tl;dr: Healthcare companies are investing in mobile and seeing positive outcomes
Healthcare organizations working on mobile strategy
18 Nov 2016
18 Nov 2016
tl;dr: Healthcare companies are investing in mobile and seeing positive outcomes
15 Nov 2016
Earlier today, I was interviewed on Twit.tv's open source talk show about my project, Oh My Zsh.
11 Nov 2016
When I started in this industry, I haphazardly navigated my way through terminology. I most likely used things interchangeably. And it seemed like new terms and titles were coming out daily (this was emphasized as we’d go through a hiring process and each candidate would have a new title or speciality). Not so long ago, it used to be just web design. But these days, there’s more distinction, and rightfully so. This article by Kaycee Collins at Cooper does a great job of making sense of it all.
26 Oct 2016
Friends over at RubyGarage discuss how we in the Ruby on Rails community approach scaling our applications in a DZone article.
17 Oct 2016
InfoWorld recently showcased seven of the most popular productivity tools on GitHub.
Can you guess what ranked at the top?
Our own founder, Robby Russell’s, creation Oh My Zsh, which has accumulated over 43,000 GitHub stars. Created in 2009 as an open source, community-driven framework for managing your ZSH configuration, it comes bundled with a ton of helpful functions, helpers, plugins, and themes.
Check it out!
30 Sep 2016
Kyle E. Mitchell took some time to write up an explanation of The MIT License. One line at a time... in non-legal speak.
27 Sep 2016
Our friends over at dnsimple put together a comic to help explain how Domain Name Services work.
Fun fact: the first Linux server I was ever paid to put into production was a DNS server running on Bind and Slackware.
27 Sep 2016
David A. Black shares a few tips for your team to consider when conducting code reviews.
27 Sep 2016
Across the pond, the UK's Government Digital Services team shares some tips on how to design an inclusive user experience.
26 Sep 2016
An old friend of mine, Geoffrey Grosenbach, shares thoughts on why thinking like a developer could be a good thing...even if you're not...a developer.
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