Links from 2024-09-03
React, Electron, and LLMs have a common purpose: the labour arbitrage theory of dev tool popularity – Baldur Bjarnason
You’d expect Electron to be more popular than Tauri because Electron pioneered the category of “use web tech to make mediocre desktop software” and Tauri is a johnny-come-lately that commits the cardinal sin of requiring that you care about the security of your app.
we can form theories about what sustains popularity – why do some frameworks and libraries go from strength to strength and while others plateau or even peter out.
My theory is fairly straightforward:
The long-term popularity of any given tool for software development is proportional to how much labour arbitrage it enables.
Microsoft admits no guarantee of sovereignty for UK policing data
Documents show Microsoft’s lawyers admitted to Scottish policing bodies that the company cannot guarantee sensitive law enforcement data will remain in the UK, despite long-standing public claims to the contrary
DevOps Isn’t Dead, but It’s Not in Great Health Either
DevOps is all about making it easier for developers and system administrators to complete software work quickly and efficiently. That’s not been happening.
Instead, out of the tens of thousands of developers surveyed by SlashData’s Developer Nation, a mere 14% can get code into production in a single day. That’s about the same as we saw when SlashData started asking this question in the third quarter of 2020.
Tagged as: agile, collection, datenschutz, delicious, developer, devops, gdpr, links, microsoft, shaarli, tech, unions, work | Author: Martin Leyrer
[Mittwoch, 20240904, 05:00 | permanent link | 0 Kommentar(e)
Comments are closed for this story.