投稿時間:2020-06-10 07:20:17 RSSフィード2020-06-10 07:00 分まとめ(26件)

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TECH Engadget Japanese 販売停止のホラゲ『還願 DEVOTION』台湾で限定再販。パッケージ版のみ https://japanese.engadget.com/banned-horror-game-devotion-215019575.html devotion 2020-06-09 21:50:19
TECH Engadget Japanese パスを繋げてバシッとシュート!お手軽ながらも気持ち良い『Ball Pass 3D』:発掘!スマホゲーム https://japanese.engadget.com/ballpass-3d-211026878.html ballpassd 2020-06-09 21:10:26
Google カグア!Google Analytics 活用塾:事例や使い方 ZoomでBGMや効果音を出したいならHIKAKIN BOXがおすすめ https://www.kagua.biz/review/kaden/zoom-de-hikakin.html hikainbox 2020-06-09 21:00:35
AWS AWS Startups Blog Living to Love Local: Matt Doka of Fivestars on Boosting Small Businesses with Amazon RDS https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/startups/living-to-love-local-matt-doka-of-fivestars-on-boosting-small-businesses/ Living to Love Local Matt Doka of Fivestars on Boosting Small Businesses with Amazon RDSThese days the sense of community has become all more important Small businesses often seen as the backbone of local economies have been hit especially hard Founded in Fivestars if here to help that exact segment offering a payment and loyalty platform that takes the heavy lifting off the plate of those managing these businesses 2020-06-09 21:31:50
海外TECH Ars Technica FCC failed to monitor Chinese telecoms for almost 20 years: Senate report https://arstechnica.com/?p=1682529 blasts 2020-06-09 21:22:09
海外TECH Engadget New 3D printing technique could make shapeshifting robots more practical https://www.engadget.com/3d-printing-shapeshifitng-robots-214949180.html New D printing technique could make shapeshifting robots more practicalIt just got a little easier to create soft robots that adapt to the world around them Rice University researchers have developed a D printing technique they call it “D for material that automatically changes to an alternate shape when subjected 2020-06-09 21:49:49
海外TECH The Apache Software Foundation Blog Inside Infra: Greg Stein --Part I https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/entry/inside-infra-greg-stein-part Inside Infra Greg Stein Part IThe third quot Inside Infra quot interview is with ASF Infrastructure Administrator Greg Stein who shares his experience with Sally Khudairi ASF VP Marketing amp Publicity quot We ve got about different machines and each one runs something different quot PART ONE What is your name how is it pronounced Greg Stein quot Gregg St eye n quot When people need to find you are you at gstein Has that always been your handle for everything Ever since high school actually I was gjs for a bit in college but went back to gstein I started at Google early April and Gmail launched on April so I was able to get my work email ID gstein gmail So it s great but also rather annoying because there are a lot of Gary Steins and Gertrude Steins and George Steins and I get all of their email I get plane tickets hotel reservations I got a proposal from the Gates Foundation once I had some crazy bitter angry lady yelling at her husband as they were getting divorced and she could rant I mean wow that lady had a pirate s mouth But she didn t have his email address Apparently not When and how did you get involved with the ASF I left Microsoft in and the product group I was working in was building WebDAV into various Microsoft products I thought the concept of WebDAV was very cool and wanted the Open Source world to have it That meant writing a module for the Apache Web Server I think it was September when I started posting to the Apache mailing list and looking at how to plug in a WebDAV module That was Apache at the time I developed a module called mod dav for Apache And when we started Apache in I donated the module to Apache and it became a standard module in Apache I remember that I did the press release for that way back when I knew you were connected with mod dav but didn t realize the path as to how you got there It s very interesting That s what brought me to Apache when they started putting together the foundation it was in the Spring of I remember asking Roy if I could be one of the first members of the foundation and Roy s answer was basically like quot We already had the set of people locked in You ll probably get nominated and voted in at our first member meeting quot which occurred in September So yes I was in that first batch of new members rather than the original membership You ve been a member of the ASF much longer than you ve been involved with ASF Infra What were the previous hats you were wearing at the ASF You ve been here for a while and have had a lot of different configurations This is true So I m a committer on HTTPd Apache HTTP Server and then a PMC Member an ASF Member I helped start the APR Apache Portable Runtime project with some of the other Web server committers we pulled that out of HTTPd and created APR and we used that for We used APR whereas Apache was essentially the combination of the two one big code base Then Justin Erenkrantz and I started Apache Serf and that was a high performance C based client library for HTTP But we didn t have three people in the community so it couldn t really be an Apache project So