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  • 『ベルセルク』再開のお知らせ|白泉社

    書名、著者名、書名(カナ)、著者名(カナ)、ISBNコード、発売年月での検索が可能です。 発売年月日については「2016.06.29」のようにコロンで区切る形として下さい。 『ベルセルク』が6月24日発売のヤングアニマル13号から連載再開するのでお知らせいたします。連載再開に際し、ヤングアニマル編集部及び森恒二先生からのメッセージを掲載いたします。引き続き『ベルセルク』をご愛読いただけるよう何卒よろしくお願い申し上げます。 読者のみなさまへ 『ベルセルク』を再開いたします。 長らくご案内が出来ず申し訳ありませんでした。 「大ベルセルク展」「YAメモリアル号(2021年18号)」「ベルセルク単行本第41巻」などへのみなさんのコメントを読める限り読ませていただきました。その一通一通やSNSに書かれたみなさんの想いに感謝で一杯です。みなさんがどれほどベルセルクに影響され愛してくれたかが心にしみま

      『ベルセルク』再開のお知らせ|白泉社
    • Command Line Interface Guidelines

      Contents Command Line Interface Guidelines An open-source guide to help you write better command-line programs, taking traditional UNIX principles and updating them for the modern day. Authors Aanand Prasad Engineer at Squarespace, co-creator of Docker Compose. @aanandprasad Ben Firshman Co-creator Replicate, co-creator of Docker Compose. @bfirsh Carl Tashian Offroad Engineer at Smallstep, first e

        Command Line Interface Guidelines
      • How to use bookmarks in bash/zsh

        How to installHere is where the magic is. Add these 4 lines of code to your bashrc or zshrc file. if [ -d "$HOME/.bookmarks" ]; then export CDPATH=".:$HOME/.bookmarks:/" alias goto="cd -P" fiAdditionally, you need to create the directory in your home folder or wherever it suits you, just remember to update the CDPATH variable above. mkdir ~/.bookmarksHow to useTo add a new bookmark, you just need

          How to use bookmarks in bash/zsh
        • 訳文;「そこにはなんの報酬もありません。このゲームが何を為していてどう機能しているのか、ただただ見ていたかったのです」ジェンキンズ、カーソン、ホッキング、『Outer Wilds』へつづく2,3の論考 - すやすや眠るみたくすらすら書けたら

          翻訳の秋が今年もきました。また去年みたく面白い記事をいくつか見つけて勝手に紹介したいところです! 去年アップした『訳文;「"好奇心駆動型の冒険"とでも言うべき特殊なタイプの冒険に報酬を与えるゲームをつくりたい、それが『Outer Wilds』の主目的です」A・ビーチャム氏の論文より』で翻訳紹介した論考のなかで、参照文献として挙げられていた文献のうち2つ、ヘンリー・ジェンキンズ著『GAME DESIGN AS NARRATIVE ARCHITECTURE(物語による建築物としてのゲームデザイン)』とボニー・ルバーク取材『Clint Hocking Speaks Out On The Virtues Of Exploration(クリント・ホッキングが語る冒険の美徳)』。別記事1つ、ドン・カーソン著『Environmental Storytelling: Creating Immersive

            訳文;「そこにはなんの報酬もありません。このゲームが何を為していてどう機能しているのか、ただただ見ていたかったのです」ジェンキンズ、カーソン、ホッキング、『Outer Wilds』へつづく2,3の論考 - すやすや眠るみたくすらすら書けたら
          • Time on Unix

            Sections What is time Representing time Where do we usually find time on Unix System time, hardware time, internal timers Syncing time with external sources What depends on time Human perception of time What is time Time is relative Measuring time and standards Coordinating time Time zones DST Time, a word that is entangled in everything in our lives, something we’re intimately familiar with. Keep

              Time on Unix
            • Why I Won't Use Next.js

              You’ve got a new project to work on. Or you’ve got an existing project you’re motivated to upgrade to a more modern approach. Or perhaps you’re dissatisfied with your current modern framework or second-guessing yourself and you’re investigating alternatives. In any case, you’ve got a decision to make. There are lots of “modern” frameworks to choose from. Even if you’re not facing this choice right

                Why I Won't Use Next.js
              • The forgotten mistake that killed Japan’s software industry - Disrupting Japan

