This is a different kind of post from what you’re used to read on this blog. Today I won’t be sharing a new release or achievement, but rather a more technical behind-the-scenes about the ongoing development of the project. We’ll have a look at the framework that powers Sniffnet’s user...| Sniffnet
A comparison of how well Rust and Ada prevent the most common memory-related software errors.| ajxs.me
The reverse engineered "Bench Kona" is now controlled by an embedded system named "Fakon".| www.projectgus.com
We’re once again at the end of our internship season, and it’s time do our annual reviewof what the interns achieved while they were here.| Jane Street Tech Blog
The Threading library Starting in Emacs 26 some very ambitious changes were added. Basic thread support was enabled, laying the groundwork for a future concurrent emacs. The docs layout this possibility: Emacs Lisp provides a limited form of concurrency, called threads. All the threads in a given instance of Emacs share the same memory. Concurrency in Emacs Lisp is “mostly cooperative”, meaning that Emacs will only switch execution between threads at well-defined times.| coredumped.dev
Predrag Gruevski's blog and personal site.| predr.ag