Bulletin for Friday, 13 Oct 2023
7 days digest
Computer Things (1)
Mozilla Hacks – the Web developer blog (1)
Ratfactor Feed (1)
Retool Blog (1)
Vallified (1)
Eugene Yan (1)
Julia Evans (1)
The Go Blog (1)
apenwarr (1)
A Few Thoughts on Cryptographic Engineering (1)
null program (1)
Weaveworks (2)
- Reduce Risk to Your Supply Chain with Verified Open-Source Packages
- GitOps Automation Plugin for Backstage with Flux CD
The CircleCI Blog Feed | CircleCI (2)
- Automate deployment of Java Spring Boot apps to AWS Elastic Beanstalk
- Continuous integration for Yii2 APIs with Codeception
Stay SaaSy (2)
Discord Blog (2)
- Avatar Decorations & Profile Effects: Collect and Keep the Newest Styles
- Supporting Youth Mental Health: Discord's Partnership with Crisis Text Line
Latent Space (2)
- [AIE Summit Preview #2] The AI Horcrux — Swyx on Cognitive Revolution
- [AIE Summit Preview #1] Swyx on Software 3.0 and the Rise of the AI Engineer
Timescale Blog (2)
- The Problem With Locks And PostgreSQL Partitioning (And How To Actually Fix It)
- How to Reduce Your PostgreSQL Database Size
Google AI Blog (2)
- Developing industrial use cases for physical simulation on future error-corrected quantum computers
- SANPO: A Scene understanding, Accessibility, Navigation, Pathfinding, & Obstacle avoidance dataset
Replit Blog (3)
- Tabs and Spaces - Smarter Indentation
- Replit’s new AI Model now available on Hugging Face
- Announcing Replit AI for All
The Ably Blog (3)
- How to add realtime notifications to your React app
- The ultimate guide to React notification libraries
- Watch: How to build a collaborative environment around your product
taylor.town (3)
- Microsoft Defender for Endpoint now stops human-operated attacks on its own
- Automatic disruption of human-operated attacks through containment of compromised user accounts
- Expanded Microsoft Security Experts offerings provide comprehensive protection
- Distributed caching systems and MySQL
- What is MySQL partitioning?
- Personalizing your onboarding with Markdoc
- Transcript Dutch parliamentary hearing on EU Chat Control and Client Side Scanning
- Transcript bijdrage rondetafelgesprek Tweede Kamer Client Side Scanning 11 oktober
- Bijdrage rondetafelgesprek Tweede Kamer Client Side Scanning
- Learning to learn learning-rate schedules
- USC and Amazon select six new research projects
- How CloudTune generates forecasts for the Amazon Store
- Teaching household robots where to find requested objects
Simon Willison's Weblog: Blogmarks (4)
- Wikimedia Commons: Photographs by Gage Skidmore
- Bottleneck T5 Text Autoencoder
- Decomposing Language Models Into Understandable Components
- jo
- Party on PartyKit (JS Party #296)
- Coming to asciinema near you (Changelog Interviews #561)
- Experiences from GopherCon 2023 (Go Time #293)
- RTO vs WFH & the case for strong static typing (Changelog News #65)
- The beginning of the end of physical media (Changelog & Friends #16)
- How Prisma saved 98% on distribution costs with Cloudflare R2
- HTTP/2 Rapid Reset: deconstructing the record-breaking attack
- HTTP/2 Zero-Day vulnerability results in record-breaking DDoS attacks
- Internet traffic patterns in Israel and Palestine following the October 2023 attacks
- Virtual networking 101: Bridging the gap to understanding TAP
- Integrating AI tools into your workflow
- Wondering how sustainable your buildings are? Make your data speak
- Meetings are the worst. Let's reduce their blast radius
- From prototype to production: Vector databases in generative AI applications
- Subatomic speed, math misadventures, and the biggest fraud trial in history
Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow (5)
- Pluralistic: Stellantis wants to make scabbing woke; The Lost Cause prologue, Part V (11 Oct 2023)
- Pluralistic: Underground Empire; The Lost Cause prologue part IV (10 Oct 2023)
- Pluralistic: How Google's trial secrecy lets it control the coverage; The Lost Cause prologue, part III (09 Oct 2023)
- Pluralistic: The Lost Cause prologue (part 2) (07 Oct 2023)
- Pluralistic: Serializing the opening of "The Lost Cause" (06 Oct 2023)
DTN (5)
- Maximizing Maritime Performance Analysis Through Optimal Speed Routing
- Navigating Efficient Seas: The Art of Optimal Speed Routing
- Combine the Power of Optimal Speed Routing and Weather Routing to Enhance Operational Efficiency
- Forget fire sales and avoid penalties
- How Extreme Weather Disrupts U.S. Oil And Gas Sector
Earthly Blog (6)
- Linux Security Modules
- npm vs. Yarn: Unraveling the Knots of Package Management
- npx vs. npm vs. pnpm: A Comparison for JavaScript Projects
- Fish Shell
- Using Cron Jobs to Run GitHub Actions on a Timer
- macOS Containers - The Rise of Native Containerization
Blog – Hackaday (6)
- 2023 Halloween Hackfest: Musical Jack-o-Lanterns Harmonize for Halloween
- Badminton String Winder Gets The Tension Just Right
- Hackaday Prize 2023: AC Measurements Made Easy
- USB-C For Hackers: Build Your Own PSU
- Hackaday Superconference 2023: Workshops Announced, Get Tickets Now!
- Keypad Interface Module Reverse Engineers Pinouts So You Don’t Have To
The Full Feed - All of the Packet Pushers Podcasts (6)
- Kubernetes Unpacked 037: Improving The Developer Experience With Continuous Deployment (Sponsored)
- Day Two Cloud 215: Highlights From The Edge
- HS057 Technical Debt
- Tech Bytes: Why Retail Branches Need Next-Gen SD-WAN And SASE (Sponsored)
- Network Break 450: Cisco, Nutanix Announce HCI Gear; HPE Aruba Releases Wi-Fi 6e Sensor; Amazon Ships Test Satellites Into Orbit
- Heavy Networking 704: Roundtable Redux: Blaming The Network; Containerlab Love; 400G Envy
- Wikimedia Commons: Photographs by Gage Skidmore
- Bottleneck T5 Text Autoencoder
- Quoting How up-to-date is Claude's training data?
