- Lights: Elgato Key Lights (2, one as actual key light, one as fill light)
- Looking into these lights can cause fatigue after a while, which sucks if you're doing that all day.
- I managed to work around it by heavily dimming one light that is in my field of view and moving the other light out of my field of view.
- Microphone: Blue Snowball Ice
- Microphone pop filter
- Wall/ceiling mounts for camera and lights
- Camera: Sony a6000.
- This is one of multiple older Sony mirrorless cameras recommended for streaming.
- Whichever you buy, make sure the reviews mention that it can stay on
- Install IntelliJ + Scala Plugin
- Don’t do the Coursera courses yet.
- Don’t do the “red book” Functional Programming in Scala yet.
- Do: http://underscore.io/books/
- Essential Scala
- Essential Play
- Essential Slick
- Do Scala for the Impatient: https://www.amazon.com/Scala-Impatient-Cay-S-Horstmann/dp/0321774094
- The Neophyte’s Guide to Scala http://danielwestheide.com/scala/neophytes.html
Here are all of the resources mentioned by Deconstruct 2017 speakers, along with who recommended what. Please post a comment if I missed something or have an error!
- Seeing Like a State by James Scott
- Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann (Evan Czaplicki)
- A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander (Brian Marick)
- Domain Driven Design by Eric Evans (Brian Marick)
http://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs179/ | |
http://www.amd.com/Documents/GCN_Architecture_whitepaper.pdf | |
https://community.arm.com/graphics/b/blog | |
http://cdn.imgtec.com/sdk-documentation/PowerVR+Hardware.Architecture+Overview+for+Developers.pdf | |
http://cdn.imgtec.com/sdk-documentation/PowerVR+Series5.Architecture+Guide+for+Developers.pdf | |
https://www.imgtec.com/blog/a-look-at-the-powervr-graphics-architecture-tile-based-rendering/ | |
https://www.imgtec.com/blog/the-dr-in-tbdr-deferred-rendering-in-rogue/ | |
http://developer.amd.com/tools-and-sdks/opencl-zone/amd-accelerated-parallel-processing-app-sdk/opencl-optimization-guide/#50401334_pgfId-412605 | |
https://fgiesen.wordpress.com/2011/07/09/a-trip-through-the-graphics-pipeline-2011-index/ | |
https://community.arm.com/graphics/b/documents/posts/moving-mobile-graphics#siggraph2015 |
This is my attempt to give Scala newcomers a quick-and-easy rundown to the prerequisite steps they need to a) try Scala, and b) get a standard project up and running on their machine. I'm not going to talk about the language at all; there are plenty of better resources a google search away. This is just focused on the prerequisite tooling and machine setup. I will not be assuming you have any background in JVM languages. So if you're coming from Python, Ruby, JavaScript, Haskell, or anywhere… I hope to present the information you need without assuming anything.
Disclaimer It has been over a decade since I was new to Scala, and when I was new to Scala, I was coming from a Java and Ruby background. This has probably caused me to unknowingly make some assumptions. Please feel free to call me out in comments/tweets!
One assumption I'm knowingly making is that you're on a Unix-like platform. Sorry, Windows users.
from __future__ import division | |
import numpy as np | |
def multinomial_ci(counts, alpha): | |
""" | |
Calculate a simultaneous (1-alpha) * 100 percent confidence interval. | |
Parameters | |
---------- |
class NilClass | |
def method_missing (*) | |
nil | |
end | |
end |
def namedlist(typename, field_names): | |
"""Returns a new subclass of list with named fields. | |
>>> Point = namedlist('Point', ('x', 'y')) | |
>>> Point.__doc__ # docstring for the new class | |
'Point(x, y)' | |
>>> p = Point(11, y=22) # instantiate with positional args or keywords | |
>>> p[0] + p[1] # indexable like a plain list | |
33 | |
>>> x, y = p # unpack like a regular list |