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  • LogLog Games

    The article is also available in Chinese. Disclaimer: This post is a very long collection of thoughts and problems I've had over the years, and also addresses some of the arguments I've been repeatedly told. This post expresses my opinion the has been formed over using Rust for gamedev for many thousands of hours over many years, and multiple finished games. This isn't meant to brag or indicate su

    • Dario Amodei — Machines of Loving Grace

      I think and talk a lot about the risks of powerful AI. The company I’m the CEO of, Anthropic, does a lot of research on how to reduce these risks. Because of this, people sometimes draw the conclusion that I’m a pessimist or “doomer” who thinks AI will be mostly bad or dangerous. I don’t think that at all. In fact, one of my main reasons for focusing on risks is that they’re the only thing standin

        Dario Amodei — Machines of Loving Grace
      • Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting

        Programming is an iterative process. As much as we would like to come up with the perfect solution from the start, it rarely works that way. Good programs often begin as quick prototypes. While many experiments remain prototypes, the best programs can evolve into production code. Whether you’re writing games, CLI tools, or designing library APIs, prototyping helps tremendously in finding the best

          Prototyping in Rust | corrode Rust Consulting
        • Why I stopped using AI code editors · Luciano Nooijen

          TL;DR: I chose to make using AI a manual action, because I felt the slow loss of competence over time when I relied on it, and I recommend everyone to be cautious with making AI a key part of their workflow. In late 2022, I used AI tools for the first time, even before the first version of ChatGPT. In 2023, I started using AI-based tools in my development workflow. Initially, I was super impressed

          • Cascade Layers Guide | CSS-Tricks

            This is your complete guide to CSS cascade layers, a CSS feature that allows us to define explicit contained layers of specificity, so that we have full control over which styles take priority in a project without relying on specificity hacks or !important. This guide is intended to help you fully understand what cascade layers are for, how and why you might choose to use them, the current levels

              Cascade Layers Guide | CSS-Tricks
            • Introduction to Postgres Indexes – Frontend Masters Blog

              This Part 1 (of a 2-part series) is a practical, hands-on, applicable approach to database indexes. We’ll cover what B Trees are with a focus on deeply understanding, and internalizing how they store data on disk, and how your database uses them to speed up queries. This will set us up nicely for part 2, where we’ll explore some interesting, counterintuitive ways to press indexes into service to a

                Introduction to Postgres Indexes – Frontend Masters Blog
              • Lessons learned from a successful Rust rewrite

                Table of contents What worked well What did not work so well I am still chasing Undefined Behavior Miri does not always work and I still have to use Valgrind I am still chasing memory leaks Cross-compilation does not always work Cbindgen does not always work Unstable ABI No support for custom memory allocators Complexity Conclusion Discussions: /r/rust, /r/programming, HN, lobsters I have written

                • The Next Two Years of Software Engineering

                  January 5, 2026 The software industry sits at a strange inflection point. AI coding has evolved from autocomplete on steroids to agents that can autonomously execute development tasks. The economic boom that fueled tech’s hiring spree has given way to an efficiency mandate: companies now often favor profitability over growth, experienced hires over fresh graduates, and smaller teams armed with bet

                    The Next Two Years of Software Engineering
                  • How a computer that 'drunk dials' videos is exposing YouTube's secrets

                    How a computer that 'drunk dials' videos is exposing YouTube's secrets YouTube is about to turn 20. An unusual research method is unveiling statistics about the platform that Google would rather keep hidden. YouTube may not seem secretive. It's public facing. You can watch an endless stream of content from now until your dying breath. There's been a mountain of research about the platform, unpacki

                      How a computer that 'drunk dials' videos is exposing YouTube's secrets
                    • 男性のまなざし - Wikipedia

                      「男性のまなざし」(だんせいのまなざし、英語: male gaze)は映画や写真など視覚芸術の分析・批評に使われる概念のひとつで、映画の中で女性が男性の欲望対象として描かれるといった、視覚メディアがはらむ権力構造に注目した表現[1]。 1970年代にフェミニズム思想の興隆とともに構想され、現在では英語圏を中心に、映画理論やジェンダー研究、ポストコロニアル理論など広い範囲で用いられる基本概念となっている[2]。 人間の「まなざし」(gaze) が決して透明で中立的なものではなく、見る側・見られる側の力関係に強く影響され、しかも双方のアイデンティティ形成にも深く関わっていることは、ジャック・ラカンを中心として精神分析の分野で1960年代から議論が開始されていた[3]。これを映画研究の分野でさらに発展させたのが、イギリスの映画研究者ローラ・マルヴィ(英語版)が1975年に発表した論文「視覚的快楽

                      • Make Something Wonderful | Steve Jobs

                        Make Something WonderfulSteve Jobs in his own wordsThere’s lots of ways to be, as a person. And some people express their deep appreciation in different ways. But one of the ways that I believe people express their appreciation to the rest of humanity is to make something wonderful and put it out there. And you never meet the people. You never shake their hands. You never hear their story or tell

                          Make Something Wonderful | Steve Jobs
                        • An Interview with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman About Building a Consumer Tech Company

                          It’s Trae Day in Washington D.C., The End of An Era in Atlanta, Will AD Move Next? Good morning, This Stratechery interview is technically another installment of the Stratechery Founder series; OpenAI is a startup, which means we don’t have real data about the business. At the same time, OpenAI is clearly one of the defining companies of this era, and potentially historically significant. To that

