Rust CLIs Ditch npm Postinstall Peril for Native Caching
Rust's CLI boom hits npm snags: risky postinstall scripts that choke in secure setups. Cargo-npm bundles binaries natively, slashing vulnerabilities and boosting speed.
Rust's CLI boom hits npm snags: risky postinstall scripts that choke in secure setups. Cargo-npm bundles binaries natively, slashing vulnerabilities and boosting speed.
Imagine waking up to fresh tech posts on Qiita and dev.to, all spawned from your git commits—no typing required. One solo dev just wired this up with Claude's AI and Supabase's edge smarts.
Your AI agent swore there were six call sites. Reality: nineteen. Source code lies; bytecode doesn't. This shift from syntax trees to program graphs could supercharge dev agents.
Imagine a high school kid demoing hurricane forecasts via Kubernetes at the world's biggest cloud native bash. That's not sci-fi; it's KubeCon 2026, and it shows open source isn't just for graybeards anymore.
I sent the same sneaky prompt injection to ten LLMs. Three dumped their guts in JSON. Here's why that's a red flag for AI hype.
Forget productivity boosters. This AI drags your dumbest decisions through philosophy and quantum physics, refusing to pick a side. It's hilarious, private, and a sly nod to AI's real playground.
Forget boring math. This calculator remembers your sins and throws shade. 2+2? 'You've changed.'
Stack Overflow's 2024 survey nails it: devs lose 37 hours yearly to boilerplate busywork. Enter Nextjs-Elite-Boilerplate, a battle-tested open-source kit that ships production SaaS apps in under 30 minutes.
Imagine charging a customer's card, reserving stock—then everything implodes. Bunqueue's new saga engine fixes that nightmare with plain TypeScript and zero infrastructure.
One meeting. Infinite agony. Enter Meeting GPT, the AI that mocks corporate drudgery with brutal precision.
Picture this: malware slips into your EC2 instance at 2 AM. GuardDuty spots it, then bam—evidence grabbed, instance quarantined, all before you sip your coffee. This isn't sci-fi; it's AWS automation turning detective work into a reflex.
Your Scroll contract deploy cost $25. Then $0.04 next try. Blame the scalars—no governance, just team whims.
Postgres materialized views? Snail-paced full refreshes that kill your weekends. One dev's patch flips it to O(delta) — update just the changes.
GitHub down again? Before you rage-quit, consider this: those outages might be the price of pushing developer tools to the edge. A contrarian take that's refreshingly honest.
Zero marketing, 118 installs in 90 days. GhostReview isn't just another AI code reviewer—it's your personal mistake archive, built for solo devs chasing growth.
What if your AI agent actually remembered yesterday's half-finished sales pitch? Holaboss, a new open-source architecture, promises to fix the 'goldfish memory' plague in tools like Manus and OpenClaw.
Developers chased JS libraries for SVG motion, expecting heavy runtimes. CSS transforms flip that script—hardware acceleration, zero bytes shipped, buttery smooth.
Juggling terminals, browser tabs, and AI agents? PrettyMux just made that nightmare disappear for Linux power users. This native GTK4 app built on Ghostty delivers tmux vibes in a sleek GUI.
A Shiba Inu stares you down. Click it—or suffer the judgment.
Torch.compile isn't the slowpoke anymore. It just hit state-of-the-art speeds on LayerNorm — leaving Quack in the dust on H100 and B200.