Computer Science and Programming
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TibixDev/winboat: Run Windows apps on ๐Ÿง Linux with โœจ seamless integration

WinBoat
is an open-source tool that enables running Windows applications natively on Linux systems through virtualization and containerization. It provides seamless integration with the Linux desktop environment, automated installation processes, filesystem sharing between Windows and Linux, and supports running both individual Windows apps and the full Windows desktop experience. The project is currently in beta and requires KVM virtualization, Docker, and specific system resources to function properly.
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Omarchy micro-forks Chromium
37signals created a micro fork of Chromium for their Omarchy Linux distribution to add live theming functionality. The modified browser is now available through the Arch User Repository, demonstrating how open source enables anyone to customize major software projects with the right skills and motivation.
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An engineer's perspective on hiring
The current hiring process for software engineers is fundamentally broken, wasting valuable time for both candidates and companies while failing to effectively distinguish between genuinely skilled developers and those relying on AI assistance. The traditional interview methods need significant reform to address these modern challenges and create a more efficient, accurate evaluation system.
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Introduction
Reka UI is an open-source UI component library for building accessible and customizable design systems and web apps using Vue.js. It emphasizes accessibility, customization, modularity, flexible state management, developer-centric experience, and performance. Reka UI is the evolved version of Radix Vue, adhering to principles that enhance user interaction and developer ease. The components are unstyled, allowing developers to style them with any CSS solution.
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What's next for manager.dev and for me
An engineering director shares his 8-month career break experience, exploring entrepreneurship through indie products and startup ventures. After trying to build a parenting app, creating a newsletter monetization strategy, and co-founding a BigQuery analytics startup, he discovered his preference for stability over risk and team collaboration over solo work. He's now returning to full-time engineering management while continuing his newsletter for engineering managers and taking on an evangelist role at a YC startup.
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You Don't Need Animations
lobsters

Animations should serve a clear purpose rather than being added for decoration. Key considerations include frequency of use (high-frequency interactions should avoid animations), speed (UI animations should stay under 300ms), and user goals. Examples demonstrate how purposeful animations can explain features, provide feedback, or improve perceived performance, while unnecessary animations can slow down workflows and frustrate users.
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The Tech Job Meltdown

The massive tech layoffs since 2023 aren't primarily due to AI, overhiring, or economic downturns, but rather a tax policy change. Section 174 of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated the ability to immediately deduct R&D expenses, forcing companies to amortize them over 5-15 years instead. This created immediate cash flow problems and higher tax bills for tech companies, leading to over 500,000 layoffs. The policy was designed to offset corporate tax cuts in 2017 but has driven companies to move R&D operations overseas and cut US-based engineering jobs. The change particularly hurt startups and growth companies that relied on R&D write-offs to manage their tax burden while investing in innovation.
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Storybook is going ESM-only
Storybook 10 is transitioning to ESM-only builds, eliminating dual CommonJS/ESM support to reduce package size by 15%, simplify maintenance, and align with JavaScript ecosystem standards. The change requires Node.js 20.16+ and valid ESM configuration files, but maintains backward compatibility for most addons. This move follows years of ecosystem preparation and recent Node.js improvements that enable smoother ESM adoption.
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Announcing Aspire 9.5
Aspire 9.5 introduces a preview 'aspire update' command for automatic upgrades, single-file AppHost support that eliminates the need for project files, enhanced dashboard with multi-resource console logs and GenAI visualizer, and new integrations for OpenAI, Azure Dev Tunnels, and YARP static file serving. The release focuses on simplifying the developer experience for building distributed applications.
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My first 6 hours with Rust
A beginner's exploration of Rust fundamentals after 6 hours of learning, covering key concepts like ownership, borrowing, structs, enums, and memory management. The author compares Rust's unique ownership system to Java's garbage collection, explains how references work with borrowing rules, and demonstrates practical examples of data structures and method implementations. The post highlights Rust's safety guarantees through compile-time checks and its approach to modularity with default privacy.
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A New Era ยท React Native

