Hey there! In my latest blog post, I share links to a variety of fascinating reads: industry tips from top engineers, the challenges faced by women in tech, insights into being an engineering manager, solutions for JavaScript crises, and the success story of creating a professional sports team. Plus, there’s exciting news from Apple, and a look into a decade-old NAS system. Dive in and enjoy!
- 7 Must-Know Lessons To Be A Better Engineer From Top Industry Leaders: Month of Collabs: Best lessons to take forward
- The Moral Implications of Being a Moderately Successful Computer Scientist and a Woman:
- In the Trenches: What it Means to be an Engineering Manager: Personal reflections on my past role as an Engineering Manager.
- Try to Fix It One Level Deeper: I had a productive day today! I did many different and unrelated things, but they all had the same unifying theme:
- Something went wrong: Ways out of the JavaScript crisis
- Legacy: Humans have always tried to live forever. Maybe you can, but not in the way you imagine.
- It’s Time To Build… But Build What?: From A Four Year Old Essay To A New Theology
- How to Start a Professional Sports Team, Win Games, and Save the Town: After the A’s announced they were leaving Oakland, a pair of lifelong fans set out to do something audacious: start a beloved pro baseball team of their own. Remarkably, they pulled it off. Now the Oakland Ballers need to survive.
- Noisy Neighbor Detection with eBPF: The Compute and Performance Engineering teams at Netflix regularly investigate performance issues in our multi-tenant environment. The first step is determining whether the problem originates from…
- Konty: Make hand-drawn style wireframes quickly and easily.
- aws-ai-stack: AWS AI Stack – A ready-to-use, full-stack boilerplate project for building serverless AI applications on AWS – serverless/
- Apple announces its new A18 and A18 Pro iPhone chips: Today, Apple is bringing the new A18 chips to the standard iPhone and also launching a more powerful A18 Pro for its Pro models.
- My 71 TiB ZFS NAS after 10 years and zero drive failures: