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hackaday.io | ||
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www.softdevtube.com
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| | | | | Programming history is filled with bugs that turned out to be features and limitations that pushed developers to make even more interesting products. We'll journey through code that was so 'bad' it was actually good. Along the way we'll look at the important role failure plays in learning. Then we'll tame our inner perfectionists and | |
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blog.nuculabs.de
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| | | | | I haven't done any embedded development in a while and I was thinking to build myself a remote controlled toy car with video streaming. The project is going to take me a while. To build it I'm going to use C#. I'm already too familiar with Python and a little challenge doesn't hurt. To interface with the hardware, I'm going to use the .Net Core IoT Libraries from Microsoft. My idea was to create a set of .Net Core services that communicate internally via gRPC and an ASP.Net Core web application to control the car. (Now that I'm writing this I'm thinking that could possibly drop the web app and use gRPC directly from the client). | |
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rolisz.ro
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| | | | | As you are probably seeing, I've just done a major update to my blog. Besides the obvious theme change, there are several other more important changes in the backend, such as moving from Wordpress to Acrylamid Acrylamid is a static site generator written in Python. It is pretty cool. It | |
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meicheesecake.neocities.org
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| | | This whole thing is only 220 lines of code and most of them are used to assemble the UI because Tkinter is atrocious. | ||