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  • This is The Entire Computer Science Curriculum in 1000 YouTube Videos

    This is The Entire Computer Science Curriculum in 1000 YouTube Videos In this article, we are going to create an entire Computer Science curriculum using only YouTube videos. The Computer Science curriculum is going to cover every skill essential for a Computer Science Engineer that has expertise in Artificial Intelligence and its subfields, like: Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Computer Vision,

      This is The Entire Computer Science Curriculum in 1000 YouTube Videos
    • Reflections on OpenAI

      I left OpenAI three weeks ago. I had joined the company back in May 2024. I wanted to share my reflections because there's a lot of smoke and noise around what OpenAI is doing, but not a lot of first-hand accounts of what the culture of working there actually feels like. Nabeel Qureshi has an amazing post called Reflections on Palantir, where he ruminates on what made Palantir special. I wanted to

        Reflections on OpenAI
      • The End of Programming – Communications of the ACM

        The end of classical computer science is coming, and most of us are dinosaurs waiting for the meteor to hit. I came of age in the 1980s, programming personal computers such as the Commodore VIC-20 and Apple ][e at home. Going on to study computer science (CS) in college and ultimately getting a Ph.D. at Berkeley, the bulk of my professional training was rooted in what I will call “classical” CS: p

        • Interview with Ryan Dahl, Node.js & Deno creator by Evrone

          In an interview with Evrone, Ryan Dahl speaks about the main challenges in Deno, the future of JavaScript and TypeScript, and tells how he would have changed his approach to Node.js if he could travel back in time. We met with Ryan Dahl, the creator of Node.js, to discuss the origins of the platform, its impact on JavaScript, and his thoughts on its future. In the interview he also reflected on hi

            Interview with Ryan Dahl, Node.js & Deno creator by Evrone
          • RFC 9562: Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)

             Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) K. Davis Request for Comments: 9562 Cisco Systems Obsoletes: 4122 B. Peabody Category: Standards Track Uncloud ISSN: 2070-1721 P. Leach University of Washington May 2024 Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs) Abstract This specification defines UUIDs (Universally Unique IDentifiers) -- also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique IDentifiers) -- and a Uniform Resou

              RFC 9562: Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)
            • Kalyn: a self-hosting compiler for x86-64

              Over the course of my Spring 2020 semester at Harvey Mudd College, I developed a self-hosting compiler entirely from scratch. This article walks through many interesting parts of the project. It’s laid out so you can just read from beginning to end, but if you’re more interested in a particular topic, feel free to jump there. Or, take a look at the project on GitHub. Table of contents What the pro

              • Rust: A Critical Retrospective « bunnie's blog

                Since I was unable to travel for a couple of years during the pandemic, I decided to take my new-found time and really lean into Rust. After writing over 100k lines of Rust code, I think I am starting to get a feel for the language and like every cranky engineer I have developed opinions and because this is the Internet I’m going to share them. The reason I learned Rust was to flesh out parts of t

                • Solving common problems with Kubernetes

                  I first learned Kubernetes ("k8s" for short) in 2018, when my manager sat me down and said "Cloudflare is migrating to Kubernetes, and you're handling our team's migration." This was slightly terrifying to me, because I was a good programmer and a mediocre engineer. I knew how to write code, but I didn't know how to deploy it, or monitor it in production. My computer science degree had taught me a

                    Solving common problems with Kubernetes
                  • Real-world gen AI use cases from the world's leading organizations | Google Cloud Blog

                    AI is here, AI is everywhere: Top companies, governments, researchers, and startups are already enhancing their work with Google's AI solutions. Published April 12, 2024; last updated October 9, 2025. A year and a half ago, during Google Cloud Next 24, we published this list for the first time. It numbered 101 entries. It felt like a lot at the time, and served as a showcase of how much momentum b

                      Real-world gen AI use cases from the world's leading organizations | Google Cloud Blog
                    • 文系学部卒でも無条件で不合格にならないアメリカのオンラインコンピューターサイエンス修士コースを調べ、出願校を決めた|Toshinori Sugita

