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  • How I built a modern website in 2021

    How I built a modern website in 2021September 29th, 2021 — 34 min read For over half of 2021, I worked on a complete rewrite of kentcdodds.com. You're reading this on the rewrite of this site! Are you using dark mode or light mode? Have you signed in and selected your team yet? Have you tried to call into the Call Kent Podcast? This blog post isn't about these and other features of the new site, b

      How I built a modern website in 2021
    • 【忙しい人のための】Next.js公式チュートリアルを完走してきたので記事1本で振り返る【ギュッと凝縮】 | DevelopersIO

      本記事はNext.jsのチュートリアルが大きく変わったためリンク切れを起こしています。 技術メモのため記事としては残しますが、リンク切れにご留意ください。 また機会があれば新チュートリアルで記事を書こうと思いますm(_ _)m こんちには。 データアナリティクス事業本部 インテグレーション部 機械学習チームの中村です。 今回は以下のNext.jsのチュートリアルをほぼ一通り(SEOのところ以外)実施しましたので、ポイントを記事化しました。 https://nextjs.org/learn/foundations/about-nextjs" チュートリアル自体は、以下のような内容が分かるものとなっています。 CRA(create-react-app)のみ使用しているとイメージしづらい、素のHTML + JavaScriptとReactの関係のイメージが分かる Reactがフレームワークではな

        【忙しい人のための】Next.js公式チュートリアルを完走してきたので記事1本で振り返る【ギュッと凝縮】 | DevelopersIO
      • REST API Design Best Practices Handbook – How to Build a REST API with JavaScript, Node.js, and Express.js

        By Jean-Marc Möckel 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

          REST API Design Best Practices Handbook – How to Build a REST API with JavaScript, Node.js, and Express.js
        • WebKit Features in Safari 16.4

          Mar 27, 2023 by Patrick Angle, Marcos Caceres, Razvan Caliman, Jon Davis, Brady Eidson, Timothy Hatcher, Ryosuke Niwa, and Jen Simmons ContentsWeb Push on iOS and iPadOSImprovements for Web AppsWeb ComponentsCSSHTMLJavaScript and WebAssemblyWeb APIImages, Video, and AudioWKWebViewDeveloper ToolingWeb InspectorSafari Web ExtensionsSafari Content BlockersNew Restrictions in Lockdown ModeMore Improve

            WebKit Features in Safari 16.4
          • GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers

            Official integrations are maintained by companies building production ready MCP servers for their platforms. 21st.dev Magic - Create crafted UI components inspired by the best 21st.dev design engineers. 2slides - An MCP server that provides tools to convert content into slides/PPT/presentation or generate slides/PPT/presentation with user intention. ActionKit by Paragon - Connect to 130+ SaaS inte

              GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers
            • What's New In DevTools (Chrome 94)  |  Blog  |  Chrome for Developers

              Use DevTools in your preferred language Chrome DevTools now supports more than 80 languages, allowing you to work in your preferred language! Open Settings, then select your preferred language under the Preferences > Language dropdown and reload DevTools. Preferences" width="800" height="494"> Chromium issue: 1163928 New Nest Hub devices in the Device list You can now simulate the dimensions of Ne

              • PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 | BLOG - DeNA Engineering

                2025.07.18 技術記事 PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 by akira.kuroiwa #gemini-cli #ai #security #ai-agent #context-engineering #packetproxy 「なんかよく分からないけど、すごい」で終わらせないために こんにちは、DeNA セキュリティ技術グループの 黒岩 亮 ( @kakira9618 ) です。 AIエージェント、とくに Gemini CLI のようなコーディングを支援してくれるツールは非常に強力で、私たちの開発体験を大きく変えようとしています。しかし、その一方で、こんな風に感じたことはありませんか? 「このファイルの情報、勝手にAIに送られたりしない? 大丈夫かな?」 と、情報管理・セキュリティ面で漠然と

                  PacketProxyで探るGemini CLIのコンテキストエンジニアリング 〜AIエージェントを信頼できる相棒に〜 | BLOG - DeNA Engineering
                • 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

                  • Extreme Explorations of TypeScript's Type System | Learning TypeScript

                    TypeScript's type system is Turing Complete: meaning it has conditional branching (conditional types) and works with an arbitrary huge amount of memory. As a result, you can use the type system as its own programming language complete with variables, functions, and recursion. Developers have pushed the bounds of type operations possible in the type system to write some pretty incredible things! Th

                      Extreme Explorations of TypeScript's Type System | Learning TypeScript
                    • Claude Mythos Preview \ red.anthropic.com

