be a programmer] is to write programs, and to study great programs that other people have written. In my case, I went to the garbage cans at the Computer Science Center and I fished out listings of their operating systems. – Bill Gates • The breakup of Bell laid the foundation for every important communications revolution since the 1980s onward. There was no way of knowing that thirty years on we would have an Internet, handheld computers, and social networking, but it is hard to imagine their coming when they did, had the company that bured the answering machine remained intact. – Tim Wu • The cloning of humans is on most of the lists of things to worry about from Science, along with behaviour control, genetic engineering, transplanted heads, computer poetry and the unrestrained growth of plastic flowers. – Lewis Thomas • The computer beeped as the upload completed. A moment later, Ian Kabra appeared on the screen. Dan was surprised. “Hey, Ian, isn’t it, like, two in the morning back there?” “It’s called jet lag,” Ian informed him. “I’m still on London time. I don’t suppose you savages have any tea in this mausoleum.” “There’s a diet Snapple in the fridge.” Ian shuddered. “I thought not. – Gordon Korman • The computer can’t tell you the emotional story. It can give you the exact mathematical design, but what’s missing is the eyebrows. – Frank Zappa • The computer is a moron. – Peter Drucker • The computer saves man a lot of guesswork, but so does the bikini. – Evan Esar • The computer was born to solve problems that did not exist before. – Bill Gates • The computer would do anything you programmed it to do. – Vinton Cerf • The future lies in designing and selling computers that people don’t realize are computers at all. – Adam Osborne • The good news about computers is that they do what you tell them to do. The bad news is that they do what you tell them to do. – Ted Nelson • The great thing about a computer notebook is that no matter how much you stuff into it, it doesn’t get bigger or heavier. – Bill Gates • The inside of a computer is as dumb as hell but it goes like mad! – Richard P. Feynman • The kitchen was also messy–delightfully so, thought Jane–and it didn’t look as though lots of cooking went on there. There was a laptop computer on the counter with duck stickers on it, the spice cabinet was full of Ben’s toy trucks, and Jane couldn’t spot a cookbook anywhere. This is the kitchen of a Thinker, she decided, and promised herself that she’d never bother with cooking, either. – Jeanne Birdsall • The most amazing achievement of the computer software industry is its continuing cancellation of the steady and staggering gains made by the computer hardware industry. – Henry Petroski • The most compelling reason for most people to buy a computer for the home will be to link it to a nationwide communications network. We’re just in the beginning stages of what will be a truly remarkable breakthrough for most people – as remarkable as the telephone. – Steve Jobs • The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That’s where we come in; we’re computer professionals. We cause accidents. – Nathaniel Borenstein • The next major explosion is going to be when genetics and computers come together. I’m talking about an organic computer – about biological substances that can function like a semiconductor. – Alvin Toffler • The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games. – Eugene Jarvis • The power of the computer is starting to spread. – Bill Budge • The protean nature of the computer is such that it can act like a machine or like a language to be shaped and exploited. – Alan Kay • The question of whether computers can think is like the question of whether submarines can swim. – Edsger Dijkstra • The real danger is not that computers will begin to think like men, but that men will begin to think like computers. – Sydney J. Harris • The word user is the word used by the computer professional when they mean idiot. – Dave Barry • There is a computer disease that anybody who works with computers knows about. It’s a very serious disease and it interferes completely with the work. The trouble with computers is that you ‘play’ with them! – Richard P. Feynman • There is a popular cliché … which says that you cannot get out of computers any more than you have put in…, that computers can only do exactly what you tell them to, and that therefore computers are never creative. This cliché is true only in a crashingly trivial sense, the same sense in which Shakespeare never wrote anything except what his first schoolteacher taught him to write-words. – Richard Dawkins • There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their home. – Ken Olsen • There’s a lot of music that sounds like it’s literally computer-generated, totally divorced from a guy sitting down at an instrument. – Aimee Mann • They have computers, and they may have other weapons of mass destruction. – Janet Reno • Think? Why think! We have computers