                      出願校最初の出願校は、ジョージア工科大学のOMSCSになりそうだ。履修できる授業の種類、オンラインコースの懐の深さ(合格率の高さ)(、費用)が主な理由だ。 前回の記事を書いた時点では、ペンシルバニア大学のMCITがベストではないかと考えていた。 しかし、他の選択肢を十分検討していなかったので、候補になり得るコースをリストアップして比較した。特に気にしたのは、つぎの点だ。 ・文系学士が無条件でNGにならない ・CS推奨であっても、テストやMOOCs受講、業務経験などでなんとかなる ・アメリカ(最初の候補として。イギリスやオーストラリアがダメというわけでは全然ないが、英語で学ぶことを前提としたい) ・授業(基礎、分散システム、その他機械学習、データサイエンスなど共通理解になり得るものが選択できる) ・出願要件の具体的な数字(英語テスト、書類、出願期限) ・合格率(オンラインはオンキャンパスと比

                        文系学部卒でも無条件で不合格にならないアメリカのオンラインコンピューターサイエンス修士コースを調べ、出願校を決めた|Toshinori Sugita
                      • Andrej Karpathy — AGI is still a decade away

                        The Andrej Karpathy episode. Andrej explains why reinforcement learning is terrible (but everything else is much worse), why model collapse prevents LLMs from learning the way humans do, why AGI will just blend into the previous ~2.5 centuries of 2% GDP growth, why self driving took so long to crack, and what he sees as the future of education. Watch on YouTube; listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

                          Andrej Karpathy — AGI is still a decade away
                        • Software Engineering - The Soft Parts

                          In "Software Engineering - The Soft Parts" Addy Osmani shares lessons from his first 10 years at Google on the "soft skills" that can help engineers become effective and scale their effectiveness. This guidance should help junior, mid-career and even senior developers move forward, deal with changing technology, and navigate building non-trivial systems. Today I'll share some of the software engin

                            Software Engineering - The Soft Parts
                          • Digital, digital and digital

                            戦略ファーム時代に読んだ700冊程度の本をまとめています*随時更新 戦略ファーム時代に読んだ700冊程度の本をまとめています I. 戦略 企業参謀 https://amzn.to/44iKVxM 当初、いまいち戦略というものが掴めきれず迷子になっていた時に「大前研一はこれだけ読め」と教わった本。大量に出ている他の大前本を読まなくて済むのが見過ごせない大きな価値 戦略サファリ 第2版 https://amzn.to/3csZg0t 経営戦略の本を読み漁るも、実プロジェクトの方が全くもって学びになるという普通の感想をもち、俯瞰での戦略論を求めるようになる。いやあ懐かしい 企業戦略論【上】基本編 競争優位の構築と持続 Jay Barney https://amzn.to/3dJjVxB 任天堂の戦略の妙に気が付きはじめ、ベースか似通ったものはないだろうかと思うようになった時にJay Barney

                              Digital, digital and digital
                            • Fantastic Learning Resources

                              Fantastic Learning Resources Aug 6, 2023 People sometimes ask me: “Alex, how do I learn X?”. This article is a compilation of advice I usually give. This is “things that worked for me” rather than “the most awesome things on earth”. I do consider every item on the list to be fantastic though, and I am forever grateful to people putting these resources together. Learning to Code I don’t think I hav

                              • Manuel Cerón

                                Last year I finally decided to learn some Rust. The official book by Steve Klabnik and Carol Nichols is excellent, but even after reading it and working on some small code exercises, I felt that I needed more to really understand the language. I wanted to work on a small project to get some hands-on experience, but most of my ideas didn’t feel very well suited for Rust. Then I started reading the

                                • Hacker News folk wisdom on visual programming

                                  I’m a fairly frequent Hacker News lurker, especially when I have some other important task that I’m avoiding. I normally head to the Active page (lots of comments, good for procrastination) and pick a nice long discussion thread to browse. So over time I’ve ended up with a good sense of what topics come up a lot. “The Bay Area is too expensive.” “There are too many JavaScript frameworks.” “Bootcam

                                    Hacker News folk wisdom on visual programming
                                  • prompts.chat

                                    Welcome to the “Awesome ChatGPT Prompts” repository! While this collection was originally created for ChatGPT, these prompts work great with other AI models like Claude, Gemini, Hugging Face Chat, Llama, Mistral, and more. ChatGPT is a web interface created by OpenAI that provides access to their GPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer) language models. The underlying models, like GPT-4o and GPT-o

                                    • Who needs Graphviz when you can build it yourself?

