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SoftwareEngineeringBlooger.com team is all about the software engineering topics. It could be anything from low-level programming information to high-level information such as SDLC (Software Development Life Cycle).

We would like to thank you for reading articles on our blog.


Almir Mustafic
Editor in Chief

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Teaching kids the importance of information security — A simple fun example with encoding/decoding

Teaching kids about information security is very important today because the social network websites and applications are blurring the line between what should be shared securely and what not. Everybody is busy over-sharing the good, bad and ugly over the internet and in the process of doing that forgetting the basics of information security or never taking the time to learn it. Or is it that nobody is introducing these concepts in school? It is something that needs to be introduced in our education systems from early days. Do you remember the days when we used to send those short messages on a piece of paper in our classrooms? Some encoded those messages because you did not want another person in the middle to open it and understand what it says. How were those messages encoded? The simplest example is: You create a simple mapping for each letter and number in the alphabet. Then you encode your message and write it on a piece of paper. Then the person on the other end decodes

Driving Manual-transmission cars and C/C++ Programmers — What do they have in common?

You may ask what the drivers of traditional manual-transmission cars and C/C++ programmers have anything to do with each other. Well, I am a software engineer and I am also a car enthusiast (aka a petrolhead in UK). I am noticing certain trends in both the car industry and the software engineering community/industry; therefore, I wanted to share my opinions. I started programming in Basic before I even owned my own computer. I remember when I first learned a for-loop in Basic, I walked over to my friend’s house and typed it up on his Commodore 64. When I was in high-school, I did more Basic (Better Basic and QuickBASIC) and also some Turing (not Turing Machine….I am talking about a language invented by University of Toronto to teach programming and it was Pascal-like). Then I switched to C/C++ and learned all about proper handling of memory and what we call “unmanaged” code these days. C/C++ were the choice if you wanted to do some low-level programming or also if you wanted to

SERVICE NAMES, BOUNDARIES (domain lines) and API DEFINITIONS/STANDARDS

SERVICE NAMES, BOUNDARIES (domain lines) and API DEFINITIONS/STANDARDS are some of many important things to achieve the enterprise-level microservice architecture and microservices. Names mean things. So you first need to properly name your services and that’s the names that you would use when talking to your teammates and clients of your services/APIs. I have a separate article on how you go about defining what a microservice is. That's titled "Micro in Microservices" on my site almirsCorner .com. Essentially, you need define the purpose and boundaries of your service. Then you get into API routes and properly defining them for each service. The goal is to keep the routes RESTful and if you run into the situation when they are not, then it should trigger you to revisit the purpose and boundaries of that given microservice. Maybe that service needs to be split into smaller services. Thank you for reading this. Almir Mustafic