to do that for us. – Jean Rostand • This will surprise some of your readers, but my primary interest is not with computer security. I am primarily interested in writing software that works as intended. – Wietse Venema • To better understand why you need a personal computer, let’s take a look at the pathetic mess you call your life. – Dave Barry • To err is human – and to blame it on a computer is even more so. – Robert Orben • To err is human, but to really foul things up you need a computer. – Paul R. Ehrlich • To our human minds, computers behave less like rocks and trees than they do like humans, so we unconsciously treat them like people…. In other words, humans have special instincts that tell them how to behave around other sentient beings, and as soon as any object exhibits sufficient cognitive function, those instincts kick in and we react as though we were interacting with another sentient human being. – Alan Cooper • Unless mankind redesigns itself by changing our DNA through altering our genetic makeup, computer-genera ted robots will take over our world. – Stephen Hawking • We believe that within five years, 96 percent of British consumers will have access to the Internet, whether it be through a personal computer, a set-top box or a mobile phone. – Richard Branson • We can do things that we never could before. Stop-motion lets you build tiny little worlds, and computers make that world even more believable. – Nick Park • We demand privacy, yet we glorify those that break into computers. – Bill McCollum • We live in an age where technology is so powerful that we can make change without even leaving our computers or cell phones. – Sadie Calvano • We think that computers are the most remarkable tools that humankind has ever come up with, and we think that people are basically tool users. So if we can just get lots of computers to lots of people, it will make some qualitative difference to the world. – Steve Jobs • We used to have lots of questions to which there were no answers. Now, with the computer, there are lots of answers to which we haven’t thought up questions. – Peter Ustinov • We’ve created life in our own image. – Stephen Hawking • What do we want our kids to do? Sweep up around Japanese computers? – Walter F. Mondale • What I was proud of was that I used very few parts to build a computer that could actually speak words on a screen and type words on a keyboard and run a programming language that could play games. And I did all this myself. – Steve Wozniak • When I was at college there were two things I vowed I’d never do. One was go to a funeral and the other was deal with computers. And then I ended up being a computer programmer in a morgue. – Patricia Cornwell • When I write a new draft, I don’t like to feel I’m tied to any previous version. That’s why I don’t use a computer to write. The text looks, on the screen, too much like a book. It’s not a book – it’s a bad first draft of something that could one day be a book. – Lauren Groff • Why is it that drug addicts and computer aficionados are both called users? – Clifford Stoll • With both people and computers on the job, computer error can be more quickly tracked down and corrected by people and, conversely, human error can be more quickly corrected by computers. What it amounts to is that nothing serious can happen unless human error and computer error take place simultaneously. And that hardly ever happens. – Isaac Asimov • With the fight scenes, they would take a video camera and shoot alongside the camera so we would piece it together on the computer and had an extremely rough cut of what we were doing. – Kelly Hu • You couldn’t have fed the ’50s into a computer and come out with the ’60s. – Paul Kantner
[clickbank-storefront-bestselling]
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meghanhalpin · 6 years
Text
Content Design
Content is anything you create/consume/interact with.
What do users/people actually need from my portfolio? In order for me to present myself/get a job.
WANT V NEED; If someone is in debt, they are going to want a quick, simple solution. But what they need is a series of simple, manageable steps to help get them out of debt. This is what they need but not what they want.
Content can be anything. A combination of many forms could be what users need.
About me page in portfolio; could it be a video? A gif?
BOOK RECOMMENDATION; Content Design By Sarah Richards. Sarah worked on the .GOV website which is amazing looking now but when she started it had 30,000+ pages. So she printed all the pages out, laid them all out and the team walked about deciding what pages were essential and what weren’t. She paid a lot of attention not only to the content itself but also the way people talk about the content. Eg; people tend to use the word doctor as opposed to GP. Intuitive content design in action.
It’s important to put hours into the development of the content of your website. Content needs to be easy to find/use/consume.
