A bit of a long rant, still the core of the argument stays true. Apple will do everything in its power to keep their platform captive of their app store.
Good advice yes. Having a rough architecture document in a repository is more than welcome, it's needed to help on-boarding. This is unfortunately not the norm in FOSS projects.
Definitely this, mind the complexity you introduce in your code. Looking smart is not the goal here...
Interesting paper attempting to prove that hallucinations are unavoidable in those models. It is well balanced though, and explains why it's not necessarily a bad thing in theory. In my opinion, the problem is the marketing talk around those models making grand claims or denying the phenomenon.
A good exploration of the Fediverse to Bluesky bridging debate from the angle of consent and the GDPR. It's complicated and that shouldn't come as unexpected.
I'm not sure if it's malice... but for sure they harmed RSS use a lot during the years.
Interesting library if you got to do a lots of heavy analysis work with strings.
Neat extension to blend your web browsing and discovering people on the Fediverse.
Nice list of tips and recent git features to manage large repositories.
Something is definitely bonkers regarding the use of JavaScript on the web. The amount of bloat is staggering.
Neat article about colorspaces. Definitely worth reading if you're curious about the topic. It also has interactive bits to ease the understanding.
A trip down memory lane when such attacks were indeed common. Nowadays, we know better though.
Turns out to be an interesting discussion about modularity. It's probably a good approach even for a one liner in a script.
Check out the docs branch for detailed explanations. This exhibits a loop hole in the Rust compiler allowing to break lifetime inference... and from there all the usual guarantees go through the window.
Interesting, I didn't know that user space schedulers were coming to Linux. It opens the door to exciting experiments.
Nice tricks to debug the very early boot process, starting at PID 1. gdbserver saves the day here.
This is indeed an odd situation... there is no good explanation about why this is like this.
Interesting explanation of the guarantees such a system must provide and their consequences.
Very funny glitch. This anti-spam system is smart... too bad the wrong victim got in the crosshair.
Definitely true, this is mostly about avoiding false positives. Still I don't like online assessments platforms either... you need to see how the candidate is doing, interact with them, etc.