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2026-01-13 08:47:33
2026-01-13 09:30:40
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/browser/nextjs
Next.js Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Browser / Next.js Next.js Quick Start Learn how to set up highlight.io with your Next (frontend) application. 1 Install the npm package & SDK. Install the npm package @highlight-run/next in your terminal. # with npm npm install @highlight-run/next 2 Initialize the client SDK. Grab your project ID from app.highlight.io/setup , and set it as the projectID in the <HighlightInit/> component. If you're using the original Next.js Page router, drop <HighlightInit /> in your _app.tsx file. For the App Router, add it to your top-level layout.tsx file. // src/app/layout.tsx import { HighlightInit } from '@highlight-run/next/client' export default function RootLayout({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) { return ( <> <HighlightInit projectId={'<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>'} serviceName="my-nextjs-frontend" tracingOrigins networkRecording={{ enabled: true, recordHeadersAndBody: true, urlBlocklist: [], }} /> <html lang="en"> <body>{children}</body> </html> </> ) } 3 Identify users. Identify users after the authentication flow of your web app. We recommend doing this in a useEffect call or in any asynchronous, client-side context. The first argument of identify will be searchable via the property identifier , and the second property is searchable by the key of each item in the object. For more details, read about session search or how to identify users . import { H } from '@highlight-run/next/client'; function RenderFunction() { useEffect(() => { // login logic... H.identify('jay@highlight.io', { id: 'very-secure-id', phone: '867-5309', bestFriend: 'jenny' }); }, []) return null; // Or your app's rendering code. } 4 Verify installation Check your dashboard for a new session. Make sure to remove the Status is Completed filter to see ongoing sessions. Don't see anything? Send us a message in our community and we can help debug. 5 Wrap your Page Router endpoints The Highlight Next.js SDK supports tracing for both Page and App Routers running in the Node.js runtime. import { NextApiRequest, NextApiResponse } from 'next' import { withPageRouterHighlight } from '@/app/_utils/page-router-highlight.config' import { H } from '@highlight-run/next/server' export default withPageRouterHighlight(async function handler( req: NextApiRequest, res: NextApiResponse, ) { return new Promise<void>(async (resolve) => { const { span } = H.startWithHeaders('page-router-span', {}) console.info('Here: /pages/api/page-router-trace.ts ⌚⌚⌚') res.send(`Trace sent! Check out this random number: 0.015398107098662406`) span.end() resolve() }) }) 6 Wrap your App Router endpoints The Highlight Next.js SDK supports tracing for both Page and App Routers running in the Node.js runtime. import { NextRequest, NextResponse } from 'next/server' import { withAppRouterHighlight } from '@/app/_utils/app-router-highlight.config' import { H } from '@highlight-run/next/server' export const GET = withAppRouterHighlight(async function GET( request: NextRequest, ) { return new Promise(async (resolve) => { const { span } = H.startWithHeaders('app-router-span', {}) console.info('Here: /pages/api/app-router-trace/route.ts ⏰⏰⏰') span.end() resolve(new Response('Success: /api/app-router-trace')) }) }) 7 Verify your backend traces are being recorded. Visit the highlight traces portal and check that backend traces are coming in. 8 More Next.js features? See our fullstack Next.js guide for more information on how to use Highlight with Next.js. React.js Remix [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://crypto.forem.com/t/bitcoin
Bitcoin - Crypto Forem Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Crypto Forem Close # bitcoin Follow Hide Discussions specifically about Bitcoin protocol, economics, and culture. Create Post Older #bitcoin posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Building Infrastructure for Handling Millions of Bitcoin UTXOs at Scale 0xkniraj 0xkniraj 0xkniraj Follow Jan 5 Building Infrastructure for Handling Millions of Bitcoin UTXOs at Scale # bitcoin # infra # backend # custody Comments Add Comment 8 min read What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 Tami Stone Tami Stone Tami Stone Follow Dec 26 '25 What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 # cryptocurrency # bitcoin # ethereum # blockchain Comments Add Comment 4 min read MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies monzo monzo monzo Follow Dec 23 '25 MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies # french # bitcoin # ethereum # crypto Comments Add Comment 9 min read Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 12 '25 Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” # bitcoin # bitcoinmena # middleeastcrypto # abudhabi Comments Add Comment 4 min read Are Blockchains Behaving Like Beehives? Laurent Franceschetti Laurent Franceschetti Laurent Franceschetti Follow Dec 10 '25 Are Blockchains Behaving Like Beehives? # blockchain # bitcoin # cryptocurrency Comments Add Comment 2 min read Key Lessons From the Bitcoin Whitepaper Prince Isaac Israel Prince Isaac Israel Prince Isaac Israel Follow Nov 25 '25 Key Lessons From the Bitcoin Whitepaper # bitcoin # blockchain # security Comments Add Comment 3 min read Markus Vogt über das Ende eines alten Marktzyklus Professor Markus Vogt Professor Markus Vogt Professor Markus Vogt Follow Nov 25 '25 Markus Vogt über das Ende eines alten Marktzyklus # discuss # bitcoin # crypto Comments Add Comment 3 min read Introducing btc-tools.xyz: a Bitcoin RBF Online Tool: Speed Up BTC, Ordinals & Runes Transactions Neon Operator Neon Operator Neon Operator Follow Dec 25 '25 Introducing btc-tools.xyz: a Bitcoin RBF Online Tool: Speed Up BTC, Ordinals & Runes Transactions # showdev # bitcoin # rbf # ordinals Comments Add Comment 2 min read Fiat Omnia Sixto Mcready Sixto Mcready Sixto Mcready Follow Nov 23 '25 Fiat Omnia # philosophy # bitcoin # economics # fiat Comments Add Comment 8 min read Reading the Blockchain: Whale Behavior and BTC Market Signals Dan Keller Dan Keller Dan Keller Follow Nov 20 '25 Reading the Blockchain: Whale Behavior and BTC Market Signals # blockchain # webdev # web3 # bitcoin 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Africa’s tokenization opportunity: Building markets before they mature. Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Follow Nov 12 '25 Africa’s tokenization opportunity: Building markets before they mature. # blockchain # web3 # bitcoin # beginners Comments Add Comment 4 min read The Fuck Up Ratio: A Measure of Unexpected Risk in Financial Assets and Its Application to Portfolio Allocation Ryo Suwito Ryo Suwito Ryo Suwito Follow Oct 19 '25 The Fuck Up Ratio: A Measure of Unexpected Risk in Financial Assets and Its Application to Portfolio Allocation # web3 # cryptocurrency # bitcoin 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 5 min read 70% Drop Overnight: How a Trader Stays Ahead Paul Bennett Paul Bennett Paul Bennett Follow Oct 16 '25 70% Drop Overnight: How a Trader Stays Ahead # blockchain # bitcoin # typescript 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Market Stabilizes as Altcoins Lead the Rebound on October 13, 2025 Om Shree Om Shree Om Shree Follow Oct 13 '25 Market Stabilizes as Altcoins Lead the Rebound on October 13, 2025 # blockchain # crypto # bitcoin # community 9  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Bankless: Bear or Bull Market? Institutions Are Buying The Dip! Crypto Markets Explained Crypto YouTube Crypto YouTube Crypto YouTube Follow Aug 21 '25 Bankless: Bear or Bull Market? Institutions Are Buying The Dip! 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Are Blockchains Behaving Like Beehives? MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des crypto... Building Infrastructure for Handling Millions of Bitcoin UTXOs at Scale Key Lessons From the Bitcoin Whitepaper What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” Fiat Omnia 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Crypto Forem — A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://launchdarkly.com/pricing/
Pricing | LaunchDarkly For full functionality of this site it is necessary to enable JavaScript. Here are the instructions how to enable JavaScript in your web browser. LaunchDarkly Get a demo LaunchDarkly Platform LaunchDarkly Platform Guarded Releases Monitor and de-risk. Experimentation Make data-driven decisions. Feature Flags Scale great release processes. Product Analytics Measure feature impact. AI Configs Make innovative AI products. The AI Control Gap Report Feature control in the age of coding with AI. Learn more Overview Platform overview Feature lifecycle management Integrations Governance Automation Platform architecture Launchdarkly vs in-house Solutions By Team Developers DevOps & SRE Mobile apps Product managers By Industry Financial services Retail & eCommerce Healthcare Manufacturing & logistics U.S. government Media & entertainment High tech Travel & hospitality Resources Learn Blog Guides & ebooks Events & webinars Videos Success Academy Customer stories Professional services Partners Get Help Help center Request support The AI Control Gap Report Feature control in the age of coding with AI. Learn more Developers Docs Docs home Feature flags quickstart AI Configs quickstart API docs Resources Product Updates Power analysis calculator Flagship engineering blog Community Pricing Sign In Demo Project Get a demo Pricing Flexible pricing for every stage and team. Developer Feature flagging and experimentation for your project. Free forever Pay only when you exceed Developer tier limits. Get started free Unlimited Seats Includes Unlimited feature flags 30 idiomatic SDKs 5K Session Replays and Errors Need more? Calculate your usage needs Observability Usage Calculator 10M Logs and Traces Need more? Calculate your usage needs Observability Usage Calculator A/B Tests and Experiments Foundation Feature management and experimentation for growing teams. $ 12 per Service Connection / mo Service connections are the number of microservices, replicas, and environments connected to LaunchDarkly for 1 month. and $10 per 1k client-side MAU / mo Each client side user or device creates a client-side MAU . Billed Monthly Billed Yearly Start free trial Unlimited Seats Everything in Developer plus + Unlimited projects User, account, device targeting Scalable Observability usage Explore extended access to Session Replays, Error Monitoring, Logs, 
