Daily Shaarli
June 26, 2025
An old paper which is still very relevant today. It's very much written in the context of the early women's liberation movement, and yet the lessons a much more broadly applicable.
You like weird bugs involving shell implementations, syscalls and filesystems? Somehow I do, this was an interesting one.
The whole Scrum training and certification industry has a problem... and it's been going on for a long time.
A bit of a forgotten approach I think. A good way to quickly gauge projects, show the amount of work and spot the dependencies.
I like this kind of oddities in languages. This is nice to see such a list for Rust at a single place.
Good advice. Since I got to review quite a few... I'd like to see them more like that. The worst part is when one also fails to point his accomplishments during the interview. I ask specific questions about this and most time get nothing meaningful in return.
This piece is a bit too much written as Rust zealotry for my taste. That being said, there's in my opinion an interesting core truth hidden in there: for now it seems to better foster "expert generalists" when investing in it. Now it might be just for now and might stop later... time will tell.