Gazillions of webpages on the internet. Unless you’re incredibly specialised ie a government website, there are going to be competitors. You need to develop smart content. Design entrepreneur vs designer? Innovator or disruptor? We don’t want more content, we need smarter content.
Push vs pull content
Trust
Ease of use
PUSH CONTENT; look at this new iPhone, buy it! Ie bus stops, it’s THERE PULL CONTENT; This cool new phone makes your life easier and puts the entire world in your pocket, and it’s only £500. Pull content is you pulling it towards yourself ie searching things or following links etc.
Turning push content into pull content is an important skill. Your content needs to standout. Any push content can be turned into pull content, all you need to know is what your audience wants to see.
Why are we creating portfolios? MONEY. Good work will get you more work! Kyle ranks this as the most important thing. Portfolios should illustrate your work, your skills and how to contact you!! A bit about who you are is very good also.
People will pay more to use a good product. If a website is easier to use people are more likely to use it, even if the service is more expensive than a more difficult to use website. You need to make sure your website works and they can find your content. Your website has to be really good because employers KNOW what they’re looking for and they know what you’re talking about.
BRIEF; Portfolio Site and Content Strategy Example; Garry’s website. 3 portfolio items minimum.
Each portfolio piece should have its own page and case study; pics and exploration of the brief and process etc. Link blog through case studies? Words and images; prototype, video! It’s up to you!! App prototypes in invasion etc
CONTENT AUDIT; If you’re working on any kind of redesign project you’ll have to do a content audit Compiling all the content into a big list. Full content inventory
What are they used for? The list of content will come in handy at various stages of the project. If you’re redoing the information architecture you’ll come back to it again and again. It will give you a better idea of the content that you already have. Pre-courser to content analysis.
What to include Nav title Page name URL Comments Content hierarch
Content type Basic description of content; brief reminder. Topics, tags or categories; meta data Attached files; how many and type Related; links, related links Availability desktop, mobile, app? Numbering system; index
http://tinyurl.com/ContentAudit1234
Page is whole number Items within page are decimals
Site map Desc/comments
Tobias Van Schneider An incredible beard; the moustache work is a thing of beauty. First page is who is and what he does. Semplice, GOOGLE THIS Latest instagrams in the html not a link, a showcase. He doesn’t demonstrate much work because he’s working for other companies but his website is still slick.
Lefft (Paddy Donnelly) Illustrator, blogs are individual to the project he creates. Newsletter, styles his articles very well, about him page, links used. Colour changes of text to highlight. Paddy exhibits his work straightaway. Cloud whale is amazing.
Both he and Tobias have their own newsletters, Tobias also has a podcast. CONTENT EVERYWHERE. A newsletter could even be things you’ve found on the internet this week, or facts you learned or new words you heard etc.
Wenizhou Simple grid but exhibits her work immediately, and it’s lit. Little animations that are easy to do. When you click on each piece of work it talks about the project, this is what we need to. Her process is amazing.
Shantell Martin Unreal, I love her. Her website and the way she’s used photography is amazing. Detailed discussion of each piece within the page and how she arrived at the end product. Lots of photos. Website is fluid as heck. Worked with Kendrick.
John Hicks Big headers and pieces that take up the whole screen. Lots of content without over crowding. Then case studies which are very important. You can talk about what was easy and also what obstacles you encountered as well. Downloadables? Goodies.
Brian Holf Home page is one portfolio item but it changes the odd time, keeps the site fresh, not the same viewpoint every time. You can then go into the case study from the piece, takes you to an individual page. Contact deeds at the bottom along with an “All Work” button.
Case studies are so important! Four case studies looks far better than four finished pieces.
Xavier Cusso, Toy Fight, Cédric Pierra <- research in own time.
HAMBURGER MENUS ARE FOR MOBILE
SITEMAP YOUR OWN SITE
A sitemap is a planning tool, structure, navigation, page hierarchy, plan logical presentation to users, visualise user paths.
