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Born and raised in NJ and proud of it. Web developer/IT geek. Hiking, photography, fitness, hockey, gaming. Work at Princeton University, but views expressed here are my own.

Plainsboro, NJ USA
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Early morning. Day 1 of SymfonyCon is finally here 😊
#SymfonyCon

My conundrum with Mastodon in a nutshell is the whole chicken and egg problem. I'd rather use this site than that other one, but everyone I interact with is lingering over there.

If a critical mass of tech/dev folks I follow became more active here, I'd have a lot less reason to go over to that other place we shall not mention.

Yeah that was a good session, especially since we’ve all been in those shoes before lol.
Session this morning on Domain Driven Design by @Skoop #symfonycon

This piece sums it up well. PHP isn’t any less secure than any other language.

https://hakluke.com/people-who-say-php-is-insecure-are-uninformed/

People who say "PHP is insecure" are uninformed

I hear a lot of folks parrot the opinion that PHP is somehow less secure than other languages. This simply isn't true. Here's why.

HΔKLUKΞ
I know the schedule isn't complete yet, but the list of sessions already confirmed for SymfonyCon Brussels is really good/ I can't wait.

25 years ago today, the first iMac came out. At the time, the market cap of Apple was under $6 billion dollars and the share price was hovering around 31 cents a share.

Since then, it was the first company in the world to surpass a trillion dollar value. The first company to surpass 2 trillion dollars. Right now, it is valued at 2.8 trillion dollars and is expected to be the first company in the world to hit the 3 trillion dollar mark.

https://www.theverge.com/23830432/imac-twenty-five-years-ago-saved-apple

How the iMac saved Apple

Apple released its first iMac for sale 25 years ago. It quickly became the most important product in its lineup and set the company up for success over the next two and a half decades.

The Verge
Sounds vaguely familiar. I also remember the Plus! pack for Windows 95 came with a Weezer music video which seemed so cutting edge at the time. Watching video on the computer was like a wow moment back then.

“But in the end it was Ethernet that won the battle for LAN standardization through a combination of standards body politics and a clever, minimalist—and thus cheap to implement—design. It went on to obliterate the competition by seeking out and assimilating higher bitrate protocols and adding their technological distinctiveness to its own. Decades later, it had become ubiquitous.”

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/06/speed-matters-how-ethernet-went-from-3mbps-to-100gbps-and-beyond/

Speed matters: How Ethernet went from 3Mbps to 100Gbps... and beyond

One of the biggest computing inventions of all time, courtesy of Xerox PARC.

Ars Technica

It will be interesting to see how Meta's adoption of ActivityPub goes. Will this take ActivityPub to the next level, or is this some "embrace and extend" type shit that will be a step backwards?

https://www.engadget.com/is-decentralization-the-future-of-social-media-194554192.html

Engadget is part of the Yahoo family of brands