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  • Moving my serverless project to Ruby on Rails

    I have a small side project: digital gift cards for hackers. It uses Shopify for all the store-related stuff: frontend, payments, refunds, reports, etc. But unlike regular digital products (ebooks, videos) I wanted each card that the user purchases from the store to be unique. So I made a script that generates personalized images and ran it manually for every order. The next logical step was autom

      Moving my serverless project to Ruby on Rails
    • WinterJS 1.0 · Blog · Wasmer

      Back to articlesWinterJS 1.0Announcing WinterJS 1.0, the fastest Javascript web server now also supporting Cloudflare applications and React Server Components WinterJS 1.0 is finally here. WinterJS is an incredibly fast WinterCG-compatible Javascript runtime written in Rust using the SpiderMonkey engine to execute JavaScript, and Tokio to handle the underlying HTTP requests and JS event loop. Wint

        WinterJS 1.0 · Blog · Wasmer
      • DevTools architecture refresh: migrating DevTools to TypeScript  |  Blog  |  Chrome for Developers

        This post is part of a series of blog posts describing the changes we are making to DevTools' architecture and how it is built. Following up on our migration to JavaScript modules and migration to Web Components, today we are continuing our blog post series on the changes we are making to Devtools' architecture and how it is built. (If you have not seen it already, we posted a video on our work of

        • Recoil Patterns: Hierarchic & Separation

          This article will discuss practical patterns in Recoil. It’s an advance topic that goes beyond Recoil basics, so we won’t spend time describing Recoil or its fundamentals concepts. If you’re not familiar with Recoil I suggest starting with the following sources: * Official Recoil YouTube * Recoil documentation This article is brought to you by WeKnow and represents insights gained during architect

            Recoil Patterns: Hierarchic & Separation
          • Why Dark didn't choose Rust

            Welcome again HN! Dark is a programming language, structured editor, and infrastructure—all in one—whose goal is to make it 100x easier to build backend services. Check out the website, our What is Dark post, and How Dark deploys in 50ms for more. Thanks for checking us out! This is the third or a 3-part series: Leaving OCaml and Dark's new backend will be in F#. You can enjoy this without reading

              Why Dark didn't choose Rust
            • [OUTDATED] First-Party Sets and the SameParty attribute  |  Privacy Sandbox  |  Google for Developers

              Send feedback [OUTDATED] First-Party Sets and the SameParty attribute Stay organized with collections Save and categorize content based on your preferences. Many organizations have related sites with different domain names, such as brandx.site and fly-brandx.site—or domains for different countries such as example.com, example.rs, example.co.uk and so on. Browsers are moving towards making third-pa

              • Kafka is dead, long live Kafka

                HN Disclaimer: WarpStream sells a drop-in replacement for Apache Kafka built directly on-top of object storage. TL;DRWarpStream is an Apache Kafka® protocol compatible data streaming platform built directly on top of S3. It's delivered as a single, stateless Go binary so there are no local disks to manage, no brokers to rebalance, and no ZooKeeper to operate. WarpStream is 5-10x cheaper than Kafka

                  Kafka is dead, long live Kafka
                • OWASP Top 10:2021

                  Introduction Welcome to the OWASP Top 10 - 2021 Welcome to the latest installment of the OWASP Top 10! The OWASP Top 10 2021 is all-new, with a new graphic design and an available one-page infographic you can print or obtain from our home page. A huge thank you to everyone that contributed their time and data for this iteration. Without you, this installment would not happen. THANK YOU! What's cha

                  • Understanding all of Python, through its builtins

                    Python as a language is comparatively simple. And I believe, that you can learn quite a lot about Python and its features, just by learning what all of its builtins are, and what they do. And to back up that claim, I'll be doing just that. Just to be clear, this is not going to be a tutorial post. Covering such a vast amount of material in a single blog post, while starting from the beginning is p