- Decomposing Language Models Into Understandable Components
- jo
- Quoting DALL-E 3 leaked prompt
- Quoting Dave Lee
Towards Data Science - Medium (8)
- Activation Functions & Non-Linearity: Neural Networks 101
- Why Your RAG is Not Reliable in a Production Environment
- Can a Llama 2-Powered Chatbot Be Trained on a CPU?
- Design Patterns with Python for Machine Learning Engineers: Builder
- An Introduction to Loading Large Language Models
- Retrieval Augmented Generation — Intuitively and Exhaustively Explain
- Finding Order in Chaos with Polynomial Chaos Expansion, using uncertainpy and chaospy
- Mastering data integration from SAP Systems with prompt engineering
Percona Database Performance Blog (8)
- Kubernetes Observability: Code Profiling With Flame Graphs
- MongoDB Queries Slow Due to Flow Control but No Replication Lag?
- Deep Dive Into Roles in MySQL 8.0
- Migrate Data From Atlas to Self-Hosted MongoDB
- Percona Server for MongoDB 7 Is Now Available
- Using Jobs to Perform Schema Changes Against MySQL Databases on K8s
- Share Your DBaaS Opinion, Get Some Swag
- PostgreSQL Tuple-Level Statistics With pgstattuple
- Scientists just drafted an incredibly detailed map of the human brain
- The Download: the problem of plastic, and how AI could boost batteries
- The quest for equitable climate solutions
- How AI could supercharge battery research
- Think that your plastic is being recycled? Think again.
- The Download: gene-edited chickens, and China’s green companies
- These Chinese companies prove green tech can be profitable
- How gene editing could help curb the spread of bird flu
- Generative AI deployment: Strategies for smooth scaling
- The Download: oyster aquaculture, and trusting AI with our bodies
LogRocket Blog (12)
- The starter guide to using behavioral design
- Considering both customer and business value in product decisions
- Building SvelteKit forms with Superforms
- Optimizing static pages in your Next.js apps with Prisma
- Tools and strategies for leveraging digital analytics
- Leader Spotlight: Bringing product out from behind the curtain with Mike Ohanian
- 12 UX books to expand your skillset in 2023
- The pros and cons of A/B testing
- Adding interactive code snippets to your SSG sites
- Using case studies as a catalyst for product adoption
- Validating structural data with Valibot
- Leader Spotlight: Flattening the learning curve, with Karla Fiske
- ASCII protocol buffers as config files
- I screwed something up in that last post about Hue
- The Philips Hue ecosystem is collapsing into stupidity
- Expressing my laziness in concrete ways
- Feedback: the feed seems just fine...
- Fulfilling a reader's request for my "dot files"
- Administrivia: HTML generation and my general clowniness
- More than five whys and "layer eight" problems
- Missing the point completely
- That simple script is still someone's bad day
- Where the time went during a "laptop" coding interview
- Fix the unit test and open a giant hole everywhere
- Log libraries and the tendency to open holes in things
- One way a builder culture can fail
- The hardware behind my old mail filtering server
- But wait, there's more
- A terrible schema from a clueless programmer
- Years since 1900 + seven bits = breakage in 2028
- Now you can (try to) serve five terabytes, too
- Disabling ssh password auth on Monterey is different
- An UPDATE without a WHERE, or something close to it
- 'date -d' vs. 'date -s', and 'show foo' vs. 'clear foo'
- In the news today: munch munch munch
- Fun with glibc and the ctype.h functions
- A different take on the NUMA OOM killer story
- Followup on the dashboard story
- Big company tale: six months for a list and a button
- Human shielding and how things impact a person
https://buttondown.email/hillelwayne
Lots of updates this week! First of all, my talk Is Software Engineering Real Engineering is now available online! It's the video version of the crossover project. Link is to the video, slides, references, and FAQ. I know a lot of people have been waiting for this; I hope it lives up to expectations :) Second, the TLA+ workshop is on Monday ! There's still a couple slots if you want to sign up; use the code C0MPUT3RTHINGS for 15% off. One of them is choosing good properties to verify.... ↩ (BACK TO TOP)
Protecting user privacy is a core element of Mozilla’s vision for the web and the internet at large. In pursuit of this vision, we’re pleased to announce new partnerships with Fastly and Divvi Up to deploy privacy-preserving technology in Firefox. The post Built for Privacy: Partnering to Deploy Oblivious HTTP and Prio in Firefox appeared first on Mozilla Hacks - the Web developer blog . (BACK TO TOP)
https://monzo.com/blog/technology
This blog explores how we’ve made our platform more resilient to spikes in app opens. We can now reduce load on our platform before we get overwhelmed so you can still access and use critical parts of the app, and your card continues to work. (BACK TO TOP)
https://engineering.linkedin.com/blog.rss.html
Co-Authors: Chau Vu and Whitney Parsons In March 2020, the world turned upside down—the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic, and life as we knew it was altered completely. Offices closed, we stopped traveling, and we had to change the way we interacted with others. In the face of this disaster, businesses were challenged to adapt to continue operating while keeping their employees safe and healthy. (BACK TO TOP)
Whether you're exploring speed, scale, data binding, or debugging, we compare advantages, disadvantages, complexity, and conventions of the two popular libraries. (BACK TO TOP)
I recently co-authored a blog post for the Google Cloud Platform Blog, along with my colleague Keith Chen. In the blog post we spoke about our latest features, which help organizations builds their own multi-tenant log management features on Cloud Logging. Check out the post here. (BACK TO TOP)
#543 – October 09, 2023 Where does my computer get the time from? Where does my computer get the time from? From NTP, but where does NTP get the time from? Rapidly create custom browser mods (sponsor) Stop creating yet another screen. PixieBrix is the first low-code platform to add automation, integrations, collaboration, and AI to the web apps your teams already use. 50 years later, is two-phase Locking the best we can do? Turns out no, we can do better. (BACK TO TOP)
Introduction Ever wondered what it’s like to intern as a software engineer at Slack? Picture yourself on the famous Ohana floor—the 61st floor of the Salesforce Tower in San Francisco— it is one of many privileges we had as interns. Not only did our experience with Slack’s Data Engineering team let us step onto the […] The post Unleashing Impact at Slack’s Data Engineering Internship appeared first on Slack Engineering . (BACK TO TOP)
https://blog.pragmaticengineer.com/
From learning to code in Australia, to launching Chronosphere in Silicon Valley: cofounder and CEO Martin Mao shares his story. (BACK TO TOP)
https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/think-fast-talk-smart-podcast
Whatever you’re writing, Todd Rogers says most people are too busy to read it. That’s why, he says, “you want to make it as easy as possible for them." Rogers is a professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and the author of the book Writing for Busy Readers: Communicate More Effectively in the Real World .” This kind of writing, Rogers says, is “more effective for us, and kinder to readers. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info . (BACK TO TOP)
I give one talk a year and in 2023 this is that talk. (BACK TO TOP)
A few weeks ago I gave a keynote at Strange Loop called Making Hard Things Easy. It’s about why I think some things are hard to learn and ideas for how we can make them easier. Here’s the video, as well as the slides and a transcript of (roughly) what I said in the talk. the video the transcript .container{ display:flex; } .slide { width:40%; border-bottom: 2px #ccc dashed; padding: 10px 0px; } .slide img { width: 100%; } .container{ display:block; } .slide, . I thought I understood DNS./.../. (BACK TO TOP)
The Go Blog Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Type Inference - And a Little Bit More Robert Griesemer 9 October 2023 This is the blog version of my talk on type inference at GopherCon 2023 in San Diego, slightly expanded and edited for clarity. What is type inference? Wikipedia defines type inference as follows: Type inference is the ability to automatically deduce, either partially or fully, the type of an expression at compile time. With the introduction of generics in Go 1.Sort . 2.. (BACK TO TOP)
Interesting
](https://apenwarr.ca/log/20231006)
A few conversations last week made me realize I use the word “interesting” in an unusual way. I rely heavily on mental models. Of course, everyone relies on mental models. But I do it intentionally and I push it extra hard. What I mean by that is, when I’m making predictions about what will happen next, I mostly don’t look around me and make a judgement based on my immediate surroundings. If this sounds predictably error prone: yes. It is. Here’s my system. But you can try to compensate for it. (BACK TO TOP)
MathJax = { tex: { inlineMath: [['$', '$'], ['\(', '\)']] }, svg: { fontCache: 'global' }, chtml: { displayAlign: 'left' } }; MathJax.Hub.Config({ "HTML-CSS": { scale: 175} }); .MathJax {font-size: 1em !important} How did fighter planes in the 1950s perform calculations before compact digital computers were available? The Bendix Central Air Data Computer (CADC) is an electromechanical analog computer that used gears and cams for its mathematics. A closeup of the numerous gears inside the CADC. (BACK TO TOP)
There are many popular frameworks for writing little web applications. Go and JavaScript (Node.js) are among the most popular choices. Reportedly, Netflix runs on Node.js; Uber moved from Node.js to Go for better performance. There are also less popular options such as Nim. An in-depth review of their performance characteristics would be challenging. But I … Continue reading Web server ‘hello world’ benchmark : Go vs Node.js vs Nim vs Bun (BACK TO TOP)
https://eli.thegreenplace.net/
This post explains how cubic spline interpolation works, and presents a full implementation in JavaScript, hooked up to a SVG-based visualization. As a side effect, it also covers Gaussian elimination and presents a JavaScript implementation of that as well. I love topics that mix math and programming in a meaningful way, and cubic spline interpolation is an excellent example of such a topic. There are many techniques to interpolate between a given set of points...k.a.75, 0, 2.75, 1, 0.75, -4. (BACK TO TOP)
https://blog.cryptographyengineering.com
Warning: extremely wonky cryptography post. Also, possibly stupid and bound for nowhere. One of the hardest problems in applied cryptography (and perhaps all of computer science!) is explaining why our tools work the way they do. After all, we’ve been gifted an amazing basket of useful algorithms from those who came before us. Hence it’s … Continue reading To Schnorr and beyond (Part 1) → (BACK TO TOP)
This article was discussed on Hacker News and on reddit . This has been a ground-breaking year for my C skills, and paradigm shifts in my technique has provoked me to reconsider my habits and coding style. It’s been my largest personal style change in years, so I’ve decided to take a snapshot of its current state and my reasoning. These changes have produced significant productive and organizational benefits, so while most is certainly subjective, it likely includes a few objective improvements. (BACK TO TOP)
One of my biggest complaints with the Swytch Framework is that it is using a validating HTML5 parser. This is great if you want to sanitize some HTML or validate HTML, but in the case of Swytch, this isn’t ideal. Now if you haven’t heard of the Swytch Framework, it’s essentially JSX for PHP. You […] (BACK TO TOP)
So many people want “innovation.” It’s almost — or maybe it is — a buzzword. Something people say they want but have no idea how to attain it. Innovation doesn’t just magically appear from thin air. No, if you want innovation, you must desire something and a solution must be necessary. Let me back up […] (BACK TO TOP)
We are reaching out to all our community of end users, customers, and partners who use FluxCD or any Weave OSS and Flux integrations. Over the past weeks, the CNCF Flux project had Critical Vulnerability Exceptions (CVEs) that we have helped patch and made available in full, secure builds that are drop-in replacement for your current Flux. Why are critical vulnerabilities appearing? As Flux has matured, the ecosystem has grown in complexity. From Flux 2. (BACK TO TOP)
Backstage , an open platform originally developed by Spotify and now a recognized CNCF project, is used to build developer portals. This widely adopted developer portal platform finds a home in numerous prominent organizations, including Netflix, Airbnb, and Walmart. It serves as a central hub for managing various aspects of software development, including microservices, documentation, infrastructure, and more. (BACK TO TOP)
The world ain’t fair. Well, it depends on how you define fair. One thing is certainly true - companies cannot provide the same opportunity to every employee. Each position in a company has a unique set of opportunities, for example: Some teams have a stronger support ecosystem than others Some managers are stronger than others. You might get an all star or you might get a mortal. Some teams are overfunded; some are underfunded. Some people get teed-up grand slam projects and some people don’t.e. (BACK TO TOP)
One of the most common management mistakes is not providing clarity when people are wrong on important, invested efforts. For example, say you’re an IC engineer and you want to propose moving our Critical Service from python to Go for speed improvements. When you get to architecture review, you get feedback that we can’t do that because Critical Service doesn’t need to be super fast and porting it isn’t a priority - the risk incurred is not worth the return on investment. Soften feedback.e. (BACK TO TOP)
For the first time since the 2000s , I'm working on a new Rails application without using any form of real build steps on the front-end. We're making it using vanilla ES6 with import maps for Hotwire , and vanilla CSS with nesting and variables for styling. All running on a delightfully new simple asset pipeline called Propshaft . It's all just so... simple. It's also fast. Really fast. Infinitely fast. Rails 7. These are great tools, and I'm thrilled they work so well with Rails. (BACK TO TOP)
