NAT punching for peer to peer networking Computer Science |
- NAT punching for peer to peer networking
- From WYSIWYG to LaTeX to LaTeX in 2019
- Design a Least Recently Used Cache
- How do text messaging services work
- From where can i learn networking for free in very simple and easy way?
- Final Year Project
- New to computers could use some tips.
NAT punching for peer to peer networking Posted: 21 Sep 2019 10:50 PM PDT |
From WYSIWYG to LaTeX to LaTeX in 2019 Posted: 21 Sep 2019 09:31 AM PDT |
Design a Least Recently Used Cache Posted: 21 Sep 2019 06:47 PM PDT |
How do text messaging services work Posted: 21 Sep 2019 01:13 PM PDT Hello everyone, This might seem to some like a dumb question, but i am interested to know how do applications like snapchat, viber stay connected to the server and recieve messages seconds after they are sent.. How i would do is to send a request to the server checking if new messages are available, then the server will respond with the new messages, but i think this is not the way they work, since it would not be very efficient, so is there any other way they do it? [link] [comments] |
From where can i learn networking for free in very simple and easy way? Posted: 21 Sep 2019 11:28 AM PDT I want to learn networking in very simple and easy way . Can someone refer me in some videos or free books PDFs link. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Sep 2019 08:12 AM PDT I have a few days to decide what my final year project is going to be. I am stressing due to the fact I know I am just an ok programmer and I am afraid of picking something too hard. I am interested/experienced mainly in Web apps using Laravel and Django. I have less experience with android studios but I would be interested in doing a project in it. I was thinking about a time usage app which tracks your device's activity and displays it in a nice interface with graphs making it into meaningful data and Also, I was looking at an mp3 GUI web app to store your MP3 files and play them. Just need some inspiration for some ideas, any recommendation would be great. [link] [comments] |
New to computers could use some tips. Posted: 21 Sep 2019 12:00 PM PDT Hi everyone. I've always used computers in my everyday life, however I realize my understanding of them is rather simple. I would really like to understand how what we see on our screen today starts off as programming. It appeals to me as an engineer as a new project. However I can only think of this with my engineer brain and think to reverse engineer a computer to understand it. Is there a simple way for a noob to wipe Windows 10 os off his computer so he can be unrestricted with his machine and just write new commands? I really would like to grow naturally in understanding, and start from scratch. [link] [comments] |
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