we took it out of Apache and started working on it on our own and then eventually Subversion started to use Serf and so we got more committers on Serf and the community kind of built up around it because of Subversion So we ran Serf externally but just like it was an Apache community it was Apache licensed and so on Eventually we wanted to move it back into Apache and I don t recall off hand but we went straight to a TLP from our external project back to Apache Serf Early it was January or February ASF co Founder Brian Behlendorf approached me about helping with the network protocol for this new version control system they were starting at CollabNet because he knew my background in HTTP and WebDAV That “V stands for versioning I got involved with the Subversion project that Spring That was also run as a very egalitarian Open Source project very similar to how we run stuff at Apache I was really the only Apache person but Karl Fogel just knows how to run a great community and so all those values that we cherish in communities at Apache were part of Subversion from day one but was run by CollabNet I was hired in to manage their development team Eventually CollabNet wanted to turn it into a vendor neutral thing that wasn t only CollabNet so they started a small LLC called the Subversion Corporation Once the IP was transferred to the Subversion Corporation people said quot Okay let s move to Apache quot because nobody wanted to deal with the overhead of the Subversion Corporation We approached Apache at the end of and Subversion became Apache Subversion I was the first VP for that I think that s the only VP hat I ve worn In I was elected to the Board at the Members meeting and in Roy decided to step down as Chair and said quot Oh Greg should be Chairman quot He just kind of threw me under the bus that way but I agreed and that s when I became ASF Chairman I was chairman until which is the longest running chairman I think Brett Porter did four years I think it was when you hosted us at the Harvard Club and Doug Cutting was appointed Chairman but he said he didn t really want to travel do much press stuff or be a face of Apache Roy came to the rescue threw me under the bus again and said quot Greg can be Vice Chairman and we ll have the Vice Chairman do all that stuff So I held the Vice Chairman role until September when I gave up my director position the Vice Chairman position and VP of Subversion because that s when I became Infrastructure Administrator Over the years I did a bunch of volunteer work for ASF Infrastructure I helped out with what we call AP mail adjusting moderators changing aliases things like that So I ve had AP mail access for quite a while when I was doing that Upayavira wrote id apache org for people to review their Member records change their passwords etc I helped him with some of that stuff That was all written in Python so I was able to help out Python before Python was popular I ve been using Python since and I ve contributed to Python itself We set up the Python Software Foundation in When I say “we I mean myself and Dick Hardt from ActiveState We took the Apache bylaws and added a different class of membership to it so that companies would become I forget what we called them like corporate members or something The normal people were called nominated members as they were nominated by somebody else and voted in But this gave corporations a vote at the table on the board and anything else that members would get a vote on So the core of the Python Software Foundation came from Apache Back to ASF Infrastructure In we had four people on staff in Infrastructure and our volunteer VP of Infrastructure didn t have enough volunteer time to be able to provide support and management for those four people plus we wanted to hire two more people With six people he was right out So we spent a lot of trying to figure out how to create a “manager for the Infra team At the time the idea of an “executive director type position was also thrown around but a full time position to manage four or six staff is completely overkill and we certainly didn t have the budget for a full time position Somewhere around late August I realized that there was an email that Ross former ASF President Ross Gardler sent and I thought quot I can do that That s a half time job I m certainly happy to do it I ve managed engineering teams before Now infra s not an engineering team they don t really develop products but it s pretty close to engineering management At a minimum it s personnel management which I ve been doing since the s So I threw my hat in the ring Ross ran it by the Board and the team and nobody raised a strong concern so in his authority as President he went ahead and hired me half time It was the day of our Board meeting I resigned all my positions and we appointed my replacement for Vice Chairman and my Director position that day both of which I believe were Sam He filled my role as Director and I started as Infrastructure Administrator What does “Infrastructure Administrator mean What does it entail are you hands on coding solutions like the rest of the team Are you solving problems What do you do I chose the title because I didn t