Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Earlier this year, @noamseg and I ran a survey of 6,500 tech professionals asking them what tools they use most in their work. We shared the results of this analysis in our annual "What's in your stack?" report (see link below).
But then we got a question: "What promising tools
Lenny Rachitskyx.comA conversation with @patrickc on old programming languages, software at industrial scale, and AI's effect on economics/biology/Patrick's daily life.
00:15 - Why Patrick wrote his first startup in Smalltalk
03:35 - LISP chatbots
06:09 - Good ideas from esoteric programming... See more
Michael Truellx.com
In "The End of Software" @cpaik gets it half right. He totally nails the arc of history (the availability of application software will explode) but it's worth asking "so what?"
Who win: new classes of companies to make order from chaos + take advantage of new markets
Who loses: founders +... See more
Vibe coding is here to stay. I'd been worried it might be a fad, but I talked to the founder of an infrastructure company who's in a position to see how well vibe-coded apps are doing, and he said a lot of them are making money.
Paul Grahamx.com
๐๐ฅ๐๐ ๐-๐๐ข๐ข๐: ๐ฆ๐ผ๐ณ๐๐๐ฎ๐ฟ๐ฒ ๐๐ป๐ด๐ถ๐ป๐ฒ๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ถ๐ป๐ด ๐ฎ๐ ๐๐ผ๐ผ๐ด๐น๐ฒ
The Software Engineering at Google book is not about programming, per se, but about the engineering practices utilized at Google to make their codebase sustainable and healthy.
What you can learn from this book:
๐ญ. ๐ช๐ต๐ฎ๐... See more