                                      We recently overhauled our internal tools for visualizing the compilation of JavaScript and WebAssembly. When SpiderMonkey’s optimizing compiler, Ion, is active, we can now produce interactive graphs showing exactly how functions are processed and optimized. You can play with these graphs right here on this page. Simply write some JavaScript code in the test function and see what graph is produced

                                        Who needs Graphviz when you can build it yourself?
                                      • xvw.lol - Why I chose OCaml as my primary language

                                        This article is a translation, the original version is available here. I started using the OCaml language regularly around 2012, and since then, my interest and enthusiasm for this language have only grown. It has become my preferred choice for almost all my personal projects, and it has also influenced my professional choices. Since 2014, I have been actively participating in public conferences d

                                        • Why We Use Julia, 10 Years Later

                                          Exactly ten years ago today, we published "Why We Created Julia", introducing the Julia project to the world. At this point, we have moved well past the ambitious goals set out in the original blog post. Julia is now used by hundreds of thousands of people. It is taught at hundreds of universities and entire companies are being formed that build their software stacks on Julia. From personalized me

                                            Why We Use Julia, 10 Years Later
                                          • State of Text Rendering 2024

                                            Preface In 2009 I wrote State of Text Rendering, as a high-level review of the Free Software text rendering stack, with a focus on shaping, and mostly in the context of the GNOME Desktop. Since then, I have spent around twelve years working on various Google products to improve fonts and text rendering: all Open Source work. When I wrote that text in 2009, my main assignment was to finish HarfBuzz

                                            • What's New in Emacs 28.1?

                                              Try Mastering Emacs for free! Are you struggling with the basics? Have you mastered movement and editing yet? When you have read Mastering Emacs you will understand Emacs. It’s that time again: there’s a new major version of Emacs and, with it, a treasure trove of new features and changes. Notable features include the formal inclusion of native compilation, a technique that will greatly speed up y

                                              • Lakehouse: A New Generation of Open Platforms that Unify Data Warehousing and Advanced Analytics

                                                Lakehouse: A New Generation of Open Platforms that Unify Data Warehousing and Advanced Analytics Michael Armbrust1, Ali Ghodsi1,2, Reynold Xin1, Matei Zaharia1,3 1Databricks, 2UC Berkeley, 3Stanford University Abstract This paper argues that the data warehouse architecture as we know it today will wither in the coming years and be replaced by a new architectural pattern, the Lakehouse, which will

                                                • The Alkyne GC · mcyoung

                                                  Alkyne is a scripting language I built a couple of years ago for generating configuration blobs. Its interpreter is a naive AST walker1 that uses ARC2 for memory management, so it’s pretty slow, and I’ve been gradually writing a new evaluation engine for it. This post isn’t about Alkyne itself, that’s for another day. For now, I’d like to write down some notes for the GC I wrote3 for it, and more

                                                    The Alkyne GC · mcyoung
                                                  • Large Text Compression Benchmark

                                                     Large Text Compression Benchmark Matt Mahoney Last update: July 3, 2025. history This competition ranks lossless data compression programs by the compressed size (including the size of the decompression program) of the first 109 bytes of the XML text dump of the English version of Wikipedia on Mar. 3, 2006. About the test data. The goal of this benchmark is not to find the best overall compressi

                                                    • Easy Mode Rust — Llogiq on stuff

                                                      This post is based on my RustNationUK ‘24 talk with the same title. The talk video is on youtube, the slides are served from here. Also, here’s the lyrics of the song I introduced the talk with (sung to the tune of Bob Dylan’s “The times, they are a-changin’”): Come gather Rustaceans wherever you roam and admit that our numbers have steadily grown. The community’s awesomeness ain’t set in stone, s

                                                      • A from-scratch tour of Bitcoin in Python

                                                        I find blockchain fascinating because it extends open source software development to open source + state. This seems to be a genuine/exciting innovation in computing paradigms; We don’t just get to share code, we get to share a running computer, and anyone anywhere can use it in an open and permissionless manner. The seeds of this revolution arguably began with Bitcoin, so I became curious to dril

                                                        • Expert Generalists

                                                          As computer systems get more sophisticated we've seen a growing trend to value deep specialists. But we've found that our most effective colleagues have a skill in spanning many specialties. We are thus starting to explicitly recognize this as a first-class skill of “Expert Generalist”. We can identify the key characteristics of people with this skill - and thus recruit and promote based on it. We

