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Total monthly number of StackOverflow questions over time Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News Failed to fetch content - HTTP Status - 403 |
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Writing a SIMD-optimized Parquet library in pure C: lessons from implementing Thrift parsing, bit-packing, and runtime CPU dispatch Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming Carquet is a high-performance library written in pure C for reading and writing Apache Parquet files, filling the gap for a production-ready C implementation in contrast to existing libraries in C++, Rust, Java, and Python. It is designed for C-only environments with minimal dependencies, especially beneficial for embedded or constrained systems. While Carquet provides functionality for handling Parquet files, Apache Arrow remains the industry standard for comprehensive feature support and reliability. Carquet supports various platforms (Linux, macOS, Windows |
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When std::shared_mutex Outperforms std::mutex: A Google Benchmark Study on Scaling and Overhead Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming Failed to generate summary |
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Treating business logic as a separate, testable artifact — does anyone do this? Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming The content emphasizes the importance of user feedback, stating that all feedback is taken seriously. It describes a CLI tool designed to validate business logic specified in YAML files, which can be integrated into continuous integration (CI) systems to prevent pull requests (PRs) that contain invalid or risky logic changes. The tool helps separate business logic from application code, allowing the definition of rules in version-controlled YAML and facilitating testing and review of changes. The output of the tool indicates whether all tests pass or if there are |
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Bold December Summary (text editor with lsp and dap support) Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming Bold is a fast text editor expected to enter public beta around May. The author has worked just over two weeks this month due to taking time off, illness, and holidays. They spent time auditing key classes and utility code, fixing bugs, and working on insert and delete logic for proper highlighting of semantic tokens, which required extensive coding to maintain delta updates without overwriting token information. Additionally, they began implementing a keymap configuration file that supports multiple actions for one shortcut, although it's still a work in |
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The Most Popular Blogs of Hacker News in 2025 Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News In his article published on January 2, 2026, Michael Lynch analyzes the most popular Hacker News bloggers from 2025, with Simon Willison retaining his top position for the third consecutive year. Lynch defines a blogger as someone who runs a personal blog rather than a corporate or team platform. Simon stands out due to his genuine approach to blogging about artificial intelligence (AI) — he shares his experiences as a power user without any commercial bias. In a year dominated by AI discussions, Simon |
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Who Owns the Memory? Part 1: What is an Object? Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming This article is the first in a series examining low-level memory management in C, C++, and Rust, beginning with the fundamental concept of bytes. It highlights how a 64-bit processor views memory as a flat array of addressable bytes, devoid of inherent meaning regarding data types. Memory abstractions such as effective types in C, object lifetimes in C++, and validity invariants in Rust help compilers optimize code by understanding relationships and constraints on data that the hardware cannot intuit. The article emphasizes that |
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Native Android Application Development in Swift Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming The content discusses the capability of building Android apps using Swift, highlighting the Droid framework as a key tool for creating native user interfaces. The framework includes various components like AndroidX, Flexbox, and Material Design, and offers a declarative syntax similar to SwiftUI, simplifying the app development process by abstracting complex Android functionalities. The documentation for this framework is still being developed, and users are encouraged to be patient with any issues they may encounter. Additionally, user preferences are tracked through cookies to improve documentation |
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Encapsulating audio metadata and edit logic in a single text format Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming Of course! Please provide the content you'd like me to summarize. |
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Why Developer Expertise Matters More Than Ever in the Age of AI Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming Failed to fetch content - HTTP Status - 403 |
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Research found indentation depth correlates with cyclomatic complexity. A language-agnostic approach to measuring code complexity Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming The abstract discusses the challenges maintainers face when assessing code revisions, particularly distinguishing between simple and complex changes of similar size. While lines of code (LOC) is a straightforward method for ranking revisions, it doesn't account for the complexity of changes. Traditional complexity metrics like Halstead’s and McCabe’s are difficult to apply across different programming languages. The authors propose a language-independent method based on the statistical moments of code indentation as a lightweight metric to assess complexity. Their findings indicate that using variance and summation |
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How Uber Shows Millions of Drivers Location In Realtime Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: /r/programming In the 4th episode of the "Behind The Screen" series, the author discusses Uber's backend system for managing real-time location events, as detailed in the Uber Engineering Blog. Initially, Uber used a polling mechanism where the mobile app continuously requested location updates from the server, leading to high server resource usage, faster battery drain, and increased cold start times. This inefficient system resulted in 80% of backend requests being related to location polling. To address these issues, Uber developed RAMEN ( |
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IQuest-Coder: A new open-source code model beats Claude Sonnet 4.5 and GPT 5.1 [pdf] Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News Failed to fetch content - HTTP Status - 503 |
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Adventure 751 (1980) Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News The content discusses two main topics: the revival of the Adventure 751 game and the history of the Analog Computer Laboratory at the University of Arizona. 1. **Adventure 751 Game**: A nostalgic reference to the early 80s adventure game, "Adventure 751," associated with the CompuServe service. This game, a variation of Crowther/Woods Adventure, was popular and has been sought after since the 90s when CompuServe shut down its gaming section. Arthur O’ |
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A Basic Just-In-Time Compiler (2015) Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News The article discusses a programming challenge from the /r/dailyprogrammer subreddit, where participants were tasked with writing a program to process a recurrence relation. Given an initial term and a sequence of operations (limited to addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division), the goal was to compute the next terms in the sequence. The author opted to create an x86-64 Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler instead of a traditional interpreter, converting operations into native machine code for direct hardware execution. The update |
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2026 will be my year of the Linux desktop Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News The author expresses their decision to embrace Linux as their primary operating system in 2026, having not used Windows for over three months. Frustrated with Windows 11, which they find increasingly intolerable due to poor user experience and features, they view the improvements in Linux desktop environments as compelling enough to switch. The author plans to convert their SSDs to btrfs drives on Fedora and use Bazzite or SteamOS on their handheld devices. They believe that the decline of Windows makes Linux |
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Show HN: Website that plays the lottery every second Published: 2026-01-03 | Origin: Hacker News Failed to fetch content - HTTP Status - 403 |
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I charged $18k for a Static HTML Page (2019) Published: 2026-01-02 | Origin: Hacker News The author, who previously worked as a contractor on various short-term projects, preferred quick gigs that allowed for high rates and flexibility. A large company urgently contacted them for a project after their developer left unexpectedly. The job was appealing as it aligned with the author's expertise and offered good pay. After negotiating a rate, they received project instructions that required them to work exclusively with this company for timely delivery. The project involved creating an HTML page with some animations and videos, which they estimated would take a day but |
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Daft Punk Easter Egg in the BPM Tempo of Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger? Published: 2026-01-02 | Origin: Hacker News John Scalo discusses the BPM (Beats Per Minute) of Daft Punk's song "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger," noting that while most sources list it at around 123 BPM, he believes the actual BPM is 123.45. Scalo, who has developed a BPM detection app called Tempi over the past ten years, explains that tempo detection can be complicated due to various influences like noise and performance inaccuracies. He states that most electronic music has a precise “integr |
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Publish on your own site, syndicate elsewhere Published: 2026-01-02 | Origin: Hacker News POSSE stands for "Publish (on your) Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere," a strategy that encourages individuals to first post content on their own websites and then share copies or links on third-party platforms, allowing viewers to easily return to the original source. The practice supports maintaining current connections with friends through familiar social media platforms while prioritizing these relationships over larger technical ideals like federation. POSSE emphasizes personal relationships, suggesting that approaches combining POSSE with federated systems will likely see better user adoption. |