Tree Of Life is nothing short of a masterpiece IMO. Influential on me personally as my first exposure to how much editing and structure (or lack thereof) build directorial style. It left an impression on me to feel so much for a film that explicitly says so little.
Obligatory mention of that iconic low-angle shot of The Mother floating gracefully across the plains. One of the best of all time.
I think referencing the well-known cases in cve-rs[1] is quite a bad faith effort. Of course if you try reeeally hard to write unsound code, you can write unsound code. An edge case in the type system downstream of lifetime variance rules is simply not something that matters in any practical attempt to write safe software. I find the tracker interesting since it probes the boundary of the compiler, but it says absolute nothing to the effect of "Rust is unsafe".
Novig | Multiple Roles | New York | Onsite | Full-time
Novig is rebuilding sports betting from first principles as a prediction market exchange. Legacy sportsbooks are extractive middlemen with misaligned incentives, dark patterns, and predatory mechanics. We're creating the alternative: a transparent exchange where users trade against each other at fair odds.
We're building core infrastructure around order routing, risk management, data pipelines, low-latency networking, and market integrity at scale. We write Rust extensively. We believe correctness, performance, and expressive code are necessities rather than luxuries. Ideal candidates care deeply about infrastructure, security, and performance. It certainly won't hurt to also care about prediction markets, traditional markets, or well-designed distributed systems.
If you don't mind sharing, what were some of the first red flags that you noticed in the codebase? Looking at all these jailbreaks and vulnerabilities visible from the outside, I'm sure they only scratch the surface.
FnOnce
FnMut
Fn