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151. The Cost of a Closure in C
I had a vague idea that closures could have a variety of performance implications; I did not believe that so many of the chosen and potential designs for C and C++ extensions ones, however, were so…
152. How the Bell Labs Holmdel Complex Inspired 'Severance'
153. Gut microbial imbalance can impact memory, says study
Published in the journal BMC Biology, the research shows how long-term antibiotic use, unhealthy diets, stress and poor sleep can disturb the gut microbiome, se
154. Patterns.dev
Learn JavaScript design and performance patterns for building more powerful web applications.
155. Samsung to halt SATA SSD production, leaker warns
Samsung is reportedly preparing to wind down its SATA SSD business, and a notable hardware leaker warns the move could have broader implications for consumer storage pricing than Micron’s decision to end its Crucial RAM lineup. The report suggests reduced supply and short-term price pressure may follow as the market adjusts.
156. Dick Van Dyke turns 100
The goofy star of Mary Poppins becomes a centenarian on Saturday. And what a precocious performer he has proved, sustaining scrappy mischief through seven decades of mainstream entertainment
157. Sperm donor with cancer-causing gene fathers nearly 200 children
A Danish sperm donor carrying a rare genetic mutation linked to a very high risk of cancer has fathered at least 197 children across Europe, according to an
158. Humans rank above meerkats but below beavers in monogamy league table
Human beings in 7th place out of 35 species on monogamy scale, according to a study by Cambridge University
159. Myna v2.0: contextual variants, more weights (and even supports APL)
monospace typeface designed for symbol-rich programming - Release v2.0.0 · sayyadirfanali/Myna
160. Cadmium Zinc Telluride: The wonder material powering a medical 'revolution'
Just a handful of companies can make cadmium zinc telluride, a material with powerful properties.
161. Windows 3.1 'Hot Dog Stand' color scheme true story
Setting the record straight, 33 years later.
162. French supermarket's Christmas advert is worldwide hit (without AI) [video]
"Pas facile de se faire des amis, quand on les mange". Intermarché vous souhaite de Joyeuses Fêtes. 🌟🤳Suivez-nous sur nos réseaux sociaux : Facebook : http...
163. Craft software that makes people feel something
164. Sen. WHITEHOUSE: We are moving to file a bipartisan Section 230 repeal
Sen. WHITEHOUSE: We finally are moving to file a bipartisan Section 230 repeal bill. Waiting any longer serves no useful purpose.
165. An Orbital House of Cards: Frequent Megaconstellation Close Conjunctions
Abstract page for arXiv paper 2512.09643: An Orbital House of Cards: Frequent Megaconstellation Close Conjunctions
166. My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file (2022)
167. Nuclear energy key to decarbonising Europe, says EESC
The EESC has adopted an opinion pointing out that nuclear energy is an essential component of the clean energy mix which is needed to phase out fossil fuels. The Committee calls on the European Commission to include key regulatory and financial enablers in order to make the planned investment possible, and to enhance transparent dialogue with civil society.
168. EFF Launches Age Verification Hub as Resource Against Misguided Laws
With ill-advised and dangerous age verification laws proliferating across the United States and around the world, creating surveillance and censorship regimes that will be used to harm both youth and adults, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has launched a new resource hub that will sort through the mess and help people fight back. To mark the hub's launch, EFF will host a
169. Litestream VFS
Query your SQLite database any time, anywhere
170. Berlin Approves New Expansion of Police Surveillance Powers
The law fuses hacking, home entry, and AI into a single blueprint for dystopian modern policing.
171. The Tor Project Is Making a Switch to Rust, Ditches C
Arti, the Rust rewrite of Tor, brings circuit isolation and onion service improvements in its 1.8.0 release.
172. The Walt Disney Company and OpenAI Partner on Sora
173. Smartphone Without a Battery (2022)
174. PeerTube is recognized as a digital public good by Digital Public Goods Alliance
Learn more about PeerTube.
