Bienvenidos al canon digital
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 30 20:56 (updated on 2011- 06- 30 20:56)- with 0 comment(s)
WikiLeaks banking blockage advertisement
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 29 20:50 (updated on 2011- 06- 29 20:50)- with 0 comment(s)
Y River se fue a la B
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 27 00:12 (updated on 2011- 06- 27 00:12)- with 0 comment(s)
Me cago en el fútbol, pero no podía pasar esto por alto. Como la nevada en Buenos Aires, era algo que no pensaba ver jamás, pero ahí lo tienen =P
Building
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 25 21:07 (updated on 2011- 06- 25 21:07)- with 0 comment(s)
Amanecer @ Villa Urquiza
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 25 21:05 (updated on 2011- 06- 25 21:05)- with 0 comment(s)
Retiro
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 25 21:03 (updated on 2011- 06- 25 21:03)- with 0 comment(s)
Torre de Babel
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 25 21:02 (updated on 2011- 06- 25 21:02)- with 0 comment(s)
Two dogs dining in a busy restaurant
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 24 15:49 (updated on 2011- 06- 24 15:49)- with 0 comment(s)
Aballay, El Hombre Sin Miedo
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 24 02:44 (updated on 2011- 06- 24 02:44)- with 0 comment(s)
Película bizarra, eh... Me da curiosidad.
Berlin
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 16 16:19 (updated on 2011- 06- 16 16:19)- with 0 comment(s)
Babasónicos - Dopádromo
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 13 02:02 (updated on 2011- 06- 13 02:02)- with 0 comment(s)
I was just listening to Dopádromo from Babasónicos and thinking: what a good album!
The Architecture of Open Source Applications
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 07 00:56 (updated on 2011- 06- 07 00:56)- with 0 comment(s)
The Architecture of Open Source Applications
Architects look at thousands of buildings during their training, and study critiques of those buildings written by masters. In contrast, most software developers only ever get to know a handful of large programs well—usually programs they wrote themselves—and never study the great programs of history. As a result, they repeat one another's mistakes rather than building on one another's successes.
This book's goal is to change that. In it, the authors of twenty-five open source applications explain how their software is structured, and why. What are each program's major components? How do they interact? And what did their builders learn during their development? In answering these questions, the contributors to this book provide unique insights into how they think.
If you are a junior developer, and want to learn how your more experienced colleagues think, this book is the place to start. If you are an intermediate or senior developer, and want to see how your peers have solved hard design problems, this book can help you too.
I hope I can find the time to read this (at least some chapters).
It's ALIVE!
by Leandro Lucarella on 2011- 06- 05 00:45 (updated on 2011- 06- 05 00:45)- with 2 comment(s)
Thank you Garrett, you saved my bike! =D
Today I got, after looking for one for several months, my derailleur hanger!
Raleigh (both Argentina and USA) were completely unhelpful, so I got to find it somewhere else, and finally found one at bicyclederailleurhangers.com (mine is #22 =).
I hope tomorrow I can finally fix my bike.
/me happy!