21 May 26
With Flipper One, we’re reimagining what a Linux cyberdeck can be — it’s a huge project. We’re opening up the development process and asking the community for help.
18 May 26
17 May 26
09 May 26
My takes and experinces with secrets management on NixOS
08 May 26
Modern phones are not simple rectangles. They have rounded corners, camera cutouts, dynamic islands, and home indicators that double as gesture areas. Browsers…
05 May 26
A toolkit for spec-driven software development. Stop writing prompts, start writing specs. Ship better quality software and minimize slop.
02 May 26
22 Mar 26
Learn modern web development with expert-led courses, tutorials, and workshops. Master React, TypeScript, Next.js, AI tools like Claude Code and Cursor, and more with hands-on video lessons.
Learn modern web development with expert-led courses, tutorials, and workshops. Master React, TypeScript, Next.js, AI tools like Claude Code and Cursor, and more with hands-on video lessons.
Summary of the collected written experiences from developers of the rust compiler on using LLMs for programming and the deluge of LLM generated pull-requests.
16 Mar 26
Global community of worker owned cooperatives specializing in the development of software, communication and design.
12 Mar 26
The macOS app for effortlessly rewriting Git history.
22 Feb 26
Radicle is an open source, peer-to-peer code collaboration stack built on Git. Unlike centralized code hosting platforms, there is no single entity controlling the network. Repositories are replicated across peers in a decentralized manner, and users are in full control of their data and workflow.
17 Feb 26
A system for AI-assisted software development where each piece of work makes subsequent work easier
21 Jan 26
18 Jan 26
16 Jan 26
An easy-to-read, quick reference for PHP best practices, accepted coding standards, and links to authoritative PHP tutorials around the Web
11 Jan 26
08 Jan 26
Recently, an important series of changes have been committed, which some of our folks (and many others around the world) have been working on for many many years and which have the power to seriously speed up aggregations for basically everyone out there. What is even better is that you don’t have to change your code, there is no need to adjust parameters or anything of that sort. You can simply run your code as it is and enjoy the benefits of this important improvement.
tl;dr: no, or at the very least, “not for every use case.” (Though I really wish it were for the use cases I have, because it would save me a lot of work.)