                This is our 200th episode, so I wanted to do something special. Everyone loves to complain about the poor quality of Japanese software, but today I’m going to explain exactly what went wrong.  You’ll get the whole story, and I’ll also pinpoint the specific moment Japan lost its way. By the end, I think you’ll have a new perspective on Japanese software and understand why everything might be about

                  The forgotten mistake that killed Japan’s software industry - Disrupting Japan
                • Announcing TypeScript 5.0 - TypeScript

                  Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.0! This release brings many new features, while aiming to make TypeScript smaller, simpler, and faster. We’ve implemented the new decorators standard, added functionality to better support ESM projects in Node and bundlers, provided new ways for library authors to control generic inference, expanded our JSDoc functionality, simplified con

                    Announcing TypeScript 5.0 - TypeScript
                  • Generating UUIDs at scale on the Web

                    TL;DR can you trust every browser to generate globally unique identifiers at scale? At Teads, we have tried, and the answer is yes, with a few caveats. This article describes the experiments we’ve run and the discoveries we made along the way. Why we need client-side unique identifiersGenerating unique identifiers is a common need that third-party scripts integrated on Web pages and e-commerce sit

                      Generating UUIDs at scale on the Web
                    • Remix vs Next.js

                      Easily the biggest question we get asked is something like: How is Remix different from Next.js? It appears we have to answer this question! We'd like to address it directly and without drama. If you're a fan of Remix and want to start tweeting smug reactions to this article, we kindly ask that you drop the smugness before hitting the tweet button 🤗. A rising tide lifts all boats. We've been frie

                        Remix vs Next.js
                      • Cloudflare servers don't own IPs anymore – so how do they connect to the Internet?

                        Cloudflare servers don't own IPs anymore – so how do they connect to the Internet?2022-11-25 A lot of Cloudflare's technology is well documented. For example, how we handle traffic between the eyeballs (clients) and our servers has been discussed many times on this blog: “A brief primer on anycast (2011)”, "Load Balancing without Load Balancers (2013)", "Path MTU discovery in practice (2015)",  "C

                          Cloudflare servers don't own IPs anymore – so how do they connect to the Internet?
                        • Rust concepts I wish I learned earlier

                          This past month, I have been enthralled by the Rust programming language given its unique edge for writing memory-safe, modern programs. Over the years, several languages have emerged as the most preferred by engineers to write resilient, backend software. The tides have shifted from Java/C++ into Go and Rust, which combine decades of programming language theory to build tools that are effective i

                            Rust concepts I wish I learned earlier
                          • Leaving Google

                            Last Friday was my last day at Google. Of course, when you leave Google you have to write some kind of letter or rant. Seriously it's a rule: they won't remove your neural implant until you hit publish. Jokes aside, this is more of a memoir than a polemic. Of course I have opinions, but now's not the time. This is more about reflecting on the last seven years of my life, thinking about what was im

                              Leaving Google
                            • Linux perf Examples

                              Recent posts: 22 Jul 2024 » No More Blue Fridays 24 Mar 2024 » Linux Crisis Tools 17 Mar 2024 » The Return of the Frame Pointers 10 Mar 2024 » eBPF Documentary 28 Apr 2023 » eBPF Observability Tools Are Not Security Tools 01 Mar 2023 » USENIX SREcon APAC 2022: Computing Performance: What's on the Horizon 17 Feb 2023 » USENIX SREcon APAC 2023: CFP 02 May 2022 » Brendan@Intel.com 15 Apr 2022 » Netfl

                              • REST API Design Best Practices Handbook – How to Build a REST API with JavaScript, Node.js, and Express.js

                                I've created and consumed many API's over the past few years. During that time, I've come across good and bad practices and have experienced nasty situations when consuming and building API's. But there also have been great moments. There are helpful articles online which present many best practices, but many of them lack some practicality in my opinion. Knowing the theory with few examples is goo

                                  REST API Design Best Practices Handbook – How to Build a REST API with JavaScript, Node.js, and Express.js
                                • How NAT traversal works

