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- 16:36, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Rust Just Gave.jpg
- 16:36, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Rust Just Gave.jpg
- 16:35, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Rust’s Biggest Flaw Is Not The Learning Curve. It Is The Ecosystem (Created page with "Rust is not held back by its borrow checker. It is held back by everything around it. You can fight through ownership. You can learn lifetimes. You can tame the compiler. 500px Then you reach for a web framework, a database driver, an async runtime, a metrics crate, a logger, a migration tool, and a task scheduler. That is when Rust really tests you. Not on syntax. On chaos. You are not just learning a language. You are gamb...")
- 16:33, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Rust’s Biggest Flaw.jpg
- 16:33, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Rust’s Biggest Flaw.jpg
- 16:32, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Turbo Vision for Rust 1.0 (Created page with "500px In an era dominated by web technologies and GPU-accelerated interfaces, there’s something deeply satisfying about building text-mode user interfaces that run directly in the terminal. While modern Rust developers typically reach for Ratatui when building terminal UIs, there’s another approach that offers a different philosophy: Turbo Vision for Rust, a faithful port of Borland’s legendary 1990s text-mode UI framework. Th...")
- 16:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:The palette system.jpg
- 16:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:The palette system.jpg
- 16:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Turbo Vision uses.jpg
- 16:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Turbo Vision uses.jpg
- 16:28, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Rust doesn't have inheritance.jpg
- 16:28, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Rust doesn't have inheritance.jpg
- 16:27, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:But borland turbo vision.jpg
- 16:27, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:But borland turbo vision.jpg
- 16:26, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Turbo Vision for Rust 1.0.jpg
- 16:26, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Turbo Vision for Rust 1.0.jpg
- 16:24, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Rust Is Loved by Developers. Here’s Why Your CTO Still Says No (Created page with "500px I did not lose my job in a layoff. There was no restructuring email. No polite “your role has been affected” message. I was called into a room, looked in the eye, and told it was over. The official reason was “misaligned technical bets.” The real reason was simple: I turned our company into a Rust experiment and treated everyone else like they were slow for not keeping up. I did what many developers quietly want...")
- 16:21, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Rust is loved by developer.jpg
- 16:21, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Rust is loved by developer.jpg
- 16:20, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Trust Me Bro: The Cloudflare Rust .unwrap() That Panicked Across 330+ Data Centers (Created page with "500px https://blog.cloudflare.com/18-november-2025-outage/ There are many majestic forces in our universe. Black holes. Supernova. And apparently, a single Rust .unwrap() in Cloudflare's edge network. Yep. Billions of dollars of global infrastructure, taken down by the Rust equivalent of “Trust me bro, this can’t fail.” Welcome to distributed systems. Let’s see what happened, have some fun doing it, and learn how not to ship inte...")
- 16:18, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Cloudflare outage.jpg
- 16:18, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Cloudflare outage.jpg
- 16:17, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Rust-Proofing Android (Created page with "500px Image: Android + Rust logos (credit: XDA Developers) You can read the article through the link down below. 🦀 Rust-Proofing Android Today's issue: Gay Rust Quizes, Meta Open-Sources Below, and Surprising Rust Facts You Probably Didn't Know open.substack.com Read the full article here: https://medium.com/rustaceans/rust-proofing-android-8eec81dc80ab")
- 16:15, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Rust-Proofing Android.jpg
- 16:15, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Rust-Proofing Android.jpg
- 09:43, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Go vs Rust vs Node at 1M Concurrency: Throughput, Errors, and Spend (Created page with "500px Executive Summary Go vs Rust vs Node at 1M concurrency is not a language war; it’s about how each runtime treats throughput, errors, and spend under real traffic. In repeated high-load runs, the pattern is consistent: Rust keeps p95/p99 shortest (strong backpressure → fewer nodes → lower spend), Go balances time-to-ship with stable tails, and Node moves fastest on features but pays a tail-latency and scaling...")
- 09:41, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Go vs Rust vs Node at 1M.jpg
- 09:41, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Go vs Rust vs Node at 1M.jpg
- 09:40, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page How can a Rust program access metadata from its Cargo package? (Created page with "500px A practical, copy-pasteable guide for adding --version (and friends) without duplicating data. If you’re building a CLI in Rust, you probably want a --version flag that stays in sync with your Cargo.toml. The good news: you don’t need to maintain the version in two places. Cargo already exposes a rich set of package metadata to your code at compile time via environment variables. This article shows several approache...")
