michael

New selected poems / Hans Magnus Enzensberger ; translated by David Constantine, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Michael Hamburger, Esther Kinsky

Hayden Library - PT2609.N9 A6 2015




michael

Agnes / b y Peter Stamm ; translated from the German by Michael Hofmann

Hayden Library - PT2681.T3234 A7313 2016




michael

Walter Benjamin: A Critical Life / Howard Eiland, Michael W. Jennings

Online Resource




michael

Investigations of a dog, and other creatures / Franz Kafka ; in a new translation by Michael Hofmann

Hayden Library - PT2621.A26 A2 2017




michael

To the back of beyond / Peter Stamm ; translated from the German by Michael Hofmann

Hayden Library - PT2681.T3234 W4513 2017




michael

Markt und intellektuelles Kräftefeld: Literaturkritik im Feuilleton von "Pariser Tageblatt" und "Pariser Tageszeitung" (1933-1940) / Michaela Enderle-Ristori

Online Resource




michael

Translational Recurrences [electronic resource] : From Mathematical Theory to Real-World Applications / edited by Norbert Marwan, Michael Riley, Alessandro Giuliani, Charles L. Webber, Jr

Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014




michael

Foundations in sound design for interactive media : a multidisciplinary approach / edited by Michael Filimowicz




michael

Signals and systems : analysis using transform methods and MATLAB / Michael J. Roberts

Roberts, Michael J., Dr., author




michael

Amazon Web Services in action / Michael Wittig, Andreas Wittig ; foreword by Ben Whaley

Wittig, Michael, 1987- author




michael

Strategic thinking and writing Michael Edmondson, PhD

Dewey Library - HD30.28.E348 2019




michael

LRFD minimum flexural reinforcement requirements / Sri Sritharan, Hartanto Wibowo, Michael J. Rosenthal, Jacob N. Eull (Iowa State University) ; Jay Holombo (T.Y. Lin International)

Barker Library - TE7.N25 no.906




michael

18th Conference of Power System Engineering, Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics: 11-13 June 2019, Pilsen, Czech Republic / editors, Lukáš Richter, Michal Volf, Michaela Vacková, Petr Pavlíček and Miroslav Krejčí

Online Resource




michael

Constitutive modelling and failure prediction for silicone adhesives in façade design Michael Drass

Online Resource




michael

Rain Loads: Guide to the rain load provisions of ASCE 7-16 / by Michael O'Rourke, et al

Online Resource




michael

Turning silicon into gold: the strategies, failures, and evolution of the tech industry / Griffin Kao, Jessica Hong, Michael Perusse, Weizhen Sheng

Online Resource




michael

Leveraging private capital for infrastructure renewal / Bryant Jenkins, Lisa Amini, Krista deMello, Samuel Benford, Charles Doherty, Michael Bennon, Rajiv Sharma

Barker Library - TE220.L48 2019




michael

Can business save the Earth?: innovating our way to sustainability / Michael Lenox and Aaron Chatterji

Dewey Library - HD30.255.L46 2018




michael

Interrogating models of diversity within a multicultural environment [electronic resource]/ edited by Michael Tonderai Kariwo, Neda Asadi, Chouaid El Bouhali.

Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2019]




michael

Phytoplasmas: plant pathogenic bacteria. / Assunta Bertaccini, Kenro Oshima, Michael Kube, Govind Pratap Rao, editors

Online Resource




michael

Marine eutrophication: a global perspective / Michael Karydis and Dimitra Kitsiou

Online Resource




michael

Modelling nature: an introduction to mathematical modelling of natural systems / Edward Gillman, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nottingham, Michael Gillman, School of Life Sciences, University of Lincoln

Dewey Library - QH51.G55 2019




michael

Collaborative research in fisheries: co-creating knowledge for fisheries governance in Europe / Petter Holm, Maria Hadjimichael, Sebastian Linke, Steven Mackinson, editors

Online Resource




michael

The Great Barrier Reef: biology, environment and management / Pat Hutchings, Michael Kingsford, and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, editors

Hayden Library - QH541.5.C7 G74 2019




michael

The effects of e-cigarette taxes on e-cigarette prices and tobacco product sales [electronic resource] : evidence from retail panel data / Chad D. Cotti, Charles J. Courtemanche, Johanna Catherine Maclean, Erik T. Nesson, Michael F. Pesko, Nathan Tefft

Cambridge, Mass. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020




michael

We decide!: theories and cases in participatory democracy / Michael Menser

Dewey Library - JF799.M47 2018




michael

The Senkaku paradox: risking great power war over limited stakes / Michael E. O'Hanlon

Dewey Library - UA23.O347 2019




michael

Revolutionary love: a political manifesto to heal and transform the world / Rabbi Michael Lerner

Dewey Library - JK1726.L47 2019




michael

Rethinking open society: new adversaries and new opportunities / edited by Michael Ignatieff, Stefan Roch

Dewey Library - JC423.R48 2018




michael

From domination to coloring [electronic resource] : Stephen Hedetniemi's graph theory and beyond / Gary Chartrand, Teresa W. Haynes, Michael A. Henning, Ping Zhang.

Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2019]




michael

Explicit stability conditions for continuous systems [electronic resource] : a functional analytic approach / by Michael I. Gil’

Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005




michael

Developments in language theory [electronic resource] : 8th International Conference, DLT 2004, Auckland, New Zealand, December 13-17, 2004 : proceedings / [Cristian S. Calude, Elena Calude, Michael J. Dinneen (eds.)]

Berlin : Springer, [2005]




michael

Control theory in physics and other fields of science [electronic resource] : concepts, tools, and applications / Michael Schulz

Berlin ; New York : Springer, [2006]




michael

Ecology / William D. Bowman (University of Colorado), Sally D. Hacker (Oregon State University), Michael L. Cain (New Mexico State University)

Bowman, William D., author




michael

Soil pollution : a hidden reality / authors, Natalie Rodríguez Eugenio (FAO), Michael McLaughlin (University of Adelaide), Daniel Pennock (University of Saskatchewan (ITPS Member)) ; reviewers, Gary M. Pierzynski (Kansas State University (ITPS Member

Rodríguez Eugenio, Natalie, author




michael

Carbon capture and storage : efficient legal policies for risk governance and compensation / Michael G. Faure and Roy A. Partain

Faure, Michael (Michael G.), author




michael

The integration imperative : cumulative environmental, community, and health effects of multiple natural resource developments / Michael P. Gillingham, Greg R. Halseth, Chris J. Johnson, Margot W. Parkes, editors




michael

Designing climate solutions : a policy guide for low-carbon energy / by Hal Harvey, with Robbie Orvis, Jeffrey Rissman, Michael O'Boyle, Chris Busch, and Sonia Aggarwal

Harvey, Hal, author




michael

Discerning experts : the practices of scientific assessment for environmental policy / Michael Oppenheimer, Naomi Oreskes, Dale Jamieson, Keynyn Brysse, Jessica O'Reilly, Matthew Shindell, and Milena Wazeck

Oppenheimer, Michael, author




michael

In search of good energy policy / edited by Marc Ozawa (Cambridge University Energy Policy Research Group), Jonathan Chaplin (Cambridge University Faculty of Divinity), Michael Pollitt (Cambridge University Judge Business School), David Reiner (Cambridge




michael

Hydrometallurgy : fundamentals and applications / Michael L. Free

Free, Michael




michael

024 JSJ Strata.js with Michael Jackson




michael

211 JSJ Ember and EmberConf with Michael North

02:22 - Michael North Introduction

04:10 - Ember vs React or Angular

07:13 - Convention Over Configuration

09:39 - Changes in Ember

16:04 - Ember FastBoot

18:53 - EmberConf

22:47 - Mobile/Native Experience & Optimization

29:52 - Electron

30:46 - Open Source Empowerment; The Ember Learning Team

33:54 - Michael North's Frontend Masters Ember 2 Series

37:11 - The Ember Community

Picks

React Rally (Jamison)
Embedded (Jamison)
Remy Sharp: A debugging thought process (Jamison)
NashDev Podcast (Aimee)
JS developers who don’t know what closure is are fine. (Aimee)
Sublime Text (Chuck)
DesktopServer (Chuck)
MemberPress (Chuck)
Frontend Masters (Mike)
Wicked Good Ember Conf (Mike)
Debugging Node.js with
Visual Studio Code (Mike)




michael

212 JSJ Horizon.js with Horizon.js with Michael Glukhovsky: Live from ng-conf!

02:34 - Michael Glukhovsky Introduction

02:35 - horizon-js

04:52 - Versus Open Source Firebase

06:15 - The Security Model

07:56 - The Admin Interface

09:16 - RethinkDB + Horizon

10:56 - Versus Meteor

13:35 - Message Format

14:26 - Getting Started

19:01 - Real-time

21:24 - Security

26:56 - The Grand Vision; Use Cases

32:17 - Managing Deployment with Redundancy

 

Picks




michael

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

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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




michael

MJS 079: Michael Garrigan

Panel: Charles Max Wood

Guest: Michael Garrigan

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with http://michaelgarrigan.com who is one of the podcast’s listeners. He is changing careers midway and has had many exciting careers in the past, such as being a professional chef, carpenter, repairman, and so on. Listen to today’s episode to hear Michael’s unique experience with programming and JavaScript.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

1:18 – Chuck: I started this show but interviewing guests and then opened up to listeners. Michael scheduled an interview and here we go! I find that his experience will be different than mine than others. We will be getting guests on here, but wanted this to be a well-rounded view within the community.

2:25 – Michael’s background! His experience is a mid-career change. To see the things that are intimidating and exciting.

3:16 – How did you get into programming?

3:23 – Michael: How do people talk to machines? What are the different computer languages out there? What do people prefer to use? The C programming language, I saw as the “grandfather” program. That’s the first thing I looked at. Then I was like, “what is going on?” I got a copy of the original K&R book and worked through that.

4:58 – Chuck: I did the C language in college. The Java that I was learning then was less complicated. How did you end up with JavaScript then?

5:26 – Guest: It was easy and you can just open up a console and it works. You want to see things happen visually when you program is great. It’s a great entry point. We started building things in React and how fun that is. I enjoy JavaScript in general.

6:11 – Chuck: What is your career transition?

6:18 – Guest: I have always been a craftsman and building things. I had a portion time I was a professional chef, which is the cold side like sausages and meats and cheeses, etc. I used to do a lot of ice carvings, too. Stopped that and opened a small business and repaired antique furniture for people. Wicker restoration. It was super cool because it was 100+ years old. To see what people did very well was enjoyable. Every few years I wanted to see how something worked, and that’s how I got into it. That was the gateway to something that was scary to something that made programs.

8:24 – Chuck: I was working in IT and wrote a system that managed updates across multiple servers. There is some automation I can do here, and it grew to something else. What made you switch? Were you were looking for something more lucrative?

9:01 – Michael: Main motivation I appreciate the logic behind it. I always build physical items. To build items that are non-physical is kind of different. Using logic to essentially put out a giant instruction sheet is fun.

9:52 – Chuck: At what point do you say I want to do a boot camp?

10:04 – Michael: I might to this as a career. Hobby level and going to work is definitely different. I could see myself getting up every day and going to meetings and talking about these topics and different issues. Coding day to day.

10:51 – Chuck: Who did you talk to who got you started?

10:57 – Guest: Things I read online and friends. They said get the basics behind programming. Languages come and go. Be able to learn quickly and learn the basics.

12:13 – Chuck: In NY city? It’s pricy to live there.

12:33 – Guest: Cost of living is much greater.

12:42 – Chuck: What was it like to go to a boot camp?

12:50 – Guest answers question.

14:30 – Advertisement – Get a Coder Job

15:11 – Chuck: What different projects have you worked on?

15:19 – Guest talks about his many different projects. Like senses.gov.

18:11 – Michael: Working on getting a job. I put together a portfolio and just graduated this past week.

19:38 – Charles: Anything that has been a huge challenge for you?

19:47 – Not really just one. I’ve done big projects in the past. Seeing that I can do them and sheer amount of work that I have put in. Not really too concerned. Only concern is that mid-30s any bias that is out there. I don’t think that will really affect me.

20:25 – Chuck: Yeah, it’s rally not age-bias.

20:55 – Michael: “Making your bones” is an expression in culinary school. That means that you put in the hours in the beginning to become a professional at it. So I have had transitioned several times and each time I had to make my bones and put in the time, so I am not looking forward to that for me right now, but...

21:43 – Chuck: Anything else?

21:51 – Guest: Meetups.

22:40 – Chuck: I have been putting time into making this book.

22:53 – Guest puts in his last comments.

24:00 – Chuck: Thinking about what I want DevChat TV to be. I have been thinking and writing the mission statement for DevChat TV.

25:14 – Chuck: It’s a big deal to get out of debt. My wife and I will be at the end of the year.

25:37 – Guest: Discipline not to spend money, and peer pressure.

25:48 – Picks!

25:57 – Advertisement for Digital Ocean!

Links:

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Charles

Michael Garrigan




michael

Young Architects 13 [electronic resource] : it's different / foreword by Michael Manfredi ; introduction by Anne Rieselbach ; Catie Newell, form-ula, Future Cities Lab, Kiel Moe, NAMELESS, William O'Brien Jr




michael

You've got dissent! [electronic resource] : Chinese dissident use of the Internet and Beijing's counter-strategies / Michael Chase, James Mulvenon

Chase, Michael




michael

Yupik transitions [electronic resource] : change and survival at Bering Strait, 1900-1960 / Igor Krupnik and Michael Chlenov

Krupnik, Igor




michael

Zenoss core 3.x network and system monitoring [electronic resource] : a step-by-step guide to configuring, using, and adapting this free Open Source network monitoring system / Michael Badger

Badger, Michael