                                  WireGuard is a registered trademark of Jason A. Donenfeld. We covered a lot of ground in our post about How Tailscale Works. However, we glossed over how we can get through NATs (Network Address Translators) and connect your devices directly to each other, no matter what’s standing between them. Let’s talk about that now! Let’s start with a simple problem: establishing a peer-to-peer connection be

                                    How NAT traversal works
                                  • What it was like working for GitLab

                                    February 8, 2024 I joined GitLab in October 2015, and left in December 2021 after working there for a little more than six years. While I previously wrote about leaving GitLab to work on Inko, I never discussed what it was like working for GitLab between 2015 and 2021. There are two reasons for this: I was suffering from burnout, and didn't have the energy to revisit the last six years of my life

                                    • Working with Errors in Go 1.13 - The Go Programming Language

                                      Damien Neil and Jonathan Amsterdam 17 October 2019 Introduction Go’s treatment of errors as values has served us well over the last decade. Although the standard library’s support for errors has been minimal—just the errors.New and fmt.Errorf functions, which produce errors that contain only a message—the built-in error interface allows Go programmers to add whatever information they desire. All i

                                        Working with Errors in Go 1.13 - The Go Programming Language
                                      • The Untold Story of SQLite - CoRecursive Podcast

                                        00:00 - Introduction 01:45 - The Battleship 02:49 - NP-Complete Problems 06:24 - Building SQLite V1 07:54 - Motorola Phones 09:40 - America Online Phones 11:12 - Symbian OS and Nokia 13:01 - The Bus Factor and the Consortium 15:11 - Enter Android 17:05 - Guys, This Is Important 18:18 - Testing and Aviation Standards 21:29 - Billions of Tests 25:30 - Building From First Principles 28:05 - B-Trees a

                                          The Untold Story of SQLite - CoRecursive Podcast
                                        • npm Blog Archive: Next Phase Montage

                                          The npm blog has been discontinued. Updates from the npm team are now published on the GitHub Blog and the GitHub Changelog. tl;dr – Good news! npm, Inc., is being purchased by GitHub. The public registry remains public, free, and as available as ever. npm as you know it continues, and in fact, there is good reason to believe that it’ll only get better. I’m still going to be working on npm (but wi

                                            npm Blog Archive: Next Phase Montage
                                          • Everything you need to know from ES2016 to ES2019

                                            JavaScript is a language in constant evolution and in the past few years many new features have been added to the ECMAScript specification. This article is an extract of my book Complete Guide to Modern JavaScript and it covers the new additions of ES2016, ES2017, ES2018, ES2019. At the end of the article you will find a link to download a cheatsheet that summarizes everything. Everything new in E

                                              Everything you need to know from ES2016 to ES2019
                                            • Parse, don’t validate

                                              Historically, I’ve struggled to find a concise, simple way to explain what it means to practice type-driven design. Too often, when someone asks me “How did you come up with this approach?” I find I can’t give them a satisfying answer. I know it didn’t just come to me in a vision—I have an iterative design process that doesn’t require plucking the “right” approach out of thin air—yet I haven’t bee

                                              • Services By Lifecycle - Wide Awake Developers

                                                This post took a lot longer to pull together than I expected. Not because it was hard to write, but because it was too easy to write too much. Like a pre-bonsai tree, it would grow out of control and get pruned back over and over. In the meantime, I delivered a workshop and spent some lovely holiday time with my family. But it’s a new year now, and January is devoid of holidays so it’s high time I

                                                • research!rsc: Coroutines for Go

                                                  This post is about why we need a coroutine package for Go, and what it would look like. But first, what are coroutines? Every programmer today is familiar with function calls (subroutines): F calls G, which stops F and runs G. G does its work, potentially calling and waiting for other functions, and eventually returns. When G returns, G is gone and F continues running. In this pattern, only one fu

                                                  • The Four Innovation Phases of Netflix’s Trillions Scale Real-time Data Infrastructure

                                                    My name is Zhenzhong Xu. I joined Netflix in 2015 as a founding engineer on the Real-time Data Infrastructure team and later led the Stream Processing Engines team. I developed an interest in real-time data in the early 2010s, and ever since believe there is much value yet to be uncovered. Netflix was a fantastic place to be surrounded by many amazing colleagues. I can’t be more proud of everyone

