Wasn't the creator/maintainer of svelte on the NYT data visualisation/web technology team?
If the numbers from the phoenix project are to be trusted, a loose estimate is the time spent in queue is proportional to the ratio of utilized to unutilized resources. For example, 50% used & 50% unused is 50:50 = 1…
`command -v eza >/dev/null && alias ls="eza"`
This feature isn't modelling your interests. It's letting advertisers get insight into the performance of their ad campaigns without tracking individual users. The ad agency is only able to see: their add (y), published…
The page also says that their projected timeline for an alpha build is in 2026, so yes.
GitHub disabled the xz repo, making it a bit more difficult for nix to revert to an older version. They've made a fix, but it will take several more days for the build systems to finish rebuilding the ~220,000 packages…
Nice to see functional components in SFCs now. I've been loving vue since I used it for a project that I wanted to ditch react on.
Wasn't the creator/maintainer of svelte on the NYT data visualisation/web technology team?
If the numbers from the phoenix project are to be trusted, a loose estimate is the time spent in queue is proportional to the ratio of utilized to unutilized resources. For example, 50% used & 50% unused is 50:50 = 1…
`command -v eza >/dev/null && alias ls="eza"`
This feature isn't modelling your interests. It's letting advertisers get insight into the performance of their ad campaigns without tracking individual users. The ad agency is only able to see: their add (y), published…
The page also says that their projected timeline for an alpha build is in 2026, so yes.
GitHub disabled the xz repo, making it a bit more difficult for nix to revert to an older version. They've made a fix, but it will take several more days for the build systems to finish rebuilding the ~220,000 packages…
Nice to see functional components in SFCs now. I've been loving vue since I used it for a project that I wanted to ditch react on.