want to be called “manager I didn t want to feel like I m the boss I wanted to help with the administrative side make sure the guys get paid deal with the invoices handle what you might call back office kind of stuff and let the team focus on what they do best which is the system administration ASF Infrastructure Team Member Daniel Gruno does some development work in addition I do a little bit of development work For me it s more like where in my hobby time I might work on Subversion but now my hobby time is coding Infrastructure type stuff so it s not really part of my work duties I deal with salaries raises bonuses getting the payroll done and for our contractors getting them paid I also deal with third party contracts for things like Travis CI for lists apache org that s with PonyMail I make sure that our vendors get paid and our contractors and employees get paid How was the Infra team structured and how many are in the team We have five full time people that work on Infrastructure all five are system administrators Daniel Gruno does maybe system administration and tool development We don t develop any products because we re not an Apache community We write tools but don t actually develop any products This is why PonyMail is in the Incubator it was originally written by one of the people on Infra but we didn t want to run that as an Infra community With only five people we don t really want to be a community lead or anything like that The joke is if somebody wants to move into my position they lose half their salary because my position is part time It s not really a promotion it would be a loss to do anything So unlike a corporation with people on staff career development is a little more difficult It s really a job for people that enjoy Apache and enjoy our mission and also enjoy working with the other people on the team Who does ASF infra serve Our primary users are all the communities at Apache We ve got over communities and those are the primary users I don t like calling them “customers but in a corporate world they would probably be considered our customers and we serve those users There s people with accounts that are working on different projects but the user base is way way larger than that because people can file JIRA tickets and work on the wiki and do things like that without actually being an Apache Committer So the user base is even larger Then you start looking at all the people subscribed to all of our mailing lists and that number goes even higher There s probably of our work which is also supporting the administrative side of the Foundation itself For the Board your role in PR and Trademarks and Legal and the office of the President and various other operational type stuff we spend of our time A lot of what we do applies naturally across all of the user base because the foundation uses the same tool set as our communities Subversion mailing lists JIRA Confluence etc We help with account creation the LDAP management what sort of permissions people have to access different things One of the neat things that we ve done and I ve actually had a couple of communities ask us about it is our GitBox setup where our projects can use GitHub But then we also mirror all that source code back to Apache so that we have a copy of it for provenance tracking And in case GitHub does something dumb we have our own copy of the code Any changes made on GitHub get sent to our mailing list or get mirrored into JIRA Our projects can see all the activity on GitHub and it gets mirrored into our mailing lists where we prefer that our community work is performed That s actually a pretty cool feature that we ve done at Apache It s interesting to see communities outside of Apache that emulate structures and processes and solutions that the ASF has created It s cool to see it even happening on an infrastructure level How does ASF infra differ from other organizations or other open source foundations Most of them don t really have teams Most projects out there do their work on GitHub and don t have their own source control They don t have account management they don t run mailing lists We do all this stuff that most Open Source projects just don t deal with They also don t have the scale that we have Yes Because they re one project and we have over projects Most projects have some repositories hanging out on GitHub or on GitLab or wherever else that they might host if somebody wants to run a demonstration of that project they buy their own virtual machine and AWS and pay that out of pocket At Apache all of our projects can have virtual machines hosted by Infra where they install their software for demonstration purposes They can point people at that VM so they can check out the product in live motion So that ability to run VMs is also pretty unique to the Foundation When you look at the Linux Foundation or the Eclipse Foundation those are a little bit different They re not a charitable organization like us They re a c which is really like a trade association Like a consortium Yes a consortium I believe that they do have infra teams but their business model is quite different from ours If you look at Mozilla they have the Mozilla Foundation