Celebrating twenty years of Ruby on Rails with more than 700 happy developers packed into the coolest conference venue possible in Amsterdam was epic. Safe to say, Rails World was a roaring success. Which is deeply satisfying to conclude, because it really wasn't a given outcome when I started working on The Rails Foundation last year. It's hard to know how new institutions are going to be received. The internet is often a poor guide for what people really think or what they really want. Really. (BACK TO TOP)
Starting today, Nitro members get early access to the Shop, full of stylish avatar decorations and profile effects to add some good ol’ razzle-dazzle to their profiles. (BACK TO TOP)
Discord’s Mental Health Policy Manager walks us through what the Crisis Text Line is, what they do, and how their staff offers support to anyone who may need it. (BACK TO TOP)
Listen now (90 mins) | Our second crosspost with Nathan Labenz's excellent Cognitive Revolution podcast. Here's our takes on most recent AI topics and previewed next week's AI Engineer Summit with our mutual guests! (BACK TO TOP)
Listen now (39 mins) | An excellent conversation following Swyx's Infobip Shift conference keynote, and a preview of next week's AI Engineer Summit. As heard on Podrocket! (BACK TO TOP)
Microsoft today issued security updates for more than 100 newly-discovered vulnerabilities in its Windows operating system and related software, including four flaws that are already being exploited. In addition, Apple recently released emergency updates to quash a pair of zero-day bugs in iOS. (BACK TO TOP)
Recent weeks have seen a sizable uptick in the number of phishing scams targeting U.S. Postal Service (USPS) customers. Here's a look at an extensive SMS phishing operation that tries to steal personal and financial data by spoofing the USPS, as well as postal services in at least a dozen other countries worldwide. (BACK TO TOP)
https://www.timescale.com/blog/
PostgreSQL locks can cause issues in partitioned tables. Read how TimescaleDB solves this using lock minimization strategies. (BACK TO TOP)
Optimizing the storage used by your PostgreSQL database will help keep your costs low and improve the performance of your large tables. (BACK TO TOP)
Posted by Nicholas Rubin, Senior Research Scientist, and Ryan Babbush, Head of Quantum Algorithms, Quantum AI Team If you’ve paid attention to the quantum computing space, you’ve heard the claim that in the future, quantum computers will solve certain problems exponentially more efficiently than classical computers can. They have the potential to transform many industries, from pharmaceuticals to energy. But concrete examples of such potential applications are few and far between.e. (BACK TO TOP)
Posted by Sagar M. Waghmare, Senior Software Engineer, and Kimberly Wilber, Software Engineer, Google Research, Perception Team As most people navigate their everyday world, they process visual input from the environment using an eye-level perspective. Unlike robots and self-driving cars, people don't have any "out-of-body" sensors to help guide them. Instead, a person’s sensory input is completely "egocentric", or "from the self.g.) beyond egocentric imagery are available.3cm with a 2.g. (BACK TO TOP)
When you're programming, indentation is something you shouldn't have to think about, as an IDE should handle most of the details nowadays. With Replit, you don't have to think about what happens when you press tab. We're releasing a suite of new indentation and whitespace related features that will make the code editing experience even better. AUTOMATIC INDENTATION DETECTION Replit can now automatically detect the indentation of files that you open. Now, you can use any size between 1 and 16.g. (BACK TO TOP)
At Replit, our mission is to empower the next billion software creators. Yesterday, we strengthened our commitment by announcing that Replit AI is now free for all users. Over the past year, we’ve witnessed the transformative power of building software collaboratively with the power of AI. We believe AI will be part of every software developer’s toolkit and we’re excited to provide Replit AI for free to our 25+ million developer community.5 3B on Hugging Face. HOW TO USE REPLIT V1. (BACK TO TOP)
For every human endeavor, there inevitably arrives a moment when an innovation profoundly elevates the potential for productivity. For instance, communication was revolutionized by the invention of the printing press, and later, the Internet. After decades of steady progress, software is witnessing its disruption phase as well -- AI is redefining the whole software development lifecycle. At Replit, we are on a mission to empower the next billion software creators.5-3b.replit-code-v1. (BACK TO TOP)
Learn to add realtime notifications to React apps using Ably and React Toastify, and the Notifications API in this step-by-step guide. (BACK TO TOP)
Explore the world of React notifications: the top libraries, how they compare, and implementation tips for your projects. (BACK TO TOP)
Ably Chief Product Officer Tim Buntel and Product Manager Srushtika Neelakantam showcase how to build collaborative environments in just a few lines of code. (BACK TO TOP)
Middle-class families spend ~$13K per year on every child. Parents quickly discover that kids sap incalculable quantities of time/energy from every waking hour. But raising children shouldn't bankrupt your family! What if you ran your family like a business? What if motherhood looked more like management? What if each baby was an investment in your future? Profitable Parenting brings balanced budgets to all households. Furthermore, Profitable Parenting aligns your wallet with your moral compass. (BACK TO TOP)
Subscribe to Taylor's Town Hall via email . I've accumulated accidental friends over the years. At some point we got stuck together, and now we feel comfortable together, and so we complicitly waste each others' time. But recently I met a handful of people I admire deeply. Suddenly some of my accidental friends feel like obligations. I don't know what to do with this feeling. Take a look through your recent text conversations. You can't force friendships, but you can totally study them... (BACK TO TOP)
Wolfram Research is a strange company. Its CEO livestreams their R&D meetings and is publicly pursuing a theory of everything . Maybe next he'll solve the Navier-Stokes smoothness problem and use it to attenuate his reality-distortion field . But in all seriousness, Wolfram makes incredible software . Mathematica has been impressive since 1989 . Wolfram Language blew my mind in 2010 , and continues to drop massive updates . Their newest LLM updates are jaw-dropping." "Siri, trim this video . (BACK TO TOP)
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/
Today, we're pleased to announce that Microsoft Defender for Endpoint customers will now be able automatically to disrupt human-operated attacks like ransomware early in the kill chain without needing to deploy any other capabilities. Now, organizations only need to onboard their devices to Defender for Endpoint to start realizing the benefits of attack disruption. The post Microsoft Defender for Endpoint now stops human-operated attacks on its own appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
