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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✍️ New post on HTTP basic authentication

Following my previous post on bearer authentication, this one covers HTTP basic auth, a simple mechanism that browsers natively support.

It’s great for quick-and-dirty password protection, and it doesn’t take much code.

adamj.eu/tech/2025/12/08/djang

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I wish people would stop saying "JavaScript was written in 10 days" with the subtle implication that this is somehow shoddy or half-arsed. GvR wrote the first version of Python in a month in December 1989; the first bit of C was made out of B and NB in a month or two in ~1970. Every single bit of software you've ever used that isn't some enterprise nightmare was first a proof of concept hacked together in a couple of weeks by whoever first did it. This is entirely normal; it's not a bad thing!

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If you're recommending Mastodon and the wider Fediverse to organisations, friends, family or colleagues, don't worry if they say no. You have done something really important simply by making them aware of it as an option.

Most people and organisations don't immediately try stuff they hear about. Usually they need to hear it mentioned by a few different sources before they actually try it.

By being one of those sources, you're nudging them closer to actually trying it 👍

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ok - i thought i will never find out what my last name means because it’s hella obscure and regional.

BUT HERE I AM - having done a small search for the word “Muxel” in Google Books i found this in the “German Provincional Dictionary” from 1792.

Supposedly Muxel is some old-bavarian Term for a “devil” or “rascal”.

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🎉 And we're live! 🎉

We just launched CSS Wrapped 2025: our annual recap of all things CSS & web UI that landed in Chrome over the course of the year. 🚀

This is a big one! We highlighted 22 new features to help you build better on the web.

Check it out:

chrome.dev/css-wrapped-2025

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Wikipedia has a new page on how to spot AI slop and give it the Ellen Ripley treatment. Inter alia "the LLM tends to omit specific, unusual, nuanced facts (which are statistically rare) and replace them with more generic, positive descriptions (which are statistically common). Thus the highly specific 'inventor of the first train-coupling device” might become “a revolutionary titan of industry.'" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedi

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I finally got around to reading this and boy is it good:
“If we use 200kW as a baseline and assume all of that power will be fed to GPUs, we'd need a system 12.5 times bigger, i.e., roughly 531 square metres, or about 2.6 times the size of the relevant solar array. This is now going to be a very large satellite, dwarfing the ISS in area, all for the equivalent of three standard server racks on Earth.”

Why training AI in orbit is a non-starter (orbital compute is NOT going to look like the same kinds of use cases we are currently obsessed with on the ground): taranis.ie/datacenters-in-spac

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Here's someone absolutely killing it on a piano / keyboard rendition of the NES Ducktales Moon Theme youtube.com/watch?v=09G25bxf1Bk

How is that keyboard even still standing during this performance? How are their hands still attached to their arms

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RE: social.growyourown.services/@F

I originally wrote this article for government agencies, but resharing it in the context of the quoted post, in case someone finds it helpful for sharing with their organizations.

Particularly the case studies and a list of scheduling tools might be relevant.

stefanbohacek.com/blog/fediver

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disease transmission, US-specific :boost_request:

Katelyn Jetelina reports that "influenza-like illnesses" (with symptoms of coughs, fevers, and sore throats) have reached seasonal epidemic levels in the US: "This is when I start masking in crowded indoor spaces like airports. Yes, well-fitted masks work. This is a physics question with a clear answer. And I’ll take all the protection I can get—I’d love to not miss upcoming school performances, work travel, and some fun family events."
(yourlocalepidemiologist.substa)

If you're not already masking in crowded indoor spaces, now is the time to get your N95/KN95s back out. You may be confident your immune system can handle whatever comes your way, but it's not fair to assume that is true of everyone you share space with.

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Quantum sensors can detect magnetic fields more accurately than other sensors, so the European Space Agency is sending them to outer space to measure Earth’s magnetic field. They will be used to improve global navigation and climate change tracking. spectrum.ieee.org/quantum-sens

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