221 results for "":

Thumbnail for Technology, as seen on TV

Technology, as seen on TV

Enhance! In this series, we’re looking at TV depictions of technology, and reviewing how realistic they are. Of course, they’re very rarely accurate, but it’s still interesting to take a look and try to figure out what they could’ve been thinking of, and just reminisce in general.

S-exps in your browser

The front end of the pool

I’ve been interested in reactive JavaScript for a while. At memoways, we strive to build snappy user interfaces for clients who like to interact with their data with as little latency as possible.

In the past two years, I learned front-end development on-the-fly, as the needs of the clients required it. Two years ago, I was still using jQuery. Then, I discovered space-pen thanks to my colleague Nicolas. It was nice to have proper ‘view’ objects, and use jQuery’s event system to have messages propagate throughout a hierarchy.

Thumbnail for Serving ASCII cats over HTTP

Serving ASCII cats over HTTP

Our catscii program does everything we want it to do, except that it’s a command-line application rather than a web server. Let’s fix that.

Enter axum

The documentation for the axum crate tells us how to make a basic web server, and we honestly don’t need much more than that.

So let’s add axum:

amos@miles:~/catscii$ cargo add [email protected] Updating crates.io index Adding axum =0.6 to dependencies. Features: + form + http1 + json + matched-path + original-uri + query + tokio + tower-log - __private_docs - headers - http2 - macros - multipart - w
Thumbnail for What's in a Linux executable?

What's in a Linux executable?

Executables have been fascinating to me ever since I discovered, as a kid, that they were just files. If you renamed a .exe to something else, you could open it in notepad! And if you renamed something else to a .exe, you’d get a neat error dialog.

Clearly, something was different about these files. Seen from notepad, they were mostly gibberish, but there had to be order in that chaos. 12-year-old me knew that, although he didn’t quite know how or where to dig to make sense of it all.

Thumbnail for Crafting ICMP-bearing IPv4 packets with the help of bitvec

Crafting ICMP-bearing IPv4 packets with the help of bitvec

So. Serializing IPv4 packets. Easy? Well, not exactly.

IPv4 was annoying to parse, because we had 3-bit integers, and 13-bit integers, and who knows what else. Serializing it is going to be exactly the same.

Right now, we don’t have a way to serialize that.

Let’s take the version and ihl fields, both of which are supposed to take 4 bits, together making a byte. We could serialize them like this:

Thumbnail for Deploying at the edge

Deploying at the edge

Disclaimer:

Although I no longer work for the company my website is hosted on, and this article is written in way that mentions neither my previous or current hosting provider: at the time of this writing, I don’t pay for hosting.

One thing I didn’t really announce (because I wanted to make sure it worked before I did), is that I’ve migrated my website over completely from a CDN (Content Delivery Network) to an ADN (Application Delivery Network), and that required some architectural changes.

And now for a bit of an announcement

Hey all, thanks for checking in!

After much soul searching, I have arrived to the following conclusion:

  • Teaching folks about stuff is my jam.

I’ve been writing multiple articles that sort of read like course material, if there was no dress code, maybe?

In 2013, I organized a 1st year Computer Science student project. Instead of making them implement “control tower software” for a fictional airline, I decided to go for something real - the BitTorrent protocol.

The many rewrites of the itch.io desktop app

I started working on the itch.io desktop app over 4 years ago.

It has arguably been my main project ever since, along with companion projects like butler, capsule and many smaller libraries.

I’m fuzzy on the initial history, but I remember the codebase went through a lot of changes. As early as 2014, the whole codebase was ported from vanilla JavaScript to TypeScript. In 2016, I released a timeline of all the changes. In 2018, I released a postmortem for v25 (which I then deleted).

Thumbnail for Building poppler for Windows

Building poppler for Windows

I know what you’re thinking: haven’t we strayed from the whole “content pipeline” theme in this series?

Well… fair. But compiling and distributing software is part of software engineering, and unless you’re in specific circles, I see that taught a lot less than the “just write code and stuff happens” part.

Amos

Technically it’s release engineering, but who’s keeping track.

When rustc explodes

One could say I have a bit of an obsession with build times.

I believe having a “tight feedback loop” is extremely valuable: when I work on a large codebase, I want to be able to make small incremental changes and check very often that things are going as expected.

Especially if I’m working on a project that needs to move quickly: say, the product for an early-stage startup, or a side-project for which I only ever get to do 1-hour work bursts at most.