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Home » ⭐️ Weekly Report – Technology Reading Update – 26 Mar, 2021

⭐️ Weekly Report – Technology Reading Update – 26 Mar, 2021

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1. Site Reliability Engineering

You’ve hired new employees into your organization, and they’re starting as Site Reliability Engineers. Now you have to train them on the job. Investing up front in the education and technical orientation of new SREs will shape them into better engineers.


2. On-call training for developers

We had a problem at my company a couple of years ago. We were writing code, only to throw it over the fence to our infrastructure team to support in production. As a result the disconnect between the developers writing the code and the actual shipped product was becoming more pronounced.


3. Bad News for the Highly Intelligent

Bad

There are advantages to being smart. People who do well on standardized tests of intelligence—IQ tests—tend to be more successful in the classroom and the workplace.


4. Intel’s New IDM 2.0 Strategy: $20b for Two Fabs, Meteor Lake 7nm Tiles, New Foundry Services, IBM Collaboration, Return of IDF

Intel’s

The new CEO of Intel, Pat Gelsinger, has today outlined his vision for Intel over the coming years.


6. JavaScript

JavaScript/

At first glance, null and undefined may seem the same, but they are far from it. This article will explore the differences and similarities between null and undefined in JavaScript. Here’s an example. We assign the value of null to a:


7. Weekly To-do

Kubernetes Blog Post in Chinese Coding for MMSS


8. Unironically Using Kubernetes for my Personal Blog

Unironically

There’s no shortage of posts like “Let’s use Kubernetes!” Now you have 8 problems, or Do I Really Need Kubernetes?, which tend to argue that unless you’re orchestrating 1000 containers, you’re good without Kubernetes. Also, I thought this tweet was hilarious:


9. How we found and fixed a rare race condition in our session handling

How

On March 8, we shared that, out of an abundance of caution, we logged all users out of GitHub.com due to a rare security vulnerability. We believe that transparency is key in earning and keeping the trust of our users and want to share more about this bug.


10. 3D Hologram Printer

Professor Steve Benton was a pioneer in the field of holography, the founding head of the MIT Media Lab Spatial Imaging Group, and the inventor of the rainbow hologram found on most credit cards. Here is his definition of what a hologram is:



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