Nice intro for regular people who want to get into publishing a web site. Good way to bring some democracy back to the web.
Looks like we properly live by the "simple by default, powerful when needed" tagline. Now there are also challenges, this article gives a nice balanced view.
The latest Nobel prizes indeed say something about the presence of computer scientists in other fields. Do we risk to delve too much on theoretical model? For sure using computers helps a lot, we have to be careful about not loosing empirical validation in the process.
This is a neat broad introduction about the problems you will encounter when multiple threads are involved and how to approach them.
Nice post, and indeed it's not about Python if you read until the end. It shows that it's important to be able to make informed choices and not just pick your tech stack based on knee-jerk reactions.
I don't think I would side with the conclusion. It's a worthwhile article to get a better idea of the pain points around htmx.
Excellent point, we made the web too complex for regular users. This is actually an issue in term of access and democracy for people to write content there.
Indeed, we should likely revisit what we put in our PATH environment variable. Some of it is old cruft which is now unnecessary.
Another good tutorial about global illumination. Make sure to read part 2 as well.
It's really time to get as many people as possible out of those toxic ecosystems...
I'm not sure I'm sold on this one. Interesting food for thought but I'll have to mull it over for a while I think. I'm concerned about the performance implications of querying like this.
Still very early days on this topic, clearly more studies are required. Still this one is interesting and indicates are clear link between code review anxiety and code review avoidance. If you're often procrastinating or rubber stamping code reviews, a workshop to reduce biases and showing you can manage your anxiety could improve things greatly.
Yes, the governance of Open Source projects can be tricky. This is part of the job though, and properly embraced we all go further. An example from the Wayland space.
Several ways to deal with the task, which are the performance implications? Clearly coroutines aren't the best tool for the job here.
Nice catalogue of ideas for data visualisation tasks.
Indeed, we should stop listening to such people who are basically pushing fantasies in order to raise more money.
OK, this paper picked my curiosity. The limitations of the experiments makes me wonder if some threshold effects aren't ignored. Still this is a good indication that the question is worth pursuing further.
Interesting proposals, let's see how far they go. They could bring most of the benefits of htmx and similar straight in HTML.
As it gets more adoption people are figuring out ways to use htmx properly and not abuse what should be niche features.
How shocking! This was all hype? Not surprised since we've seen the referenced papers before, but put all together it makes things really clear.