175. Deprecate Like You Mean It
176. I couldn't find a logging library that worked for my library, so I made one
When I started building Fedify, an ActivityPub server framework, I ran into a problem that surprised me: I couldn't figure out how to add logging. Not because logging is hard—there are dozens of mature logging libraries for JavaScript. The problem was that they're primarily designed for applications, not for libraries that want to stay unobtrusive. I wrote about this a few months ago, and the response was modest—some interest, some skepticism, and quite a bit of debate about whether the post was AI-generated. I'll be honest: English isn't my first language, so I use LLMs to polish my writing. But the ideas and technical content are mine. Several readers wanted to see a real-world example rather than theory. The problem: existing loggers assume you're building an app Fedify helps developers build federated social applications using the ActivityPub protocol. If you've ever worked with federation, you know debugging can be painful. When an activity fails to deliver, you need to answer questions like: Did the HTTP request actually go out? Was the signature generated correctly? Did the remote server reject it? Why? Was there a problem parsing the response? These questions span multiple subsystems: HTTP handling, cryptographic signatures, JSON-LD processing, queue management, and more. Without good logging, debugging turns into guesswork. But here's the dilemma I faced as a library author: if I add verbose logging to help with debugging, I risk annoying users who don't want their console cluttered with Fedify's internal chatter. If I stay silent, users struggle to diagnose issues. I looked at the existing options. With winston or Pino, I would have to either: Configure a logger inside Fedify (imposing my choices on users), or Ask users to pass a logger instance to Fedify (adding boilerplate) There's also debug, which is designed for this use case. But it doesn't give you structured, level-based logs that ops teams expect—and it relies on environment variables, which some runtimes like Deno restrict by default for security reasons. None of these felt right. So I built LogTape—a logging library designed from the ground up for library authors. And Fedify became its first real user. The solution: hierarchical categories with zero default output The key insight was simple: a library should be able to log without producing any output unless the application developer explicitly enables it. Fedify uses LogTape's hierarchical category system to give users fine-grained control over what they see. Here's how the categories are organized: CategoryWhat it logs["fedify"]Everything from the library["fedify", "federation", "inbox"]Incoming activities["fedify", "federation", "outbox"]Outgoing activities["fedify", "federation", "http"]HTTP requests and responses["fedify", "sig", "http"]HTTP Signature operations["fedify", "sig", "ld"]Linked Data Signature operations["fedify", "sig", "key"]Key generation and retrieval["fedify", "runtime", "docloader"]JSON-LD document loading["fedify", "webfinger", "lookup"]WebFinger resource lookups …and about a dozen more. Each category corresponds to a distinct subsystem. This means a user can configure logging like this: await configure({ sinks: { console: getConsoleSink() }, loggers: [ // Show errors from all of Fedify { category: "fedify", sinks: ["console"], lowestLevel: "error" }, // But show debug info for inbox processing specifically { category: ["fedify", "federation", "inbox"], sinks: ["console"], lowestLevel: "debug" }, ],}); When something goes wrong with incoming activities, they get detailed logs for that subsystem while keeping everything else quiet. No code changes required—just configuration. Request tracing with implicit contexts The hierarchical categories solved the filtering problem, but there was another challenge: correlating logs across async boundaries. In a federated system, a single user action might trigger a cascade of operations: fetch a remote actor, verify their signature, process the activity, fan out to followers, and so on. When something fails, you need to correlate all the log entries for that specific request. Fedify uses LogTape's implicit context feature to automatically tag every log entry with a requestId: await configure({ sinks: { file: getFileSink("fedify.jsonl", { formatter: jsonLinesFormatter }) }, loggers: [ { category: "fedify", sinks: ["file"], lowestLevel: "info" }, ], contextLocalStorage: new AsyncLocalStorage(), // Enables implicit contexts}); With this configuration, every log entry automatically includes a requestId property. When you need to debug a specific request, you can filter your logs: jq 'select(.properties.requestId == "abc-123")' fedify.jsonl And you'll see every log entry from that request—across all subsystems, all in order. No manual correlation needed. The requestId is derived from standard headers when available (X-Request-Id, Traceparent, etc.), so it integrates naturally with existing observability infrastructure. What users actually see So what does all this configuration actually mean for someone using Fedify? If a Fedify user doesn't configure LogTape at all, they see nothing. No warnings about missing configuration, no default output, and minimal performance overhead—the logging calls are essentially no-ops. For basic visibility, they can enable error-level logging for all of Fedify with three lines of configuration. When debugging a specific issue, they can enable debug-level logging for just the relevant subsystem. And if they're running in production with serious observability requirements, they can pipe structured JSON logs to their monitoring system with request correlation built in. The same library code supports all these scenarios—whether the user is running on Node.js, Deno, Bun, or edge functions, without extra polyfills or shims. The user decides what they need. Lessons learned Building Fedify with LogTape taught me a few things: Design your categories early. The hierarchical structure should reflect how users will actually want to filter logs. I organized Fedify's categories around subsystems that users might need to debug independently. Use structured logging. Properties like requestId, activityId, and actorId are far more useful than string interpolation when you need to analyze logs programmatically. Implicit contexts turned out to be more useful than I expected. Being able to correlate logs across async boundaries without passing context manually made debugging distributed operations much easier. When a user reports that activity delivery failed, I can give them a single jq command to extract everything relevant. Trust your users. Some library authors worry about exposing too much internal detail through logs. I've found the opposite—users appreciate being able to see what's happening when they need to. The key is making it opt-in. Try it yourself If you're building a library and struggling with the logging question—how much to log, how to give users control, how to avoid being noisy—I'd encourage you to look at how Fedify does it. The Fedify logging documentation explains everything in detail. And if you want to understand the philosophy behind LogTape's design, my earlier post covers that. LogTape isn't trying to replace winston or Pino for application developers who are happy with those tools. It fills a different gap: logging for libraries that want to stay out of the way until users need them. If that's what you're looking for, it might be a better fit than the usual app-centric loggers.
177. Common Lisp, ASDF, and Quicklisp: packaging explained
Common Lisp has good packaging tools, but they're different. Here we explain the what and how.
178. Powder and Stone. Or, Why Medieval Rulers Loved Castles
And how gunpowder and castles led to modern states and centralized taxation. Part I.
179. RoboCrop: Teaching robots how to pick tomatoes
180. The simple cult camera that inspired Instagram (2017)
A rudimentary plastic camera made in China in the 1980s became an iconic item – even influencing a certain photography app you probably have on your phone.