@jbm The backlash against Linux kernel advisories is confusing. We wanted transparency; now we have it. More data is always better than a black box. If the new influx of CVEs is breaking your vulnerability management workflow, the problem might be your process, not the advisories.
Thanks for the hard work @gregkh
The #Rust support in the #Linux #kernel is now officially a first class citizen and not considered experimental any more:
https://git.kernel.org/torvalds/c/9fa7153c31a3e5fe578b83d23bc9f185fde115da; for more details, see also: https://lwn.net/Articles/1050174/
This is one of the highlights from the main #RustLang for #LinuxKernel 7.0 that was merged a few hours ago ; for others, see https://git.kernel.org/torvalds/c/a9aabb3b839aba094ed80861054993785c61462c
The 2nd Annual #EuropeanOpenSourceAwards have come to a close, but you can still revisit the best moments of the Awards Ceremony.
👇Watch the recording available here :
https://awards.europeanopensource.academy/awards/2026-recording-event
The European Open Source Awards ceremony from January 29th, in one loooong recording with yours truly showing up several times.
Most blabbing at 1h24 and onward when @gregkh was up.
I am losing it at how many of my peers have forgotten what software engineering is. It is not typing in lines of code.
Since we’re not superstitious, the 13th edition of KR will take place September 21–23, 2026 (black cats strictly forbidden during this edition — even on a leash… 😄). We hope to see loads of you there!
And because we want to keep offering the best possible conditions for three days of good vibes and community for everyone, feel free to support this edition by becoming a sponsor. All the info is here!
reading vibecoders talk about how great vibecoding is for engineering real things is like reading bitcoiners talk about how they think money works
Being on Team Words Mean Things is difficult these days, particularly when multibillion-dollar companies put out breathless press releases saying "By using our massive language model, whose training data includes every version of GCC ever released, and having it autocorrect its own output by testing it against GCC, we managed to make a C compiler that mostly works for only $20,000 in a week and gosh I have so many feelings."
I mean, what the fuck are we even doing here.
I think it's interesting how software engineers are (among?) the most eager working class group to replace themselves with LLMs.
It's interesting because LLMs do a worse job than us, we lose ability/skill to do our job the more we use it, lose our jobs, produce worse software, are less satisfied with our work, etc.
Yet so many of my peers seem to be super excited about and advocate for it, while other working class groups at least detest LLMs if not even consider organising themselves to protect their trade/jobs from LLMs.
Are we becoming the cops (read as: class traitors) of this techno-fascist dystopia?
so I like to make plaintext outlines of presentations I do. Today is a banger.
I may regret this at some point, but I felt the need to put down in writing how I feel about this moment in the tech industry.
It is not kind. You may well be insulted by it. If you are... then you really should question yourself.