The writing was on the wall. This is an unsurprising development but Edge users should know where it's going...
This is one of the handful of uses where I'd expect LLMs to shine. It's nice to see some tooling to make it easier.
Looks like I'm a digital packrat of some sort! There are reasons behind it and it's well explained.
Is it the future of web browsers? Maybe... I'm not sure this would be a good thing though.
Nice little paper I overlooked. I agree with it obviously. More tests are not a free pass to let complexity go wild. Architecture and design concerns are still very important even if you TDD properly.
Another example that on such ecosystems you're not really owning your device. Seek alternatives!
They really never learn... Whatever the country politician try to blindly fight against cryptography again and again. Let's hope this one is stopped.
Interesting endeavor... this is nice to have an attempt at a formal definition with no axiom introduced.
Maybe it'll at least be a wake up call for governments and businesses to let go of their US cloud addiction. There are reasons why you don't want such vendor lock-in. The political drama unfolding in the United States makes obvious why you should think carefully at how dependent you are from your service and infrastructure providers.
I'm still baffled people are coming with ideas like this for their businesses... The level of cynicism you must have to build such a startup.
Very interesting discussion weighting the main differences and disagreements between a Philosophy of Software Design, and Clean Code. I read and own both books and those differences were crystal clear, it's nice to see the authors debate them. I'm a bit disappointed at the section about TDD though, I think it could have been a bit more conclusive. It gives me food for thought about my TDD teaching though and confirms some of the messages I'm trying to push to reduce confusion.
Or why even the core git developers don't really use the defaults. This piece gives good knobs to play with in order to have a nicer experience.
It could be so much better indeed. Unfortunately in great part this is about UX design and carrying heavyweight frontend frameworks though...
Not all of this makes sense... Why are they collecting so much from an IDE?
They help with some issues... but they can't solve all the memory safety issues of the language I'm afraid.
This is indeed forgotten features available in our desktop and browsers. It can be very convenient.
We're indeed close to universal HTTPS adoption. One last push please?
Definitely this. It's important for an organization to create knowledge... and this requires both people willing to learn and to teach.
Very interesting paper on the IPv6 transition. It shows quite well the stagnation we're in and provides good arguments about why it is so slow to transition.
This is definitely a fun and interesting project. Such decentralized mesh network are tempting to play with.