jer

Kinds come first: age, gender, class, and ethnicity give meaning to measures / Jerome Kagan

Hayden Library - BF637.L53 K34 2019




jer

Boredom, shanzhai, and digitization in the time of creative China / edited by Jeroen de Kloet, Chow Yiu Fai, and Lena Scheen

Online Resource




jer

Handbook of computational chemistry edited by Jerzy Leszczynski

Online Resource




jer

Biochemistry / Jeremy M. Berg, John L. Tymoczko, Gregory J. Gatto, Jr., Lubert Stryer

Rotch Library - QP514.2.S66 2019




jer

Crimson tide [videorecording] / Hollywood Pictures presents a Don Simpson/Jerry Bruckheimer production ; produced by Don Simpson, Jerry Bruckheimer ; story by Michael Schiffer and Richard P. Henrick ; screenplay by Michael Schiffer ; directed by Tony Scot

1 videodisc (116 min.) sound, color; 4 3/4 in




jer

Synchrotron Light Sources and Free-Electron Lasers: Accelerator Physics, Instrumentation and Science Applications / edited by Eberhard Jaeschke, Shaukat Khan, Jochen R. Schneider, Jerome B. Hastings

Online Resource




jer

Women who dared : to break all the rules / Jeremy Scott

Scott, Jeremy, 1934- author




jer

Researching higher education : international perspectives on theory, policy and practice / edited by Jennifer M. Case and Jeroen Huisman




jer

Genetic and evolutionary computing: proceedings of the thirteenth International Conference on Genetic and Evolutionary Computing, November 1-3, 2019, Qingdao, China / Jeng-Shyang Pan, Jerry Chun-Wei Lin, Yongquan Liang, Shu-Chuan Chu, editors

Online Resource




jer

Differential privacy for dynamic data / Jerome Le Ny

Online Resource




jer

Kennzahlen IFRS-Abschluss [electronic resource] = ratios IFRS-financial statements / Inge Wulf und Jeremy Wieland

Wulf, Inge




jer

Financial accounting [electronic resource] / Jerry J. Weygandt, PhD, CPA, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, Paul D. Kimmel, PhD, CPA, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwauk, Wisconsin, Donald E. Kieso, PhD, CPA, Northern Illinois Un

Weygandt, Jerry J




jer

Financial accounting [electronic resource] : IFRS edition / Jerry J. Weygandt PhD, CPA, University of Wisconsin--Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, Paul D. Kimmel, PhD, CPA, University of Wisconsin--Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Donald E. Kieso, PhD, CPA, No

Weygandt, Jerry J




jer

Relación de la causa de Juana María, mulata: esclava, mulata y hechicera: historia inquisitorial de una mujer novohispana del siglo XVIII / edición, Alma Leticia Mejía González

Online Resource




jer

Biblical terror: why law and restoration in the Bible depend upon fear / Jeremiah W. Cataldo

Online Resource




jer

This is our brain / Jeroen Hendrikse

Online Resource




jer

Neither ghost nor machine: the emergence and nature of selves / Jeremy Sherman

Hayden Library - QP411.S54 2017




jer

Biomarkers in psychiatry / Judith Pratt, Jeremy Hall, editors

Online Resource




jer

Technical, technological and economical aspects of thin-seams coal mining: International Mining Forum 2007 / [edited by] Eugeniusz J. Sobczyk, Jerzy Kicki

Online Resource




jer

The Black Jacobins reader / Charles Forsdick and Christian Høgsbjerg, editors




jer

Jinkers and jarrah jerkers / [by] Edward Trautman [and] Jean Trautman

Trautman, Edward




jer

Rome and Jerusalem : the clash of ancient civilizations / Martin Goodman

Goodman, Martin, 1953- author




jer

Ancient Jerusalem revealed : archaeological discoveries, 1998-2018 / editor : Hillel Geva




jer

Garth Brooks Attacked on Twitter for ‘Sanders’ Jersey

Garth Brooks hit the stage in Detroit wearing the jersey of retired Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders. However, the photo he posted backstage confused some of his fans. Because of the name “Sanders” and the jersey number 20, they thought the shirt was meant to convey support for Vermont ...




jer

Coronavirus: Pune-based cricket museum buys Azhar Ali’s auctioned bat and jersey to raise funds

The Pakistan Test captain had put his bat used to score triple century in a day-night Test and Champions Trophy 2017 jersey up for auction.




jer

Why veterans run: military service in American presidential elections, 1789-2016 / Jeremy M. Teigen

Dewey Library - JK524.T36 2018




jer

004 JSJ Backbone.js with Jeremy Ashkenas

The panelists discuss Backbone.js with Jeremy Ashkenas.




jer

017 JSJ CoffeeScript with Jeremy Ashkenas

The panelists talk to Jeremy Ashkenas about CoffeeScript.




jer

208 JSJ MS Office with Jeremy Thake

This episode was recorded live from The Microsoft Build Conference 2016. In this episode we chatted with Jeremy Thake of Microsoft about MS Office. You can follow him on Twitter, see what he’s done over on GitHub, or visit his blog.

