This newer standard brings up interesting features again. I'm especially interested in std:expected myself.
This is a huge release. Lots of very strong and needed feature to be a competitive engine. Congrats!
Definitely this. I think this could have turned into a good term until it was used for everything under the sun. It's about maintainability first, not just about what you like or not.
Interesting new compression format around the corner. Might turn out useful in some cases. I could definitely have used it last year for a test harness with very large reference data (so no, not gaming).
Development is and has to be a team sport indeed.
That's a good set of questions to ask ourselves when in contact with a product claiming the use of "AI".
Very nice set of rules. They are very simple to apply individually. The art is in respecting it all of course.
This really looks like a nice library for symbolic maths. Keep in mind it's python based but it goes all the way to generating solutions to the given problem in various languages.
A bit too much written in superlatives for my taste. Still, this is an interesting set of qualities indeed. Definitely things to aim for.
They're definitely a powerful tool. I see them used in a few places but definitely not enough.
Good musing about simple code and complexity. We definitely should avoid unwarranted complexity in our code, or at least try to prevent it's spreading.
Having taught quite a bit at the university, having interviewed quite a few junior developers... I have to agree what's proposed here is missing from most curricula. I wish this would be taught more systematically. If not at least students everywhere should know this online course exists.
Coming from Zombie Nokia, still I think we need more options like this. It is the number one solution to reduce ecological footprints of computing.
OK, definitely a gutsy move... Still this is an interesting approach for a complex system. Better have a controlled early failure if you can get it, than a complete collapse later on. This might be just the incentive you need for real organizational change.
Not earth shattering benchmark, kind of confirms what we can expect on the concurrency and REST side of things: Rust, Go > .NET > JVM
That's an interesting perspective. Rust definitely gets in the way of iterating quickly indeed which might be a problem to test ideas. Introducing it gradually later is thus a better path. That being said it doesn't always have a great story for mixing with other languages, there are a few tools to help, but nothing I've seen really used in the wild so far (this will probably come though).
Interesting and surprising limitation. This makes a lot of sense when you think about the set of images used for training though. Also says something about our own art history.
Another impressive feat from the people behind the Cosmopolitan project. A self contained and portable binary which run your Django application on almost any platform? Apparently doable. The versions used for the dependencies are a bit old but that's clearly something which will be solved soon.
Alright, that's an impressive set of tools they created to build their games. Lots of efforts went into this, very inspiring.
If you didn't have an adblocker yet (who doesn't really?) it's time to really think about it. When even the FBI starts to advocate for ad blockers it's a sign of how bad the online ad market has become.