and Traces Observability Usage Calculator Scalable Experimentation usage MAU is used to measure targeting for experiments. Single sign on Enterprise Advanced feature management and experimentation at scale. Custom Contact us for more information Contact us Unlimited Seats Everything in Foundation plus + Advanced user targeting Release automation Workflows, scheduling, & approvals SAML / SCIM Release Assistant Custom roles & teams Guardian Monitor and guard your releases at scale. Custom Contact us for more information Contact us Unlimited Seats Everything in Enterprise plus: Release Monitoring Guardrail Metrics Proactive Failure Notifications Automatic Pause or Rollback Advanced Observability Exposure Insights Insights on which users/contexts were exposed to the failed change. Trusted by 5,500+ customers, from startups to enterprise Compare all features Developer Get started free Foundation Get started free Enterprise Contact us Guardian Contact us Platform — Service Connections Service connections are the number of microservices, replicas, and environments connected to LaunchDarkly for 1 month. 5 $12/mo per service connection Contact Us Contact Us Client-side MAU Client-side MAU are the client-side users, devices, organizations, or other defined entity that encounter feature flags in your product in 1 month. 1k $10/mo per 1K Contact Us Contact Us Experimentation MAU The number of users available to be targeted in experiments each month. 100k $3/mo per 1k Contact Us Contact Us Data Export Events — Contact Us Contact Us Contact Us Session Replays 5,000/mo Starts at $3.50/1k sessions Contact us Contact us Errors 5,000/mo Starts at $0.30/1k per month Contact us Contact us Traces 10,000,000/mo Starts at $1.50/1M per month Contact us Contact us Logs 10,000,000/mo Starts at $1.50/1M per month Contact us Contact us Feature management + Targeting Client-side MAU types Create targeting rules that use any client-side MAU kind such as: user, device, or environment. Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Targeting users by attribute Create targeting rules based on any client-side MAU attribute. Segments Segments allow you to target groups of client-side MAU individually or by attribute, so that you can quickly turn features on or off for certain groups. Segment overview Percentage rollouts Advanced targeting Custom client-side MAU Custom client-side MAU allows you to define any number of new "client-side MAU kinds" for targeting. Bulk user management (edit and export) — — Flag prerequisites Build dependencies into your feature flags and control granular features from a global level. — — Synced segments Sync audience data from external sources with an unlimited number of targets for targetted feature delivery. — — Big segments Big segments are segments that are either synced from external tools or list-based segments with more than 15,000 entries. — — Flag types Boolean Multivariate flags Multivariate flags allows you to define two or more custom variations of flag states. Flag templates Killswitch flags Release flags Experiment flags Migration flags Custom flags Flag and release management Multi-environment flag dashboard Archive flags Flag statuses Flag history Flag reviews Compare flags Clone flags Code references Code References simplifies removal of tech debt by finding references to feature flags in your code — — Copy flag settings Compare and copy a flag's settings between two environments — — Experimentation + Detailed features Full-stack experimentation A/B/n testing (multiple treatments) Mutual exclusion support (and layers) Funnel optimization experiments Funnel optimization experiments allow you to track the performance of each of the steps in your funnel over time Mutually exclusive experiments Configure multiple experiments while preventing client-side MAU from being included in more than one of them at a time Experiment results reports & visualizations Results filtering by audience attributes Flexible metric design: click, pageview, numeric, conversion Metrics import: API, integrations, SDK-level Release automation, collaboration and observability + Release observability Release Level Monitoring — — Sentry errors and OpenTelemetry metric import — — — Guarded Progressive Releases — — — Configurable Performance Thresholds — — — Release Auto-remediation — — — Release Health Metrics — — — Regression Notifications — — — Organization workflow collaboration Multi-environment release dashboard Customize your flag list view by combining filters with multiple environments (e.g. Dev, Test, Production). — — Flag scheduling Plan and automate progressive rollouts and other flag updates in advance. — — Required approvals Require approvals for flag changes from another team member or decision maker. — — Reusable workflow templates Save your workflows and reuse them with any other flags to expediate your rollouts. — — Required comments and confirmation Require members to leave comments when they change flags or segments. — — Release assistant # of release pipelines — — Unlimited Unlimited Targeting rules by environment Configure targeting rules for each environment, with customizable time durations before being prompted to progress to the next phase. — — Add Release Guardian to critical phases Incorporate Release Guardian in your release pipelines to monitor critical flag changes. — — Available Upon Request Available Upon Request Mobile lifecycle assistant Mobile Lifecycle Assistant