You'd expect Mozilla to know better. This is disappointing, they're no living up to their responsibility.
Interesting approach to building a new code review system. I somehow doubt it'll get traction unfortunately but it has nice ideas baked in.
A paper listing patterns to reduce latency as much as possible. There are lesser known tricks in there.
Nice little reference of what can be done with std::filesystem.
Looks like an interesting library to build portable GPU compute workloads. Cleverly tries to leverage WebGPU.
Funny experiment at drawing parallels between engineering leadership and how you should behave when hiking in nature. This works surprisingly well.
We keep finding floppies in use at surprising places. There's clearly lot of inertia for technologies getting replaced.
I'm rarely on the side of a Goldman Sachs... Still this paper seems to be spot on. The equation between the costs (financial and ecological) and the value we get out of generative AI isn't balanced at all. Also, since it is stuck on trying to improve mostly on model scale and amount of data it is doomed to plateau in its current form.
Nice advices to deal with underperforming teams or individuals. Making the distinction between refusal to align or failure to execute is particularly useful.
This one is more self-help than I'm usually comfortable with... somehow something rung true to me with it. It's indeed a good reminder that changing habits takes a while. It's an exercise in patience and there are good reasons for it.
Wow! This is a really bad data breach. Apparently related to the recent data theft on the Snowflake end.
The European Commission starts showing it's muscles. Twitter is an obvious one to pursue since it became the X cesspool.
The title is a bit pushing it. Still, I didn't realize some of the fine prints of the Ubuntu support schemes.
It's nice to have a balanced view on the matter. It's not just roses and rainbows. This gives a good overview of the current limitations and where Rust can give most benefits in the kernel.
It's time to push European governments to abandon this nonsense.
Good tour of all the way dependencies might get compromised in your supply chain. Getting this easy to detect is needed.
An interesting puzzle to pursue. Is it possible to rebuild exactly the same binary distribution packages?
Those brand new models keep failing at surprisingly simple tasks.
Ever wondered how attributes work in Python under the hood? Here is how.
Very long read but will be an essential resource to have a fine understanding of text rendering in its current form.