Pure and Julia are cool languages worth checking out
Network World - Ah! The fresh aroma of the New Year accompanied by the aroma of fresh new tech! I love the smell of geekiness ... Mmmm. This week, we'll start with some uber-geekosity: A couple of really interesting programming languages.
The first is called Pure and it's web site describes the language as "a modern-style functional programming language based on term rewriting. It offers equational definitions with pattern matching, full symbolic rewriting capabilities, dynamic typing, eager and lazy evaluation, lexical closures, built-in list and matrix support and an easy-to-use C interface."
Wikipedia explains that "functional programming" is "a programming paradigm that treats computation as the evaluation of mathematical functions and avoids state and mutable data," and the site gives an example of a Pure program that prints the first 1,000 Fibonacci numbers:
extern int puts(char*); do (puts.str) (take 1000 (fibs 0L 1L)) with fibs a b = a : fibs b (a+b) & end;
Fascinating stuff. Pure is available, for free, for FreeBSD, GNU/Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows and licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License V3.
The other language that's worth checking out is Julia, "a high-level, high-performance dynamic programming language for technical computing, with syntax that is familiar to users of other technical computing environments. It provides a sophisticated compiler, distributed parallel execution, numerical accuracy, and an extensive mathematical function library."
Julia's support for parallelism is intriguing as the language "provides a number of key building blocks for distributed computation, making it flexible enough to support a number of styles of parallelism, and allowing users to add more." The site gives an example of counting, in parallel, the number of heads in a large number of coin tosses:
nheads = @parallel (+) for i=1:100000000 randbit() end
The @parallel directive automatically distributes the calculation "across all available compute nodes, and the result, reduced by summation (+), is returned at the calling node."
I'd love to see Julia implemented on Parallela, a Kickstarter project I was amped about last year, that succeeded in raising almost $900,000 on its goal of $750,000. Described as "A Supercomputer For Everyone," this $99 board, which runs Linux, will support a performance of 26 GFLOPS and should be perfect for a language like Julia.
Enough of the rarified stuff: Here's something that may make you more productive in 2013 ... Mindjet Tasks.
I wrote about Mindjet last May when the company released Mindjet Maps for iPad and Android and for iPhone.
I still think that these apps ... which are free! ... are indispensable planning tools. Late last year, Mindjet released another iOS app that's related to mind-mapping: Mindjet Tasks.
Mindjet Tasks allows you and your team to set up dashboards for projects so you can coordinate planning from wherever you have a cell signal. If you do have some kind of connection, then Mindjet Tasks allows you to make on-the-fly task assignments with real-time updates and team postings. It will also auto-prioritize tasks and can share data with MindJet on OS X and Windows.
I've always been an admirer of Mindjet and Mindjet Tasks looks like a very slick addition to their product line. I'll give it a Gearhead rating of 5 out of 5!
Gibbs is geeked out but organized in Ventura, Calif. Your resolutions to gearhead@gibbs.com and follow him on Twitter and App.net (@quistuipater) and on Facebook (quistuipater).
Read more about software in Network World's Software section.
- Google I/O 2013's Coolest Products and Services
- 10 Star Trek Technologies That are Almost Here
- 19 Generations of Computer Programmers
- 25 Must-Have Technologies for SMBs
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Seven Contact Center Trends You Can't Ignore Rapid changes are underway in the world of traditional contact centers. It starts with the disruptive nature of social media and mobile apps,...
- Top Ten Reasons Customers Choose Siemens Enterprise Communications to Help Transform their Business Trusted by over 75% of the Fortune 500, Siemens Enterprise Communications is the only vendor to provide the complete range of Voice, UCC...
- Amplify collective effort. Dramatically improve performance. Discover why now is the time to revisit the untapped potential of team performance and leverage team collaboration as a vital corporate asset.
- The Untapped Potential of Virtual Teams The results from a recent global research study show that while the vast majority of organizations rely on remote, distributed and mobile team...
- Modernizing Wireless Infrastructure for Today's Mobile and Data Driven Enterprise Find out some of the compelling drivers and unique challenges that the Georgia Dome had to address to prepare the stadium for a...
- 5 Ways to Keep the Heart of Your IT Beating Strong in 2013 Your IT investments should bring you some combination of results, relief, and reward. So how do you make sure your ongoing data center... All Networking White Papers | Webcasts
The old PacBell building at 140 New Montgomery Street, San Francisco, (@140nm) was wired for connectivity long before the needs of a tenant like Yelp would make 21st century demands. But even this telecom landmark needs some major infrastructure improvements to support the companies it expects to move in soon. more