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19 November 2025
- 09:3209:32, 19 November 2025 diff hist +7,770 N Rustfmt Is “Effectively Unmaintained” — Are We Shipping Blind? Created page with "Pinned toolchains end style wars — and cut PR time by double digits. 500px I’m making a blunt claim: format drift silently taxes delivery. Last week, format-only failures beat test failures 28% vs 24% on our team. Average PR time fell from 28.4h to 17.9h after we fixed it. The antagonist was drift — IDE defaults vs CI, stale rules, and a toolchain gap. I will show the pins, scripts, and guardrails that restored flow. The map is simple:..."
- 09:3109:31, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rustfmt.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:3009:30, 19 November 2025 diff hist +7,585 N Rust Isn’t the Future — It’s Just Hype Created page with "Rust is the programming equivalent of a luxury sports car that spends 99% of its time stuck in traffic — technically impressive, completely impractical, and owned by people who won’t shut up about it. ☁️ Whenever I write about cloud costs or DevOps, these are some of the quick guides I reference often: • DevOps Interview Guide — 408 Questions → https://gumroad.com/a/416513171/ctqbrx • AWS DevOps Interview Q&A → https://gumroad.com/a/416513171/oxwo..." current
- 09:3009:30, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust Isn’t the Future.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:2509:25, 19 November 2025 diff hist +2 I’m Amazed by Rust: From Electron + Python to Tauri + Rust (and Why I’m Not Looking Back) No edit summary current
- 09:2409:24, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,989 N I’m Amazed by Rust: From Electron + Python to Tauri + Rust (and Why I’m Not Looking Back) Created page with "500px Summary: I tried to ship a cross-platform desktop app with Electron + React + a bundled Python/Flask runtime. It worked… until it didn’t. Managing a separate server, ports, packaging, and updates felt brittle and bloated. So I tried Rust (with Tauri). After ~3–4 days with The Rust Book and ~5–6 days of wrangling my first Tauri app into shape, I’m hooked. The compiler is tough but trustworthy; when it compiles, it runs..."
- 09:2209:22, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,347 N Rust’s Type System Is So Strong, It’s Crushing Creativity Created page with "500px The Paradox of Perfection Rust’s type system is a masterpiece — it’s rigorous, precise, and beautifully designed to make entire classes of bugs impossible. It’s also, sometimes, a creativity killer. When I first started using Rust, I felt invincible. No nulls, no segfaults, no hidden memory leaks. Every line I wrote felt like it was blessed by a mathematical god. Then I tried to build something experimental — a small p..." current
- 09:2109:21, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust’s Type System.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1909:19, 19 November 2025 diff hist +20,919 N Typst Studio in Pure Rust: WebAssembly and Rust for Modern Web Applications Created page with "500px 1. The WebAssembly Revolution in the Web Technology Landscape web app: https://automataia.github.io/wasm-typst-studio-rs/ WebAssembly represents one of the most significant paradigm shifts in modern web application architecture that we’ve witnessed in the past decade. Born as an experimental project in 2015 through collaboration between major browser vendors including Mozilla, Google, Microsoft, and Apple, and achieving W3C standard st..." current
- 09:1809:18, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Typst Studio.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1709:17, 19 November 2025 diff hist +5,752 N Saving Disk Space Across Multiple Rust Projects with sccache Created page with "500px I don’t know about you, but my laptop disk space is limited. Probably it’s more the limitation itself than the size of the limitation — there’s something about watching that progress bar creep toward red that makes every gigabyte feel precious. And if you’re working with multiple Rust projects, you know exactly what I’m talking about. Each Rust project creates its own target/ directory, filled with compilation artifacts..." current
- 09:1609:16, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:How sccache.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1509:15, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Saving Disk Space.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1409:14, 19 November 2025 diff hist +128 Zero-Copy Parsers: Rust Pipelines That Outrun JSON No edit summary current
- 09:1309:13, 19 November 2025 diff hist +9,940 N Zero-Copy Parsers: Rust Pipelines That Outrun JSON Created page with "500px he conventional wisdom in data processing has always been simple: parse first, optimize later. After careful analysis and several iterations, we implemented a zero-copy parsing strategy in Rust that doubled our throughput while reducing memory usage by 65%. But what if I told you that this “wisdom” has been costing you 200% performance gains? In production systems processing millions of JSON payloads daily, the hidden enemy isn..."
