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3 Articles match "Account","Books"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | Understanding Map - Reduce 14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? The Problem Solver - Monday, December 3, 2012 Maurice de Beijer: Understanding Map - Reduce 14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? DevelopMentor Courses - Monday, December 3, 2012 The Meter: Tom Giib's greatest invention So many god ideas in fact that it can be hard to read his book - something I think he admits himself in the opening pages of Competitive Engineering. Accounts: Profit, revenue, costs Website hits: visitors, unique hits, conversions, etc. If you’ve ever found the time to read Tom Gilb’s work - and I’m thinking specifically of Competitive Engineering here - you’ll know that his work is packed full of good ideas. One of his ideas is that of a Meter. This alway confuses me a little, still now. You: A Metre you say? Centimeters and inches? Me: No, A yard stick You: Distance again? Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, January 24, 2012 |
19 Articles match "Account","Books"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Understanding Map - Reduce 14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? The Problem Solver - Monday, December 3, 2012 Understanding Map - Reduce 14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? The Problem Solver - Monday, December 3, 2012 The Meter: Tom Giib's greatest invention So many god ideas in fact that it can be hard to read his book - something I think he admits himself in the opening pages of Competitive Engineering. Accounts: Profit, revenue, costs Website hits: visitors, unique hits, conversions, etc. If you’ve ever found the time to read Tom Gilb’s work - and I’m thinking specifically of Competitive Engineering here - you’ll know that his work is packed full of good ideas. One of his ideas is that of a Meter. This alway confuses me a little, still now. You: A Metre you say? Centimeters and inches? Me: No, A yard stick You: Distance again? Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, January 24, 2012 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - Understanding Map - Reduce
14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? The Problem Solver - Monday, December 3, 2012 - Building Windows Machines in Amazon EC2
Now I must admit I'd rather have found a good tutorial on The Internets or even in a book. Create an Account. Register for an Amazon Web Services account at [link]. Enable Elastic Compute Cloud for your AWS account at [link]. Of course, the system was created with an administrator account which has a strong password. Login Part 4: Administrator Account and Password. Now just fire up Remote Desktop, use the Administrator account and password from step 13 to log in. Feel free to send me any I missed. First, briefly why does one care about EC2? Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Saturday, January 30, 2010 - Software Facts - well, numbers at least
Office environments can have as much of an impact on productivity as tools and methods Looking after employees well increases productivity and reduces turn-over Companies providing 10 day or more of training per employee per year have higher productivity rates than similar companies who do not Accounting errors (and use of unpaid overtime) can hide the true cost of software production by 100%, i.e. the work costs twice as much as the accountants say Formal design reviews and code inspections are effective but can fall into disuse because (new) managers do not understand this. Allan Kelly's Blog - Friday, January 14, 2011 - Final roundup of facts from Capers Jones
In two previous entries I’ve reported some interesting statistics and findings - possibly facts - from Capers Jones book Applied Software Measurement (see Software Facts - well, numbers at least and More Facts and Figures from Capers Jones ). want to finish off with a few notes from the later chapters of the book. Its a shame Jones missed this reference, given how well the book is referenced on the whole I’m surprised. Overall the book is highly recommended although there are several things I would like to see improved for the next revision. Allan Kelly's Blog - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - Getting Things Done with Backpack and 37Signals
If you haven't started using GTD yet, I recommend that you read the book. think you'd be surprised to see how many inboxes you truly have if you took a full account of them. GTD encourages you to do this for all sorts of things - take a full account and get them out of your mind. [Note: You can download this post as a PDF.]. Here's an article about Getting Things Done and how I use Backpack from 37Signals to make it happen. I'm also a huge fan of the 37Signals suite of products ( Backpack , Basecamp , etc). You'll see why shortly. How should I organize my pages? Inboxes. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Sunday, January 30, 2011 - Understanding Map - Reduce
14: public string Book { get; set; }. Each order line contains the books title, the quantity and the amount it was sold for. In this case the books title and the price it was sold for. 3: public string Book { get; set; }. 11: Book = line.Book, 12: Amount = line.Price. 7: Book = line.Book, 8: Amount = line.Price. As long as we take this into account the function is quite simple to write. 7: Book = grp.Key, 8: Amount = grp.Sum(item => item.Amount). Quite a few people seem to be intimidated by the concept of Map-Reduce. Simple right? The Problem Solver - Monday, December 3, 2012 - The Meter: Tom Giib's greatest invention
So many god ideas in fact that it can be hard to read his book - something I think he admits himself in the opening pages of Competitive Engineering. Accounts: Profit, revenue, costs Website hits: visitors, unique hits, conversions, etc. If you’ve ever found the time to read Tom Gilb’s work - and I’m thinking specifically of Competitive Engineering here - you’ll know that his work is packed full of good ideas. One of his ideas is that of a Meter. This alway confuses me a little, still now. You: A Metre you say? Centimeters and inches? Me: No, A yard stick You: Distance again? Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, January 24, 2012 %>
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