David E. Weisberg chronicles the 80-year evolution of Computer-Aided Design (CAD) through extensive interviews with industry pioneers and detailed company histories. The comprehensive 650-page document covers CAD's development from its 1950s origins through the early 2000s, offering insights into the technology, companies, and individuals who revolutionized engineering design.
A former programmer reflects on the frustrations of modern software development, highlighting challenges like incomplete domain knowledge, complex APIs, and constant technological evolution. The author expresses preference for small, manageable programming projects while suggesting that high-pressure development may be better suited for younger developers.
A comparison between Ruby on Rails and Next.js frameworks highlights how Rails maintains relevance through simplicity and abstraction, while Next.js enables advanced web capabilities at the cost of complexity. The text draws parallels between vinyl records' longevity and web technologies' evolution, emphasizing how fundamental approaches remain valuable despite technological advancement.
A MIDI sequencer interface displays four parallel 32-step sequencer tracks with global BPM control and module status indicators.
Recent concerns emerge about potential US government interference with academic platforms like arXiv, GitHub, and university IT systems, particularly regarding DEI policies and federal funding. ArXiv's cloud-based infrastructure and dependence on federal funding through Cornell University raise questions about its vulnerability, though bulk download options exist for data preservation.
A developer reflects on the significant improvements in the Wayland ecosystem over the past three years, highlighting advancements in explicit sync support, commit-timing protocols, and Mesa implementations. The post acknowledges substantial progress in Wayland's functionality and development speed, while noting some remaining challenges in areas like foreign surface embedding and window management.