User containment is a unique and innovative defense mechanism that stops human-operated attacks in their tracks. We’ve added user containment to the automatic attack disruption capability in Microsoft Defender for Endpoint. User containment is automatically triggered by high-fidelity signals and limits attackers’ ability to move laterally within a network regardless of the compromised account’s Active Directory state or privilege level. (BACK TO TOP)
Read about the latest updates to our Microsoft Security Experts product offerings. The post Expanded Microsoft Security Experts offerings provide comprehensive protection appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Learn what distributed caching systems are, how they complement MySQL databases, and potential issues you might face when implementing them. (BACK TO TOP)
Learn the basics of MySQL partitioning, including partitioning with range, list, and key strategies, as well as how partitioning relates to database sharding. (BACK TO TOP)
Learn how we utilized Markdoc to create custom, extendable product onboarding at PlanetScale. (BACK TO TOP)
On the 11th of October, Dutch parliament organized a hearing on the EU “Chatcontrol” proposal, with a focus on client side scanning. Dutch parliament had earlier passed two motions calling on the Dutch government not to support this proposal, but our government has declared it will ignore those motions. This hearing was timely because next week, or even this Friday, EU member states vote on how to proceed with this terrible proposal (Lawfare review from a US perspective). (BACK TO TOP)
Op 11 oktober was er een rondetafelgesprek in de Tweede Kamer over het EU ‘Chatcontrol’ voorstel. Hier is mijn position paper voor dat gesprek te vinden. Die pagina heeft ook links naar de artikelen in NRC, BNR, NOS en de uitzending van het NOS journaal. Hieronder het transcript van mijn opmerkingen. Op de site van de Tweede Kamer is het origineel met beeld en geluid te vinden. Tekst: Dit onderwerp ben ik al zo’n jaar 15 af en aan bij betrokken. (BACK TO TOP)
Dit is mijn position paper voor het rondetafelgesprek in de Tweede Kamer op 11 oktober over het EU client side scanning voorstel, ook bekend als ‘chatcontrol’, een verplichte module in je WhatsApp/Signal/iMessage/Snapchat die je communicatie en foto’s scant op ‘grooming’ en bekende en onbekende kinderporno & automatisch melding doet bij politie en Europol. (BACK TO TOP)
In a series of papers, Amazon researchers performed a theoretical analysis of a simplified problem that led to a learnable learning-rate scheduler, applied that scheduler to a more complex neural model, and distilled the results into a practical algorithm. (BACK TO TOP)
Faculty and academic-fellow projects are focused on various aspects of trustworthy machine learning. (BACK TO TOP)
The system has expanded from generating peak computation-load forecasts one year in advance to a series of forecasts that include per-minute forecasts several months into the future. (BACK TO TOP)
Leveraging a large vision-language foundation model enables state-of-the-art performance in remote-object grounding. (BACK TO TOP)
With a name like PartyKit, you know we just had to get its founder and CEO Sunil Pai on the show! PartyKit is an open source tool that simplifies creating collaborative, multiplayer applications. Join us to learn all about it and the journey of Sunil and his team! (BACK TO TOP)
This week we’re joined by Marcin Kulik to talk about his project asciinema. You’ve likely seen this out there in the wild — asciinema lets you record and share your terminal sessions in full fidelity. Forget screen recording apps that offer blurry video. asciinema provides a lightweight, text-based approach to terminal recording with lots of possibilities. (BACK TO TOP)
The 10th GopherCon took place the last week of September and it was a blast. In this episode, we’re talking about our experiences at the conference from several different viewpoints. Angelica as a conference organizer, Johnny as an emcee and workshop instructor, Kaylyn as a speaker, and Kris as a regular attendee. (BACK TO TOP)
Jacob Kaplan-Moss’ recommendations for remote vs colocated teams, Duarte Carmo created a neural search engine from Changelog transcripts, Tom Hacohen says strong static typing is a hill he’s willing to die on, Orhun Parmaksız created a CLI that makes your keyboard sound like a typewriter & Luke Plant spits hard truths about simplicity. (BACK TO TOP)
On September 29th, Netflix shipped its final DVDs, marking the end of an era in physical media. So, we invited our friend Christina Warren (aka film_girl) from GitHub to pour out a drink with us and lament the end of this golden age of access to the films we all love. (BACK TO TOP)
Cloudflare products provide much of the underlying infrastructure for Prisma Accelerate and Prisma Pulse, empowering user-focused product development. This ongoing collaboration extends to enhancing the Prisma ORM (BACK TO TOP)
This post dives into the details of the HTTP/2 protocol, the feature that attackers exploited to generate the massive Rapid Reset attacks, and the mitigation strategies we took to ensure all our customers are protected (BACK TO TOP)
The “HTTP/2 Rapid Reset” attack exploits a weakness in the HTTP/2 protocol to generate enormous, hyper-volumetric DDoS attacks. Cloudflare has mitigated a barrage of these attacks in recent months, including an attack three times larger than any previous attack we’ve observed (BACK TO TOP)
On Saturday, October 7, 2023, attacks from the Palestinian group Hamas launched from the Gaza Strip against the south of Israel started a new conflict in the region. Cloudflare's data shows that Internet traffic was impacted in different ways (BACK TO TOP)
Tap devices were historically used for VPN clients. Using them for virtual machines is essentially reversing their original purpose - from traffic sinks to traffic sources. In the article I explore the intricacies of tap devices, covering topics like offloads, segmentation, and multi-queue. (BACK TO TOP)
For AI tools to be useful to your team, they have to fit into your existing workflows. (BACK TO TOP)
If we can make operational data easier to manage and easier to access through simple, standardized APIs, everyone can transform their companies into sustainable data-driven organizations. (BACK TO TOP)
The home team talks with Matt Martin, cofounder and CEO of Clockwise, which offers AI-powered time management and scheduling tools. (BACK TO TOP)
What exactly is a vector database? And how does it relate to generative AI? (BACK TO TOP)
Ben and Ryan talk about the work that earned the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics and how it might make computers way faster. Plus: California’s efforts to transform how math is taught, Unity’s new fee structure, and the trial of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried. (BACK TO TOP)
Today's links Stellantis wants to make scabbing woke: The real DEI was the collective bargaining unit we formed along the way. The Lost Cause prologue, Part V: Fuck around, find out. Hey look at this: Delights to delectate. The swivel-eyed loons have a point, is what I'm saying: https://locusmag. Who cares about COINTELPRO and what they did to Martin Luther King?" https://en.wikipedia. The right has created an entire mirror world of "I know you are but what am I?" politics. Partially.ilr.afscme. (BACK TO TOP)