- 09:1309:13, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:The nom bytes.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1209:12, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Zero-copy parsing.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:1109:11, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Zero-Copy Parsers.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0909:09, 19 November 2025 diff hist +5,357 N Rust Made My API Feel Instant — Without a Single Hardware Change Created page with "The single change was code. The difference felt like buying a faster CPU without spending a rupee. Every developer knows that sinking feeling when your API starts dragging. Traffic climbs, requests pile up, latency graphs start to look like mountains. You scale. You tune. You tweak the configs. Still, your p95s and p99s refuse to calm down. That was me three months ago. The API worked fine — until it didn’t. Every fix felt like taping over cracks in a boat tha..." current
- 09:0909:09, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust made my api feel.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0809:08, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Inside Rust’s Cooperative.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0709:07, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,401 N Inside Rust’s Cooperative Multitasking: The Secret Behind Tokio’s Fairness Created page with "500px The Myth: Async Is Just Multithreading With Fancy Syntax When you first write async Rust, it feels like threads — you spawn tasks, you await stuff, and it somehow all “just runs.” But if you ever used Go or Java Loom, something feels different in Rust. It’s… calmer. More predictable. That’s not an accident. Tokio — Rust’s most popular async runtime — doesn’t do preemptive multitasking like an..." current
- 09:0509:05, 19 November 2025 diff hist −48 MCP Development with the Google Cloud Rust SDK and Gemini CLI No edit summary current
- 09:0409:04, 19 November 2025 diff hist +11,270 N MCP Development with the Google Cloud Rust SDK and Gemini CLI Created page with "Leveraging the Gemini CLI and the underlying Gemini LLM to add MCP support for deploying AI applications built in the Rust Language. This article extends the Official Google Cloud Rust SDK to provide API call information over a MCP connection. What is this Tutorial Trying to Do? Traditionally, ML and AI tools have been deployed in interpreted languages like Python, and Java. One of the key goals of this tutorial is to validate that a compiled language like Rust can b..."
- 09:0309:03, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Google cloud api.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0209:02, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Cloud run.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0109:01, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Closest to nyc.jpg No edit summary current
- 09:0009:00, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Locations in europe.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:5908:59, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:MCP server stdio.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:5808:58, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Validate mcp.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:5708:57, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Gemini CLI.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:5408:54, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Gemini.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:5208:52, 19 November 2025 diff hist +6,775 N 10 Rust Interview Questions That Every Developer Should Be Ready For Created page with "I’ve been in interviews where a single question separated the hire from the “we’ll keep your resume.” You’ll get asked about Rust not to scare you — to see how you think. Short answers won’t win every time. Explanations will. Talk trade-offs. Talk why you chose what you did. Show a tiny example. Say what you’d do if it failed. This list isn’t trivia. It’s practice for real conversations. Answer like you’ve used Rust in production — even if you hav..." current
- 08:5208:52, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:10 Rust Interview Questions That Every Developer Should Be Ready For.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4808:48, 19 November 2025 diff hist +4,932 N Why Tech Giants Are Betting Big on Rust in 2025 Created page with "Walk into any major tech company’s engineering floor today, and you’ll hear the same conversation. 500px “We’re rewriting this in Rust.” It’s happening at Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon. But why? The Problem Nobody Talks About Here’s something most developers don’t realize: around 70% of security bugs in Chrome and Windows come from memory issues. Buffer overflows, use-after-free errors, all that stuff...." current
