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  • The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers

    Developers are increasingly relying on AI coding assistants to accelerate our daily workflows. These tools can autocomplete functions, suggest bug fixes, and even generate entire modules or MVPs. Yet, as many of us have learned, the quality of the AI’s output depends largely on the quality of the prompt you provide. In other words, prompt engineering has become an essential skill. A poorly phrased

      The Prompt Engineering Playbook for Programmers
    • 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
      • 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

        • Introducing Ezno

          Ezno is an experimental compiler I have been working on and off for a while. In short, it is a JavaScript compiler featuring checking, correctness and performance for building full-stack (rendering on the client and server) websites. This post is just an overview of some of the features I have been working on which I think are quite cool as well an overview on the project philosophy ;) It is still

            Introducing Ezno
          • 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

            • 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

              • jQuery 4.0.0 | Official jQuery Blog

                On January 14, 2006, John Resig introduced a JavaScript library called jQuery at BarCamp in New York City. Now, 20 years later, the jQuery team is happy to announce the final release of jQuery 4.0.0. After a long development cycle and several pre-releases, jQuery 4.0.0 brings many improvements and modernizations. It is the first major version release in almost 10 years and includes some breaking c

                • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 RC - TypeScript

                  Today we’re excited to announce our Release Candidate of TypeScript 5.2! Between now and the stable release of TypeScript 5.2, we expect no further changes apart from critical bug fixes. 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 5.2! using Declarations and Explic

                    Announcing TypeScript 5.2 RC - 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
                    • HTML: The Programming Language

                      Introduction HTML, the programming language, is a practical, turing-complete[1], stack-based programming language based on HTML, the markup language. It uses elements defined in HTML, the markup language, in order to do computations. To give you a sense of what HTML, the programming langauge, looks like, below is a sample program that prints the values from 1 to 10 to standard out (console.log) A

                      • 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
                        • WebKit Features in Safari 17.2

                          ContentsHTMLCSSImages and videoJavaScriptWeb APIWeb AppsWebGLPrivacyWeb InspectorFixes for Interop 2023 and moreUpdating to Safari 17.2Feedback Web technology is constantly moving forward, with both big new features and small subtle adjustments. Nowadays, web developers expect web browsers to update multiple times a year, instead of the once or twice a year typical of the late 2000s — or the once

                            WebKit Features in Safari 17.2
                          • 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

                            • 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
                                  • Announcing TypeScript 5.2 Beta - TypeScript

                                    Today we are excited to announce the availability of TypeScript 5.2 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 5.2! using Declarations and Explicit Resource Management Decorator Metadata Named and Anonymous Tuple Elements Easier Method Usage for Unions o

                                      Announcing TypeScript 5.2 Beta - TypeScript
                                    • 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
                                      • Node.js

                                        Notable changes Add support for externally shared js builtins By default Node.js is built so that all dependencies are bundled into the Node.js binary itself. Some Node.js distributions prefer to manage dependencies externally. There are existing build options that allow dependencies with native code to be externalized. This commit adds additional options so that dependencies with JavaScript code

                                          Node.js
                                        • What if you don't need MCP at all?

                                          What if you don't need MCP at all? 2025-11-02 One chonky MCP server Table of contents After months of agentic coding frenzy, Twitter is still ablaze with discussions about MCP servers. I previously did some very light benchmarking to see if Bash tools or MCP servers are better suited for a specific task. The TL;DR: both can be efficient if you take care. Unfortunately, many of the most popular MCP

                                            What if you don't need MCP at all?
                                          • Rustenstein 3D: Game programming like it's 1992 - NextRoll

                                            Twice a year, NextRoll celebrates Hack Week, where employees get to work for a week on a project of their choice. It’s an excellent opportunity to experiment, learn new technologies and team up with people from across the company. You can learn all about Hack Week here. As NextRoll increasingly adopts the Rust programming language, it’s common for engineers to use Hack Week as an opportunity to ga

                                              Rustenstein 3D: Game programming like it's 1992 - NextRoll
                                            • October 2022 (version 1.73)

                                              Update 1.73.1: The update addresses these issues. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the October 2022 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Search include/exclude folders - Quickly set folders to include/exclude in the tree view. Comma

