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En terapia con Roberto Rocha
Siéntete cómodo, ya estás En Terapia, un podcast dirigido por un servidor con la intensión de acompañarte y animarte a resolver los conflictos que se presentan en tu vida, mediante una plática amena y con colegas especialistas que te ayudarán a ver otra perspectiva de lo que te pasa.https://www.robertorocha.com.mx/https://www.instagram.com/robertorocha__/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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Historias de Arte en Podcast
En Historias de Arte en Podcast, van a oír todo acerca de sus obras de arte y artistas favoritos. Para nosotras no hay nada más apasionante que investigar y enseñar lo que hay detrás del arte más famoso del mundo, cada episodio es una historia diferente, hablamos de pinturas, artistas, sus fascinantes vidas, como se hicieron famosos, o si no se hicieron famosos en vida, dónde estudiaron, las rivalidades que muchas veces surgieron y surgen entre ellos...en fin, queremos mostrar lo humano de cada obra de arte y que pasen un buen rato. Para muchos, la historia del arte es aburrida, lejana y complicada, este podcast les va a demostrar que no es así. ¡Bienvenidos! WEB: http://historiasdearte.com Síguenos en Instagram: @historiasdearte.enpodcast. Twitter: @historiasdeart1 Facebook: historias de arte en podcast
Territorios improbables
Territorios Improbables es un viaje algunos de los lugares más peculiares, más escondidos y, a la vez, más extraordinarios del planeta. Y por las historias que los construyeron.
Hippomocks and cpp-dependencies
Rob and Jason are joined by Peter Bindels to discuss the Hippomocks mocking library and the cpp-dependencies analyzer. Peter Bindels is a C++ software engineer who prides himself on writing code that is easy to use, easy to work with and well-readable to anybody familiar with the language. He's worked for a contractor for a few years and then made the switch to work at Tomtom, where he's been working on various parts of the software chain, last of which was a major cleanup in the navigation code base. In doing so he developed a tool to determine, check and improve dependencies between components, which allows quicker structural insight in complicated systems. He also created HippoMocks in 2008, one of the first full fledged C++ mocking frameworks that is still a relevant choice today. He has given two talks at Meeting C++ 2016 and will be giving his third talk, on Mocking in C++, at CppNow 2017. News Fluent C++ - The Design of the STL Fluent C++ - Inserting several elements into an STL container efficently 2017 Keynote - Ryan Newton - Haskell Taketh Away CLion 2017.1 released: C++14, C++17, PCH, disassembly view, Catch, MSVC and more An introduction to Reflection in C++ Peter Bindels @dascandy42 Peter Bindels' GitHub Links Hippomocks framework cpp-dependencies Meeting C++ 2016: Peter Bindels - How to understand million-line C++ projects Lightning Talks Meeting C++ 2016: Peter Bindels - Mocking C++ Sponsors Conan.io JetBrains
Vcsn
Rob and Jason are joined by Akim Demaille to discuss VCSN, a platform for automata and rational expressions, and some of the interesting problems he faced while working on the library. Akim has been participating in free software for about 20 years, starting with a2ps, an anything to PostScript tool written in C. In order to ensure its portability, he became a major contributor to GNU Autoconf, GNU Automake and GNU Bison. Akim has been teaching and researching at EPITA, a French CS Graduate School, for eighteen years. He has taught formal languages, logics, OO design, C++ and compiler constructions, which includes the Tiger compiler, an educational project where students implement a compiler in C++. This project, whose assignment is regularly updated, keeps track of the C++ eveolutions, and this year's version uses C++17 features. Akim's recent research interests are focused on the Vcsn platform, dedicated to automata and rational expressions. He's recently been recruited by former students of his to be part of the Infinit team at Docker. News Announcing Meeting C++ 2017 C++Now 2017 Keynote: Ali Çehreli - Competitive Advantage with D Reduce C++ Build Times by Reducing Header Dependencies Capturing *this in C++11, 14 and 17 Akim Demaille Akim Demaille's GitHub Links Vcsn home page Vcsn Online Sandbox The Tiger Project Johnny Five Technical report about runtime instantiation in C++ Sponsors Incredibuild JetBrains
Vcsn
Rob and Jason are joined by Akim Demaille to discuss VCSN, a platform for automata and rational expressions, and some of the interesting problems he faced while working on the library.
