Now what?
You have Linux installed and running. The GUI is working fine, but you are getting tired of changing your desktop themes. You keep seeing this "terminal" thing.
Snipplr is a public source code repository that gives you a place to store and organize all the little pieces of code that you use each day. Best of all, it lets you share your code snippets with other coders and designers. Did we mention it works with TextMate, too? It's code 2.0.
The goal of this project is to provide a comparison of the existing open-source and commercial (when available for free evaluation download) libraries for binding XML data to Java classes. The libraries are evaluated in several areas, including ease of use (the amount of effort needed to invest to the first successful run), the size of the accompanying jar files and the performance. In this project, the main emphasis is put into providing the performance comparisons, both in time and in memory. For various aspects of XML binding you can visit this link (courtesy of Ronald Bourret).
quick references that feature the most commonly forgotten things on a specific topic. You can print them out and hang them on your wall, or just keep them handy in your bookmarks for quick reference.
This is a nice collection of useful XSLT transforms, models and reusable fragments under GPL, involving HTML tables, XML Schema, HTML GUI, MathML, SQL analogy, etc. This has been developped as part of the "Worlwide Botanical Knowledge Base" project, ( htt
Those were the days... I bought the printed book, for 1.0 or 1.1. Now there's an update for Tiger, and there's still some interesting stuff in it (e.g. self defined Collection classes etc.).
Software Engineering Body of Knowledge. A project of IEEE's Computer Society of which I'm a member. <sigh> Wish I could go to Edinburgh for the workshop...</sigh>