/Trends

The IndieWeb Movement: Owning Your Data And Being The Change You Want To See In The Web

- Jamie Tanna tl;dr: Movement around owning your content by owning your domain. The domain can link out to other platforms where you create content (e.g. Twitter) or create content on your domain and syndicate to other platforms.

featured in #158


When DRY Fails

- Anders Hovmöller tl;dr: This article outlines why and when you should go against DRY principles, and how to reconcile code you've replicated in areas of your codebase.

featured in #157


In 2019, Multiple Open Source Companies Changed Course - Is It The Right Move?

- Scott Gilbertson tl;dr: The cloud has created tension amongst open sourced technologies and companies wrapping such technologies into products they sell. This articles debates between changing the open source business model and changing how open source is licensed.

featured in #157


The Whole Code Catalog

- Steve Krouse tl;dr: Library of tools for the future, along with reviews, screenshots, what the tools is good for and could be added. The purpose is to democratize access to upcoming languages and frameworks.

featured in #153


No Moore Left to Give: Enterprise Computing After Moore's Law (Video)

- Bryan Cantrill tl;dr: Moore's Law has driven massive growth but is becoming economically unviable. Bryan runs through his take on the future of computing, and the avenues that could take over.

featured in #148


The RedMonk Programming Language Rankings

- Stephen O'Grady tl;dr: Asses languages both by popularity (GitHub) and my discussion (StackOverflow) to extract insights into potential future adoption trends.

featured in #148


Why I (Still) Love Tech: In Defense of a Difficult Industry

- Paul Ford tl;dr: The author expresses his love for technology and the conflict he sees in an industry that's evolved from small, marginal communities of programmers and technologists who share his love to what it's become.

featured in #141


Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results

tl;dr: Key results from the annual survey. Top result is that "Python has risen in the ranks of programming languages again, edging out Java this year and standing as the second most loved language (behind Rust)".

featured in #137