Article: 17 min
This article is an in-depth guide to 3D-knitting, explaining its benefits over traditional methods like cut-and-sew and flatbed knitting. It highlights the technology's ability to create seamless, durable garments with minimal waste and discusses its impact on sustainability and consumer experience.
Discussion (7):
The comment thread discusses the perceived value of traditional crafts like knitting and music creation in comparison to automation and AI, with differing opinions on whether these technologies miss the essence of human involvement.
Article: 48 min
This article discusses Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL), a Common Lisp implementation that is bootstrappable from various other Common Lisp implementations. It explains the motivation behind this bootstrap strategy, technical details involved in achieving it, and assesses its social and technical effects on the development of the implementation and Common Lisp users.
Discussion (9):
The discussion revolves around the active development of SBCL, particularly regarding coroutines and other features. It also touches on the use of Scheme (Dr. Racket) for learning programming and building software with Lisp.
Article: 10 min
s@ is an innovative decentralized social networking protocol that leverages static sites for user data storage and browser-based client aggregation of feeds. It emphasizes self-reliance, privacy, and direct interaction between users without the need for servers or relays.
Discussion (110): 30 min
The comment thread discusses various decentralized social networking protocols, with a focus on satproto and indieweb's webmention. Opinions vary regarding the complexity, simplicity, decentralization, security, and user-friendliness of these systems. There is also debate about the value of encryption in open environments and potential issues like spam generation.
Article: 38 min
The article discusses the 9-year journey of the Temporal proposal to improve time handling in JavaScript, from its inception at TC39 to its current implementation and standardization. It highlights the challenges faced by developers due to inconsistencies with the native Date object, leading to the development of libraries like Moment.js for date manipulation. The Temporal proposal aims to provide a more robust solution with features such as immutable objects, different DateTime types, and first-class time zone support. The article also mentions the collaboration between companies like Bloomberg, Microsoft, Google, Mozilla, and Igalia in advancing the proposal through various stages of maturity until it reached Stage 4, becoming part of the next ECMAScript specification (ES2026). Temporal is already supported across major browsers and JavaScript engines.
Discussion (210): 35 min
The discussion revolves around the Temporal API, a JavaScript library designed for improved date-time handling, with opinions ranging from praise for its explicitness and potential to streamline time management, to concerns about performance and complexity. The community largely agrees on the API's benefits but acknowledges challenges in adoption due to existing libraries and implementation issues.
Article: 1 hr 4 min
The author discusses their experience returning to Rails in 2026 after a long absence and shares insights into why they found it enjoyable again. They also reflect on the current state of Rails, its popularity among developers, and how it compares to other modern web development frameworks.
Discussion (62): 14 min
The comment thread discusses the perceived shift of Ruby on Rails towards AI integration, which many participants view negatively. They argue that this change departs from what made Rails special and focuses too much on complexity rather than simplicity and beauty of code. There is a debate about whether convention over configuration allows coding agents to be more effective, with some agreeing that reviewing agent-produced code would be easier with Rails due to its simplicity.
Article: 30 min
printf-tac-toe is an innovative C implementation of tic-tac-toe that utilizes printf in a single call to create and manage game logic, including player turns, win conditions, invalid moves, and board display.
Discussion (0):
More comments needed for analysis.
Article: 6 min
The article describes an artist's project where they introduced glitches into the datastream of the classic 1922 film 'Häxan' by manipulating its hexadecimal representation and encoding. The author experimented with various techniques to add color, but found that only a specific method involving I-frames resulted in both color introduction and a visually appealing outcome.
Discussion (4):
The comment thread discusses the appeal of '0dd.company', an alternative creative community, compared to traditional jobs and side projects. Members appreciate its soul-nourishing aspects over financial gain. The thread also mentions datamoshing as a form of artistic expression.
Article: 30 min
The article discusses the challenges and limitations of WebAssembly's current status on the web, particularly in terms of its integration with JavaScript and access to web APIs. It argues that these issues contribute to a 'second-class' experience for developers using WebAssembly, leading to limited adoption by average developers despite its technical advantages. The proposed solution is the introduction of WebAssembly Components (WebAssembly Components Model), which aims to provide a standardized self-contained executable artifact supporting multiple languages and toolchains, handling loading and linking of WebAssembly code, and enabling direct access to web APIs without JavaScript glue code.
Discussion (197): 1 hr 1 min
The discussion revolves around the perceived strengths and weaknesses of WebAssembly, particularly in comparison to JavaScript for web development. Key points include its suitability for untrusted code execution due to sandboxing, challenges in integrating with traditional web APIs, and ongoing debates about its mainstream adoption and future role in the web ecosystem.
Article: 1 hr 12 min
The article discusses the complexities and challenges within the public key infrastructure (WebPKI) that underpins web security, focusing on issues related to certificate types, history, revocation processes, and the role of Certificate Authorities. It also explores alternative approaches for non-web applications and critiques the current system's reliance on WebPKI.
Discussion (3):
The comment thread discusses the complementarity of two resources related to SSL/TLS and PKI history, inviting interest in both.
Article: 55 min
An extensive experiment was conducted to determine the number of times a DVD±RW can be rewritten, using various discs and a custom script for automation. The study utilized a Lite-On iHAS120 drive with Opti Drive Control software, and found that most discs failed within 500 cycles due to read errors during verification. Only one disc managed over 639 cycles before its first failure.
Discussion (33): 6 min
The comment thread discusses various aspects of rewritable DVD technology and Windows update management. Participants share personal experiences, insights into how DVD-RW discs work, and tips for managing updates in Windows systems.
In the past 13d 22h 37m, we processed 2741 new articles and 113387 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 51d 14h 47m