                            An Interview with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman About Building a Consumer Tech Company
                          • Reflections on Palantir

                            Palantir is hot now. The company recently joined the S&P 500. The stock is on a tear, and the company is nearing a $100bn market cap. VCs chase ex-Palantir founders asking to invest. For long-time employees and alumni of the company, this feels deeply weird. During the 2016-2020 era especially, telling people you worked at Palantir was unpopular. The company was seen as spy tech, NSA surveillance,

                              Reflections on Palantir
                            • Linear sent me down a local-first rabbit hole | Bytemash

                              I started using Linear a couple of months ago and using it made me go down a technical rabbit hole that changed how I think about web applications. For the uninitiated, Linear is a project management tool that feels impossibly fast. Click an issue, it opens instantly. Update a status and watch in a second browser, it updates almost as fast as the source. No loading states, no page refreshes - just

                                Linear sent me down a local-first rabbit hole | Bytemash
                              • Dario Amodei — Machines of Loving Grace

                                I think and talk a lot about the risks of powerful AI. The company I’m the CEO of, Anthropic, does a lot of research on how to reduce these risks. Because of this, people sometimes draw the conclusion that I’m a pessimist or “doomer” who thinks AI will be mostly bad or dangerous. I don’t think that at all. In fact, one of my main reasons for focusing on risks is that they’re the only thing standin

                                  Dario Amodei — Machines of Loving Grace
                                • Radicalized - The American Prospect

                                  Credit: Gregory Katsoulis/Creative Commons This story is part of the Cory Doctorow collection Radicalized, published by Macmillan in 2019. You can find more information on the entire book at the Macmillan website. It is being republished with permission for reasons that will become clear if you read it. Picture above published via Creative Commons. On Joe Gorman’s thirty-sixth birthday, his wife L

                                    Radicalized - The American Prospect
                                  • MeteorExpress | Mysterious Wiper Paralyzes Iranian Trains with Epic Troll - SentinelLabs

                                    MeteorExpress | Mysterious Wiper Paralyzes Iranian Trains with Epic Troll Executive Summary On July 9th, 2021 a wiper attack paralyzed the Iranian train system. The attackers taunted the Iranian government as hacked displays instructed passengers to direct their complaints to the phone number of the Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei’s office. SentinelLABS researchers were able to reconstruct the maj

                                      MeteorExpress | Mysterious Wiper Paralyzes Iranian Trains with Epic Troll - SentinelLabs
                                    • Visualizing Black Holes with General Relativistic Ray Tracing – Sean's Projects

                                      Okay I ended up making this write-up waaaaaay too long, so before I get into any of the jargon, let’s take a look at the finished product: Orbiting around the equator of a supermassive black hole, with an off-axis accretion disk. Orbiting laterally from the equator to the north pole of a slightly less supermassive black hole. Sitting near the accretion disk of a really, really supermassive black h

                                      • Simon Peyton Jones

                                        Recorded 2022-02-01. Published 2022-03-25. Simon Peyton Jones is interviewed by Andres Löh and Joachim Breitner. Simon is the creator of Haskell and in this episode he talks about his new position at Epic, the origins of Haskell and why “it feels right”, and the (extra)ordinary Haskell programmers. Andres Löh: Hello Simon. Thank you so much for joining us today. Simon Peyton Jones: Hi Andres, hi J

                                        • Why has American pop culture stagnated?

                                          In recent years, I’ve read a bunch of people talk about a stagnation in American pop culture. I doubt that this sort of complaint is particularly new. For decades in the mid-20th century, Dwight Macdonald railed against mass culture, which he viewed as polluting and absorbing high culture. In 1980, Pauline Kael wrote an op-ed in the New Yorker entitled “Why Are Movies So Bad? or, The Numbers”, whe

                                            Why has American pop culture stagnated?
                                          • cubic blog: Learnings from building AI agents

                                            I’m Paul, cofounder of cubic—an "AI-native GitHub." One of our core features is an AI code review agent that performs the first review on a PR, catching bugs, anti-patterns, duplicated code, and similar issues. When we first released it back in April, the main feedback we got was that it was too noisy. Even small PRs often ended up flooded with low-value comments, nitpicks, or outright false posit

                                              cubic blog: Learnings from building AI agents
                                            • The bottom emoji breaks rust-analyzer

                                              Thanks to my sponsors: Andy F, Jack Duvall, Tomas Sedovic, James Leitch, Valentin Mariette, Chris Sims, Nicolas Riebesel, Walther, Marc-Andre Giroux, Enrico Zschemisch, Peter Shih, Marcus Griep, psentee, Zalán Bálint Lévai, Ripta Pasay, Tyler Bloom, Boris Dolgov, ZacJW, Geoffrey Thomas, Hadrien G. and 262 more Some bugs are merely fun. Others are simply delicious! Today’s pick is the latter. Repro

                                                The bottom emoji breaks rust-analyzer
                                              • What SaaS Founders Should Know About Entering the Japanese Market

                                                What SaaS Founders Should Know About Entering the Japanese Market Japan is one of the largest global markets for SaaS businesses. Yet selling software products there remains a little-understood process for many international founders and operators. In this post, we talk to Yuga Koda at Nihonium, a firm that helps SaaS companies enter and grow in the Japanese market, about what actually works, what

                                                  What SaaS Founders Should Know About Entering the Japanese Market
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