Papers every developer should read at least twice (2009)
(michaelfeathers.silvrback.com)
July 2021 Archive
61.
63.
64.
Please, enough with the dead butterflies (2017)
(emilydamstra.com)
66.
67.
68.
Building a data team at a mid-stage startup
(erikbern.com)
69.
Purelymail – cheap, no-nonsense email
(purelymail.com)
70.
No More Movies
(jayriverlong.github.io)
71.
Intel in talks to buy GlobalFoundries for about $30B
(reuters.com)
72.
Postgres Full-Text Search: A search engine in a database
(blog.crunchydata.com)
73.
Don’t Wanna Pay Ransom Gangs? Test Your Backups
(krebsonsecurity.com)
74.
Simple, solar-powered water desalination (2020)
(news.mit.edu)
75.
Leak uncovers global abuse of cyber-surveillance weapon
(theguardian.com)
76.
Kubernetes is our generation's Multics
(oilshell.org)
77.
78.
The Greatest Regex Trick Ever (2014)
(rexegg.com)
79.
80.
Why we're blind to the color blue
(calebkruse.com)
81.
82.
Give me /events, not webhooks
(blog.syncinc.so)
83.
Open Insulin Foundation
(openinsulin.org)
84.
Hosting SQLite Databases on GitHub Pages
(phiresky.netlify.app)
85.
Self hosting is important
(dataswamp.org)
86.
Intuit to share payroll data from 1.4M small businesses with Equifax
(krebsonsecurity.com)
87.
Google results for PHP tutorials contain SQL injection vulnerabilities
(waritschlager.de)
88.
89.
Organic and regenerative agriculture are revitalizing rural Montana economies
(montanafreepress.org)
90.