                      Understanding all of Python, through its builtins
                    • Introducing the Docker Desktop WSL 2 Backend | Docker

                      What’s Changed Since the Tech Preview Earlier this year, we released a technical preview of our vision for the future of Docker development on Windows using WSL 2. We received lots of feedback from Windows Insiders via different channels, and collated common failure cases. We also used it ourselves a lot, and took the time to evaluate its architecture. Based on this analysis, we worked hard to red

                        Introducing the Docker Desktop WSL 2 Backend | Docker
                      • 各方面に配慮した桃次郎と桃子[かくほうめんにはいりょしたももじろうとももこ](順不同)≪ふりがなつき≫【There’s English】

                        各方面に配慮した桃次郎と桃子[かくほうめんにはいりょしたももじろうとももこ](順不同)≪ふりがなつき≫【There’s English】 昔々(むかしむかし)、あるところにおじいさんとおばあさん(アルファベット順(じゅん))がおりました。『あるところ』というのは日本(にほん)によく似(に)た異世界(いせかい)であり、現実世界(げんじつせかい)とはいかなる関(かか)わりもありませんでした。おじいさんとおばあさんは仲良(なかよ)く暮(く)らしておりましたが、二人(ふたり)の間(あいだ)には子(こ)どもがいませんでした。 ただし、決(けっ)して子(こ)どもがいないから不幸(ふしあわ)せであったというわけではありませんし、勿論養子(もちろんようし)をもらうという選択肢(せんたくし)もあったのですが、お互(たが)いのライフスタイルを尊重(そんちょう)した結果(けっか)、十分(じゅうぶん)な話(はな)

                          各方面に配慮した桃次郎と桃子[かくほうめんにはいりょしたももじろうとももこ](順不同)≪ふりがなつき≫【There’s English】
                        • GitHub Packages Container registry is generally available

                          ProductGitHub Packages Container registry is generally availableThroughout the beta, we added features to improve the experience of using the Container registry. Today, we’re excited to announce that the Container registry is generally available as part of GitHub Packages! Last year, we introduced the Container registry to GitHub Packages and saw developers utilize it as a way to publish, manage,

                            GitHub Packages Container registry is generally available
                          • Inside the Ukrainian Counterstrike That Turned the Tide of the War

                            WorldUkraineInside the Ukrainian Counterstrike That Turned the Tide of the War It would be easy to underestimate Valeriy Zaluzhny. When not in uniform, the general prefers T-shirts and shorts that match his easygoing sense of humor. When he first heard from aides to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in late July 2021 that he was being tapped to lead the country’s armed forces, his stunned res

                              Inside the Ukrainian Counterstrike That Turned the Tide of the War
                            • YJIT: Building a New JIT Compiler for CRuby

                              Opens in a new windowOpens an external siteOpens an external site in a new window The 1980s and 1990s saw the genesis of Perl, Ruby, Python, PHP, and JavaScript: interpreted, dynamically-typed programming languages which favored ease of use and flexibility over performance. In many ways, these programming languages are a product of the surrounding context. The 90s were the peak of the dot-com hype

                                YJIT: Building a New JIT Compiler for CRuby
                              • Git Credential Manager Core: Building a universal authentication experience

                                SecurityGit Credential Manager Core: Building a universal authentication experienceAuthentication is a critical component to your daily development. When working in open source, you need to prove that you have rights to update a branch with git push. Additionally… Authentication is a critical component to your daily development. When working in open source, you need to prove that you have rights t

                                  Git Credential Manager Core: Building a universal authentication experience
                                • JQuery to React: How we rewrote the HelloSign Editor

                                  HelloSign is a Dropbox company that provides a Web-based eSignature solution: If you have a document you want someone to sign, you upload the document file, then show you an editor in which you place all the fields to build the form the recipient will fill out—signatures, dates, initials, etc. You send this prepared form to the recipient. When they’re done signing, everything is reassembled into a