but that s kind of a shell Mozilla Corporation essentially runs everything and the foundation is like a legal shell wrapped around the corporation You mentioned earlier that we have projects you re referring to Top Level Projects TLPs but we also have sub projects and initiatives At Apache we have more than different activities going on you guys touch all of those It s not like there s any aspect of ASF that you re not involved with or you re not supporting That s correct And I say because I m thinking mostly from a TLP thing Irrespective of the existence of sub projects you re still dealing with other communities and projects there s more than just the Hats off to you guys It s quite a lot of work We ve got about different machines and each one runs something different Some companies have copies of a machine that they ll start up in the cloud running some container we never do that Each individual machine is configured one by one and they re all different And so machines to support the initiatives It s a lot of heterogeneous work and that can be kind of distracting but it s also very interesting because we do support such a wide variety of stuff for our projects There s what five Infra team members and we have projects and initiatives going on That s a lot of stuff happening is it non stop Yeah it s nonstop That s why we went from four to six people we were sort of treading water but we weren t really able to move forward on a number of our longer term initiatives So when we went to six people in November that made us a lot more hands on if you will That meant that we could actually make some progress on this longer term work that we wanted to accomplish Some of that is like where people can get things done instead of filing a JIRA ticket and having us do the work for them Is that popular Do people use it Oh absolutely When somebody opens a JIRA ticket to say quot Can I have this Git repository or “Can you create a JIRA Space for me quot we close the ticket and say quot Go to selfserve apache org quot Before where everybody would file a ticket for a Git repository or file a ticket for JIRA file a ticket for Confluence or whatever we just close them all down now and they use selfserve apache org instead We simply won t do those things anymore So selfserve apache org is actually quite handy And then about four months ago we ve added a feature called asf yaml it allows communities to control a lot of the finer grained aspects about how their repositories are used like how do they publish Web pages from a repository or if you make a change where does the commit email go Which mailing lists Does it go to their development list Or do they have a commit list If somebody opens a PR on GitHub where does notification of that go Those used to all be tickets also but people can deal with those just by editing a file in their repository now So again it reduces tickets and that s our goal where these routine tasks that all the different communities want to perform we want to move those into a self served mechanism so that we don t need hands on all the time And thus we can support different initiatives That s great to help empower the communities to take care of their own needs whether they re minor or major but that also encourages autonomy So that s really helpful for you guys you don t need to have a team of people to support the day to day We do stay busy You re talking about the influx and we get requests from people through email through our Slack channel and through JIRA Of course our monitoring system will tell us when something goes down so our monitoring systems also give us more work to do so it is kind of an endless string of queries Depending on what the task is each of those different channels is appropriate For a quick task hitting us up on Slack is totally fine but if there s going to be several days of work we like JIRA tickets so that we can track the work as it progresses How do you encourage the team How do you keep them motivated What were your challenges with such a huge load to carry how do you keep everyone going One of the big benefits that we have for our team is actually that we re all remote so we all sit on a Slack channel We have a team only channel that we use for communicating quot What s going on What beer are you drinking today What are you having for dinner quot I think about my days when I worked at Microsoft or at Google where I sat in the office by myself and it s a very individual experience that I used to have but now our team is there all the time on our channel It s a very social experience I think that makes for a much tighter team And it provides a very different experience than what you get at a more “normal company That sort of team experience really helps keep people motivated People enjoy their jobs more From a management standpoint I can certainly say quot If people are sitting there talking about what they re going to make for lunch there s a drag on the team and maybe we re not seeing the highest productivity possible quot but I think that would actually run the counter Our team is actually more productive as a result of this great team bonding We have a conference call once a week