Article: 3 min
This article introduces jj, a command-line interface (CLI) for Jujutsu, a distributed version control system (DVCS). It highlights how jj simplifies and enhances functionality compared to popular DVCSes like Git, offering both simplicity and power in its design. The tutorial aims to demonstrate the benefits of using jj over other VCS tools.
Discussion (62): 15 min
The comment thread discusses the new version control system, jj, and compares it to Git. Opinions vary on its ease of use, with some finding it counterintuitive but potentially better for collaboration due to its git-compatible backend. There is a debate about whether jj should be mandated by major players and concerns about introducing new 'bad ideas' or workflows that require adaptation.
Article: 16 min
DaVinci Resolve introduces its Photo Editor, offering advanced color tools for still photography, including AI, GPU acceleration, RAW support, and collaboration features.
Discussion (194): 52 min
The comment thread discusses DaVinci Resolve, a versatile tool that combines video editing with advanced photo editing features. Users appreciate its integration for photographers familiar with the software and highlight its potential as an alternative to Adobe Lightroom. However, some criticize the complexity of open-source alternatives like Darktable's UI. The discussion also touches on trends such as AI in photo editing and hardware-software synergy.
Article: 3 min
NimConf 2026 has announced its dates and opened registrations. The event is scheduled for June 20, 2026, in an online format with pre-recorded talks premiering on YouTube. Viewers can ask questions through live chat, while presenters have until May 10, 2026, to submit talk proposals.
Discussion (8): 2 min
The comment thread discusses the recent popularity of programming languages, with a focus on Nim and Rust among students. There is debate about language adoption by AI and concerns over community size for some languages.
Article: 5 min
Google is updating its spam policies to explicitly ban 'back button hijacking', a deceptive practice that interferes with user navigation and browser history, aiming to improve user experience.
Discussion (296): 54 min
The comment thread discusses various issues related to back button hijacking, including its negative impact on user experience and the lack of clear guidelines or enforcement against it. There is a consensus that legitimate uses for browser APIs like the History API exist but can be misused by malicious actors. The conversation also touches upon the role of search engines in addressing such practices and the need for better technical solutions to prevent back button hijacking.
Article: 11 min
The article discusses Backblaze's decision to stop backing up files from cloud storage services like OneDrive and Dropbox, which has led to frustration among users who relied on the service for comprehensive data protection.
Discussion (220): 51 min
The comment thread discusses user dissatisfaction with Backblaze's backup service due to exclusions of certain file types without proper transparency, leading to mistrust. Users appreciate alternative solutions like Restic and cloud storage providers such as B2 for better control and reliability. The concept of 'unlimited' storage is criticized for being misleading or subject to change.
Article: 16 min
A large-scale supply chain attack was discovered on multiple WordPress plugins purchased by a new owner through Flippa, resulting in malware being injected into the plugins and causing SEO spam to be served invisibly to Googlebot.
Discussion (294): 1 hr 25 min
The discussion revolves around the impact of AI on cybersecurity, the role of cryptocurrencies in facilitating cybercrime, and the challenges faced by the software industry in maintaining security. Key points include the potential for AI to automate attacks, the need for regulatory changes to improve app store security, and the social pressures that influence code quality.
Article: 13 min
The article introduces the Introspective Diffusion Language Model (I-DLM), a novel approach to improving diffusion language models by enhancing introspective consistency, which leads to better quality and higher throughput compared to existing autoregressive (AR) models. The I-DLM method uses introspective strided decoding (ISD) for verifying previously generated tokens while advancing new ones in the same forward pass.
Discussion (26): 5 min
The comment thread discusses the use and potential of diffusion models for text generation, focusing on their speed advantages, user experience challenges, reasoning capabilities, and comparisons with other language models like Qwen3.5 and Mercury 2.
Article: 4 min
GitHub Stacked PRs is a feature that allows developers to organize pull requests into an ordered stack, making it easier for them to review and merge large changes. This tool simplifies stack management by enabling users to navigate between PRs, check their status, and trigger cascading rebases with one click.
Discussion (423): 1 hr 53 min
The discussion revolves around the introduction of stacked PRs in GitHub, with opinions divided on their utility and implementation. Users appreciate stacked PRs for managing complex changes across monorepos or multiple repositories, while others criticize the GitHub UI's support for this feature. There is a consensus on the need for improvement in the review process and potential issues with merge conflicts when squashing stacks.
Article: 20 min
An article discussing the history of Franklin Computer Corporation, a company that cloned Apple products in the 80s and used an impersonator of Benjamin Franklin in their ads. The article highlights the questionable practices of Franklin, including copyright infringement, and the lasting impact on the impersonator Ralph Archbold.
Discussion (26): 5 min
The comment thread discusses various opinions on intellectual property rights, hardware cloning, and the history of computer products such as the Franklin ACE 1000. The debate centers around whether copying proprietary hardware is ethical or beneficial for competition in the industry.
Article: 7 min
The article discusses the challenges in tool calling with open-source models due to their varying wire formats, which require custom parsers for each model. It highlights issues like reasoning tokens leaking into arguments or being stripped by decoders before parsing, making it difficult to maintain a generic parser that can handle all formats.
Discussion (7): 2 min
The comment thread discusses the lack of standardization in AI and its impact on tool evolution and adoption. There is a debate about the difficulty of handling multiple formats and whether it's more of a social problem or an engineering challenge.
In the past 13d 23h 43m, we processed 2623 new articles and 107737 comments with an estimated reading time savings of 50 days 14 min