I hereby claim:
- I am rtimmons on github.
- I am rtimmons (https://keybase.io/rtimmons) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 5C29 D562 617F DC29 F2F7 DAF7 049A 9152 16E9 0530
To claim this, I am signing this object:
var e = { | |
n: function() { | |
this.self = this; | |
} | |
} |
#!/usr/bin/env perl -w | |
=pod | |
Use: Count the amount of time spent listening to a particular artist | |
Example usage: | |
./itunes-count.pl \ | |
--libxml=$HOME/Music/iTunes/iTunes\ Music\ Library.xml \ |
// ==UserScript== | |
// @name Trumpicana | |
// @namespace http://tampermonkey.net/ | |
// @version 0.1 | |
// @description grab the 🙀 | |
// @author not me | |
// @match http://*/* | |
// @grant none | |
// ==/UserScript== |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
import sys | |
try: | |
import numpy as np | |
except: | |
print(f"numpy not found:\n\tpip install numpy") | |
sys.exit(1) |
Presto lets us trade APIs for queryable data-structures. Many APIs are already in Presto including Jira, TIPS, and DAG data. MARS uses Presto to run batch-procesing jobs against these data-structures. SQL is the (unfortunate) lingua-franca in this land.
This is a new and foreign situation for some of us, but it's not scary. If you know some MQL or even basic Python you can pick up Presto's SQL easily to quickly explore data within dev-prod and the rest of the company. And MARS is both simpler and more powerful than you might guess.
In a few days everyone in dev-prod and STAR will automatically have access to Presto. Let's hit the ground running.