                      Assessing Claude Mythos Preview’s cybersecurity capabilities April 7, 2026 Nicholas Carlini, Newton Cheng, Keane Lucas, Michael Moore, Milad Nasr, Vinay Prabhushankar, Winnie Xiao Hakeem Angulu, Evyatar Ben Asher, Jackie Bow, Keir Bradwell, Ben Buchanan, David Forsythe, Daniel Freeman, Alex Gaynor, Xinyang Ge, Logan Graham, Kyla Guru, Hasnain Lakhani, Matt McNiece, Mojtaba Mehrara, Renee Nichol, A

                      • CVE-2024-4367 - Arbitrary JavaScript execution in PDF.js - Codean Labs

                        This post details CVE-2024-4367, a vulnerability in PDF.js found by Codean Labs. PDF.js is a JavaScript-based PDF viewer maintained by Mozilla. This bug allows an attacker to execute arbitrary JavaScript code as soon as a malicious PDF file is opened. This affects all Firefox users (<126) because PDF.js is used by Firefox to show PDF files, but also seriously impacts many web- and Electron-based a

                          CVE-2024-4367 - Arbitrary JavaScript execution in PDF.js - Codean Labs
                        • The New Internet: Tailscale's Vision for the Future of Connectivity

                          Avery Pennarun is the CEO and co-founder of Tailscale. A version of this post was originally presented at a company all-hands. We don’t talk a lot in public about the big vision for Tailscale, why we’re really here. Usually I prefer to focus on what exists right now, and what we’re going to do in the next few months. The future can be distracting. But increasingly, I’ve found companies are startin

                            The New Internet: Tailscale's Vision for the Future of Connectivity
                          • A virtual DOM in 200 lines of JavaScript

                            In this post I’ll walk through the full implementation of a Virtual DOM in a bit over 200 lines of JavaScript. The result is a full-featured and sufficiently performant virtual DOM library (demos). It’s available on NPM as the smvc package. The main goal is to illustrate the fundamental technique behind tools like React. React, Vue and the Elm language all simplify the creation of interactive web

                            • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 - TypeScript

                              Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.2! If you’re not familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on top of JavaScript by making it possible to declare and describe types. Writing types in our code allows us to explain intent and have other tools check our code to catch mistakes like typos, issues with null and undefined, and more. Types also power TypeScript’s edi

                                Announcing TypeScript 5.2 - TypeScript
                              • Rust to WebAssembly the hard way — surma.dev

                                Toggle dark mode What follows is a brain dump of everything I know about compiling Rust to WebAssembly. Enjoy. Some time ago, I wrote a blog post on how to compile C to WebAssembly without Emscripten, i.e. without the default tool that makes that process easy. In Rust, the tool that makes WebAssembly easy is called wasm-bindgen, and we are going to ditch it! At the same time, Rust is a bit differe

                                  Rust to WebAssembly the hard way — surma.dev
                                • AST vs. Bytecode: Interpreters in the Age of Meta-Compilation

                                  233 AST vs. Bytecode: Interpreters in the Age of Meta-Compilation OCTAVE LAROSE, University of Kent, UK SOPHIE KALEBA, University of Kent, UK HUMPHREY BURCHELL, University of Kent, UK STEFAN MARR, University of Kent, UK Thanks to partial evaluation and meta-tracing, it became practical to build language implementations that reach state-of-the-art peak performance by implementing only an interprete

                                  • Introduction to Spherical Harmonics for Graphics Programmers

                                    This post requires JavaScript to properly render mathematics (like $\int f(x) dx$, $Y_\ell^m$). It's not likely to work in your browser's "reader mode". On your computer graphics journey, you will eventually run into some paper or code mentioning spherical harmonic functions. They are indeed a very useful tool: with just a few coefficients, they allow us to approximate a given function defined on

                                    • syntaxdesign

                                      One of the most recognizable features of a languages is its syntax. What are some of the things about syntax that matter? What questions might you ask if you were creating a syntax for your own language? Motivation A programming language gives us a way structure our thoughts. Each program, has a kind of internal structure, for example: How can we capture this structure? One way is directly, via pi

                                      • Announcing TypeScript 5.5 - TypeScript

                                        Today we’re excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.5! If you’re not familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on top of JavaScript by making it possible to declare and describe types. Writing types in our code allows us to explain intent and have other tools check our code to catch mistakes like typos, issues with null and undefined, and more. Types also power TypeScript’s edi

                                          Announcing TypeScript 5.5 - TypeScript
                                        • WebGPU — All of the cores, none of the canvas — surma.dev

