(New to this series? Consider starting from part 1) At the end of the last post, we started to get some interesting functionality with the ability to resolve addresses to names in a module. This was the last functionality missing before we could implement breakpoints! This part adds the ability for ...
Berlin based technology consultancy specialising in the Rust programming language. We offer development, implementation, training and long-term support.
I made one of those e-ink weather displays that you see on tech blogs and hacker news sometimes. It can display the current weather, the temperature and precipitation forecast for the rest of the week, and my current and upcoming tasks from Todoist. It's powered by a couple NiMH AA …
Recently, I found myself returning to a compelling series of blog posts titled Zero-cost futures in Rust by Aaron Turon about what would become the foundation of Rust's async ecosyste…
A guide to adding Rust to a Java codebase with JNI and the rust-maven-plugin.
Stabilization report This report proposes the stabilization of #![feature(return_position_impl_trait_in_trait)] (RPITIT) and #![feature(async_fn_in_trait)] (AFIT). These are both long awaited featu...
I think Rust is a perfect choice here. Considering the investments of the Linux kernel, AWS, Microsoft and so on, I think Rust is a future-proof bet.
That said it think the programming language is not everything. It seems to me that lemmy was written under the assumptions that there will be a lot more hosted instances that will fedrate but a lot of load seems to centralize on a handful of instances now (i.e. lemmy.world).
To support these it could make sense to rethink the system design to something that offers better support for high-load and high-availability scenarios.
10 years here. Feels refreshing !