What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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When I was early in the industry, we had a great collection of high quality publications (A List Apart, CSS Tricks, Smashing Mag) teaching people how to build for the web.

Recently, it’s been harder to find the same level of free education, but I firmly believe @piccalilli has risen to become one of the new go-to’s.

Kudos to @belldotbz@bell.bz on Bluesky and the team behind it. Give it a follow and support them on Open Collective!

piccalil.li/

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此間、恋愛詐欺した人のノンフィクション映画が作成されるらしいけど、あらすじ見た限り社会全体の問題という名を乱用して正当化・美化している様に見えた。

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【写真部展参加エントリー受付中】
Misskey写真部展2026の参加申請フォームを再度公開しました
本フォームのご入力で参加費のお支払いが後日発生いたしますのでご確認の上お申し込みください

出展1次エントリー期間は
2025年8月3日(日) 23時59分 までとなります
枠がいっぱいになった際は先着順にて確定とさせていただきます

この投稿時点でのお申し込み可能な枠は以下の通りです
・公募枠 残多数 (4枚データ提出、1枠2,000円、1人2枠まで)

入力に際して、事前に細則をご確認お願いします
細則資料はこちらから

参加申請フォームはこちら

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Javascript/Typescript 생태계에는 소스코드 간 의존관계를 유향그래프(Direct Graph)로 시각화하는 CLI 도구가 있다는 사실... 알고 계신가요? madge, 적극적으로 추천합니다.

그냥 JS/TS 프로젝트 뿐만이 아니라, jsx 파일이 들어간 경우도 의존관계를 아름답게 시각화해줍니다. fedify 소스코드 통독하면서 이걸 적극적으로 써볼까 합니다. 마치.... 탐정이 사건 추적하면서 지도에 X 표시하는 감성으로...

fedify 프로젝트를 그래프로 아름답게 시각화한 모습이다.
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The issue with digital identity is that people don’t have a single, unified identity. Identity, like many things, is a social construct, not part of some natural order. As a dual national, I'm acutely aware that when and how I assert an identity credential, or characteristic, depends on context. Therefore, digital systems that help us assert these identities must be responsive to people’s contextual needs and under their control. Otherwise, we’re just building more surveillance tools.

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If anyone still cares about VMware here is some news. They are still trying to kill whatever partner left. VMware reboots its partner program again – and it looks like smaller players are out. Why would anyone expect better from VMware at this point? I can't see why anyone would trust them moving forward. Even governments are suing them to stop the madness theregister.com/2025/07/16/vmw

I guess I don’t understand corporate endgame 😉

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@pfefferleMatthias Pfefferle – as a number of Mastodon users have posts set to auto-delete, could there be a way to show in WordPress Comments where this has happened – ie that there was a Fedi comment, but the user auto-deleted it?

I just saw on this post: 25.netribution.co.uk/nic/profi - that replies to Elena now make less sense as she deletes her posts after a month. Any kind of notice where the comment was would help.

Sidenote, I opened an issue with YooTheme today to improve integration: yootheme.com/support/question/.

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Juntai Park shared the below article:

Upyo 0.2.0 Release Notes

洪 民憙 (Hong Minhee) @hongminhee@hackers.pub

Upyo 0.2.0 has been released, introducing new features to this cross-runtime email library that supports Node.js, Deno, Bun, and edge functions. The latest version expands its capabilities with Amazon SES transport support, enabling AWS Signature v4 authentication and session-based authentication. Additionally, comprehensive OpenTelemetry integration has been added, offering distributed tracing, metrics collection, and error classification without altering existing code. The OpenTelemetry transport automatically instruments email operations, tracking delivery rates and latency, and integrates with existing OpenTelemetry infrastructure. Community feedback is encouraged to further improve Upyo, whether through testing the new Amazon SES transport, implementing OpenTelemetry, or contributing to the GitHub repository. This release enhances Upyo's utility by providing more transport options and robust observability features, making it a valuable tool for developers needing reliable email sending across various environments.

Read more →
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I was pleasantly surprised to find out that Zohran Mamdani recommends following me. On twitter though. I deleted my account there.

Someone dug out an article he wrote in 2013 about his beard and the time he spent in Cairo during a very politically charged era.

Thank you Zohran and good luck with everything you are facing right now. Also you should have an account on mastodon/fediverse.

web.archive.org/web/2016031702

Bearded in Cairo — The Bowdoin Orient

I arrived in Cairo on Wednesday, June 19, eleven days before the onset of nationwide protests that were to depose President Mohammad Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood. I moved into an apartment on 15 Bostan Street, a couple minutes walk from Tahrir Square. In true foreigner fashion, I found myself paying double-price for the taxi, dragging my suitcases into the lobby. Most apartment buildings in Cairo have a doorman—a bawab—and I spent our first conversation trying to explain that I was claustrophobic and was going to walk up eight flights of stairs to my apartment. He smiled and grabbed my suitcases as he stepped into the elevator. I started climbing.The summer before, I had studied at Middlebury’s Arabic program with a friend who then recommended a language institute in Cairo. I took his advice, and this summer, I signed up for six weeks of an intensive language course and gave myself a week at the end to travel around the country.In Egypt, like in every other Arabic-speaking country, people speak a local dialect of Arabic known as aamiyya. Aamiyya and fusha are like two languages that, while obviously related, are still noticeably different. I, like every other foreign language student, learned the latter—it is taught in schools, spoken in official capacities and used for all written Arabic. However, I soon learned that no one spoke it outside of a presidential address—ever. As I explored the streets near my apartment, I tried to pick up conversations with whoever was willing. Midway through one, the man I was speaking to paused, saying, “I can’t believe I’m speaking fusha right now”—obviously saying most of it in aamiyya. I was a Shakespearean character walking around twenty-first century London; all I was missing was the medieval outfit.

web.archive.org · The Bowdoin Orient

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