                                          WebGPU is an upcoming Web API that gives you low-level, general-purpose access GPUs. I am not very experienced with graphics. I picked up bits and bobs of WebGL by reading through tutorials on how to build game engines with OpenGL and learned more about shaders by watching Inigo Quilez do amazing things on ShaderToy by just using shaders, without any 3D meshes or models. This got me far enough to

                                            WebGPU — All of the cores, none of the canvas — surma.dev
                                          • 14 Linting Rules To Help You Write Asynchronous Code in JavaScript

                                            Debugging asynchronous code in JavaScript can feel like navigating a minefield at times. You don't know when and where the console.logs will print out, and you have no idea how your code is executed. It's hard to correctly structure async code so it executes in the right order as you intend it to. Wouldn't it be nice if you had some guidance while writing asynchronous code, and to get a helpful me

                                              14 Linting Rules To Help You Write Asynchronous Code in JavaScript
                                            • Use Thunder Client and VSCode as an alternative to Postman

                                              Visual Studio Code (VSCode) is a popular code editor that can be used as an alternative to Postman for API testing. With the right extensions, developers can easily create, manage, and test APIs within the VSCode environment. Using Thunder Client with VSCode for API testing can streamline the development workflow and save time by using a single tool for coding and testing, as this article will sho

                                                Use Thunder Client and VSCode as an alternative to Postman
                                              • News from WWDC25: WebKit in Safari 26 beta

                                                Jun 9, 2025 by Jen Simmons, Saron Yitbarek, Jon Davis, Richard Robinson, Eddy Wong, Brandel Zachernuk, Marcos Cáceres, Tim Nguyen, Daniel Liu, Razvan Caliman, Blaze Burg, Qianlang Chen, Brian Weinstein, Aditya Keerthi, Karl Dubost, David Johnson, Luming Yin ContentsSVG IconsEvery site can be a web app on iOS and iPadOSHDR ImagesWebKit in SwiftUI<model> on visionOSImmersive video and audio on visio

                                                  News from WWDC25: WebKit in Safari 26 beta
                                                • Why People are Angry over Go 1.23 Iterators - gingerBill

                                                  NOTE: This is based on, but completely rewritten, from a Twitter post: https://x.com/TheGingerBill/status/1802645945642799423 TL;DR It makes Go feel too “functional” rather than being an unabashed imperative language. I recently saw a post on Twitter showing the upcoming Go iterator design for Go 1.23 (August 2024). From what I can gather, many people seem to dislike the design. I wanted to give m

                                                  • Announcing TypeScript 5.5 Beta - TypeScript

                                                    Today we are excited to announce the availability of TypeScript 5.5 Beta. To get started using the beta, you can get it through NuGet, or through npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@beta Here’s a quick list of what’s new in TypeScript 5.5! Inferred Type Predicates Control Flow Narrowing for Constant Indexed Accesses Type Imports in JSDoc Regular Expression Syntax Checking Iso

                                                      Announcing TypeScript 5.5 Beta - TypeScript
                                                    • React for Two Computers — overreacted

                                                      I’ve been trying to write this post at least a dozen times. I don’t mean this figuratively; at one point, I literally had a desktop folder with a dozen abandoned drafts. They had wildly different styles—from rigoruous to chaotically cryptic and insufferably meta; they would start abruptly, chew on themselves, and eventually trail off to nowhere. One by one, I threw them all away because they all s

                                                        React for Two Computers — overreacted
                                                      • Announcing TypeScript 5.5 RC - TypeScript

                                                        Today we are excited to announce the availability of the release candidate of TypeScript 5.5. To get started using the RC, you can get it through NuGet, or through npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@rc Here’s a quick list of what’s new in TypeScript 5.5! Inferred Type Predicates Control Flow Narrowing for Constant Indexed Accesses Type Imports in JSDoc Regular Expression Syn

                                                          Announcing TypeScript 5.5 RC - TypeScript
                                                        • MAI-Thinking-1: Building a Hill-Climbing Machine

                                                          MAI-Thinking-1: Building a Hill-Climbing Machine The Microsoft AI Team 1 Abstract Progress in AI is driven not by a single model, but by the ability to continually improve upon the current state of models. Achieving this requires treating model development as a system-level optimization problem, for which the solution is building a hill-climbing machine for rapid improvement. Our process includes

                                                          • Jekyll and the Genesis of the Jamstack

                                                            Skip to main content Blog Category: Future Jekyll and the Genesis of the Jamstack Jared White on September 13, 2021 September 15 Update: There’s been a fair amount of internet consternation since I published this article. While I do stand by everything in the post factually-speaking, I apologize for the insensitive timing of this article—coming so soon after Frank’s passing. I’m genuinely sorry th

