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  1. James Ward's Recent Presentations Google I/O 2023: What’s new in Kotlin for Android ( Video ) Discover exciting updates coming to Kotlin for Android developers this year, including the upcoming K2 compiler, using KTS for Gradle build scripts, improvements in Kotlin Symbol Processing, and some news about Kotlin Multiplatform.

  2. jamesward.com › tags › javaJava - James Ward

    Mar 16, 2021 · James Ward's Recent Presentations; Developer Marketing Protips; About James Ward

  3. Oct 17, 2011 · About James Ward; Learning Scala: Function Literals. 2011-10-17. Scala. I’ve gradually been learning Scala over the past few months and I really have been enjoying it. For me Scala is like Shakespeare. It seems familiar and totally foreign at the same time. I don’t enjoy Shakespeare plays nearly as much as someone who has taken the time to learn the language of Shakespeare. Some have interpreted Scala being “familiar yet totally foreign” as Scala being “hard” but I’d say it’s ...

  4. Jul 18, 2012 · About James Ward; The Magic Behind Heroku’s “git push” Deployment. 2012-07-18. Heroku. In my spare time I help out with a little app called [Greg’s Toolkit][1] that was built before I knew about Heroku. The app runs on EC2 and deploying new versions of the app is pretty tedious. Here is the deployment instructions copied directly from the project’s wiki:

  5. Jul 7, 2010 · To create a pure JavaScript AMF library the first thing that is needed is a pure JavaScript ByteArray library since JavaScript doesn’t natively have one. I used one from adamia.com since it was similar to the ByteArray in Flash Player, seemed fast, and seemed to parse floats correctly. This ByteArray has some of the basic functions like ...

  6. Apr 25, 2012 · That is super simple and now I’m managing my web libraries as dependencies! Note: Play 2 actually puts a copy of jQuery in the default project template but hopefully for Play 2.1 they will pull it out and instead use the jQuery WebJar.

  7. Sep 24, 2014 · Jekyll is simple static content compiler popularized by GitHub Pages. If you use Jekyll in a GitHub repo a static website will automatically be created for you by running Jekyll on your content sources (e.g. Markdown). That works well but there are cases where it is nice to deploy a Jekyll site on Heroku. After trying (and failing) to follow many of the existing blogs about running Jekyll on Heroku, I cornered my coworker Terence Lee and got some help.