Technology Commentary

Technology Commentary

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Software Bloat Makes me Sad
Software Bloat Makes me Sad
Most software is bloated, meaning: it’s taking both a lot more space to store (both in memory and on disk) and more time to run than required.
·bugsink.com·
Software Bloat Makes me Sad
The Department of Everything
The Department of Everything
A world that has tossed out the print edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica in favor of Wikipedia is not necessarily a richer one.
·hedgehogreview.com·
The Department of Everything
No EC2 or Kubernetes Allowed: Insights from Building Serverless-Only Architecture at PostNL
No EC2 or Kubernetes Allowed: Insights from Building Serverless-Only Architecture at PostNL
PostNL shared insights and guidance from its transition from outsourced IT project delivery to an in-house product delivery capability. By embracing cloud-native technologies, with an emphasis on serverless services, the company achieved significant gains in productivity and market responsiveness while reducing operational costs.
·infoq.com·
No EC2 or Kubernetes Allowed: Insights from Building Serverless-Only Architecture at PostNL
The Rise of Coffee Shop Networking
The Rise of Coffee Shop Networking
Coffee shop networking is a significant shift in how organizations approach network design by prioritizing user experience, flexibility, and security.
·networkcomputing.com·
The Rise of Coffee Shop Networking
Summary of the AJAX frameworks comparison
Summary of the AJAX frameworks comparison
previous weeks, I've analyzed several libraries and frameworks that augment the client with AJAX capabilities. Vue.jsAlpine.jsHTMXVaadin In this post, I’ll compare them across several axes. Analysis Frontend skills Remember that I started this series from the point of view of a backend developer. In this section, I grade how much you need to know about client technologies to complete the job. Team organization In the introduction, I hinted that the decoupling of frontend and back
·blog.frankel.ch·
Summary of the AJAX frameworks comparison
🛑 Don’t Start Coding Yet: Here’s What Great Engineers Do First
🛑 Don’t Start Coding Yet: Here’s What Great Engineers Do First
Before jumping into coding, top software engineers make a plan. By reducing scope creep, managing dependencies, and setting clear milestones, engineers can deliver better results on time
·strategizeyourcareer.com·
🛑 Don’t Start Coding Yet: Here’s What Great Engineers Do First
The infinite hows
The infinite hows
An argument against the Five Whys and an alternative approach you can apply.
·oreilly.com·
The infinite hows
revealing the fediverse's gifts
revealing the fediverse's gifts
If they’re motivated, tooled up, and plugged into communities of support fediverse server teams can provide context-sensitive, high-touch local moderation for their members—while also connecting to a broad landscape of other well-governed servers. But can new fediverse members find them?
·wrecka.ge·
revealing the fediverse's gifts
A Missing IDE Feature
A Missing IDE Feature
Slightly unusual genre --- with this article, I want to try to enact a change in the world. I believe that there is a missing IDE feature which is:
·matklad.github.io·
A Missing IDE Feature
The Part of PostgreSQL We Hate the Most
The Part of PostgreSQL We Hate the Most
As much as Andy loves PostgreSQL, there is one part that is terrible and causes many headaches for people. Learn what it is and why it sucks.
·cs.cmu.edu·
The Part of PostgreSQL We Hate the Most
REST APIs Turn 25: How They Came To Be and What Could Be Next
REST APIs Turn 25: How They Came To Be and What Could Be Next
As REST approaches its 25th anniversary, it's a perfect time to reflect on its impact in the web era. With AI and automation on the rise, let's explore the evolution of APIs and what the future might hold for RESTful APIs in this new landscape.
·journal.hexmos.com·
REST APIs Turn 25: How They Came To Be and What Could Be Next
Scaling productivity on microservices at Lyft (Part 1)
Scaling productivity on microservices at Lyft (Part 1)
Late in 2018, Lyft engineering completed decomposing our original PHP monolith into a collection of Python and Go microservices. A few…
·eng.lyft.com·
Scaling productivity on microservices at Lyft (Part 1)
Bike Manufacturers Are Making Bikes Less Repairable
Bike Manufacturers Are Making Bikes Less Repairable
Just like cars, tractors, computers, and seemingly every other product category, bikes—and especially e-bikes—are going all black box on us.
·ifixit.com·
Bike Manufacturers Are Making Bikes Less Repairable
Rethinking Dev Loops: A Network-Driven Approach to Faster Coding
Rethinking Dev Loops: A Network-Driven Approach to Faster Coding
Learn the difference between development workspaces and environments in this in-depth guide. Explore how developers traditionally set up environments, common issues with workspace and environment connections, and innovative solutions like network-based testing for faster development cycles. Understand the key components of workspaces, such as IDEs, libraries, runtimes, and debugging tools, versus environments that host databases, APIs, and services. Discover how two-way connections between workspaces and environments can streamline development workflows and boost productivity
·kloudlite.io·
Rethinking Dev Loops: A Network-Driven Approach to Faster Coding
Berkeley Softworks - Wikipedia
Berkeley Softworks - Wikipedia
Berkeley Softworks, Inc., later GeoWorks Corporation, was an American software-development company founded by American computing engineer and former Mattel employee Brian P. Dougherty in 1983. It is best known for its GEOS operating systems for GEOS for the Commodore 64, 64c, plus 4, Apple II and the c128 and PC/GEOS, also known as GeoWorks ensemble or simply GeoWorks. The company ceased operations in 2003 after it was bought by various other companies.
·en.m.wikipedia.org·
Berkeley Softworks - Wikipedia
GEOS (16-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
GEOS (16-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
GEOS is a computer operating environment, graphical user interface (GUI), and suite of application software. Originally released as PC/GEOS, it runs on MS-DOS-based, IBM PC compatible computers. Versions for some handheld platforms were also released and licensed to some companies.
·en.m.wikipedia.org·
GEOS (16-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
GEOS (8-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
GEOS (8-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
GEOS is a discontinued operating system from Berkeley Softworks. Originally designed for the Commodore 64 with its version being released in 1986, enhanced versions of GEOS later became available in 1987 for the Commodore 128 and in 1988 for the Apple II. A lesser-known version was also released for the Commodore Plus/4.
·en.m.wikipedia.org·
GEOS (8-bit operating system) - Wikipedia
How I built my Open-source social media scheduling Tool
How I built my Open-source social media scheduling Tool
I published Postiz, my open-source social media scheduling tool, on Reddit, and received much attention. I guess it was super needed in open-source.I have received multiple questions from developers on how I built it. So today, I will take you throug...
·nevodavid.hashnode.dev·
How I built my Open-source social media scheduling Tool