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@varbear shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Stop Forwarding Errors, Start Designing Them

A fresh take on Rust error handling just dropped - and it's calling out the usual suspects. Forget blindly forwarding errors withanyhowor smearing context around withProvider. This approach pushes forstructured, intent-driven error types- errors that say what to do next (like "retry this") instead o.. read more  

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@varbear shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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The Code Review That Cost $2 Million, CodeGood

New data shows only15% of code review comments catch real bugs. The rest? Nitpicks on style, naming, or formatting - stuff linters and AI were made to handle. Human reviews burn through$3.6M a yearin larger orgs and still miss the tough stuff: threading issues, system integration bugs, rare edge cas.. read more  

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@varbear shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Distinguishing yourself early in your career as a developer

A seasoned dev maps the job market into three tiers:local/public companies,VC-backed/startups, andBig Tech/finance. Each step up brings more money, more competition, and a steeper climb. Category 3(Big Tech/finance): Highest salaries. Broadest interview access. Brutal prep required. Category 2(start.. read more  

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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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BadPods Series: Everything Allowed on AWS EKS

A security researcher ran a full-blown container escape on EKS usingBadPods- a tool that spins up dangerously overprivileged pods. The pod broke out of its container, poked around the host node, moved laterally, and swiped AWS IAM creds. All of it slipped past EKS’s defaultPod Security Admission (PS.. read more  

BadPods Series: Everything Allowed on AWS EKS
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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Streamline your containerized CI/CD with GitLab Runners and Amazon EKS Auto Mode

GitLab Runners now work withAmazon EKS Auto Mode. That means hands-off infra, smarter scaling, and built-in AWS security. Runners spin up onEC2 Spot Instances, so teams can cut CI/CD compute costs by as much as90%- without hacking together flaky pipelines... read more  

Streamline your containerized CI/CD with GitLab Runners and Amazon EKS Auto Mode
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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Kubernetes GPU Management Just Got a Major Upgrade

Kubernetes 1.34 droppedDynamic Resource Allocation (DRA)- think persistent volumes, but for GPUs and custom hardware. Vendors can now plug in drivers and schedulers for their devices, and workloads can pick exactly what they need. Coming in 1.35: a newworkload abstractionthat speaks the language of .. read more  

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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Implementing assurance pipeline for Amazon EKS Platform

AWS released a full-stack CI/CD validation pipeline forAmazon EKS. It pulls in six layers of testing,Terraform,Helm,Locustload testing, and evenAWS Fault Injectionfor pushing resilience to the edge. The goal: bake policy checks, functional tests, and brutal load tests right into pre-deployment. Fewe.. read more  

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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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From Deterministic to Agentic: Creating Durable AI Workflows with Dapr

Dapr droppedDurable Agents- a mashup of classic workflows and LLM-driven agents that can actually get things done and survive rough edges. They track reasoning steps, tool calls, and chat states like a champ. If things crash, no problem: Dapr Workflows and Diagrid Catalyst bring it all back... read more  

From Deterministic to Agentic: Creating Durable AI Workflows with Dapr
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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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1.35: Enhanced Debugging with Versioned z-pages APIs

Kubernetes 1.35 makes a quiet-but-crucial upgrade: z-pages debugging endpoints now returnstructured, machine-readable JSON. That means tools- not just tired humans - can parse control plane state directly. The responses areversioned, backward-compatible, and tucked behind feature flags for now... read more  

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@kaptain shared a link, 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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v1.35: New level of efficiency with in-place Pod restart

Kubernetes 1.35, as you may know, introducedin-place Pod restarts(alpha). It's a real reset: all containers, init and sidecars included - without killing the Pod or kicking off a reschedule. Think restart without the cloud drama. Big win for workloads with heavy inter-container dependencies or massi.. read more  

Claude is an AI assistant built by Anthropic, a safety-focused AI research company. It's designed around three core principles - being helpful, harmless, and honest - which shapes how it approaches everything from simple questions to complex, multi-step tasks. In practice, Claude handles a broad range of work: writing and editing, coding and debugging, research and summarization, data analysis, brainstorming, and extended back-and-forth conversation. It's built to engage thoughtfully rather than just generate output - it can push back when something seems off, ask clarifying questions, and reason through problems step by step. What sets Claude apart from many AI assistants is its emphasis on nuance and judgment. It tries to give calibrated answers - acknowledging uncertainty when it exists, avoiding overconfidence, and flagging when a question might not have a clean answer. It also has a large context window, making it well suited for long documents, complex codebases, or extended workflows. Claude is available through Claude.ai for individual users, through an API for developers building products and tools, and through Claude Code for agentic coding tasks directly in the terminal. The current model family includes Claude Opus 4.6, Claude Sonnet 4.6, and Claude Haiku 4.5 - ranging from lightweight and fast to highly capable for complex reasoning tasks.