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I haven't been to enough of these "live" events to really determine which, if any, are worth the time / money. Which ones do you attend and why?
For conventions, if you're still in university, and can make it to Montreal, Canada, the Canadian Undergraduate Software Engineering Conference (CUSEC) has been extremely enjoyable. See the 2009 site for the next event, and for a take on what previous years have been like, take a look at the 2008 speakers (note: it included Jeff Atwood).
I attend CUSEC primarily because our software engineering society on campus makes a point of organizing a trip to it, but also because of the speakers that present there, and the career fair.
I used to belong to my local Linux User Group which I co-founded but I treated it more as a social event than anything else but obviously a social event full of geeks is still a great way to get a great debate going :)
Conventions and the like I've not got much out of other than being pestered by businesses who can offer me nothing that is apart from a bunch of Linux and Hacker ones where I've met loads of people who I consider friends offline, again great for the social aspect but pretty worthless to me in other respects.
That's not to say I never got any business out of attending various events it's just that treating them as social occasions meant any business that did come my way was a bonus so I never left an event feeling like it was a waste of time.
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I'm currently involved in a scrum project for a small organization.
Some events have led us to believe the organization doesn't understand their role in the scrum process. We've already gone as far as arguing about the size of the development team which, in my opinion, shouldn't be something for them to worry about (negative conclusion to this project has little to no impact on their end and large impact on us).
Learning the lingo as they go, they've asked us if they could see our backlog.
I don't have a ton of experience with scrum but is it wise to show it?
I fear we might get a lot of negative feedback because they don't understand the process all that well.
(Additional context: we are students and this situation is not covered by our classes, our teacher hasn't responded to our e-mails yet.)
Scrum is transparent. Everything the team does is open and visibile to all interested parties. Regular showcases are held to demonstrate completed work and both the sprint and project backlogs are public.
If you are following the Scrum framework then you will have a Product Owner who represents the business and is fully engaged with the team. It is the Product Owners responsibility to engage with stakeholders (i.e. other business users) to explain the contents of the product backlog.
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I'm looking for a in house geocoding tool to geocode millions of address. I've tried on TIGER database, but it got only about 60% address rooftop. There are addresses way far away from the actual address. My needs are:
1. fast enough to process those millions of address in days
2. rooftop accuracy - shouldn't be too far away (I'll say less than 100 foot mistake)
3. in house service - so it should be free to our internal staff
4. ideally open source, but it's ok to have a one time cost to set it up
Currently I'm looking at application level infrastructure, and I'm open to dedicate map server or something like that. I just don't have enough information to start researching.
Feel free to throw me any ideas, thoughts, comments. I'd love to hear them!
There are two pieces to this problem.
the geocoder and how well it parses addresses and matches them to the reference data set.
the reference data
For 1, I have extracted the parser standardizer from PAGC into a postgresql stored procedure (which is OpenSource) and then built a couple of geocoders using that as the heart of the engine.
For 2, and the accuracy that you are looking for, you will likely need high quality commercial data like Navteq or parcel data. Tiger is good for the cost to get you near the location but Title 13 requires Census to fuzzy the address ranges to no single address can be matched to a Census form. So as you found out, Tiger will not do the job.
I have written a lot of geocoders and have one that will work with Navteq and should give you results that are close to your requirements. Check out http://imaptools.com/ and contact me if your interested.
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Is there a legitimate reason why the majority of society (beyond CS-educated persons) should know about the abstractions we become familiar with in CS/programming (such as data abstractions, computer systems abstractions, etc)? Or does it truly not really matter to anyone but programmers, scientists, and engineers?
There is absolutely no reason why the majority of society should know about CS concepts. This is not the way society works, IMO. To be honest, a much stronger case could be made why the majority of the people should know about first aid then about CS.
There are a lot of professions out there which are crucial to maintain the standard of living we have now. Computer science is one of them, I'll give you that, so are doctors, engineers, mechanics, teachers,...
The majority of the people already know how to use computers because it's useful to them. Just like you know how to live in your house, you probably don't know how to build one from the ground up.
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Suppose an actor A has the site of an actor B in iFrames. There is no difference in the sites except the url. Urls are totally different. Should the actor A ask a permission of the actor B for using B's site? Is there any law that forbid placing other site on a site in iFrames?
Not a programming question, but at least let me help you with a link to a site. The owner of plagiarismtoday.com have had some of your concerns and, although not a lawyer, have collected quite a bit of information.
http://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2009/04/07/is-the-diggbar-content-theft/
Read The Law on Framing and follow the link to the case of Washington Post v. TotalNews
You should also check your country and local state laws, there is no such thing as a standard legal solution because it changes from one place to the other and many countries do not have laws on what you are asking. However, let me tell you, the web seems to be dominated by two frame of mind, or law philosophy:
lex mercatoria: these folks tend to think the web is commerce and commerce laws should apply, which are mostly derived by mores and civil laws
lex retis: these folks say the web is anarchy, no law should govern it
PS: I am a lawyer. Even if this is a bit complicated, I hope you can get an idea.
As far as I can tell, it only becomes a legal problem if the iframe is used to perpetrate fraud, deceptive marketing, or somesuch. Short of that, it's merely annoying. You can always use framebusters/framekillers if it bothers you enough.
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I'm thinking of forming a Hackers Club at work. My idea is that we would meet monthly and at each meeting one member would present an interesting hack he had created. (The hacks presented wouldn't necessarily have to be software hacks; they could also be the sort of things you read about in MAKE magazine.)
There would also be ANSI standard pizza, veggie pizza, and beer and pop available for socializing afterward. I'm even thinking of calling the club "TMRC" even though it will have nothing to do with model railroads.
Has anyone ever tried doing something like this or have any advice?
We do this at the office. I call it 'Developer Fight Club'
Usually do challenges of varying difficulty and compete against one another.
At the end of it, we go over our solutions, do code-reviews and discussions, and then use either benchmark results or other people as the deciding factor for who wins.
Typically, the loser has to buy lunch for the winner :)
For ideas of things to do, try stuff from Top Coder, programming questions on Stack Overflow, or even simple "crackme" applications available on different programming sites.
The main rules you'll need to adhere to are:
Make It Fun
Make It Educational Make
Make It Fair
Try to rotate the challenges, so either everyone is really good at the subject, equally bad, or at least mix it up often enough that it doesn't favor one person's skillset too much.
If there are women in your 'hacker' group, consider the advice given in the Howto Encourage Women in Linux. Especially the 'meeting places and times' section.
This is a little beyond what you asked, but there is good info on how to plan for hackers and how to resolve issues among members in a polite, hackerly manner.
Overview:
http://events.ccc.de/congress/2007/Fahrplan/events/2133.en.html
Videos:
http://chaosradio.ccc.de/23c3_m4v_1500.html
http://chaosradio.ccc.de/24c3_m4v_2133.html
My favorite is the Tuesday Pattern:
If there's a scheduling conflict such that no day of the week is good for everybody, just hold the event on Tuesday. No exceptions! Simple and fair :-)