Today's links Underground Empire: Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman's must-read account of "How America Weaponized the World Economy." The Lost Cause prologue part IV: "Commies, agitators, traitors, and climate bed wetters." Hey look at this: Delights to delectate.macmillan.com/books/9781250840554/undergroundempire Despite several harrowing near-misses, neither of the two hair-trigger, nuclear-tipped arsenals were ever loosed. But Gaddis has a different idea. Independence is a long way off.” Oh. (BACK TO TOP)
Pluralistic: How Google's trial secrecy lets it control the coverage; The Lost Cause prologue, part III (09 Oct 2023)
Today's links How Google's trial secrecy lets it control the coverage: You got it wrong, but we won't tell you how. The Lost Cause prologue, part III: Going viral in the free world. Hey look at this: Delights to delectate. This day in history: 2003, 2008, 2013, 2018, 2022 Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming/recent appearances, current writing projects, current reading How Google's trial secrecy lets it control the coverage (permalink) "Corporate crime" is practically an oxymoron in America. (BACK TO TOP)
Today's links The Lost Cause prologue (part 2): It's a small world, after all. Hey look at this: Delights to delectate. This day in history: 2003, 2008, 2013, 2018, 2022 Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming/recent appearances, current writing projects, current reading The Lost Cause prologue (part 2) (permalink) My next novel is The Lost Cause, out on November 14; it's a hopeful tale of the fights we'll face after we address the polycrisis.macmillan. I held the flash under my chin, squinting. (BACK TO TOP)
Today's links Serializing the opening of "The Lost Cause": My novel of climate hope, out on November 14. Hey look at this: Delights to delectate. This day in history: 2003, 2008, 2013, 2018, 2022 Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming/recent appearances, current writing projects, current reading Serializing the opening of "The Lost Cause" (permalink) My next novel is The Lost Cause, a hopeful tale of the climate emergency, which comes out on November 14.macmillan. Because it’s dark.m.m. 2:07 a. (BACK TO TOP)
The quest for optimal voyage planning and cost efficiency is a constant in maritime transportation. See how Optimal Speed Routing redefines voyage optimization. The post Maximizing Maritime Performance Analysis Through Optimal Speed Routing appeared first on DTN . (BACK TO TOP)
Optimal Speed Routing can reduce fuel consumption by 14.16% per voyage, according to an IMO study. Learn more about this artful approach to efficiency. The post Navigating Efficient Seas: The Art of Optimal Speed Routing appeared first on DTN . (BACK TO TOP)
Learn how combining Optimal Speed Routing with real-time weather-influenced routing helps drive decisions that reduce fuel use and environmental impacts. The post Combine the Power of Optimal Speed Routing and Weather Routing to Enhance Operational Efficiency appeared first on DTN . (BACK TO TOP)
See how greater inventory accuracy can help grow your business and bottom line through improved forecasts and efficiencies. The post Forget fire sales and avoid penalties appeared first on DTN . (BACK TO TOP)
While shorter than recessions, weather events have super-sized effects on the entire oil and gas supply chain. Meteorologist Jim Foerster explains how. The post How Extreme Weather Disrupts U.S. Oil And Gas Sector appeared first on DTN . (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . We simplify and speed up software building using containerization, which can be a game-changer when working with Linux Security Modules. Check us out . Linux is used by millions of people around the world. It is the most popular operating system if measured by active devices. It is used in almost every industry and is used in almost every type of device. With this wide usage of Linux, comes the responsibility of keeping the system secure.6.04.com/sharkdp/bat/releases/download/v0. (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . We streamline and speed up building software using containers. If you’re into npm or yarn, Earthly can enhance your CI build processes. Give us a go . If you’ve worked on a Node.js project before, you’re likely already familiar with npm , the bundled package management tool for Node.js. And there’s a good chance you’ve started disliking how npm handles things like disk space management and concurrent installation. However, this comes with its own setup and management complexity. (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . Making building software in containers simpler and faster. Earthly is great for npm, npx, and pnmp users as it streamlines CI build processes. Check it out . If you’ve worked with JavaScript-based projects, you’ve likely used npm , npx , or pnpm to manage your project’s dependencies and scripts. Each of these tools offers a unique set of features that are suited to different types and scales of projects. npm comes bundled with Node.js packages that comes bundled with npm.js.2.0. (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . We make building software simpler and faster using containers. If you’re into Fish Shell, you might appreciate how Earthly simplifies the build processes. Give it a look . What Is a Shell? Essentially, it’s the place where you execute all your terminal commands. There are many types of shells out there. Bash is one of the oldest, and it ships by default in most Linux distributions. There are other shells as well, and these shells were developed after the bash shell.fish file..... (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . We simplify and expedite software builds using containerization. If you’re using GitHub Actions for automating cron jobs, you’ll find Earthly to be a useful companion. Check it out . GitHub Actions is a simple solution for setting up build (CI/CD) pipelines for your projects hosted on GitHub. Thanks to GitHub’s generous free tier, you can use GitHub Actions in both public and private projects, making GitHub Actions one of the most widely used CI/CD platforms in the industry.3.m. (BACK TO TOP)
We’re Earthly . We make building software simpler and faster using containers. If you’re a macOS user exploring containerization, Earthly is worth a look. Check us out . macOS traditionally has not natively supported containers. You can run Linux containers on macOS in a VM. But you could never run native containers, which used the host OS, the way you could on Linux or even on Windows. Here at Earthly, this has always been inconvenient. We’d love for people to use Earthly for XCode builds. . (BACK TO TOP)
Halloween is many things to many people. For some, it’s a chance to dress up and let loose. For others, it’s a chance to give everyone in the neighborhood a …read more (BACK TO TOP)
If you want to keep your badminton game at its peak, you’ll need a good racket with a proper set of strings. When an injury kept [Antonie Colin] off the …read more (BACK TO TOP)
