HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

crcastle

no profile record

Submissions

Who Will Monetize Truth? [pdf]

readwise-assets.s3.amazonaws.com
2 points·by crcastle·2 ay önce·0 comments

The quiet grief of adult friendship

timesofindia.indiatimes.com
4 points·by crcastle·2 ay önce·1 comments

How to Call an API from an Email

redo.com
3 points·by crcastle·2 ay önce·0 comments

The Figure-Eight Model for Agentic DevEx

medium.com
3 points·by crcastle·2 ay önce·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by crcastle·3 ay önce·0 comments

Bloom filters: the niche trick behind a 16× faster API

incident.io
2 points·by crcastle·3 ay önce·1 comments

Dear Heroku: Uhh What's Going On?

judoscale.com
108 points·by crcastle·3 ay önce·45 comments

AWS engineer reports PostgreSQL perf halved by Linux 7.0, fix may not be easy

phoronix.com
410 points·by crcastle·3 ay önce·165 comments

Future Shock

blog.ceejbot.com
3 points·by crcastle·4 ay önce·1 comments

Render raises $100M at $1.5B valuation

render.com
3 points·by crcastle·5 ay önce·1 comments

Public Makes Millions on Plunging Crypto

cepr.net
29 points·by crcastle·7 ay önce·22 comments

Nat traversal, and how we're improving it

tailscale.com
2 points·by crcastle·9 ay önce·0 comments

Absolute Scale Corrupts (2019)

tailscale.com
1 points·by crcastle·9 ay önce·0 comments

Setting Up a Home ISP with GPON

apalrd.net
3 points·by crcastle·9 ay önce·0 comments

The Meandering Sea of Primordial Soupy Thought

kennethreitz.org
3 points·by crcastle·10 ay önce·0 comments

Open Source SDR Ham Transceiver Prototype

m17project.org
117 points·by crcastle·10 ay önce·11 comments

comments

crcastle
·3 ay önce·discuss
Not historically.
crcastle
·3 ay önce·discuss
Ubuntu is used in many serious backend environments. Heroku runs tens of thousands (if not more) instances of Ubuntu on its fleet. Or at least it did through the teens and early 2020s.

https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/stack
crcastle
·4 ay önce·discuss
Full post title is Building a Firewall ...via Endpoint Security!? Reverse Engineering macOS 26.4's Undocumented Network Events

The second sentence may be more useful as the title here.
crcastle
·4 ay önce·discuss
This is one of the more level-headed and empathetic writings that I've seen on the impact of LLMs on software engineers and our (or at least my) current strange combination of unbridled enthusiasm with existential dread. And it finishes with actual practical advice. (the post was derived from a talk the writer gave at his company)

> there’s fear in the air. You’ve heard that if you don’t learn these tools, you’ll be unemployable. That sounds pretty awful to me. What if none of us have jobs at the end of this?

> The industrial revolution didn’t eliminate human labor. It changed what human labor meant. Human labor still mattered at the end of it. The people who adapt to major technological shifts don’t just survive—they become more valuable, not less.

> I’m here to tell you it’ll be okay. You are smart. You can adapt. I believe in you.

> It’s not about 20x the number of lines of code you write, though you can do that. It’s about doing things you wouldn’t have attempted at all.

> A refactoring you’d never have had time for.

> An analysis you’d never have bothered with.

> A prototype you’d never have built.

> I’ve been doing this for nearly thirty-five years, and this is the most exciting time to write software I’ve seen. Yes, there are pleasures lost here. I love the flow state of writing code, just like I love printing black and white photographs in the darkroom. I don’t have to lose either one. I can still do both for pleasure. Black and white photography isn’t part of anybody’s journalism workflow any more, but people still do it. There’s a place for it all.

> The tools make it easy to produce a lot of code fast. They do not make it safe to skip evaluating what it did. Nobody is exempt. Don’t make our security team have to file disclosure reports, or clean up our messes.

> Two facts:

> We are responsible for what we ship.

> We can’t skip evaluating the work.