Developer

GrapheneOS Exposes the Forgotten Flaw in Age Verification Laws: The Operating System Already Has the Tools
Every few months, another state legislature drafts a bill demanding that apps and websites verify the age of their users. The proposals arrive with earnest language about pro...
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Rust’s AI Reckoning: Inside the Debate Over Whether Machine-Generated Code Will Reshape—or Fracture—an Entire Programming Language
The Rust programming language has a problem. Or an opportunity. Depending on whom you ask, artificial intelligence is either about to supercharge the language's adoption or e...
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Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Is Getting Apple’s AirDrop — And That Changes Everything About How Phones Talk to Each Other
Samsung's next flagship phone lineup will support Apple's AirDrop file-sharing protocol. Read that again. The most stubborn divide in consumer technology — the wall between i...
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The Hidden Bottleneck: Why Node.js Worker Threads Don’t Work the Way You Think They Do
For years, the standard advice for CPU-bound work in Node.js has been simple: use worker threads. Offload the heavy computation. Keep the event loop free. It sounds clean. It...
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Apple’s Quiet iPad Refresh: Why an A18-Powered Entry-Level Tablet in Early 2026 Matters More Than You Think
Apple is preparing to update its most affordable iPad with the A18 chip, a move that would bring Apple Intelligence to the company's cheapest tablet for the first time. The r...
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Amazon’s AI Phone Ambitions Face a Wall of Skepticism — and the Ghost of the Fire Phone
Amazon wants back into the smartphone business. The question is whether anyone wants Amazon back.Reports have surfaced that the e-commerce and cloud computing giant is...
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The Programmer Who Wants You to Stop Doing Things Today: Bram Cohen’s Case for Radical Procrastination in Software Development
Bram Cohen, the inventor of BitTorrent and one of the more iconoclastic minds in software engineering, has a piece of advice that will make every project manager twitch: don'...
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The Operating System That Treats Your Entire Machine Like a Git Repo — And Why Hardcore Engineers Can’t Stop Talking About It
Somewhere between the sterile predictability of macOS and the duct-tape chaos of a hand-configured Arch Linux install, there's NixOS. It's not new. It's not flashy. And for y...
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Avalonia’s Bold Play: Giving .NET MAUI Apps a Second Life Across Every Desktop Platform
A small but ambitious open-source company just made a move that could reshape how enterprise developers think about cross-platform .NET applications. Avalonia UI, the company...
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The Camera App Developer Who Sued His Own Co-Founder — and Landed in a Fight With Apple
Ben Sandofsky built one of the most respected camera apps on the iPhone. Now he's in a courtroom battle that pits him against the person who helped him create it — and, indir...
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The Great Age Gate Deception: How Child Protection Laws Became a Trojan Horse for Mass Surveillance and a Death Sentence for Open-Source Software
Somewhere between the genuine desire to protect children online and the legislative text now moving through statehouses across America, something went badly wrong. A wave of...
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Samsung’s Quiet Bet: Turning the Galaxy S26 Into a Webcam Could Reshape How We Think About Phone Cameras
Samsung is preparing to let you use your next Galaxy phone as a webcam. Not through some clunky workaround or third-party app, but natively — built right into the operating s...
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The Great Culling: How AI Is Hollowing Out the Game Development Workforce From the Inside
In March 2025, a game developer with fifteen years of experience posted a single word on LinkedIn: "Available." Within hours, dozens of colleagues — artists, animators, progr...
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The Internet Archive Is Under Siege — And the Collateral Damage Could Be Civilization’s Memory
The Internet Archive, the San Francisco-based nonprofit that has spent a quarter century preserving the web's sprawling, chaotic history, is caught in a vise. On one side: pu...
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A Security Scanner Became the Weapon: How a Supply Chain Attack on Trivy Spawned a Self-Replicating Worm Across 47 npm Packages
The irony is almost too perfect. Trivy, the open-source vulnerability scanner built by Aqua Security and trusted by thousands of organizations to detect security flaws in the...
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