                                                      The Four Innovation Phases of Netflix’s Trillions Scale Real-time Data Infrastructure
                                                    • An Interview With Linus Torvalds: Linux and Git - Part 1 30 Years Of Linux

                                                      Jeremy founded Tag1 Consulting in 2007. He has been a contributing core Drupal developer since 2002, and helped establish Drupal as a successful CMS through the early popularity of his personal blog, KernelTrap.org. Over the years, he authored and maintained the core statistics module and throttle module, as well as the pager logic and the initial Drupal 5 installer. He continues to contribute to

                                                        An Interview With Linus Torvalds: Linux and Git - Part 1 30 Years Of Linux
                                                      • Kernel Queue: The Complete Guide On The Most Essential Technology For High-Performance I/O

                                                        Kernel Queue: The Complete Guide On The Most Essential Technology For High-Performance I/O When talking about high-performance software we probably think of server software (such as nginx) which processes millions requests from thousands clients in parallel. Surely, what makes server software work so fast is high-end CPU running with huge amount of memory and a very fast network link. But even the

                                                          Kernel Queue: The Complete Guide On The Most Essential Technology For High-Performance I/O
                                                        • The Linux Kernel Module Programming Guide

                                                          Peter Jay Salzman, Michael Burian, Ori Pomerantz, Bob Mottram, Jim Huang 1 Introduction 1.1 Authorship 1.2 Acknowledgements 1.3 What Is A Kernel Module? 1.4 Kernel module package 1.5 What Modules are in my Kernel? 1.6 Is there a need to download and compile the kernel? 1.7 Before We Begin 2 Headers 3 Examples 4 Hello World 4.1 The Simplest Module 4.2 Hello and Goodbye 4.3 The __init and __exit Mac

                                                          • Speculation in JavaScriptCore

                                                            This post is all about speculative compilation, or just speculation for short, in the context of the JavaScriptCore virtual machine. Speculative compilation is ideal for making dynamic languages, or any language with enough dynamic features, run faster. In this post, we will look at speculation for JavaScript. Historically, this technique or closely related variants has been applied successfully t

                                                            • Linux Hardening Guide | Madaidan's Insecurities

                                                              Last edited: March 19th, 2022 Linux is not a secure operating system. However, there are steps you can take to improve it. This guide aims to explain how to harden Linux as much as possible for security and privacy. This guide attempts to be distribution-agnostic and is not tied to any specific one. DISCLAIMER: Do not attempt to apply anything in this article if you do not know exactly what you ar

                                                              • 「HoloCure」開発者インタビュー なぜ海外ユーザーが「ホロライブ」のファンゲームを制作したのか?

                                                                Home » 「HoloCure」開発者インタビュー なぜ海外ユーザーが「ホロライブ」のファンゲームを制作したのか? 「HoloCure」開発者インタビュー なぜ海外ユーザーが「ホロライブ」のファンゲームを制作したのか? 現在、ホロライブ所属VTuberの間で大きな注目を集めているのが、二次創作ゲーム「HoloCure」です。ホロライブのメンバーがプレイアブルキャラクターとして出演し、彼女たちにゆかりのあるアイテムや武器なども数多く登場しています。 今年の9月には大型アップデートも行われ、日本在住のホロライブVTuberも登場するようになりました。今回は、製作者のKay Yuさんに制作の経緯について詳しくお聞きしました(※制作者は海外在住のため、このインタビューは英語文章で回答をいただきました。記事では内容を翻訳し、掲載します。) ――そもそも「ホロライブ」を知ったきっかけはどういったもの

                                                                  「HoloCure」開発者インタビュー なぜ海外ユーザーが「ホロライブ」のファンゲームを制作したのか?
                                                                • Code Reviews 101 - The Basics | Sema

                                                                  Code improves with multiple reviews and revisions, and this process isn’t something that can be done alone. Spotting errors in code design is difficult at the best of times — and the closer you are to the work, the harder it can be to critique. That’s where code reviews come in. The beginning: introducing code reviewsWhat is a code review? Code improves with multiple reviews and revisions, and thi

                                                                    Code Reviews 101 - The Basics | Sema
                                                                  • Doing RAG? Vector search is *not* enough