                                                              Jekyll and the Genesis of the Jamstack
                                                            • Atkinson Dithering

                                                              Atkinson Dithering When the Macintosh was released in 1984, it featured a square-pixeled black-and-white display at a crisp 72 dots per inch. The 512x342 resolution might seem less than impressive today, but for the time it was a pleasantly high-resolution consumer-grade computer. Among other things, the monospaced Monaco 9pt bitmap font featured characters that were 6 pixels wide, allowing the Ma

                                                              • Cloudflare functions with Scala.js

                                                                Indoor VivantsAnton Sviridov. I love reinventing the wheel and I usually use Scala for that. TL;DR We are deploying an app to Cloudflare using Scala.js We are using ScalablyTyped We are using Scala 3 heavily Code on Github Deployed app Cloudflare API bindings Welcome to the "Put ma Scala on yo cloud" series I want to say that I'm kicking off a blog series, but even I don't believe that. If I did,

                                                                • WebKit Features in Safari 18.4

                                                                  Mar 31, 2025 by Jen Simmons, Saron Yitbarek, Jon Davis, Razvan Caliman, Karl Dubost, Brady Eidson, Elika Etemad, Youenn Fablet, Matthew Finkel, Simon Fraser, Timothy Hatcher, David Johnson, Anne van Kesteren, Daniel Liu, Keith Miller, Rupin Mittal, Tim Nguyen, Pascoe, Abrar Rahman Protyasha, Richard Robinson, Lily Spiniolas, Brandon Stewart, John Wilander and Luming Yin ContentsDeclarative Web Pus

                                                                    WebKit Features in Safari 18.4
                                                                  • Local-first software: You own your data, in spite of the cloud

                                                                    Cloud apps like Google Docs and Trello are popular because they enable real-time collaboration with colleagues, and they make it easy for us to access our work from all of our devices. However, by centralizing data storage on servers, cloud apps also take away ownership and agency from users. If a service shuts down, the software stops functioning, and data created with that software is lost. In t

                                                                    • Highlights from the Claude 4 system prompt

                                                                      25th May 2025 Anthropic publish most of the system prompts for their chat models as part of their release notes. They recently shared the new prompts for both Claude Opus 4 and Claude Sonnet 4. I enjoyed digging through the prompts, since they act as a sort of unofficial manual for how best to use these tools. Here are my highlights, including a dive into the leaked tool prompts that Anthropic did

                                                                        Highlights from the Claude 4 system prompt
                                                                      • Frozen String Literals: Past, Present, Future?

                                                                        If you are a Rubyist, you’ve likely been writing # frozen_string_literal: true at the top of most of your Ruby source code files, or at the very least, that you’ve seen it in some other projects. Based on informal discussions at conferences and online, it seems that what this magic comment really is about is not always well understood, so I figured it would be worth talking about why it’s there, w

                                                                        • The V8 Sandbox · V8

                                                                          After almost three years since the initial design document and hundreds of CLs in the meantime, the V8 Sandbox — a lightweight, in-process sandbox for V8 — has now progressed to the point where it is no longer considered an experimental security feature. Starting today, the V8 Sandbox is included in Chrome's Vulnerability Reward Program (VRP). While there are still a number of issues to resolve be

                                                                          • ROFL with a LOL: rewriting an NGINX module in Rust

                                                                            ROFL with a LOL: rewriting an NGINX module in Rust2023-02-24 At Cloudflare, engineers spend a great deal of time refactoring or rewriting existing functionality. When your company doubles the amount of traffic it handles every year, what was once an elegant solution to a problem can quickly become outdated as the engineering constraints change. Not only that, but when you're averaging 40 million r

                                                                              ROFL with a LOL: rewriting an NGINX module in Rust
                                                                            • 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
                                                                              • Designing the Built-in AI Web APIs

                                                                                For the last year, I’ve been working as part of the Chrome built-in AI team on a set of APIs to bring various AI models to the web browser. As with all APIs we ship, our goal is to make these APIs compelling enough that other browsers adopt them, and they become part of the web’s standard library. Working in such a fast-moving space brings tension with the usual process for building web APIs. When

                                                                                • Let’s learn how modern JavaScript frameworks work by building one

                                                                                  2 Dec Let’s learn how modern JavaScript frameworks work by building one Posted December 2, 2023 by Nolan Lawson in Web. Tagged: javascript. 20 Comments In my day job, I work on a JavaScript framework (LWC). And although I’ve been working on it for almost three years, I still feel like a dilettante. When I read about what’s going on in the larger framework world, I often feel overwhelmed by all the

                                                                                    Let’s learn how modern JavaScript frameworks work by building one