- 09:37, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Why Rust Doesn’t Always “restrict” Your &mut: the Real Story Behind noalias (Created page with "500px If you’ve heard that “Rust is faster because &mut references never alias,” you might expect the optimizer to happily fold <pre> // C with restrict void adds(int *restrict a, int *restrict b) { *a += *b; *a += *b; } </pre> into a single *a += 2 * (*b); — and for the Rust equivalent to do the same. In practice, older Rust builds often emitted code that loaded and stored twice, just like a conservative C compi...")
- 09:35, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Interior Mutability in Rust (Created page with "In this article, I will talk about what Interior mutability in Rust is and where its needed with some practical examples and how it can be implemented. Interior mutability is a design pattern in Rust that allows you to mutate data even when there are immutable references to that data. This sounds a bit counter-intuititve to the whole Rust ownership and borrow philosophy. But there are practical use cases where such an implementation is required and we will explore them...")
- 09:32, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Interior Mutability in Rust.jpg
- 09:32, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Interior Mutability in Rust.jpg
- 09:31, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page The Byzantine Generals Problem: A Modern Performance Analysis in Elixir, Erlang, and Rust (Created page with "Introduction In 2007, I wrote about implementing Leslie Lamport’s Byzantine Generals Problem algorithm across several programming languages. At the time, this seemed like an interesting theoretical exercise in distributed computing. I didn’t realize that a year later, Satoshi Nakamoto would publish the Bitcoin whitepaper, introducing a decentralized, Sybil resistant digital currency that solved Byzantine fault tolerance at unprecedented scale. Nearly two de...")
- 09:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Result summary.jpg
- 09:30, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Result summary.jpg
- 09:26, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Cross border payments.jpg
- 09:26, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Cross border payments.jpg
- 09:25, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:1 generals to handle m traitors.jpg
- 09:25, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:1 generals to handle m traitors.jpg
- 09:24, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:The Byzantine Generals Problem.jpg
- 09:24, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:The Byzantine Generals Problem.jpg
- 09:22, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page Mastering Cursor: How an AI Editor Changed the Way I Code in Rust (Created page with "500px When I first opened Cursor, I wasn’t expecting it to change the way I wrote Rust. Honestly, I just wanted a smarter VS Code — something that could autocomplete a few lines, maybe refactor a messy function or two. What I got instead was a teammate. One that argues, makes silly mistakes, forgets things mid-conversation — but somehow helps me ship production-grade Rust faster than I ever could alone. Over the past few months,...")
- 09:20, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:Mastering cursor.jpg
- 09:20, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:Mastering cursor.jpg
- 09:19, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page What Would Make Rust Dev Life Easier? A Wishlist of Sharp, Friendly Tools (Created page with "500px Rust is a little like rock climbing with a great belayer: you’re safe, but you will feel the pump. The compiler has your back, the ecosystem is growing up fast, and yet… there are still those tiny paper cuts and once-a-week yak shaves that add friction. So here’s a fun thought experiment for the community: if you could wish for a piece of software, tool, or crate that doesn’t exist yet (or doesn’t work well enough),...")
- 09:16, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page How a Rust Future gets polled: from async fn to state machine (Created page with "Having worked on a few async rust project, several go & nodejs, I decided to see what’s really going on. I mean, it’s simple right? Take a function, instead of blocking sequentially, just the way you spin up functions in threads. However, after studying a few resources, I got to learn more about concurrency, parallelism, and the async state machine. Starting with, why? Why do we even need all these constructs. Simple, we want to support multiple actions at a time. Y...")
- 09:13, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page The Rust Code That Can’t Fail: Design Patterns for Bulletproof SoftwareStop fighting the compiler. Start making it your bodyguard. (Created page with "500px e’ve all been there. You ship a new feature, and everything looks great. Then the bug reports roll in. A value was used in the wrong unit, a function was called with an uninitialized object, or a simple null check was missed somewhere deep in the logic. These aren't complex algorithmic errors; they're the simple, dumb mistakes that slip through code reviews and haunt our production servers. What if you could elimin...")
- 09:11, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs created page File:The Rust Code That Can’t Fail.jpg
- 09:11, 22 November 2025 PC talk contribs uploaded File:The Rust Code That Can’t Fail.jpg