                                    JQuery to React: How we rewrote the HelloSign Editor
                                  • GitHub Copilot AI Is Generating And Giving Out Functional API Keys

                                    GitHub Copilot AI Is Generating And Giving Out Functional API Keys Microsoft, in partnership with OpenAI, made Copilot available on GitHub. For starters, it’s an assistant that can help you with better code suggestions, but it has been recently brought to notice that the AI is leaking API keys that are valid and still functional. First reported by a SendGrid engineer, he asked the AI for the keys,

                                      GitHub Copilot AI Is Generating And Giving Out Functional API Keys
                                    • A Notoriously Hateful Japanese Composer’s Music Just Opened the Tokyo Olympics

                                      TOKYO—The Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics, which are supposed to celebrate the world’s diversity and harmony, have been plagued with scandals—and COVID-19. They’ve come to symbolize xenophobia, discrimination, and cruelty—and Friday night, we can add homophobia and historical revisionism to the mix. It’s no surprise that Japan’s pacifist Emperor Naruhito and his wife, Masako, the empress, want

                                        A Notoriously Hateful Japanese Composer’s Music Just Opened the Tokyo Olympics
                                      • An AnandTech Interview with Jim Keller: 'The Laziest Person at Tesla'

                                        Topics Covered AMD, Zen, and Project Skybridge Managing 10000 People at Intel The Future with Tenstorrent Engineers and People Skills Arm vs x86 vs RISC-V Living a Life of Abstraction Thoughts on Moore's Law Engineering the Right Team Idols, Maturity, and the Human Experience Nature vs Nurture Pushing Everyone To Be The Best Security, Ethics, and Group Belief Chips Made by AI, and Beyond Silicon A

                                          An AnandTech Interview with Jim Keller: 'The Laziest Person at Tesla'
                                        • The State of Machine Learning Frameworks in 2019

                                          In 2018, PyTorch was a minority. Now, it is an overwhelming majority, with 69% of CVPR using PyTorch, 75+% of both NAACL and ACL, and 50+% of ICLR and ICML. While PyTorch’s dominance is strongest at vision and language conferences (outnumbering TensorFlow by 2:1 and 3:1 respectively), PyTorch is also more popular than TensorFlow at general machine learning conferences like ICLR and ICML. While som

                                            The State of Machine Learning Frameworks in 2019
                                          • Storybook 6.2

                                            Storybook is the industry standard UI development workshop for components and pages. It's used by Netflix, Slack, Target, Shopify, Stripe, and thousands of teams around the world. As a modern frontend developer, you’re in a constant cat-and-mouse game to stay on top of ecosystem changes. Every Storybook release contains hundreds of adaptations to try to make that easier for you, whether you’re upg

                                              Storybook 6.2
                                            • Advancing Excel as a programming language with Andy Gordon and Simon Peyton Jones - Microsoft Research

                                              Episode 120 | May 5, 2021 Today, people around the globe—from teachers to small-business owners to finance executives—use Microsoft Excel to make sense of the information that occupies their respective worlds, and whether they realize it or not, in doing so, they’re taking on the role of programmer. In this episode, Senior Principal Research Manager Andy Gordon, who leads the Calc Intelligence tea

                                                Advancing Excel as a programming language with Andy Gordon and Simon Peyton Jones - Microsoft Research
                                              • How Turborepo is porting from Go to Rust – Vercel

                                                How Turborepo is porting from Go to RustOur strategy for making updates and maintaining stability while we migrate languages. In a previous blog post, we talked about why we are porting Turborepo, the high-performance build system for JavaScript and TypeScript, from Go to Rust. Now, let's talk about how. Today, our porting effort is in full swing, moving more and more code to Rust. But when we wer

                                                  How Turborepo is porting from Go to Rust – Vercel
                                                • Mechanical Watch – Bartosz Ciechanowski

