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California moves to exempt Linux from its age-verification law after backlash
California is moving to exempt Linux from its age-verification law after a backlash from the tech community, with the proposed amendment coming from t
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California is moving to exempt Linux from its age-verification law after a backlash from the tech community, with the proposed amendment coming from t
tech
California has moved to exempt Linux from its age-verification law after facing backlash from the tech community, with over 200 comments on the issue
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The recent posting on HackerNews about an open-source private home security camera system with end-to-end encryption is a telling sign.
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It's becoming increasingly apparent that not everyone is a fan of React.
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The latest development is Perry, a compiler that can directly compile TypeScript to executables using SWC and LLVM.
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The emergence of Opstan, a decentralized social network on a Proof of Work (PoW) blockchain, is a significant indicator of this change.
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It's becoming increasingly evident that the internet has become too American to trust.
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It's becoming increasingly evident that the traditional boundaries between different types of memory are blurring.
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Technical debt exists on a spectrum from slightly annoying to existential risk. Most engineering teams manage it with a combination of instinct and complaint. Engineers know roughly which parts of the codebase are painful, but there is no systematic view of the debt portfolio and no principled framework for deciding
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A 45-minute CI pipeline is a tax on every engineer every day. If your team runs 50 builds per day and each build takes 45 minutes instead of 12 minutes, that is 27.5 hours of wall-clock time lost daily, plus the context-switching cost of engineers waiting for CI before
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The standard engineering hiring screen, LeetCode-style algorithm problems, timed under pressure, on a platform with an unfamiliar IDE, measures one thing with reasonable reliability: the candidate's ability to solve algorithm problems under pressure on an unfamiliar platform. This correlates with job performance at approximately the same level as
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Architecture Decision Records exist to solve a recurring and expensive problem: six months after a significant technical decision was made, nobody remembers why it was made, the person who made it has left, and the team is either relitigating it or making a downstream decision that conflicts with it. ADRs
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