                                                            Expert Generalists
                                                          • Automerge 2.0 | Automerge CRDT

                                                            Automerge 2.0 is here and ready for production. It’s our first supported release resulting from a ground-up rewrite. The result is a production-ready CRDT with huge improvements in performance and reliability. It's available in both JavaScript and Rust, and includes TypeScript types and C bindings for use in other ecosystems. Even better, Automerge 2.0 comes with improved documentation and, for th

                                                            • A History of Clojure

                                                              71 A History of Clojure RICH HICKEY, Cognitect, Inc., USA Shepherd: Mira Mezini, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany Clojure was designed to be a general-purpose, practical functional language, suitable for use by professionals wherever its host language, e.g., Java, would be. Initially designed in 2005 and released in 2007, Clojure is a dialect of Lisp, but is not a direct descendant of any

                                                              • The AI-Native Software Engineer

                                                                An AI-native software engineer is one who deeply integrates AI into their daily workflow, treating it as a partner to amplify their abilities. This requires a fundamental mindset shift. Instead of thinking “AI might replace me” an AI-native engineer asks for every task: “Could AI help me do this faster, better, or differently?”. The mindset is optimistic and proactive - you see AI as a multiplier

                                                                  The AI-Native Software Engineer
                                                                • オンラインでコンピュータサイエンス修士が取れる海外大学院まとめ | Masaki Nishi

                                                                  ex-btrax, Rakuten, AWS, Deloitte / B.S. in CS @OregonState, M.S. in CS @GeorgiaTech こんにちは、Masaki Nishi@Twitterです。 私は、現在メガベンチャーでエンジニアとして働いていて、英語もそこそこ使っているのですが、大学時代の学部が経済学部かつ、今まで英語でアカデミックに学んだ経験がないということで、海外の大学院でコンピュータサイエンス修士を取得したいと思っています。 経済的に、日本で働きながらオンラインで海外大学院のコンピュータサイエンスの修士号を取得しようと考えており、情報収集をしていたので、まとめてみました。 前回の「オンラインでコンピューターサイエンス学士を取得できる海外大学まとめ」という記事で、日本にいながらオンラインでコンピュータサイエンスの学士号を取得できる大学をまとめましたが

                                                                    オンラインでコンピュータサイエンス修士が取れる海外大学院まとめ | Masaki Nishi
                                                                  • Data structures and algorithms study cheatsheets for coding interviews | Tech Interview Handbook

                                                                    General interview tips​Clarify any assumptions you made subconsciously. Many questions are under-specified on purpose. Always validate input first. Check for invalid/empty/negative/different type input. Never assume you are given the valid parameters. Alternatively, clarify with the interviewer whether you can assume valid input (usually yes), which can save you time from writing code that does in

                                                                      Data structures and algorithms study cheatsheets for coding interviews | Tech Interview Handbook
                                                                    • GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI

                                                                      ComfyUI-Gemini_Flash_2.0_Exp (⭐+172): A ComfyUI custom node that integrates Google's Gemini Flash 2.0 Experimental model, enabling multimodal analysis of text, images, video frames, and audio directly within ComfyUI workflows. ComfyUI-ACE_Plus (⭐+115): Custom nodes for various visual generation and editing tasks using ACE_Plus FFT Model. ComfyUI-Manager (⭐+113): ComfyUI-Manager itself is also a cu

                                                                        GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI
                                                                      • Philosophy of coroutines

                                                                        [Simon Tatham, initial version 2023-09-01, last updated 2025-03-25] [Coroutines trilogy: C preprocessor | C++20 native | general philosophy ] Introduction Why I’m so enthusiastic about coroutines The objective view: what makes them useful? Versus explicit state machines Versus conventional threads The subjective view: why do I like them so much? “Teach the student when the student is ready” They s

                                                                        • C++ safety, in context

                                                                          Scope. To talk about C++’s current safety problems and solutions well, I need to include the context of the broad landscape of security and safety threats facing all software. I chair the ISO C++ standards committee and I work for Microsoft, but these are my personal opinions and I hope they will invite more dialog across programming language and security communities. Acknowledgments. Many thanks

                                                                            C++ safety, in context
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