Thrift Store Saints


Book Description

First place winner for "Popular Presentation of the Catholic Faith" from the Catholic Press Association! Thrift Store Saints is a collection of true stories based on Jane Knuth’s experiences serving the poor at a St. Vincent de Paul thrift store in the inner city of Kalamazoo, Michigan. At the outset of the book, Knuth is a reluctant new volunteer at the store, sharing that her middle-class, suburban, church-going background has not prepared her well for this kind of work. By the end of the book, Knuth has undergone a transformation of sorts, and neither she nor we can ever view the poor in the same way again. Knuth’s transformation is rooted in the prevailing message of Thrift Store Saints: When we serve the poor, they end up helping us as much as we help them. Throughout the book we are introduced to new “saints,” as Knuth thoughtfully, at times humorously, describes how her encounters with the poorest people led her to the greatest riches of God’s grace. Thrift Store Saints makes clear that it doesn’t require heroic Mother Teresa-types to make a difference with the poor, and it even more powerfully shows us that working with them is not gloomy, depressing work. Knuth’s moving stories demonstrate the profound joy any of us can experience when we see serving the poor not as social work, but as a spiritual path that leads us to the heart of Jesus.







Programmer's Guide to Apache Thrift


Book Description

Summary Programmer's Guide to Apache Thrift provides comprehensive coverage of the Apache Thrift framework along with a developer's-eye view of modern distributed application architecture. Foreword by Jens Geyer. About the Technology Thrift-based distributed software systems are built out of communicating components that use different languages, protocols, and message types. Sitting between them is Thrift, which handles data serialization, transport, and service implementation. Thrift supports many client and server environments and a host of languages ranging from PHP to JavaScript, and from C++ to Go. About the Book Programmer's Guide to Apache Thrift provides comprehensive coverage of distributed application communication using the Thrift framework. Packed with code examples and useful insight, this book presents best practices for multi-language distributed development. You'll take a guided tour through transports, protocols, IDL, and servers as you explore programs in C++, Java, and Python. You'll also learn how to work with platforms ranging from browser-based clients to enterprise servers. What's inside Complete coverage of Thrift's IDL Building and serializing complex user-defined types Plug-in protocols, transports, and data compression Creating cross-language services with RPC and messaging systems About the Reader Readers should be comfortable with a language like Python, Java, or C++ and the basics of service-oriented or microservice architectures. About the Author Randy Abernethy is an Apache Thrift Project Management Committee member and a partner at RX-M. Table of Contents Introduction to Apache Thrift Apache Thrift architecture Building, testing, and debugging Moving bytes with transports Serializing data with protocols Apache Thrift IDL User-defined types Implementing services Handling exceptions Servers Building clients and servers with C++ Building clients and servers with Java Building C# clients and servers with .NET Core and Windows Building Node.js clients and servers Apache Thrift and JavaScript Scripting Apache Thrift Thrift in the enterprise




Legislative Document


Book Description













The Code of Federal Regulations of the United States of America


Book Description

The Code of Federal Regulations is the codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the Federal Government.