Please visit:
- http://Hayek.Hamburg
- http://Jochen.Hayek.Hamburg/wp
- http://Jochen.Hayek.Hamburg/wp/blog-en
- http://Jochen.Hayek.Hamburg/wp/blog-de
And of course from now on you can also address me as “Jochen AT Hayek DOT Hamburg” 😎
Please visit:
And of course from now on you can also address me as “Jochen AT Hayek DOT Hamburg” 😎
Understanding how to turn numbers into usable insights is a significant challenge for those who work with data on a daily basis. Thinking with Data provides a concise framework and key insights to help data people uncover the real problem to be solved as well as how to approach, organize, and analyze potential results. By drawing from rhetoric studies, design thinking, and his data strategy consultancy experience, author Max Shron shows you how focusing on the whywill help you create usable insights from your company’s data jumble.
This introductory guide teaches you how to use GitHub to manage and collaborate with developers, designers, and other business professionals more effectively. You’ll learn about project transparency, collaboration tools, the basics of Git management, and how to make changes yourself—without having to bother your development team.
These sections show the tricks how to deal with folders – although there are no explicit ways. If you want to change the filename, edit the file – the the filename is editable as well. You can also enter a “/” then – that’s how to create a folder. In order to move a file upwards, enter “../” at the beginning of the name. You can not rename a directory, but you can move all files below to the new directory.
The O’Reilly book describes using “GitHub for Mac“. Today (2017-07-21) there is “GitHub Desktop” instead – and I started using it 😎 . I started migrating a couple of utilities I uploaded to misc/using_timestamps_in_filenames. Quite a big step for me!
Pete Goodliffe, author of Code Craft, presents several lessons that will help you go beyond just being a good coder. You’ll learn how to become a better worker, a better team member, and even a better person. This is a book for people who care about code, who are passionate about the way they create it, and who want to do an even better job.
Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, and other social web properties generate a wealth of valuable social data, but how can you tap into this data and discover who’s connecting with whom, which insights are lurking just beneath the surface, and what people are talking about? This book shows you how to answer these questions and many more. Each chapter combines popular and useful social web data with analysis techniques and visualization to help you find the needles in the social haystack that you’ve been looking for—as well as many you probably didn’t even know existed.