There is indeed a trade-off approach available nowadays between "backend computes the whole page" and "frontend computes it all in JS". This sounds like an interesting patch depending on the project context.
It was only a matter of time until this kind of things would be doable through webassembly. I'm wondering about the size of the payloads the browser needs to download though.
This is in part a rant but lots of points in there are very valid. This is in part why I don't find Go a very compelling option so far. Modern tooling indeed, nice runtime in some areas but leaves way too much of the complexity in imperative code.
Behind the hype... a speculative bubble completely out of touch with reality.
Excellent news, hoping to see more such bogus patents cancelled. Also, one can hope, that patent offices would start becoming less sloppy...
Looks like it's still in the very early days but the overall approach looks interesting.
Good arguments around the microservices hype. People advocate for it way more than reasonable, this applies only in rare contexts.
Good explanation of why the complexity of CSS code quickly gets out of control.
A good reminder that it's not all rosy with Python type-hints. There's definitely room for improvements.
This looks like a very interesting tracing tool for debugging and profiling purposes.
That looks like a very interesting tool for larger Python based projects. Definitely need a way to profile memory use in there.
I like this approach to technical interview questions. I do something similar in some cases with a mix of reading and writing.
Interesting to see how a more widespread remote work impact people. Unexpected patterns appear, it's clearly not all for the better though.
Good list of interesting CLI tools. I adopted quite a few of them, there are more I'd like to evaluate.
Funny experiment, that's a seriously small docker image now!
This is a good example in my opinion: stick with simple choices as long as possible, invest the complexity where it matters.
Interesting use of Rust behind a Python API. This is IMO an interesting niche for the language.
Nice list of lesser known tricks with Python formatted string literals.
OK, definitely not something I'd advise by default. Still, if you're in the right situation that might be an option. The fact that they don't deploy in one go is definitely a factor here.
OK... now that's really neat for most teaching situations. I want one. :-)