When working on simple DC systems, a small low-cost multimeter from the hardware store will get the job done well enough. Often they have the capability for measuring AC, but …read more (BACK TO TOP)
What if you wanted to build your own USB-C PSU? Good news – it’s easy enough! If you ever wanted to retrofit a decent DC PSU of yours to the …read more (BACK TO TOP)
Last week, we announced just half of our fantastic slate of talks for Supercon. This week, we’re opening up the workshops. The workshops are small, hands-on opportunities to build something …read more (BACK TO TOP)
If you’ve scavenged some random keypads and want to reuse them in a project without the hassle of figuring out the pinouts, then [Cliff Biffle] has an interface module for …read more (BACK TO TOP)
In this sponsored episode of the Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, Kristina and Michael are joined by Adam Frank, SVP of Product and Marketing at Armory, to discuss the role of continuous deployment in the software development lifecycle. They highlight the challenges organizations face in implementing effective continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) processes and the importance of prioritizing the developer experience. (BACK TO TOP)
Today's Day Two Cloud covers highlights from a recent Edge Field Day event. Ned Bellavance was a delegate at the event and will share perceptions and insights based on presentations from the event. Topics include a working definition of edge, the constraints of hosting infrastructure in edge locations (power, space, network connectivity and others), and operational models for running software and services in these environments. (BACK TO TOP)
In this podcast episode, Johna and I discuss the concept of technical debt. We provide different definitions of technical debt, with me focusing on the inability to switch solutions easily and Johna emphasizing the trade-off between immediate speed and long-term efficiency. We give examples of technical debt, such as outdated systems and insecure infrastructure, and […] The post HS057 Technical Debt appeared first on Packet Pushers . (BACK TO TOP)
Today on the Tech Bytes podcast, we talk with sponsor Palo Alto Networks about SD-WAN for retail locations. From securing payment card data to supporting customer Wi-Fi to connecting a multitude of IoT devices, a secure, reliable WAN is a must for retail. We talk with Palo Alto Networks about how SD-WAN can help retail locations get and keep shoppers in stores. The post Tech Bytes: Why Retail Branches Need Next-Gen SD-WAN And SASE (Sponsored) appeared first on Packet Pushers . (BACK TO TOP)
Network Break 450: Cisco, Nutanix Announce HCI Gear; HPE Aruba Releases Wi-Fi 6e Sensor; Amazon Ships Test Satellites Into Orbit
This week's Network Break covers new HCI gear from the Cisco/Nutanix partnership, a sensor to detect Wi-Fi 6e performance, Intel financial engineering, Amazon shipping test satellites for a space broadband service, and more IT news. The post Network Break 450: Cisco, Nutanix Announce HCI Gear; HPE Aruba Releases Wi-Fi 6e Sensor; Amazon Ships Test Satellites Into Orbit appeared first on Packet Pushers . (BACK TO TOP)
Today's Heavy Networking is another roundtable episode. We've assembled a group of network engineers to talk about what's on their minds. Topics today include why other IT departments adn end users are quick to blame the network first, and what can be done about it; using Nokia's open-source Containerlab for testing and development work; and why you shouldn't feel left behind when you hear talk about 400G and 800G networks. (BACK TO TOP)
https://towardsdatascience.com
Explaining why neural networks can learn (nearly) anything and everything Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
And how you should tune it properly 🛠️ Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
Building a local chatbot with Llama2, LangChain, and Streamlit on a CPU Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
Learn how to use the Builder design pattern to enhance your code Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
Mastering Megamodels: An Introductory Guide to Loading Llama2 and HuggingFace’s Large Language Models Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
Making language models that can look stuff up Continue reading on Towards Data Science » (BACK TO TOP)
Here’s how to tackle chaotic problems using math, physics, Python and data science Image by author generated using Midjourney Three years ago I moved from Rome, Italy and I started living in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, after a PhD offer from University of Cincinnati. There were (and there are) a lot of things that I miss about my city: the food, the weather, the beauty of the eternal city. One thing that I absolutely don’t miss about my city is the insane traffic .” ¹ http://mpe.dimacs.rutgers. 2. 2. (BACK TO TOP)
Construction engineer investigating his work — Stable diffusion Introduction In our previous publication, From Data Engineering to Prompt Engineering , we demonstrated how to utilize ChatGPT to solve data preparation tasks. Apart from the good feedback we have received, one critical point has been raised: Prompt engineering may help with simple tasks, but is it really useful in a more challenging environment? This is a fair point. Lets start by providing the basic table information to ChatGPT... (BACK TO TOP)
In this blog post, we’ll review how to run Linux profilers such as perf and produce flame graphs on Kubernetes environments.Flame graphs are a graphical representation of function calls. It shows which code paths are more busy on the CPU in given samples. They can be generated with any OS profiler that contains stack traces […] (BACK TO TOP)
Have you ever encountered queries delayed by flow control but found no lagged secondaries? This article shows a possible scenario of why this happens.Replica Sets provide high availability and redundancy to MongoDB clusters. There is always one primary node that can accept writes, but the replica set topologies vary depending on the use case and […] (BACK TO TOP)
This blog post discusses roles in MySQL 8.0, which are named collections of privileges. Like user accounts, roles can have privileges granted and revoked as required.Typically, we have multiple users with the same set of privileges. Previously, the only way to grant and revoke privileges to multiple users was to change the privileges of each […] (BACK TO TOP)
In this blog post, we will discuss how we can migrate data from MongoDB Atlas to self-hosted MongoDB. There are a couple of third-party tools in the market to migrate data from Atlas to Pecona Server for MongoDB (PSMDB), like MongoPush, Hummingbird, and MongoShake. Today, we are going to discuss how to use MongoShake and […] (BACK TO TOP)
Databases are different from a lot of software. For one, they often favor stability over innovation. This is not a general rule, but as databases are responsible for a core layer of any IT system – data storage and processing — they require reliability. This requirement does not always pair with the latest and greatest […] (BACK TO TOP)
