C++'s Borg-like mission continues, and some thoughts on Rails 8.1. Plus, there is a little trouble in Microsoft Paradise. And why Chris finally paid for an LLM.
Rust meets Linux in a clash of coding cultures. Why some developers are resisting, and where things go from here.
Microsoft wins the foot-in-mouth award this week, and Google gets the Rust religion - but Mike is skeptical.
Azure suffers a big outage, and Microsoft blames faulty automation; why we think there might be early signs of weak demand for Apple's Vision Pro and more.
We share our spicy C++ take, major Apple frustrations, and 2023 spoilers.
Red Hat hints at its future direction, why realtime might finally come to Linux after all these years, and our reaction to Google's ambitious new programing language.
We put the sports car of Linux laptops to the test. Is it the multi-tasking machine it claims to be?
Mike just launched the secret project he's been working on for months and shares all the details.
The more you read into it, the worse it gets. At least we have new devices to keep us happy.
Things are worse than we ever thought, but that doesn't prevent us from taking a victory lap.
Do as we say, not as we do. This week we're setting off to host our own email. We'll cover the basics, what's we're using, and why.
After we pine about the way things used to be, Mike shares why he is developing a fondness for C++.
Is it a Post-Open Source world now that the mega-clouds are here? We share our thoughts on this renewed idea.
Mike rekindles his youthful love affair with Emacs and we debate what makes a "10x engineer".
Wes turns back the clock and explores the message passing mania of writing Objective-C without a Mac, and we wax-poetic about programming language history.
Mike and Wes burrow into the concurrent world of Go and debate where it makes sense and where it may not.
We debate Rust's role as a replacement for C, and share our take on the future of gaming with Google's Stadia.
Apple wades into controversy after filing some Swift-related patents and we explore WebAssembly and its implications for the open web.
Mike and Wes are back to debate the state of developer tools and ask where Jenkins fits in 2019.
Mike's adventures with Qt land him on Windows 10 this week battling DLL hell. He shares the latest developments in his attempt to build his next app with Qt.
Mike shares more first impressions of Qt, the surprising places we’ve found QML in the wild, and why or why not to use Qt.