Computer Science and Programming – Telegram
Computer Science and Programming
148K subscribers
808 photos
31 videos
37 files
1.1K links
Channel specialized for advanced topics of:
* Artificial intelligence,
* Machine Learning,
* Deep Learning,
* Computer Vision,
* Data Science
* Python

Admin: @otchebuch

Memes: @memes_programming

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Building vertical microfrontends on Cloudflare’s platform
Cloudflare introduces a Vertical Microfrontends template that enables teams to deploy multiple independent Workers under a single domain, each owning complete vertical slices by URL path (e.g., /docs, /dash). Using service bindings for routing, CSS View Transitions for seamless navigation, and Speculation Rules for instant-feeling page loads, teams can work in isolation with their own frameworks, libraries, and CI/CD pipelines while presenting a unified user experience. The Router Worker handles path-based routing, HTML rewriting for asset paths, and automatically injects transition code to make separate projects feel like a single-page application.
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Inside Turbopack: Building Faster by Building Less
Turbopack achieves fast build times through fine-grained incremental computation and automatic dependency tracking using "value cells" - a spreadsheet-like architecture that tracks function execution and dependencies. When source code changes, only affected functions are recomputed by propagating updates through a dependency graph. An aggregation graph layer enables efficient querying of large graphs with millions of nodes. The system now includes file system caching (stable in Next.js 16.1) to persist dependency graphs and intermediate results across restarts, building on research from Salsa, Parcel, and the Rust compiler.
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Hydra joins Supabase
Supabase acquires Hydra, bringing co-creator Joe Sciarrino on board to lead their Open Warehouse Architecture initiative. Hydra co-developed pg_duckdb, an MIT-licensed Postgres extension that accelerates analytics queries by over 600x. Supabase will maintain pg_duckdb as open source while building an open data warehouse architecture that integrates Postgres with object storage, serverless analytics workflows, and modern table formats. The company is hiring C++ programmers and storage engineers to build this vision.
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Linus Torvalds Confirms The Next Kernel Is Linux 7.0
Linus Torvalds announced that the next kernel version will be Linux 7.0, following the release of Linux 6.19 stable. The version jump is due to Torvalds running out of fingers and toes for counting. The Linux 7.0 merge window opens tomorrow and will run for two weeks, with the stable release expected in mid-April. This version will be included in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS.
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A Visual Diff of Java’s Evolution: Inside java.evolved
java.evolved is a community site that documents how common Java coding patterns have changed across language versions using side-by-side before/after examples. It targets developers working in mixed-era codebases (Java 6, 8, 17+) by showing how existing code would look if written with modern idioms. Examples include replacing verbose data classes with records, using pattern matching in instanceof checks, and leveraging switch expressions. The project is positioned as a practical reference for onboarding and code reviews in mature Java systems.
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Introducing Theme Builder — Zed's Blog
Zed launches Theme Builder, a visual editor for creating custom editor themes without editing JSON. The tool features live preview, an inspector to identify which tokens control specific UI elements, color linking to maintain consistency across related elements, and Tree-sitter-powered syntax highlighting that matches Zed exactly. Users can import existing themes, make changes with instant visual feedback, and export as theme overrides or extensions. The interface uses CSS custom properties for instant updates and includes undo/redo support with local storage persistence.
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How Anthropic uses Claude in Marketing
A non-technical growth marketer at Anthropic used Claude Code to build custom automation workflows that reduced ad creation time from 30 minutes to 30 seconds. Starting with zero coding experience, he created a Figma plugin for generating ad variations and a Google Ads copy workflow with CSV export. The article details his process, best practices for non-technical users building with AI coding tools, and examples of how other marketing teams at Anthropic are using Claude to save hundreds of hours monthly on repetitive tasks.
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Dragonfly v2.4.0 is released
Dragonfly v2.4.0 introduces a load-aware two-stage scheduling algorithm and a new Vortex protocol that reduces large file download times by 40-50% compared to gRPC. The release deprecates the Go client in favor of a Rust client, adds simplified multi-cluster Kubernetes deployment with scheduler cluster IDs, and implements task ID calculation based on image blob SHA256 to prevent redundant downloads. Additional improvements include enhanced preheating with IP-based peer selection, HTTP 307 redirect caching, performance optimizations for Manager and Scheduler components, and various bug fixes. Nydus enhancements include CRC32 validation support and Nydus-to-OCI reverse conversion capability.
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Supabase PrivateLink is now available
Supabase PrivateLink enables database connections through AWS private networks without public internet exposure. Using AWS VPC Lattice, it allows applications to connect to Supabase databases as if they're inside your own VPC. This addresses compliance requirements for regulated industries and reduces attack surface by eliminating public endpoints. Currently in Beta, it supports AWS VPCs in the same region, covers Postgres and PgBouncer connections (but not other Supabase services), and requires Team or Enterprise plans. Setup involves sharing AWS account details, accepting resource shares, creating VPC endpoints, and updating connection strings.
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The Palindrome in 2026
Tivadar Danka outlines his 2026 plans for The Palindrome newsletter: finishing his Machine Learning From Zero book with from-scratch algorithm implementations, creating more explainer videos, launching monthly live workshops for paid subscribers (starting with Mathematics of Machine Learning on March 7th), building a team of contributors inspired by distill.pub, and developing nb2wb—an open-source tool for converting Jupyter Notebooks to web publishing platforms. The newsletter has grown from 16,835 to 39,663 subscribers since May 2025.