Performing an operation is always challenging when dealing with K8s.When on-prem or DBaaS like RDS or Cloud SQL, it is relatively straightforward to apply a change. You can perform a DIRECT ALTER, use a tool such as pt-osc, or even, for certain cases where async replication is in use, perform changes on replicas and failover.In […] (BACK TO TOP)
The popularity of Database as a Service (DBaaS) solutions is on the rise. It’s not hard to see why. DBaaS enables users to offload administrative tasks and maintenance, allowing them to reap the benefits of a database without the traditional overhead.However, public DBaaS solutions are not suitable for all organizations. Some organizations have strict data […] (BACK TO TOP)
Since Postgres table bloat degrades database performance, we can improve its performance by removing the table bloat. We can use the pgstattuple extension to identify the bloated tables.This extension provides several functions for obtaining tuple-level statistics. Because the pgstattuple functions produce extensive page-level information, access to them is, by default, limited. Only the pg_stat_scan_tables role […] (BACK TO TOP)
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This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here. When scientists first looked at brain tissue under a microscope, they saw an impenetrable and jumbled mess. Santiago Ramon y Cajal, the father of modern neuroscience,… (BACK TO TOP)
This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Think that your plastic is being recycled? Think again. The problem of plastic waste hides in plain sight, a ubiquitous part of our lives we rarely question. But a closer examination of the… (BACK TO TOP)
Sweeping legislation in the US, including the Inflation Reduction Act, is infusing hundreds of billions of dollars into new climate and energy technologies, funding research, development, and implementation. But as the money begins to flow, there are open questions regarding who will benefit most, and who might bear the brunt of unexpected consequences. Shalanda Baker,… (BACK TO TOP)
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. During one of the final sessions at our ClimateTech event last week, I got to hear about how AI could help develop battery materials for future electric sports cars. This came during… (BACK TO TOP)
On a Saturday last summer, I kayaked up a Connecticut river from the coast, buoyed by the rising tide, to pick up trash with a group of locals. Blue herons and white egrets hunted in the shallows. Ospreys soared overhead hauling freshly caught fish. The wind combed the water into fields of ripples, refracting the… (BACK TO TOP)
This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. How gene editing could help curb the spread of bird flu The news: Gene editing could help prevent chickens from catching and spreading bird flu, new research suggests. How they did it: Researchers… (BACK TO TOP)
This story first appeared in China Report, MIT Technology Review’s newsletter about technology in China. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. Living through the epic rainfall that flooded New York City a few weeks ago was nothing if not a reminder of just how urgently we need to tackle the climate crisis. Fortunately,… (BACK TO TOP)
Gene editing could help prevent chickens from catching and spreading bird flu, according to a proof-of-concept study. Researchers used the gene-editing tool CRISPR to alter the DNA of 10 chickens to resist the bird flu virus and then exposed all of them to a low dose of it. Only one of the 10 chickens caught… (BACK TO TOP)
After a procession of overhyped technologies like Web3, the metaverse, and blockchain, executives are bracing for the tidal wave of generative AI, a shift some consider to be on par with the advent of the internet or the desktop computer. But with power comes responsibility, and generative AI offers as much risk as reward. The… (BACK TO TOP)
This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The humble oyster could hold the key to restoring coastal waters. Developers hate it. Carol Friend has taken on a difficult job. She is one of the 10 people in Delaware currently trying… (BACK TO TOP)
Using psychological principles and theories of behavior, we can design for how users behave. Learn more about behavioral design here. The post The starter guide to using behavioral design appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
If you call yourself a customer-centric company, your work should have one unwavering destination: creating value for your target customer. The post Considering both customer and business value in product decisions appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Explore how Superforms simplifies form validation in SvelteKit applications and delivers powerful client-side interactions. The post Building SvelteKit forms with Superforms appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Explore how to optimize static pages in Next.js using the Prisma database to enhance the speed and efficiency of your apps. The post Optimizing static pages in your Next.js apps with Prisma appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Digital analytics is the practice of collecting and analyzing metrics that measure online engagement and activity. The post Tools and strategies for leveraging digital analytics appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Mike Ohanian shares insights into shifting a product strategy, how he blends qualitative and quantitative data, and how to increase awareness around product management. The post Leader Spotlight: Bringing product out from behind the curtain with Mike Ohanian appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
We’ve compiled 12 of the best books every UX designer needs to read in 2023 to upskill and stay current with UX best practices. The post 12 UX books to expand your skillset in 2023 appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Linear CEO Karri Saarinen made waves when he said his product teams “don’t do A/B tests.” While A/B testing can sometimes limit creative problem solving, it's still a quick and inexpensive way to validate assumptions in many scenarios. The post The pros and cons of A/B testing appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Interactive code snippets enhance the UX of your SSG content. Let’s discuss how to implement this feature using a library called blog-cells. The post Adding interactive code snippets to your SSG sites appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
A simple and concise case study shows what your product or service did for your audience, or how your product improved someone’s life. The post Using case studies as a catalyst for product adoption appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
We introduce Valibot, one of the newest validation libraries on the block, show how it works, and see how it compares with existing validation libraries such as Zod and Yup. The post Validating structural data with Valibot appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Karla Fiske is a self-proclaimed “bridge builder.” In our conversation, she explains how she leverages personal relationships to flatten the learning curve of starting a new job in a new industry. The post Leader Spotlight: Flattening the learning curve, with Karla Fiske appeared first on LogRocket Blog . (BACK TO TOP)
Bulletin by Jakub Mikians