                                                  In the world of modern portable devices, it may be hard to believe that merely a few decades ago the most convenient way to keep track of time was a mechanical watch. Unlike their quartz and smart siblings, mechanical watches can run without using any batteries or other electronic components. Over the course of this article I’ll explain the workings of the mechanism seen in the demonstration below

                                                    Mechanical Watch – Bartosz Ciechanowski
                                                  • Post-Incident Review on the Atlassian April 2022 outage - Atlassian Engineering

                                                    This PIR is available in the following languages:日本語 | 简体中文 | 繁體中文 | Deutsch | English | Español | Français | Italiano | 한국어 | Polski | Português | русский. Letter from our co-founders & co-CEOs We want to acknowledge the outage that disrupted service for customers earlier this month. We understand that our products are mission critical to your business, and we don't take that responsibility light

                                                      Post-Incident Review on the Atlassian April 2022 outage - Atlassian Engineering
                                                    • Bootstrap 5 alpha!

                                                      The Bootstrap Blog News and announcements for all things Bootstrap, including new releases, Bootstrap Themes, and Bootstrap Icons. Bootstrap 5’s very first alpha has arrived! We’ve been working hard for several months to refine the work we started in v4, and while we’re feeling great about our progress, there’s still even more to do. We’ve been focused on making the migration from v4 to v5 more ap

                                                        Bootstrap 5 alpha!
                                                      • Why, after 8 years, I still like GraphQL sometimes in the right context

                                                        A recent post, Why, after 6 years, I’m over GraphQL, made the rounds in the tech circle. The author argues that they would not recommend GraphQL anymore due to concerns like security, performance, and maintainability. In this post, I want to go over some interesting points made, and some points I think don't hold up to scrutiny. Always be Persistin' Ok, first of all, let's start with something may

                                                          Why, after 8 years, I still like GraphQL sometimes in the right context
                                                        • Pure ESM package

                                                          esm-package.md Pure ESM package The package that linked you here is now pure ESM. It cannot be require()'d from CommonJS. This means you have the following choices: Use ESM yourself. (preferred) Use import foo from 'foo' instead of const foo = require('foo') to import the package. You also need to put "type": "module" in your package.json and more. Follow the below guide. If the package is used in

                                                            Pure ESM package
                                                          • JS Self-Profiling API In Practice

                                                            Nic Jansma (@nicj) is a software developer at Akamai building high-performance websites, apps and open-source tools. Table of Contents The JS Self-Profiling API What is Sampled Profiling? Downsides to Sampled Profiling API Document Policy API Shape Sample Interval Buffer Who to Profile When to Profile Specific Operations User Interactions Page Load Overhead Anatomy of a Profile Beaconing Size Comp

                                                              JS Self-Profiling API In Practice
                                                            • Talking TypeScript with the engineer who leads the team - Stack Overflow

                                                              In our 2020 Developer Survey results, one of the most tracked statistics is the Most-Loved Language. As it has for several years now, Rust is number one. But coming in at number two is TypeScript, a strongly typed superset of JavaScript, edging out Python by a hair. We wanted to find out what about TypeScript makes it so dang lovable, so we reached out to Ryan Cavanaugh, the principal engineering

                                                                Talking TypeScript with the engineer who leads the team - Stack Overflow
                                                              • CIA activities in Japan - Wikipedia

                                                                The activities of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in Japan date back to the Allied occupation of Japan. Douglas MacArthur's Chief of Intelligence, Charles Willoughby, authorized the creation of a number of Japanese subordinate intelligence-gathering organizations known as kikan.[1] Many of these kikan contained individuals purged because of their classification as war criminals.[2] In additi

                                                                  CIA activities in Japan - Wikipedia
                                                                • Tooling for Tooling

                                                                  We’ve seen a boom in programming language tooling in the past few years. Language servers, formatters, and linters have become commonplace in most languages. I’d call it a golden age, but I suspect this is only the beginning. Fulfilling Developer Expectations This explosion has in turn raised the bar for developer experience. No longer is it satisfactory to provide a basic syntax highlighting sche