React Native 0.82 marks a major milestone by exclusively running on the New Architecture, removing support for the Legacy Architecture. The release introduces experimental Hermes V1 with performance improvements (up to 9% faster bundle loading), upgrades to React 19.1.1 with full owner stacks support, and implements DOM Node APIs for web-like tree traversal. Additional features include Web Performance APIs in canary, an optimized debug build type for Android that runs at 60 FPS versus 20 FPS in standard debug mode, and improved error reporting for uncaught promise rejections.
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Kodit 0.5: All Things Git
Kodit 0.5 introduces a major architectural shift from directory-based to Git-based domain modeling, enabling incremental indexing and better repository version handling. The release includes LiteLLM integration for multiple embedding providers, a refactored queue-based indexing pipeline with status endpoints, and database performance improvements. Breaking changes include database schema restructuring and removal of auto-indexing commands. Future plans include repository-specific enrichments for users, developers, and readers, plus a user interface and expanded indexing capabilities beyond code.
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Why We Created Turso, a Rust-Based Rewrite of SQLite
Turso is a Rust-based rewrite of SQLite designed to address modern development needs while maintaining compatibility. SQLite's single-writer architecture, synchronous design, and limited extensibility create bottlenecks for high-throughput writes, real-time applications, and modern features like vector search and CDC. Turso introduces asynchronous I/O, concurrent writes through MVCC, native encryption, vector search, CDC support, and live materialized views. The rewrite enables SQLite-like simplicity with architectural improvements for edge computing, AI agents, and streaming analytics while fostering an open contribution model with over 150 contributors.
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Making Python in Zed Fun โ€” Zed's Blog
Zed editor has significantly improved its Python support by introducing automatic virtual environment detection with a toolchain selector, monorepo support with per-project toolchains tracked via pyproject.toml, and separate language servers per toolchain. The editor now defaults to Basedpyright and supports Ty and Ruff out of the box, with plans to integrate Astral's Ty language server into the core. These changes address previous pain points around venv management and configuration complexity, making Python development more seamless.
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Is the generative AI bubble about to burst?

The generative AI boom shows similarities to the dotcom bubble, with massive investments ($364 billion expected in 2025) flowing primarily to companies like Nvidia. While Goldman Sachs argues current AI investments are justified by profits, critics point to structural limitations in large language models that prevent true reasoning capabilities. Developers using AI tools daily recognize their utility for code generation but also experience their shortcomings, suggesting the technology may be more incremental than revolutionary. Even if an AI bubble exists, survivors will likely drive lasting changes in the industry, similar to how some dotcom survivors became today's tech giants.
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Bun v1.2.23
Bun v1.2.23 introduces major improvements including pnpm-lock.yaml migration for seamless switching from pnpm, Redis Pub/Sub support, concurrent test execution with configurable parallelism, platform-specific dependency filtering, system CA certificates support, Windows code signing for compiled executables, JSX configuration improvements, SQL array helpers, randomized test ordering, and numerous Node.js compatibility fixes across http, dns, worker_threads, crypto, and other modules.
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Litestream v0.5.0 is Here
Litestream v0.5.0 introduces major performance improvements and point-in-time recovery for SQLite databases. The update replaces the old WAL-based backup system with a new LTX file format that enables transaction-aware backups, hierarchical compaction, and faster restoration. Key changes include eliminating the generations concept for simpler backup management, supporting restoration from an average of just a dozen files, and adding NATS JetStream as a replica option. The upgrade is backwards compatible with existing configurations, though it can't restore from old v0.3.x WAL files. Future plans include a VFS for instant read replicas that can serve pages from S3 while hydrating in the background.
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Say hello to a new level of interactivity in Gemini CLI

Gemini CLI v0.9.0 introduces pseudo-terminal (PTY) support, enabling interactive commands like vim, top, and git rebase -i to run directly within the CLI context. The update uses node-pty to spawn processes in a virtual terminal, streaming real-time snapshots of terminal state including text, colors, and cursor position. This architecture supports two-way communication with keyboard input and window resizing, eliminating the need to switch to separate terminals while maintaining full context awareness.
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Vendor locked

A developer reflects on becoming so dependent on Tailwind CSS that they've lost fluency in vanilla CSS. The article explores how Tailwind's naming conventions don't map one-to-one with CSS properties, creating a form of vendor lock-in where switching back to pure CSS feels foreign. The author appreciates Tailwind's component-based approach for keeping styles contained but wishes for a solution that maintains this workflow while using standard CSS syntax.