Marking algorithm has changed; 2nd year worth 30% and final year is 70%. Both new and existing algorithms are going to be used and we will receive whichever gives the best outcome. If you want to do a masters you need a 2:2 or a first. Grades count, don’t faff about!
Fathom talk, they’re offering placements. In next Thursday afternoon. Russell in the following Thursday. recruit.ulster.ac.uk lists all placement opps.
Apply for jobs even if you’re not sure!! Check linkedin about that Disney placement. Santander SME.
CONTENT DISCOVERY AND RESEARCH Discovery is an important process! Not just dribbble. Prototyping, attempting to build so you can see what works and what makes sense. Problem solving. Not all looking at computers, a lot of it is discussion. Understand the problem. Understanding comes from discussion. Discovery helps you discover your audience, what you think you want, what you need, when you should publish that and the channels in which to do that. Using discovery to bring people with you. Sometimes you have to sell things to people. Content discovery as a team is a great way for everyone to be involved at an early stage and dissolve confrontations etc. Everyone has a chance to share. Everyone can see the same data or idea. Helps build a collective understanding and appreciation.
Figure out who your audience really are, what they want from you and how to speak with them. You need to know all this before you write a single word.
What can you do for them? What is your skillset? What have you done and how did you do it? Understand beforehand. Your audience are human beings as well. Writing good content with real human language is what gets you ranked on search engines etc. You’re writing good content for humans.
Sometimes the audience you think you want isn’t the audience you’re actually creating content for. Finding your audiences vocabulary. What vocabulary are you using? What words are your audience using? Search data = the words people use. Google trends for example.
Web designer is OUT. App design is IN. Content strategist is solidly known. UX design is on the rise.
Using web analytics and metrics. Login to your gmail and it starts working, telling you how long people spend on your site etc etc More vocabulary, what your readers want to know most, their mental models. Unique visits. Bounce rate. How long people spend on your page; time spend there.
Digital language and spoken language. Absence of body language. You don’t put search terms into google the way you’d ask a friend. Language patterns, common usage.
Narrow it down; what do you do? Can you do it? How can I contact you?
Doing discovery and research means you’re better informed and better equipped to start tackling the content design problem.
Write the content for your portfolio in plain html - no styles. Focus on the content. Write it in markdown.
Include images, pages and links as well if you wanna. Case studies. Home page and one case study as a minimum.
Content Audit
Look at what heroes are doing
Research and Discovery; google trends
Site map - in illustrator
Start to write your content for your website in HTML
STATIC AND DYNAMIC CONTENT What is a static sitE? Fixed content written in html Each page written separately as it is o the web Every web page saved separately Any changes need to go into the separate files
Advantages Easy to develop Cheap to develop Cheap to host
Disadvantages IDK KYLE MOVED THE SLIDE
Dynamic side Construction is controlled by an application server processed by server side scripts
Webpages not coded and saved separately Point 2 Point 3
Main difference is that the layout can be changed quite quickly.
Advantages Much more functional Easy to update Easier to add new content Good for large websites
Disadvantages More difficult to develop Requires you to understand databases
What is a Cms Content Managed System Bro. What is it? Allows users to manage content Separate content from structure Versioning of post content Manage media Manage content grouping Easy to use Manage any time/type of content.
FLAT FILE SITES A hybrid of both? Jekyll is a ruby based parsing engine that generates sites based on what is put into it. It’s main components are yams, liquid and markdown. YAML Aint Markup language. Liquid is ruby based?
Jekyll gives you a lot of freedom as a designer because you can build whatever you want. But it is also angry emoji, huff puff emoji. sO INSTEAD.
Kirby, file based CMS east to setup, easy to use, flexible as an Olympic gymnast. You gotta build a website with Kirby. getkirby dot com. You can use it for free until it comes to hosting. We are gonna use it for either portfolio or elements!
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alseccctv · 7 years
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הוסף עסק
New Post has been published on https://alsec.co.il/post-a-listing/
הוסף עסק
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