Jewelbots
Rob and Jason are joined by Sara Chipps to discuss Jewelbots, Arduino and getting girls interested in STEM fields. Sara Chipps is a JavaScript developer based in NYC. She has been working on Software and the Open Source Community since 2001. She’s been obsessed with hardware and part of Nodebots since 2012. She is the CEO of Jewelbots, a company dedicated towards drastically changing the number of girls entering STEM fields using hardware. She was formerly the CTO of Flat Iron School, a school dedicated to teaching people of all ages how to build software and launch careers as software developers. In 2010 she cofounded Girl Develop It, a non-profit focused on helping more women become software developers. Girl Develop It is in 45 cities, and has taught over 17,000 women how to build software. News The C++ Annotations, a free up-to-date learners book/reference manual Choosing "Some C++" Over C GCC's move to C++ PacifiC++ Sara Chipps @SaraJChipps Sara Chipps' Blog Links Jewelbots Jewelbots Support Jewelbots is a friendship bracelet that teaches girls how to code Johnny Five Girl Develop It Flat Iron School Sponsors Incredibuild JetBrains
Jewelbots
Rob and Jason are joined by Sara Chipps to discuss Jewelbots, Arduino and getting girls interested in STEM fields.
C++17 Kona Update
Rob and Jason are joined by Patrice Roy to discuss the state of C++17 after the recent ISO Standards meeting at Kona.
C++17 Kona Update
Rob and Jason are joined by Patrice Roy to discuss the state of C++17 after the recent ISO Standards meeting at Kona. Patrice Roy has been playing with C++, either professionally, for pleasure or (most of the time) both for over 20 years. After a few years doing R&D and working on military flight simulators, he moved on to academics and has been teaching computer science since 1998. Since 2005, he’s been involved more specifically in helping graduate students and professionals from the fields of real-time systems and game programming develop the skills they need to face today’s challenges. The rapid evolution of C++ in recent years has made his job even more enjoyable. He’s been a participating member in the ISO C++ Standards Committee since late 2014 and has been involved with the ISO Programming Language Vulnerabilities since late 2015. He has five kids, and his wife ensures their house is home to a continuously changing number of cats, dogs and other animals. News Herb Sutter's Trip report: Winter ISO C++ standards meeting, C++17 is complete Botond's Trip Report: C++ Standards Meeting in Kona, February 2017 Software Engineering Institute Makes CERT C++ Coding Standard Freely Available C++ Now 2017 Program Available Patrice Roy @PatriceRoy1 Patrice Roy's Blog Links C++ Standards Consistent comparison (Herb Sutter's Comparison Proposal) Sponsors Incredibuild JetBrains
Safe Numerics
Rob and Jason are joined by Robert Ramey to discuss his Safe Numerics library and the process of submitting libraries to both Boost and the C++ Standards Committee. Robert Ramey is a freelance C++ programmer for around 20 years. He has worked on a variety of applications including desktop retail applications, embedded systems on tiny micro controllers and combinations of these. For the last 10 of those years he has been active in the Boost Organization and Author and Maintainer of the Boost Serialization library Instigator of the Boost Library Incubator (www.blincubator.com) Given talks on Boost/C++ related topics at C++Now and CPPCon Written articles in print periodicals such as Software Development and ACCU Overload Of late his interest has become more focused on practical approaches to improving program correctness. This has motivated recent talks at CPP Con ( boost units library, C++ and abstract algebra) and most recently the Safe Numerics library - which has very recently been accepted as an official Boost Library. News Does const mean thread-safe? Meeting C++ Live: Multithreading with Rainer Grimm Implementation Challenge flag_set: Type-safe hard to misuse bitmask Programmers: Stop Calling Yourselves Engineers Robert Ramey @robertramey1 Robert Ramey Software Development Links Safe Numerics Library CppCon 2016: Robert Ramey "Safe Numerics Library" Boost Library Incubator Sponsors Incredibuild JetBrains
Safe Numerics
Rob and Jason are joined by Robert Ramey to discuss his Safe Numerics library and the process of submitting libraries to both Boost and the C++ Standards Committee.