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jQuery 4 – Frontend Masters Blog
jQuery 4.0 has been released with full ESM support and removal of legacy features. The minified and gzipped version is now 27.6 kB (down from 30.5 kB in version 3.7.1), with a slim build at 19.6 kB. While beneficial for existing jQuery applications that can upgrade, it's generally not recommended for new projects since vanilla JavaScript now provides most of jQuery's functionality natively.
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I'm Behind and I Don't Care
The rapid pace of AI tool releases creates pressure to constantly update workflows, but chasing every new model or tool is counterproductive. Finding a workflow that works and sticking with it allows developers to focus on building rather than perpetually optimizing. Being 80% optimal with a stable workflow is better than constantly pursuing 100% perfection, as the truly valuable tools will prove themselves over time while trends fade.
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The Phoenix Architecture
The "deletion test" is a thought experiment: imagine deleting your entire codebase and regenerating it from scratch. If that's terrifying, it reveals that critical knowledge lives only in the code itself, not in specifications, tests, or contracts. As code generation becomes cheaper through AI, the bottleneck shifts from production to validation. Systems should be built around durable oracles (property-based tests, invariants, contracts) that can mechanically verify correctness without referencing old implementations. When you have strong evaluation mechanisms, code becomes disposable and regeneration becomes safe.
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Design is more than code
Design should focus on understanding and defining problems before jumping to solutions, rather than being reduced to code execution. The design process involves two stages: conceptual (finding the right form and direction based on problem understanding and product vision) and execution (building it out). While new tools and AI make execution easier, there's a risk of devaluing the strategic thinking that happens before coding—questioning problems, aligning stakeholders, and making intentional decisions about product direction. The concern isn't about whether designers should code, but whether the industry will lose the patience for deep consideration and problem-solving in favor of rapid output.
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Vercel Flags is now in public beta
Vercel Flags is now in public beta, offering native feature flag management directly in the Vercel Dashboard. It includes targeting rules, user segments, and environment controls, with SDK support for Next.js and SvelteKit. The service also supports OpenFeature standard for integration with other frameworks and custom backends. Pricing is $30 per million flag requests, available to teams on all plans.
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Chris’ Corner: All Together Now
Modern CSS has evolved to handle tasks that previously required JavaScript. Features like custom selects with `appearance: base-select`, anchor positioning, scroll-driven animations, and scroll state queries now enable complex UI patterns purely in CSS. When combined, these capabilities demonstrate CSS's transformation into a more powerful, intelligent language that covers most presentation and interaction needs without JavaScript.
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Split Diffs are Here — Zed's Blog
Zed v0.224 ships split diff view as the new default, showing base code on the left and working copy on the right in synchronized scroll. Built on Zed's multibuffer architecture, the feature required solving two core challenges: keeping both sides vertically aligned across all changed files simultaneously, and maintaining performance at scale. Alignment is handled via a block map that inserts visual spacers between lines. Performance profiling uncovered broader wins including block map inefficiencies that sped up project search, and a macOS process spawning fix (switching from fork/exec to posix_spawn) that reduced main thread hangs from git blame and other external processes. Users can revert to unified diffs via the Diff View Style setting.
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GPU Virtualization Architecture for Multi-Desktop Containers
Deep technical dive into building GPU-accelerated multi-desktop virtualization on Apple Silicon. Covers the full stack from virtio-gpu driver through QEMU to Metal, focusing on deadlock bugs that emerge when scaling from 1-2 to 4+ concurrent desktops. Key issues include global renderer_blocked semaphore causing cross-scanout freezes, FIFO command queue blocking, broken fence polling timers, and DRM mode_config.mutex contention. Solutions involve per-context isolation, thread-based fence polling workarounds, and removing synchronous operations from critical paths.
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How we made geo joins 400× faster with H3 indexes
Geospatial joins using predicates like ST_Intersects become prohibitively slow at scale due to quadratic complexity and expensive spatial operations. By automatically rewriting these queries to use H3 hierarchical hexagonal cell indexes, spatial predicates are transformed into fast integer equi-joins on cell IDs. The approach generates H3 coverage for geometries, performs a hash join on matching cells, then applies exact predicates only to filtered candidates. Benchmarks show 400× speedup at optimal resolution (resolution 3), reducing 37.6 million comparisons to ~200k. The technique works on-the-fly without materialized indexes, supporting views and subqueries while avoiding storage overhead.
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How Stripe rolled out a consistent Cursor experience for 3,000 engineers · Cursor
Stripe rolled out Cursor to 3,000+ engineers by preinstalling it on every machine, using Cursor Rules for codebase context, and adapting code review practices. They found that senior engineers with deep codebase knowledge gained the most productivity, contrary to expectations that juniors would benefit most. The company maintained quality by using LLMs to flag risky code during reviews and spread adoption through power users sharing workflows.
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Chris’ Corner: Light & Boxes
A coding challenge explores creating dynamic box shadows that respond to a light source as elements scroll. Multiple developers showcase solutions using scroll-driven animations with animation-timeline: view() and scroll(), manipulating shadow properties through CSS custom properties and @property declarations. Solutions range from JavaScript-assisted approaches to pure CSS implementations that interpolate shadow directions based on viewport position.
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