DobrΓ½ rΓ‘no! Monday assorted links: Teen Slang Guide 2025 - Decode Gen Z Language | Parent's Safety Guide Teens dropping slang bombs you don't understand? πŸ˜΅β€πŸ’« 'Rizz', 'sigma', 'skibidi' - what do they mean & are they safe? Decode 300+ terms instantly with Teen Slang Guide! πŸ” Stay informed, stay connected, stay safe. Free offline guide for parents πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦ πŸ”— --- A brief history of threads and threading – The Eclectic Light Company The original 128K Mac from 1984 came with a single Motorola 68000 processor running at 8 MHz that could only run one app at a time. Yet today’s Macs come with multiple CPU cores that can comfortably run several substantial apps simultaneously, while running a Time Machine backup and other tasks in the background. This brief history outlines the journey between them. πŸ”— --- GitHub - bodadotsh/npm-security-best-practices A list to stay safe from NPM supply chain attacks πŸ”—
Namaste! Sunday assorted links: ArrowJS - Reactive interfaces with no build tools & native JavaScript. ArrowJS is an experimental tool for programming reactive interfaces using native JavaScript. It’s not really a framework, but not less powerful than a framework either.\r πŸ”— --- GitHub - rastapasta/mapscii MapSCII is a Braille & ASCII world map renderer for your console - enter => telnet mapscii.me <= on Mac (brew install telnet) and Linux, connect with PuTTY on Windows πŸ”—
Namaste! Sunday assorted links: Dev Compass - Programming Philosophy Quiz Discover your programming philosophy through this compass that maps your preferences along two key dimensions: Abstract Style ↔ Concrete Style and Easy for Humans ↕ Easy for Computers. πŸ”—
Good Morning! Sunday assorted links: Make any website load faster with 6 lines of HTML | DocuSeal Discover how to significantly boost your website's loading speed by adding just 6 lines of HTML. Simple steps for faster websites. πŸ”— --- Cheating on Quantum Computing Benchmarks - Schneier on Security Peter Gutmann and Stephan Neuhaus have a new paper that makes the argument that we shouldn’t trust any of the quantum factorization benchmarks, because everyone has been cooking the books. πŸ”—