C++ Game Development at Blizzard
Rob and Jason are joined by Ben Deane from Blizzard Entertainment to talk about C++ game development and more.
C++ Game Development at Blizzard
Rob and Jason are joined by Ben Deane from Blizzard Entertainment to talk about C++ game development and more. Ben started in the games industry in the UK in 1995, when he got hired at Bullfrog straight after graduating from university. While there he worked on several games there like Syndicate Wars and Dungeon Keeper. By the late 1990s he had stopped using C and was allowed to use C++ at work. In 2001 he moved to Kuju Entertainment and did a couple of games on XBox and PS2, then in 2003 he was hired by EA again and moved to Los Angeles, where he worked on the Medal of Honor series. He's always been a network game programmer, and in 2008 after a project cancellation at EA, he joined Blizzard as a lead engineer on Battle.net, working on technology for all of Blizzard's games. Today he's a principal engineer at Blizzard and the technical lead on the Battle.net desktop application. He's also a functional programming hobbyist who tries to use what he learns in Haskell to write better C++, and in recent years he has given several C++ conference talks at C++Now and CppCon. News Insomniac Games Cache Simulator Functors are not dead: the double functor trick Pi Day Challenge I'm Done - Geschafft: Words about the Future of my Blogs Check for const correctness with the C++ Core Guidelines Checker Ben Deane @ben_deane Ben Deane on GitHub Ben Deane's Blog Links Blizzard Entertainment Blizzard Careers CppCon 2016: Ben Deane "Using Types Effectively" CppCon 2016: Ben Deane "std::accumulate: Exploring an Algorithmic Empire" Sponsor Incredibuild JetBrains
Visual Studio 2017 for C++ Developers
Rob and Jason are joined by Daniel Moth to talk about the new C++ features of Visual Studio 2017. Daniel Moth joined Microsoft in the UK in 2006, before transitioning to Redmond in 2008 to work as a Program Manager on Visual Studio, which is where he is still working today. Before Microsoft he worked as a software developer in the industry for almost a decade, most of that time building mobile apps. News The C++17 Lands Learn C++ Concepts with Visual Studio and the WSL Partial Ordering: An enigma wrapped inside of a riddle, wherein all compilers agree to be wrong Daniel Moth @danielmoth Links Visual Studio 2017 for C++ Developers - you will love it Top 7 things to be excited about as a C++ developer in Visual Studio 2017 CppCon 2016: Carroll & Moth "Latest and Greatest from the visual Studio Family for C++ Developers" Visual C++ Team Blog Sponsor Incredibuild JetBrains
Visual Studio 2017 for C++ Developers
Rob and Jason are joined by Daniel Moth to talk about the new C++ features of Visual Studio 2017.
EmBO++
Rob and Jason are joined by Odin Holmes to talk about the recent Embedded C++ development conference emBO++.
emBO++
Rob and Jason are joined by Odin Holmes to talk about the recent Embedded C++ development conference emBO++. Odin Holmes has been programming bare metal embedded systems for 15+ years and as any honest nerd admits most of that time was spent debugging his stupid mistakes. With the advent of the 100x speed up of template metaprogramming provided by C++11 his current mission began: teach the compiler to find his stupid mistakes at compile time so he has more free time for even more template metaprogramming. Odin Holmes is the author of the Kvasir.io library, a DSL which wraps bare metal special function register interactions allowing full static checking and a considerable efficiency gain over common practice. He is also active in building and refining the tools need for this task such as the brigand MPL library, a replacement candidate for boost.parameter and a better public API for boost.MSM-lite. News Elle, our C++ core library is now open source Yet Another description of C++17 features; this time present mostly in Table form Atomic Smart Pointers COMMS Library Odin Holmes @odinthenerd Odin Holmes on GitHub Odin Holmes' Blog Links emBO++ - Embedded C++ Conference in Bochum Kvasir Meeting C++ Lightning Talks - Odin Holmes - Modern special function register abstraction Brigand Sponsor Backtrace JetBrains