Article: 14 min
This article discusses combining memory safety and sandboxing in a C/C++ implementation called Fil-C, specifically focusing on porting OpenSSH's seccomp-based Linux sandbox code to Fil-C.
Discussion (21): 7 min
The comment thread discusses the growing interest in MicroVMs, particularly in relation to Fil-C, a memory-safe language runtime. There is debate on the integration of MicroVM functionality into existing systems, the suitability of Rust for sandboxing, and the limitations of Seccomp. The Fil-C project's readiness for real-world applications is questioned, with some expressing concerns about its current state.
Article: 20 min
The article discusses a technique for creating closures in C using Win32 window procedures, enhancing the standard WNDPROC prototype by adding an extra context argument. It explores methods to allocate executable memory and build a trampoline function that wraps around the original WNDPROC, allowing direct access to program state through the fifth parameter of the window procedure.
Discussion (2):
The comment discusses the negative aspects of using a certain approach in ATL/WTF, which interfered with NX-bit memory protection.
Article: 19 min
This post is a collection of various lists, notes, and personal preferences from Anthony Bourdain, covering topics such as TV series, films, music, hotels, food, and more.
Discussion (38): 7 min
The comment thread discusses Anthony Bourdain's work and legacy, with a focus on his impact on food culture, travel shows, and book recommendations. There is also debate around website design aesthetics and opinions about the authenticity of his persona.
Article: 12 min
Susam Pal shared a Mark V. Shaney Junior program, a minimal Markov text generator inspired by the 1980s version. The program was trained on his blog posts and pages, producing amusingly incoherent but entertaining gibberish.
Discussion (32): 5 min
The comment thread discusses the differences and similarities between LLMs (like GPT) and Markov chains, focusing on their operation, state definitions, and utility in text generation. The conversation is moderately intense, with a mix of factual statements and opinions.
Article: 19 min
The author discusses their experience using Gleam for Advent of Code and shares insights on why they found it a suitable language for the event. They highlight features like clean syntax, helpful compiler, good error messages, strong functional programming nudges, and an excellent editor experience.
Discussion (133): 33 min
The comment thread discusses concerns about the future of programming languages and the potential impact of LLMs on language diversity, with a focus on Gleam as an attractive alternative for UI development. Opinions vary on the capabilities and limitations of LLMs in code generation, especially regarding functional programming features like generics.
Article: 23 min
A large-scale analysis by IPinfo revealed that 17 out of 20 popular Virtual Private Network (VPN) providers do not route traffic through the countries they claim to support. The study found discrepancies between claimed locations and actual exit IPs across 137 possible exit countries, with some providers claiming over 100 countries but only supporting a fraction of them.
Discussion (144): 40 min
The comment thread discusses various opinions and technical insights related to the use of virtual private networks (VPNs), geographic IP information, and network security. The main claims revolve around the critique of CGNAT standardization by IETF and its implications on privacy and compliance. There is a consensus that Mullvad stands out as a trusted option among the discussed providers. The thread also touches upon the effectiveness of DNS in providing similar services to geoip, techniques for achieving true privacy through obfuscation, and the role of residential proxies. The community dynamics show moderate agreement with some debate intensity on contentious topics such as CGNAT's effectiveness compared to IPv6 deployment and the necessity of geographic IP information for compliance purposes.
Article: 3 min
This document describes an implementation of the J programming language in C, aimed at readers familiar with both J and C. It provides a detailed guide on interpreting sentences, displaying results, comparing values, and working with nouns and verbs within the J dialect.
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Article: 38 min
The article discusses the 'cat gap', a period in the fossil record where there are few cat or cat-like species fossils found in North America, approximately 25 million to 18.5 million years ago. The cause of this gap is disputed and could be attributed to factors such as climate change, habitat changes, hypercarnivorous trends among cats, volcanic activity, evolutionary dental morphology changes, or van der Hammen cycles.
Discussion (3):
The comment thread discusses two contrasting views on the origin of cats, one suggesting they were created for their presence and another proposing a more naturalistic explanation. The conversation is characterized by a moderate level of agreement and debate intensity.
Article: 1 hr 12 min
The article provides an extensive history of the rise and development of computer games, focusing particularly on adventure games. It traces their origins back to a text-based game created by Will Crowther for time-sharing systems at BBN in 1975, which was later expanded upon by Don Woods. The article also discusses the commercialization of these games through entrepreneurs like Scott Adams and his Adventure series, as well as the development of more sophisticated adventure games such as Zork by Infocom. It highlights the role of graphical interfaces and the transition from text-based to graphical games in the 1980s.
Discussion (9):
The comment thread discusses the nostalgia and appreciation for text adventures, the desire for a perfect open-world text adventure game without graphics, technical solutions to improve AI memory management in such games, and speculative ideas about using AI prompts in books.
Article: 27 min
Twilio Segment moved from a microservices architecture back to a monolithic one due to issues with complexity, velocity, and operational overhead. The transition improved developer productivity, simplified testing and deployment processes, and made scaling the service easier.
Discussion (131): 53 min
The comment thread discusses various opinions and experiences related to microservices versus monolithic architectures in software development. It highlights the importance of choosing the right architectural style based on specific organizational needs, with a focus on factors such as dependency management, scalability, and team communication. The discussion also touches on the evolution of software architecture approaches and the role of distributed systems in modern applications.
In the past 13d 23h 51m, we processed 2471 new articles and 108558 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 50d 3h 46m