Resources:

Office Dev Center

Picks

Billions (Jeremy)




jer

239 JSJ Vets Who Code with Jerome Hardaway

00:55 - Introducing Jerome Hardaway

02:10 - Spouses and dependants of Vets Who Code

06:55 - Accepting and rejecting applicants

10:10 - The GI Bill

15:45 - Military language and coding

18:20 - PTSD, trauma, and coding

21:10 - Moving past the veteran stigma

25:45 - Military backgrounds as an asset for jobs

30:45 - The future of Vets Who Code

32:35 - How much does it cost to be part of the program?

36:15 - Is it easier or harder for Vets to get hired?

39:15 - Stories and memories

42:30 - Contributing to Vets Who Code

Picks:

Soft Skills Engineering Podcast (Dave)

Soft Skills Engineering Twitter (Dave)

Awesome Algorithms Github list (Aimee)

“The Churn” blog post by Bob Martin (Aimee)

The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington (Charles)

Vets Who Code (Jerome)

Practical Javascript (Jerome)




jer

JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump

Tweet this episode

JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump

In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump.

[00:37] Michael Crump Introduction

Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure.

[00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction

Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience.

The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities.

They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences

[02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about?

Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure.

Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems.

The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want.

Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure.

You don't have to be an operations expert.

Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year.

It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at.

Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers.

A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more.

The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs.

[12:04] Web Apps on Linux

Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application.

Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview.

You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up.

Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy.

You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world.

[15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows?

Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows.

The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows.

This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel.

Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows.

Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically.

[19:12] Supported Runtimes

Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core.

You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container.

Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker.

The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container.

If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service.

At certain levels, there's automatic scaling.

[22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets

It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state.

There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple.

You can also pull logs across all systems.

You can also use SSH in the browser

[25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers?

How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues.

If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one.

It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need.

Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science.

[28:28] How should you manage state?

A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state.

[30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB)

It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy.

You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward.

[34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps

Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well.

[36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux?

Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure.

Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB.

You can also use any images on DockerHub.

[40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment

Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction.

Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic.

[42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format

You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers.

Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup?

You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file.

[45:38] How to get started

Getting started with Node

docs.microsoft.com

Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit.

Michael's Links

Jeremy's Links

Picks

Aimee

  • Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run.

Joe

Chuck

Jeremy

Michael




jer

MJS 052: Jeremy Likness

Panel: Charles Max Wood

Guest: Jeremy Likness

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jeremy Likness. Jeremy works for Microsoft currently and first got into programming when he was kept home while having a sunburn and taught himself how to type in a program into his family’s TI-99 4A computer and then later moved on to the Commodore 64. They stress the fact that you can be a successful programmer, no matter your background and they talk about the pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • How did you first get into programming?
  • How much Microsoft is in the different programming aspects
  • Cloud developer advocates
  • Azure
  • TI-99 4A and Commodore 64
  • C and C+
  • You don’t have to go the traditional route to be a programmer
  • Having a CS major is not the only way
  • How did you get into JavaScript?
  • Discovered the internet in college
  • Career focused on Web apps
  • jQuery
  • Backbone.js
  • Hands-on career with the code
  • He did consulting for 10 years
  • Linux
  • How has your earning changed?
  • His biggest fear was getting out of touch with the realities of day-to-day programming
  • Pros and cons of being a cloud developer advocate
  • Community, Content, and Connection with engineering
  • And much, much more!

Links:

Picks

Charles

Jeremy




jer

MJS 070: Jerome Hardaway

 

Panel: Charles Max Wood

 

Guest: Jerome Hardaway

 

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Jerome Hardaway. Jerome used to be a panelist on Ruby Rogues and loved the ability to share his knowledge and interact with so many people from the community. He first got into programming by accident when he couldn’t find a job after becoming a veteran. He saw a commercial about job opportunities in coding, ended up finding a book on SQL and taught himself how to program. They talk about where he ran across Ruby on Rails, what he has worked on that he is particularly proud of, what he is doing currently, and more!

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Jerome’s experience being a panelist on Ruby Rogues
  • Loves being able to reach his goals in a speedy manner
  • Ruby Rogues Episode 279
  • JavaScript Jabber Episode 239
  • How did you first get into programming?
  • In the military during the recession and had trouble finding a job
  • Saw a commercial about coding
  • Taught himself SQL
  • Wordpress
  • Focusing on making Vets Who Code better
  • People would go for products over projects any day
  • Chose Ruby on Rails 
  • Setting himself apart by picking to focus on Ruby on Rails
  • Where did you come across Ruby on Rails?
  • From PHP to Ruby on Rails
  • Ruby
  • Have you found the learning curve has gotten steeper for Rails?
  • Keeping up with the JavaScript community
  • What have you done on Ruby in Rails that you are proud of?
  • Being the right person for the job when you don’t look like it on paper
  • What are you working on now?
  • And much, much more!