                                                October 2022 (version 1.73)
                                              • WebKit Features in Safari 26.0

                                                Sep 15, 2025 by Jen Simmons, Saron Yitbarek, Jon Davis, Tim Nguyen, Blaze Burg, Marcos Cáceres, Razvan Caliman, Qianlang Chen, Karl Dubost, Kiet Ho, David Johnson, Aditya Keerthi, Daniel Liu, Keith Miller, Abrar Rahman Protyasha, Richard Robinson, Kiara Rose, Ahmad Saleem, Anne van Kesteren, Brian Weinstein, Eddy Wong, Luming Yin, Brandel Zachernuk ContentsCSSEvery site can be a web app on iOS and

                                                  WebKit Features in Safari 26.0
                                                • What's New In DevTools (Chrome 101)  |  Blog  |  Chrome for Developers

                                                  Import and export recorded user flows as a JSON file The Recorder panel now supports importing and exporting user flow recordings as a JSON file. This addition makes it easier to share user flows and can be useful for bug reporting. For example, download this JSON file. You can import it with the import button and replay the user flow. Apart from that, you can export the recording as well. After r

                                                  • Wasmtime and Cranelift in 2023

                                                    It’s that time of year: time to start winding down for the winter holiday season, time to reflect on the past year, and time to think about what we can accomplish together in 2024. The Wasmtime and Cranelift projects are no exception. This article recounts Wasmtime and Cranelift progress in 2023 and explores what we might do in 2024. Wasmtime is a standalone WebAssembly runtime. It is fast, secure

                                                      Wasmtime and Cranelift in 2023
                                                    • From XML to JSON to CBOR - The CBOR, dCBOR, and Gordian Envelope Book

                                                      Press ← or → to navigate between chapters Press S or / to search in the book Press ? to show this help Press Esc to hide this help From XML to JSON to CBOR A Lingua Franca for Data? In modern computing, data exchange is foundational to everything from web browsing to microservices and IoT devices. The ability for different systems to represent, share, and interpret structured information drives ou

                                                      • Renato Athaydes

                                                        Revisiting Prechelt’s paper and follow-ups comparing Java, Lisp, C/C++ and scripting languages A discussion on programming languages' impact on productivity and program efficiency. In 1999, Lutz Prechelt published a seminal article on the COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM (October 1999/Vol. 42, No. 10) called Comparing Java vs. C/C++ Efficiency Differences to Interpersonal Differences, henceforth Java VS

                                                        • Bullshit Jobs

                                                          Notes: ISBN 978-1-5011-4331-1, ISBN 978-1-5011-4334-2 (ebook); Most names and many identifying characteristics have been changed.; Interior design by Carly Loman; Jacket design by David L Itman To anyone who would rather be doing something useful with themselves. Preface: On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs In the spring of 2013, I unwittingly set off a very minor international sensation. It all be

                                                            Bullshit Jobs
                                                          • How fast is javascript? Simulating 20,000,000 particles

                                                            How fast is javascript? Simulating 20,000,000 particles The challenge, simulate 1,000,000 particles in plain javascript at 60 fps on a phone using only the cpu. Let's go. Ok, this is not a particularly difficult challenge if you did all the work on a gpu but the rule of the challenge is to use the CPU only or as much as possible and to stay in js land so no wasm. I know what you are thinking. This

                                                              How fast is javascript? Simulating 20,000,000 particles
                                                            • SwiftUI for Mac 2024 - TrozWare

                                                              Over the years, I have written articles and sample apps to demonstrate the new features of each year's SwiftUI updates with particular emphasis on macOS app development. Last year, the major update to SwiftUI was the new data flow system using the Observation framework. I covered that in my article SwiftUI Data Flow 2023 but I didn't feel there were sufficient UI changes to warrant an update to my

                                                              • PhobosLab

                                                                tl;dr: pl_synth is a tiny music synthesizer for C & JS and an editor (“tracker”) to create instruments and arrangements. You can try it out at phoboslab.org/synth/ The song Microscope by Ferris / Youth Uprising playing in pl_synth Sonant is a brilliant piece of software. It gives you 8 tracks, where each track has its own “instrument” (just a bunch of parameters) and a number of patterns. You fill

                                                                • 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
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