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There are many more useful codes than are generally used. We shouldn't shy away from using them when it makes sense, it also means the client side must be ready for them. Very often client code makes wrong assumptions on the possible codes.
Nice post explaining the common algorithms used for load balancing. Each having their own trade offs of course. Well done with tiny simulations.
Interesting piece. It shows quite well what users have lost with the over reliance on HTTP for everything. Moving more and more things in the brother fosters walled gardens indeed. Compound this with branding obsession from most company and you indeed end up with an absurd situation.
That's a lot which happened in this community over the past year. It's important that is keeps pushing forward and luckily it does.
A good reason to try to make pages as small as possible. Interesting to see where this threshold is coming from.
This is a good thing that the corresponding RFCs keeps being updated.
Funny experiment, that's a seriously small docker image now!
Good reminder that CORS can have an impact regarding the performance of your application.
Interesting benchmarks on HTTP/3. Clearly fares best at long distances.
Very extensive post about CORS. This is fairly complete and shows how quickly it can become complicated.
Looks like an interesting tool for testing when a HTTP server is involved.
Very interesting deep dive into conditional HTTP requests. It fully covers ETag and Last-Modified.
Nice summary of several security headers you can have to deal with for HTTP.
This is a good resource explaining most of what one needs to know about Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS). As usual in such articles, the historical bits are particularly insightful.