 

Links: 

 

Sponsors: 

Picks

Charles 

  • Take some time with the people you care about
  • Mattermost

Jerome




jer

JSJ 325: Practical functional programming in JavaScript and languages like Elm with Jeremy Fairbank

Panel:

  • Aimee Knight
  • Joe Eames
  • AJ ONeal

Special Guests: Jeremy Fairbank

In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panel talks to Jeremy Fairbank about his talk Practical Functional Programming. Jeremy is a remote software developer and consultant for Test Double. They talk about what Test Double is and what they do there and the 6 things he touched on in his talk, such as hard to follow code, function composition, and mutable vs immutable data. They also touch on the theory of unit testing, if functional programming is the solution, and more!

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Jeremy intro
  • Works for Test Double
  • What he means by “remote”
  • What is Test Double?
  • They believe software is broken and they are there to fix it
  • His talk - Practical Functional Programming
  • The 6 things he talked about in his talk
  • Practical aspects that any software engineer is going to deal with
  • Purity and the side effects of programming in general
  • Hard to follow code
  • Imperative VS declarative code
  • Code breaking unexpectedly
  • Mutable data VS immutable data
  • The idea of too much code
  • Combining multiple functions together to make more complex functions
  • Function composition
  • Elm, Elixir, and F#
  • Pipe operator
  • Scary to refactor code
  • Static types
  • The idea of null
  • The theory of unit testing
  • Is functional programming the solution?
  • His approach from the talk
  • And much, much more!

Links:

Sponsors

Picks:

Aimee

AJ

Joe

Jeremy




jer

MJS 116: Jeremy Fairbank

Sponsors

  • Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan
  • CacheFly

Host: Charles Max Wood

Joined By Special Guest: Jeremy Fairbank

Episode Summary

Jeremy is a Software Developer at Test Double and the author of Programming Elm book. Even though Jeremy majored in Chemistry in college, he was always interested in programming since middle school. After he graduated from college he went to work as a web developer at Plastic Industries and relied on blog posts and other online resources to teach himself how to code. Gradually as the company’s needs changed, Jeremy transitioned into an application developer. He taught himself JavaScript using the book Professional JavaScript for Web Developers . He then attented a Coursera classto learn on principles of functional programming and gained experience with many front end frameworks and libraries, including ElmReact, ReduxBackbone.js, and Marionette.js. Jeremy is based out of Hawaii and when he isn't coding, he spends his time playing his guitar and hiking and going to the beach with his family.

Links

Picks

Jeremy Fairbank:

Charles Max Wood:




jer

Fundamentals of estuarine physical oceanography / Luiz Bruner de Miranda, Fernando Pinheiro Andutta, Björn Kjerfve, Belmiro Mendes de Castro Filho

Miranda, Luiz Bruner de, author




jer

Microplastics in fisheries and aquaculture : status of knowledge on their occurrence and implications for aquatic organisms and food safety / Amy Lusher, Peter Hollman, and Jeremy Mendoza-Hill

Lusher, Amy, author




jer

Costly communion : ecumenical initiative and sacramental strife in the Anglican Communion / edited by Mark D. Chapman, Jeremy Bonner




jer

Winning with customers [electronic resource] : a playbook for B2B / D. Keith Pigues, Jerry Alderman

Pigues, D. Keith




jer

Indian man attacked in apparent hate crime in New Jersey



  • DO NOT USE Indians Abroad
  • World

jer

Protecting patron privacy: a LITA guide / edited by Bobbi Newman, Bonnie Tijerina

Hayden Library - KF4315.P76 2017




jer

Credit discrimination / Jeremiah Battle, Jr. ; contributing authors, Sandra Mitchell Wilmore, Alys I. Cohen, Chi Chi Wu, Charles Delbaum, Emily Green Caplan, Geoff Walsh

Dewey Library - KF1040.C74 2018




jer

Rethinking transnational Chinese cinemas : the Amoy-dialect film industry in Cold War Asia / Jeremy E. Taylor

Taylor, Jeremy E., 1973-




jer

What has Jerusalem to do with Beijing? : biblical interpretation from a Chinese perspective / K.K. Yeo

Yeo, Khiok-Khng, author




jer

Video: Why the glowing rocks under New Jersey fascinate geochemists

The complex mineral collection beneath northern New Jersey may offer clues to how Earth formed and how soil affects water purity and plant growth




jer

New Jersey town switches to peracetic acid wastewater treatment




jer

Fortbildung Orthopädie, Traumatologie [electronic resource] : die ASG-Kurse der DGOOC. Band 12, Knie / J. Jerosch, J. Heisel, A.B. Imhoff (Hrsg.)

Darmstadt : Steinkopff, 2007




jer

David Paul von Hansemann [electronic resource] : contributions to oncology / Leon P. Bignold, Brian L.D. Coghlan, Hubertus P.A. Jersmann

Basel ; Boston : Birkhäuser, [2007]




jer

Berry phases in electronic structure theory / David Vanderbilt (Rutgers University, New Jersey)

Hayden Library - QC176.8.E4 V36 2018




jer

Political conflict and exclusion in Jerusalem: the provision of education and social services / Rawan Asali Nuseibeh

Rotch Library - LA1444.J47 N87 2016