                                                                  • Incident Metrics in SRE

                                                                    Štěpán Davidovič Incident Metrics in SRE Critically Evaluating MTTR and Friends Boston Farnham Sebastopol Tokyo Beijing Boston Farnham Sebastopol Tokyo Beijing 978-1-098-10313-2 [LSI] Incident Metrics in SRE by Štěpán Davidovič Copyright © 2021 O’Reilly Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Published by O’Reilly Media, Inc., 1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebas

                                                                    • Memory Allocation

                                                                      One thing that all programs on your computer have in common is a need for memory. Programs need to be loaded from your hard drive into memory before they can be run. While running, the majority of what programs do is load values from memory, do some computation on them, and then store the result back in memory. In this post I'm going to introduce you to the basics of memory allocation. Allocators

                                                                        Memory Allocation
                                                                      • Thermal testing Raspberry Pi 4 - Raspberry Pi

                                                                        Raspberry Pi 4 just got a lot cooler! The last four months of firmware updates have taken over half a watt out of idle power and nearly a watt out of fully loaded power. For The MagPi magazine, Gareth Halfacree gets testing. Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Raspberry Pi 4 launched with a wealth of new features to tempt users into upgrading: a more powerful CPU and GPU, more memory, Gigabit Ethernet, and USB

                                                                          Thermal testing Raspberry Pi 4 - Raspberry Pi
                                                                        • Migrating from Zod to Valibot: A Comparative Experience | Matthew Kwong

                                                                          Friday, January 12, 2024 Migrating from Zod to Valibot: A Comparative Experience I've recently migrated the validation part of the contact form of my website (a.k.a. this website) from Zod to Valibot. And I would like to share with you the experience. What is Valibot? Valibot is commonly known as the "Zod alternative with a smaller bundle size". Similar to Zod, it is a schema validation library. I

                                                                            Migrating from Zod to Valibot: A Comparative Experience | Matthew Kwong
                                                                          • Swift.org - Swift 5.1 Released!

                                                                            Ted Kremenek is a member of the Swift Core Team and manages the Languages and Runtimes group at Apple. Swift 5.1 is now officially released! Swift 5.1 builds on the strengths of Swift 5 by extending the stable features of the language to compile time with the introduction of module stability. With module stability it’s now possible to create and share binary frameworks that will work with future r

                                                                            • Building Uber’s Fulfillment Platform for Planet-Scale using Google Cloud Spanner

                                                                              You’re seeing information for Japan . To see local features and services for another location, select a different city. Show more Introduction The Fulfillment Platform is a foundational Uber domain that enables the rapid scaling of new verticals. The platform handles billions of database transactions each day, ranging from user actions (e.g., a driver starting a trip) and system actions (e.g., cre

                                                                                Building Uber’s Fulfillment Platform for Planet-Scale using Google Cloud Spanner
                                                                              • Algorithms for Modern Hardware - Algorithmica

                                                                                This is an upcoming high performance computing book titled “Algorithms for Modern Hardware” by Sergey Slotin. Its intended audience is everyone from performance engineers and practical algorithm researchers to undergraduate computer science students who have just finished an advanced algorithms course and want to learn more practical ways to speed up a program than by going from $O(n \log n)$ to $

                                                                                • New from GitHub Universe 2019: GitHub for mobile, automated workflows, and more

                                                                                  CommunityCompanyProductNew from Universe 2019: GitHub for mobile, GitHub Archive Program, and moreIt’s our favorite time of year: GitHub Universe. And we've made some exciting announcements. GitHub Actions and Packages are now out of beta, we launched GitHub for mobile, redesigned the notifications experience, and introduced lots of other features we think you’ll love. It’s our favorite time of ye

                                                                                    New from GitHub Universe 2019: GitHub for mobile, automated workflows, and more