                                                                    I'm concerned by the number of times I've heard, "oh, we can do RAG with retriever X, here's the vector search query." Yes, your retriever for a RAG flow should definitely support vector search, since that will let you find documents with similar semantics to a user's query, but vector search is not enough. Your retriever should support a full hybrid search, meaning that it can perform both a vect

                                                                      Doing RAG? Vector search is *not* enough
                                                                    • Things you forgot (or never knew) because of React

                                                                      Published: August 4, 2023 Updated: October 27, 2023 Part 1: an intro about music, defaults, and bubbles Like a lot of people, there was a time when the only music I listened to was whatever was played on my local radio station. (A lot of people over 30 or so, anyway. If this doesn’t sound familiar to you yet, just stick with me for a minute here.) At the time, I was happy with that. It seemed like

                                                                        Things you forgot (or never knew) because of React
                                                                      • Next.js 13 vs Remix: An In-depth case study

                                                                        Next.js 13 vs Remix: An In-depth case studyLast updated on 29 Sep 2023 by Prateek Surana   •   - min read When it comes to building web applications, React has been at the forefront for a while now, and its adoption continues to grow. Among the most common approaches to building web applications with React, Next.js stands out as one of the most preferred options. Next.js has also been in the limel

                                                                          Next.js 13 vs Remix: An In-depth case study
                                                                        • How eBPF will solve Service Mesh - Goodbye Sidecars - Isovalent

                                                                          Service mesh is a concept describing the requirements of modern cloud native applications with regards to communication, visibility, and security. Current implementations of this concept involve running sidecar proxies in each workload or pod. This is a pretty inefficient way of solving these requirements. In this post, we will look at an alternative to the sidecar model that provides a transparen

                                                                            How eBPF will solve Service Mesh - Goodbye Sidecars - Isovalent
                                                                          • サマーズの日銀の金融引き締めへの評価 - himaginary’s diary

                                                                            サマーズが7月末の日銀の利上げとその後の市場の動乱への対応について述べたコメントがネットの一部で話頭に上っている。以下はブルームバーグ日本語記事からの引用。 サマーズ氏は、特に新任のセントラルバンカーは初めて運転席に座るドライバーのように「ハンドルを切り過ぎる」傾向があると話す。日銀の場合は「あれほど長期にわたってゼロ金利政策を続けた後だから、もっと緩やかに政策をシフトできたのではないだろうか」と指摘。7日の内田真一副総裁によるコメントに言及し、「日銀は市場に対応している姿勢をあそこまできっぱりと見せる必要はなかった」とサマーズ氏は述べた。 「オリンピックの言葉を借りれば、私なら日銀から『出来栄え点』を少し減点するだろう」とサマーズ氏は語った。 サマーズはこちらのツイートで当該のコメントを行ったブルームバーグテレビジョンの動画にリンクしている。この回の番組の主眼はトランプがFRBの金融政策

                                                                              サマーズの日銀の金融引き締めへの評価 - himaginary’s diary
                                                                            • QUIC vs TCP: Which is Better? | Fastly

                                                                              Why FastlyProductsServicesSolutionsDevelopersPartnersResourcesPricing QUIC matches TCP's efficiency, says our research. | FastlyWe’ve shared a lot about how much we love QUIC (and why we’re building our own implementation called quicly). It promises latency reduction, improved throughput, resilience to client mobility, and increased privacy and security. Excitingly, the QUIC working group at the I

                                                                                QUIC vs TCP: Which is Better? | Fastly
                                                                              • Writing a C compiler in 500 lines of Python

                                                                                A few months ago, I set myself the challenge of writing a C compiler in 500 lines of Python1, after writing my SDF donut post. How hard could it be? The answer was, pretty hard, even when dropping quite a few features. But it was also pretty interesting, and the result is surprisingly functional and not too hard to understand! There's too much code for me to comprehensively cover in a single blog

                                                                                • Next.js vs. Remix - A Developer's Dilemma

                                                                                  Next.js vs. Remix - A Developer's Dilemma Feb 21, 2024 I am a Javascript and React enthusiast, and I absolutely love writing technical blogs. There's just something about the process of breaking down complex concepts and sharing my knowledge with others that really excites me. In my free time, I enjoy exploring my other passions, such as painting, gardening, cooking, and managing my food blog. The

                                                                                    Next.js vs. Remix - A Developer's Dilemma