JavaScript Promises: Uncancelable Core, Workable Hacks
JavaScript promises resist cancellation by design. But hacks exist, raising risks in production code.
In a world where auth failures cost millions, Okta's SSO setup turns chaos into control. Here's the no-fluff guide – with a skeptic's eye on what it really means for your stack.
JavaScript promises resist cancellation by design. But hacks exist, raising risks in production code.
Everyone figured TypeScript's type checker ruled supreme at runtime too. This 'parse, don't validate' manifesto says nah—parse inputs straight into safe shapes, skipping brittle checks.
Fedora's no longer playing it safe with graphics drivers. They've locked in permanent Mesa updates for stable users, mirroring the kernel policy that keeps things fresh.
Git hit the world 19 years ago. Today, open source begs for your bucks.
Python 3.14 just dropped stable, promising free-threaded execution that could finally dent the GIL's dominance. But after decades of promises, is this the threading revolution or just another incremental tweak?
Python 3.15.0 alpha 6 just hit, packing a beefed-up JIT and UTF-8 as default. But with a full release two years out, is this worth your weekend tinkering?
Your RISC-V board hums to life — then crashes. Again. That's the story of XIP support in Linux, now facing the delete key after relentless bugs.
2723 commits from 432 contributors. PyTorch 2.11 promises distributed training breakthroughs and GPU speedups. But deprecating TorchScript? That's a gut punch for legacy code.
A fresh endowment fund drops $750K to bankroll open source maintainers — but after 20 years watching Valley hype, I'm asking: does this actually trickle down to the little guys? Or just another pat on the back for big-name founders?
Python 3.14.3 just landed, making free-threaded execution official—no more GIL bottlenecks. But does this finally make Python a multithreading powerhouse, or just another opt-in gimmick?
Opensource.com's gone quiet—too quiet. Now, a tease of 'bug fixes' hints at a domain shakeup that could redefine open source media.
Picture this: You've squashed a bug at 3 AM, but come morning, it's back—poof, gone from history. Termtrace changes that forever, letting you replay workflows pixel-perfect.