Toronto Lisp Users' Group
Search this site
Past meetings
Presentation (April 2013)
Presentation & Discussion (January 2013)
Presentations (December 2012)
Discussion Meeting (October 2012)
Discussion Meeting (September 2012)
Discussion Meeting (July 2012)
Discussion Meeting (June 2012)
Discussion meeting (May 2012)
Discussion meeting (April 2012)
Discussion Meeting (March 2012)
Discussion meeting (February 2012)
Discussion Meeting (January 2012)
Discussion Meeting (December 2011)
Discussion Meeting (November 2011)
Discussion Meeting (October 2011)
Discussion meeting (September 2011)
Discussion meeting (June 2011)
Discussion meeting (May 2011)
GDL presentation (April 2011)
Discussion meeting (March 2011)
Discussion meeting (February 2011)
Discussion meeting (January 2011)
Discussion meeting (December 2010)
Discussion meeting (November 2010)
Discussion meeting (October 2010)
Discussion meeting (September 2010)
Discussion meeting (August 2010)
Discussion meeting (July 2010)
Discussion meeting (June 2010)
Discussion meeting (May 2010)
Discussion meeting (April 2010)
Discussion meeting (March 2010)
Discussion meeting (February 2010)
Discussion meeting (January 2010)
Discussion meeting (December 2009)
Discussion meeting (November 2009)
Discussion meeting (October 2009)
Discussion meeting (September 2009)
Discussion meeting (August 2009)
Discussion meeting (July 2009)
Discussion meeting (June 2009)
Clojure Ants demo (May 2009)
Discussion meeting (April 2009)
Clojure meeting (March 2009)
Factor presentation (February 2009)
Past Meetings
>
Discussion meeting (June 2009)
Date: June 2, 2009
Location: Linux Caffe
Attending:
Ian
Vish Singh
Brian Connoy
Doug Hoyte
Paul Tarvydas
Rick Innis
Mark Bolusmjak
This was a general discussion meeting.
We discussed Steve Mann and his work:
http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/~mann/
We discussed security issues. Hacker News, an application written in Paul Graham's Arc, was
hacked
.
Security is hard. Don't implement your own crypto. Even the professionals get it wrong:
a timing attack was found in Google's KeyCzar library
.
We looked at
almost.at
, an application for following events in real-time, written using the web framework
Cappuccino
.
Comments