for minutes And we don t really have to the team knows what everybody s doing because we re all doing it right in front of everybody We all get the commit messages We have our Slack channel We see the changes to JIRA We know what each person is doing but having the call actually gives us a chance to speak to another human so you re not working in your basement all day without any human contact We actually have that once a week if you will forced human voice contact Did that evolve organically Or was that something planned The team was already doing weekly status calls When I started I said quot We re going to keep doing that We re not going to switch out for just you know a status email or anything quot Before I started I think they were doing a group edit on a status Web page or something I don t know if they had calls but today I mandate the call because I want the team to get together We ve also been doing the group get togethers at ApacheCon We got together at ApacheCon Miami and then the next year in Montreal Last year we skipped the whole conference format and just got together as a team in New Orleans for four nights It was great because it was just us without the distractions of the conference The conference is good because the INFRA team gets to meet the people that are their users their customers the people that we re actually trying to support all those communities And the people in the communities get to meet the team You know the people that asked quot Can you help me with X quot They get to put a face to those names There are times where one of the guys on the team will work with somebody in the community for a couple of weeks to track down some problem get a virtual machine configured whatever All you see is a user ID and the kind of tone of their messages but at the conference you can actually put a face to that name to that ID That s really good from a team standpoint With the team bonding we spent eight hours a day in this giant penthouse suite in New Orleans on the th floor looking out over the Mississippi River It was very cool it had space and a big dining table where we could all come in and work And then I would go around the corner to Mothers and pick upーOh my gawd the po boys the debris po boys Exactly you know what I m talking about I lived there So yes I know It was literally a block away So that was our lunch Every day I was going down to the Mothers getting a big brown shopping bag full of food and bringing it to the room We did go there and eat once so the guys could get out of the room for lunch and each evening we would go as a team out for dinner After dinner it s like “OK do whatever you want It s New Orleans That was a really good team experience We were set to go to Nashville this year and then you know pandemic ensued So we called it off It s funny I stumbled across your channel on Slack and if I remember this correctly someone was talking about grilling a whole steer or something along those lines You guys deal with a lot of beef there s a lot of meat in this group So In the team channel there s a lot of stories about food and beer and other forms of alcohol We eventually created a cooking channel on Slack because there s other people like Ruth ASF Executive Vice President Ruth Suehle and Shane ASF Vice Chair Shane Curcuru and others who also like talking about making food We still have a lot of that discussion on the team channel but we ve now got a dedicated channel with a larger set of people talking foodie type of stuff so that s very cool You were also talking about motivation I work with each of the guys to find out what they re interested in exploring Whether it s a new tool or a new product or to write a new tool to improve our workflow it s like quot What are you interested in Okay take point on that do the research go do the experimenting quot So each of the guys has gotten generally one or two long term projects that interest them that they want to work on END OF PART ONE 2020-06-09 21:07:35
海外TECH Network World 5 ways to examine the content of files on Linux https://www.networkworld.com/article/3561490/5-ways-to-examine-the-content-of-files-on-linux.html#tk.rss_all ways to examine the content of files on Linux Linux provides many commands for examining the contents of files including cat more   head and tail but that s just a start For one thing even the most obvious commands have a lot more options than many Linux users ever get around to using And there are some less obvious commands that offer some unique features In this post we ll both at commands for viewing the contents of files and options for tailoring those views to better cater to your needs catThe cat command sends the entire contents of text files to your terminal window for viewing In fact if you type “cat followed by the name of a file with thousands of lines those lines will whiz by your window so fast you won t be able to make out much more of it than the last screenful of text Yet as familiar as the cat command is to Linux users even this basic command provides a lot of useful options such as numbering the lines in the output that many of us likely haven t ever used To expand on that not only can you number lines you have some choices in how you do the numbering To read this article in full please click here 2020-06-09 21:52:00