- 08:4708:47, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Why Tech Giants Are Betting Big.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4608:46, 19 November 2025 diff hist +6,750 N Rust, Immutability, and the Comfort of Constants Created page with "Rust’s insistence on immutability took me by surprise the first time I used it. As a python dev, I was used to changing variables whenever I wanted, tweaking things on the fly. In Rust, you have to be deliberate, things stay the same unless you go out of your way to make them change. At first, this felt like a hassle , why put up more barriers? But lately, I’ve found a strange kind of comfort in it. When life feels unpredictable and everything seems to shift, jobs,..." current
- 08:4608:46, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust, Immutability.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4408:44, 19 November 2025 diff hist +6,573 N Why Are Rust Executables “So Huge”? (…and how to make them tiny) Created page with "500px Summary: A fresh cargo new hello can feel chunky because Rust prioritizes debuggability, safety, and portability out of the box. You’re seeing debug symbols, unwound panics, formatting machinery, generics monomorphization, and often static linking. With the right knobs—release builds, LTO, panic = "abort", opt-level = "z", stripping, turning off unused features, or even no_std—you can shrink binaries dramatically..." current
- 08:4408:44, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Why are rust excutable.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4208:42, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,397 N Rust Eats Fewer Cores. Go Eats Fewer Weekends Created page with "500px Your cloud bill does not care about your feelings. Your pager does. Rust keeps the bill small. Go keeps the pager quiet. That is the real trade. Not syntax. Not memory model. Not hype. You either spend money on CPU… Or you spend your Saturday on incident calls. Pick. The fight is not Rust vs Go. It is you vs 3 A.M. Let me give you a real picture. We had an internal service doing ~22k requests per second at burst. Heavy JS..." current
- 08:4108:41, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust Eats Fewer Cores.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4008:40, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Inside tokio.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:4008:40, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,783 N Inside Tokio: The Beating Heart of Rust’s Async World Created page with "Rust isn’t just fast — it’s fearless. But under that calm, type-safe surface lies a tiny engine that makes everything move at lightning speed. That engine is Tokio — the silent workhorse behind Rust’s async revolution. 500px Why Tokio Exists Every language has its way of handling concurrency. Python has asyncio. Go has goroutines. JavaScript has promises. Rust? It has Tokio — an asynchronous runtime designed to make conc..." current
- 08:3808:38, 19 November 2025 diff hist +9,773 N Rust Enums vs Structs: 4 Patterns That Simplified My Whole Codebase Created page with "500px That change also removed a surprising source of bugs and made future refactors painless. Short sentence. No drama. Just the result. If that does not make the reader raise an eyebrow, nothing will. Introduction — (make or break) Enums are not a nicety. Enums are leverage. They resolve ambiguity. They remove hidden allocations. They make intent visible in code and tests. A single enum replaced four struct types and three tr..." current
- 08:3708:37, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Rust Enums vs Structs.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:3608:36, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Forget Futures- 4 Async Rust.jpg No edit summary current
- 08:3508:35, 19 November 2025 diff hist +9,190 N Forget Futures: 4 Async Rust Patterns Every Developer Should Know Created page with "500px “Dashboard frozen.” “Endpoints not responding.” “Are we down?” I jumped into the logs. No errors. CPU idle. Memory fine. But every async task was stuck waiting. The culprit? I had written code that looked concurrent… but wasn’t. My async functions blocked the executor, and my futures were being dropped mid-flight. I’d finally understand Rust async — the right way. Why Async in Rust Feels S..." current
- 08:3308:33, 19 November 2025 diff hist +8,379 N Pinning Demystified: The Rust Feature You Fear but Can’t Avoid Created page with "When I first heard the word Pin, I thought: 500px “Great. Another obscure Rust type that exists just to ruin my compile.” And I wasn’t entirely wrong. The first time I met Pin<T>, it was wrapped around some Future type deep inside an async function’s generated code. I stared at it, Googled it, and closed the tab in panic. But months later, when I started digging into how async/await actually works under the hood — and..." current
- 08:3208:32, 19 November 2025 diff hist 0 N File:Pinning Demystified.jpg No edit summary current