OK, now this is out and potentially a big deal to have this in open source.
Good news for the right to repair movement. I wish they would stop DRM'ing equipments like this...
Indeed, this is going to be "interesting" in educational situations... I guess that'll at least push into richer assignments.
I definitely recommend adopting this mindset. Been doing most of that for a long time and this definitely helps.
Very interesting account of the techniques evaluated to reach real time global illumination in the Unreal Engine.
This is unfortunately very much true. Was only a matter of time I guess. The "grass is greener" effect is indeed the most likely reason.
Neat little list of tips, indeed some are useful and I didn't know about them.
Very nice catalog! Looks like a useful reference.
Big shout out to make, one of my favorites Unix tools. I like some of the ideas for improvements listed here.
Very early times but this could become interesting. Maybe worth keeping an eye on.
Very good point of view about metrics and their use. We're unfortunately very often measuring the wrong things or using them the wrong way.
Nice primer on how Redis works and the type of deployments you can choose from.
Interesting point of view... indeed, let's see what rises from the ashes.
Interesting Java history put in perspective. Indeed it's been stagnant and have been picking up again... reminds me of another famous language.
This is not done often, but when you need it... you need it.
Good news for anyone who got to target that evil platform... if you have to make a multiplatform application this might ease your pain.
Admittedly I share the sentiment... I don't think there is any viable solution in sight though.
Lots of good advices about processes and organizations. It's nicely points out that friction is not necessarily wrong... if you get something out of it.
Also neat reminder in there that code review are here to complete work which is already socialized somehow. If you can't find reviewers it's a sign of an organizational problem when the work started.
That looks like a nifty and convenient tool.
That's an intersecting Typescript pattern to get to nominal and refinement types despite the fact they lack from the language.