10 private links
How to fix LibSSL when install mysql2 gem driver
Also, whenever upgrading MySQL, always always always run:
mysql_upgrade
See https://www.hivelocity.net/kb/using-mysql_upgrade-command/
A very good article on how to conduct a software engineering interview
Good read, from when I went to visit Twitch
This is shilling. Trying to live without Amazon.com, beyond the obvious website, is really hard with AWS powering a lot of websites.
Interesting articles on avoiding 3 common mistakes when working with ActiveRecord.
Interesting article on graphic computer, and the different techniques used to render Rise of the Tomb Raider (2015).
A good read (haven't had the opportunity yet, but comes highly recommended from Jon Moter @ Zendesk).
Visualized for better understanding
Some visualization of data from the FED
Google is offering a different way to indicate a location (other than GPS coordinates)
Interesting Photoshop helper for different Web sizes for pictures
Data is more important than code.
goal -> data architecture -> code
One must never change the order here!
Interesting read for the 1945-2018 period
Very good dive into how to architect your data for optimized queries using NoSQL and AWS DynamoDB.
Ran into this, and the solution here works: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51334732/rails-5-2-0-with-ruby-2-5-1-console-warning-already-initialized-constant
I understand 1.0.2 stays installed as the default, 1.1.0 being installed too. Hence the issue.
When installed automatically, I get the warnings. Following command shows (new rails app, 2.5.1) :
gem list | grep fileutils
fileutils (1.1.0, default: 1.0.2)
Then doing:
gem uninstall fileutils
gem update fileutils --default
makes the warnings disappear. And btw, it shows:
gem list | grep fileutils
fileutils (default: 1.1.0, default: 1.0.2)
Hope it will help fixing this annoyance. Sorry I cannot be of more help, not really a wizard with those versioning topics!
This is a great resource to learn ES6, especially the core features part where it's easy to pick up on the newer syntax.
Microsoft CSS framework for components that look like MS Office