GitHub For Beginners: Don’t Get Scared, Get Started [PART 1 of 2] | ReadWrite


It’s 2013, and there’s no way around it: you need to learn how to use GitHub. 

Why? Because it’s a social network that has completely changed the way we work. Having started as a developer’s collaborative platform, GitHub is now the largest online storage space of collaborative works that exists in the world. Whether you’re interested in participating in this global mind meld or in researching this massive file dump of human knowledge, you need to be here.

Read: GitHub For Beginners: Don’t Get Scared, Get Started  [PART 1 of 2] | ReadWrite.

50 Foreign-Language Films Everyone Needs to See, 1963-2013 | Flavorwire


It’s true that American filmmaking inspired a global appreciation of the cinematic art form, but it’s impossible to deny the international influence on film by important auteurs from countries around the globe. With the inclusion of Federico Fellini, Luis Buñuel, Costa-Gavras, François Truffaut, Akira Kurosawa, Pedro Almodóvar, and countless others, this list of essential films from non-English-speaking countries proves that American filmmaking has taken inspiration from countless artists working in many languages. Spotlighting just one film per year in the last half-century, here’s our list of 50 foreign-language films any true movie buff should see. 

See the list: 50 Foreign-Language Films Everyone Needs to See, 1963-2013 | Flavorwire.

Why Women Leave Tech Companies, And What To Do About It | Co.Exist


[T]oday, women still leave tech companies at double the rate of men. Even the women who make it past all the hurdles of being a female in the field–the lack of role models, sexism, and so on–don’t stay very long.

Women Technologists Count, a new report from the Anita Borg Institute (ABI), examines the reasons why women in mid-level roles tend to leave technical career paths to become managers–or decide to leave the industry altogether. ABI offers up pages upon pages of recommendations on how to keep women in technology, but they boil it down to this:

Why Women Leave Tech Companies, And What To Do About It | Co.Exist | ideas + impact

Read the full story: Why Women Leave Tech Companies, And What To Do About It | Co.Exist | ideas + impact.

Google Launches Web Designer, A Visual Tool For Building Interactive HTML5 Sites And Ads | TechCrunch


Google today announced the launch of Web Designer, a new tool for building interactive HTML5 sites and ads. The company first hinted at this launch in June, but had been quiet about it ever since. Web Designer, which Google calls a “professional-quality design tool,” is now officially in public beta and available for download for Mac and Windows.

Read: Google Launches Web Designer, A Visual Tool For Building Interactive HTML5 Sites And Ads | TechCrunch.

Classic Leadership Skills You Should Apply to Your Social Life | LifeHacker


What makes a great leader makes a great friend. Nobody wants to think of their social life as a business that needs management, but many of the best leadership techniques can apply to our lives outside of work. Here’s a look at some people who have set good examples in their respective professions, and how you can apply those things to your daily social life.

Read the full story: Classic Leadership Skills You Should Apply to Your Social Life | LifeHacker.

Principal sues students over parody Facebook, Twitter accounts | CNET News


An Oregon middle school educator tries to paint his mocking students as hackers in order to bring an action against them under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

Read: Principal sues students over parody Facebook, Twitter accounts | CNET News.

Stolen phones blacklist launches in Canada | CBC News


Cellphones, tablets and other wireless devices that have been reported lost or stolen can no longer be activated — and therefore used — on most wireless networks in Canada, following the launch of a new national “blacklist” of such devices Monday.

Read the full story: Stolen phones blacklist launches in Canada | Technology & Science | CBC News.

Why Free Software Is More Important Now Than Ever Before | Richard Stallman | Wired.com


It is now 30 years since I launched the campaign for freedom in computing, that is, for software to be free or “libre” (we use that word to emphasize that we’re talking about freedom, not price). Some proprietary programs, such as Photoshop, are very expensive; others, such as Flash Player, are available gratis — either way, they subject their users to someone else’s power.

Much has changed since the beginning of the free software movement: Most people in advanced countries now own computers — sometimes called “phones” — and use the internet with them. Non-free software still makes the users surrender control over their computing to someone else, but now there is another way to lose it: Service as a Software Substitute, or SaaSS, which means letting someone else’s server do your own computing activities.

Both non-free software and SaaSS can spy on the user, shackle the user, and even attack the user. Malware is common in services and proprietary software products because the users don’t have control over them. That’s the fundamental issue: while non-free software and SaaSS are controlled by some other entity (typically a corporation or a state), free software is controlled by its users.

Why does this control matter? Because freedom means having control over your own life.

If you use a program to carry out activities in your life, your freedom depends on your having control over the program. You deserve to have control over the programs you use, and all the more so when you use them for something important in your life.

Read the full story: Why Free Software Is More Important Now Than Ever Before | Richard Stallman | Wired.com

Web/Mobile Technology Trends for 2013 | AWWWARDS

Image


Web/Mobile Technology Trends for 2013

Visual & UX Design Trends for 2013 | AWWWards

Image


Visual & UX Design Trends for 2013