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round-34-wrapup.md

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Hello Hackers!

Hack && Tell round 34 happened and kicked off H&&T v2.0 !!

Thank you to Dev Bootcamp for hosting the event and feeding us. Eleanor was a treat to work with and we'll be back to say hello again soon enough.

If you would prefer to see rendered markdown, go here

Projects

Tom Ballinger - Dalsegno

A browser-based scheme-like programming environment with JavaScript interop that hot-reloads, rewinding its state on code change to the last time the modified portion of the code was run.

Aaron Schumacher - Gog

gog uses web sockets to separate data processing and data visualization, which lets you visualize any data in a web browser the way you want from any language that does reasonable http.

Thomas Levine - Svygrep

Survey a file to quickly estimate how many times a particular string occurs. And contemplate how to design surveys for directories of large files.

David Branner - Braindump

Most Wikipedia pages contain some strange code — a list that is always empty and a class to mark it as such. It turns out that this code has special uses in the subdomains for a small number of languages that use more than one writing system for the same words — Chinese is the most complex example. David illustrated both the code and its application.

Charlie Deck - Attractors

attractors.io is a web toy Charlie made over a few afternoons that uses webworkers to efficiently render strange attractors to an HTML canvas.

What's a strange attractor? The wiki says...

Sven Kreiss - Pysparklin

A pure Python implementation of Spark's RDD interface.

Francis Gulotta - Statusbot

A wireless LCD panel with some C and some nodejs that tells me nice things about the status of my latest CI build.

Fin

I opened the meetup by introducing the new organization team and saying a few things about where v2 of Hack && Tell is going. What I actually said was slightly different, but you can read the original essay for what I said here

&&{ "aditya", "danielle", "james", "sasha" }