Interesting alternative retrospective format. The way of framing the questions might help get new ideas.
This is definitely a funny hack. I wonder how long the people behind this knew about the vulnerability and waited for the right opportunity to do something with it.
Looks like a nice resource to get better at finding the root cause of performance regressions and optimising code.
Interesting stuff. This should ease greatly sharing code between shaders and the host application, especially for data specification which is easy to get wrong.
It's meant to be humorous, but this says something interesting about how design and marketing evolves.
Wow, very smart approach to solve discontinuity issues when quads are turned into triangles.
Looks like an interesting alternative to HTMX to come. Might go further enough that it has the potential to displace things like React as well.
I hope people using Grok enjoy their queries... Because they come with direct environmental and health consequences.
This is very interesting research. This confirms that LLMs can't be trusted on any output they make about their own inference. The example about simple maths is particularly striking, the real inference and what it outputs if you ask about its inference process are completely different.
Now for the topic dearest to my heart: It looks like there's some form of concept graph hiding in there which is reapplied across languages. Now we don't know if a particular language influences that graph. I don't expect the current research to explore this question yet, but looking forward to someone tackling it.
Neat little trick for services which you'd be running locally.
It's little known that regular Git has a server mode. The thing is that it's not often useful beyond sharing over the local network. Know this tool leverages magic wormhole to share repositories with peers over the Internet. This is really cool stuff in my opinion.
This is a good list of skills and behaviour to develop if you want to get better at our craft.
Personal backups don't have to be fancy... And probably shouldn't.
Nice piece to give ideas about what type of diagram to consider depending what you're exploring.
Unsurprisingly, hiring scams are becoming more elaborate. Keep it in mind for your upcoming interviews.
There's some truth to this. It's easier to market yourself as a specialist rather than a generalist... This doesn't make it easy.
This is clearly needed. This should increase the maturity of the security practice around Fediverse software.
It's indeed a vicious circle. Also it seems easy to fall into this particular trap, I see it in many places.
Good approach to detect problems early and manage the risks they'll bear.
Sure, you get good memory safety with Rust. It's important and welcome, but it's just the beginning of the story.