Uma lista com mais de 500 livros técnicos gratuitos sobre Linguagens de Programação é mantida no GitHub pelo Victor Felder.
Vale a pena dar uma vista de olhos e começar a aprender mais uma linguagem ;-).
“Um estado totalitário verdadeiramente ‘eficiente’ será aquele em que o todo-poderoso comité dos chefes políticos e o seu exército de directores terá o controlo de uma população de escravos que será inútil constranger, pois todos eles terão amor à sua servidão. Fazer que eles a amem, tal será a tarefa, atribuída nos estados totalitários de hoje aos ministérios de propaganda, aos redactores-chefes dos jornais e aos mestres-escolas.” prefácio de Aldous Huxley à sua obra
Harvard Business Review is the world's acknowledged authority on business leadership for managers responsible for success in the global economy. Now published monthly times a year, HBR delivers entrepreneurial ideas and insights that help managers strengthen their leadership power. Every issue shows how to use technology for competitive advantage. Guides strategic decision making in times of change. Profiles innovative leaders. Tells how to motivate today's workers. Shares the details of successful online alliances, and more.
This document explains how SWIFT proposes an identity oriented architecture as a plugin architecture from different mobility tools, creating a long sought out bridge between multiple mobility protocols, which can differ from domain to domain. As proposed by the SWIFT project, most of the information that flows throughout the network is identity bound. Therefore, the network is no longer device oriented, but rather identity driven. From network access to service consumption, identities are the endpoints of the communication.
As a result, it makes sense that mobility should also be addressed in the same way leading to new concepts, where identity based mobility is in fact the main driver for mobility, rather than classical device oriented mobility, often considered as the de facto standard for current networks. Positioning the identity as the “brain” for mobility, allows turning mobility protocols into what they were designed to do: serve as tools to aid the continuity of a session, while movement occurs.