海外TECH Network World Aruba AI platform aims to streamline management of edge networks https://www.networkworld.com/article/3562069/aruba-ai-platform-aims-to-streamline-management-of-edge-networks.html#tk.rss_all Aruba AI platform aims to streamline management of edge networks Aruba took the wraps off a platform the company says will use machine learning and artificial intelligence technology to help customers manage and protect edge network resources Hewlett Packard Enterprise s network subsidiary introduced Edge Services Platform ESP which can analyze telemetry data generated from WiFi or network switching gear and use it to automatically optimize connectivity discover network problems and secure the overall edge environment More about edge networking How edge networking and IoT will reshape data centers Edge computing best practices How edge computing can help secure the IoT ESP which the company said has been under development for over four years not only builds a data lake of a customer s data center campus and SD WAN information but also combines it with statistics from some billion data points generated daily by Aruba devices worldwide  ESP then applies its AI and machine learning algorithms to troubleshoot issues before they become problems said Miles Davis senior director of global solutions for Aruba To read this article in full please click here 2020-06-09 21:34:00
海外科学 NYT > Science Fauci Warns That the Coronavirus Pandemic Is Far From Over https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/09/health/fauci-vaccines-coronavirus.html Fauci Warns That the Coronavirus Pandemic Is Far From OverThe nation s leading infectious disease expert tells biotech executives that Covid has inflicted global damage exposing worrisome racial disparities 2020-06-09 21:48:40
海外科学 NYT > Science Trump Administration Revives Banned Hunting Techniques in Alaska https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/09/climate/trump-bear-hunting.html alaskathe 2020-06-09 21:16:51
海外科学 NYT > Science Coronavirus News: Live Updates https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/09/world/coronavirus-us-usa.html Coronavirus News Live UpdatesDr Anthony S Fauci calls the virus his “worst nightmare The W H O walks back comments that asymptomatic transmission is rare New Jersey s governor lifts the state s stay at home order 2020-06-09 21:36:26
海外科学 NYT > Science Testing Nursing Home Workers Can Help Stop Coronavirus. But Who Should Pay? https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/09/health/testing-coronavirus-nursing-homes-workers.html Testing Nursing Home Workers Can Help Stop Coronavirus But Who Should Pay A patchwork of state and U S recommendations has hampered efforts to devise a uniform policy leading to disputes over whether insurers or employers should cover testing costs 2020-06-09 21:10:03
海外ニュース Japan Times latest articles NHK apologizes for controversial video on anti-racism movement https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/06/09/national/nhk-video-black-lives-matter/ NHK apologizes for controversial video on anti racism movementThe release has met with harsh criticism mainly from social media users as tone deaf and offensive as it failed to address the death of George 2020-06-10 06:02:30
ニュース BBC News - Home George Floyd's funeral hears calls for racial justice https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-52978803 global 2020-06-09 21:10:43
ニュース BBC News - Home Coronavirus: All primary pupils no longer going back to school https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-52982352 england 2020-06-09 21:42:16
ニュース BBC News - Home Coronavirus: Zoos and safari parks set to reopen from 15 June - PM https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-52986783 johnson 2020-06-09 21:30:26
ニュース BBC News - Home Babylon Health admits GP app suffered a data breach https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-52986629 others 2020-06-09 21:14:22
ニュース BBC News - Home Prince Philip: Photo with Queen to mark Duke of Edinburgh's 99th birthday https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52986922 castle 2020-06-09 21:01:01
LifeHuck ライフハッカー[日本版] 仕事をこじらせてしまったら、「SMARTゴール」を設定しよう https://www.lifehacker.jp/2020/06/book_to_read-553.html 2020-06-10 06:30:00
北海道 北海道新聞 ベルギー元国王像を撤去 コンゴ搾取巡り攻撃続発 https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429167/ 続発 2020-06-10 06:47:00
北海道 北海道新聞 強制不妊、国会が調査へ 立法経緯や被害状況、来週にも https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429166/ 不妊手術 2020-06-10 06:47:00
北海道 北海道新聞 ジム「9割」で営業再開 水泳クラブも生き残り模索 https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429165/ 営業再開 2020-06-10 06:47:00
北海道 北海道新聞 NY株反落、300ドル安 利益確定売りで7日ぶり https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429163/ 利益確定売り 2020-06-10 06:16:00
北海道 北海道新聞 NY知事、無責任と批判 トランプ大統領の「やらせ」発言 https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429162/ 知事 2020-06-10 06:16:00
北海道 北海道新聞 国防長官解任を一時検討 米大統領、周囲が反対 https://www.hokkaido-np.co.jp/article/429159/ 国防長官 2020-06-10 06:06:00

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