enables you to deliver personalized experiences and mitigate bugs without waiting for app store review cycles. Mobile SDKs with automatic mobile attributes App lifecycle management First-class mobile targeting Mobile flag cleanup Migration assistant Migration Assistant allows you to safely manage migrations with controlled cohort progression and consistency checks. Migration cohorts Target specific cohorts for a particular migration that can independently move through stages of a migration. Metrics & consistency checks Detect migration issues faster by monitoring error, latency, and consistency metrics in aggregate, or broken out by cohort. Guardrails LaunchDarkly will warn you when actions are taken that could jeopardize your migration project. Other Features Launch Insights Security & compliance + 2FA SSO SCIM Create, update, and deactivate members in LaunchDarkly using your IdP of choice. — — Audit log for flag & segment changes Team sync with SCIM (available for Okta only) — — API access Define access levels to flags, projects, environments, metrics, or teams to enforce your policies. Custom roles & teams Define access levels to flags, projects, environments, metrics, or teams to enforce your policies. — — Bulk editing members — — Account history Review your account history across all projects and environments. 30-day 30-day Unlimited Unlimited Service tokens Create long term integrations with the LaunchDarkly API, that are not tied to a single seat (personal token). — — Teams Teams are groups of your organization's members. You can assign permissions to teams using custom roles. — — Relay proxy enterprise Streamline setup and management of Relay Proxy with auto-configuration and offline mode. — — HIPAA and FedRamp HIPAA — — Contact us Contact us FedRamp — — Contact us Contact us Integrations & API + Slack, Microsoft Teams, & Trello Integrations Integrate with leading DevOps platforms, observability tools, and customer data platforms. Most Most All All API controls Programmatic management of users, flags, targeting rules, and segments, and everything else you can do within the LaunchDarkly UI. Support and SLAs + Support Response Discord Community (1 business day outage) Discord Community (1 business day outage) 1 business day (8 hours outage) 1 business day (8 hours outage) Support Level Bronze Bronze Silver (Gold/Platinum Available) Silver (Gold/Platinum Available) Upgrade Available Paid support plans for mission critical support and guaranteed service uptime. — — Available Available Product Uptime — — Gold/Platinum (99.99%) Gold/Platinum (99.99%) Customer Experience Customer Success Managers — — Professional Services — Available Recommended Recommended Advisory Sessions — Available LaunchDarkly Academy Guided Onboarding Program — Available LaunchDarkly Certifications FAQ Pricing How do you calculate a month? + Months are calculated based on when you start your plan. If you start a plan on September 18th, you'll be charged on the 18th of every month. If you start on the 31st, you'll be charged on the last day of every month. If you upgrade your plan, you'll be charged a prorated amount for the partial month, and your next month's bill will include the upgrade as part of your monthly charge. How do you calculate Client-Side Monthly Active Users? + Client-side MAU is the number of unique monthly active users used in LaunchDarkly client-side SDKs. Typically, customers will send user contexts and we count unique end users that evaluate a flag, so even if a single user evaluates flags from multiple device types or over multiple sessions, we only count that user as 1 client-side context over the calendar month . How many Client-Side MAU do I need? + You can count the number of unique monthly active users that would use your application(s) where the LaunchDarkly client-side SDKs are installed. If you aim to target contexts which are not users (e.g. devices, accounts), then that context will be counted towards your MAU. In addition to your primary context, you can also include any other contexts you want (devices, accounts, etc.), but your estimate needs to only count the context with the highest volume (often users). Do you offer annual pricing plans? + Yes. All Enterprise plans are based on annual contracts. For the Foundation plan, you can select a yearly option when you sign up or at any time from the billing page in our app. There is an automatic discount on all plans set up with annual billing. Usage metrics What are service connections? + Service connections are used to measure back-end feature management. Service connections are the number of microservices, replicas, and environments connected to LaunchDarkly for 1 month. Only server-side SDKs count toward measuring service connections. Read the docs to learn more. What are client-side MAU? + Each client-side user or device creates one client-side MAU. Read the docs to learn more. What are experimentation MAU? + Experimentation MAU is number of users available to be targeted in experiments each month. Read the docs to learn more. How do I get visibility into my usage? + We provide visibility on all of your usage metrics. You can learn more about usage metrics in our documentation . Foundation & Developer When do I start getting charged on the Developer tier of the Foundation plan? + You only get charged when you exceed the Developer tier limits for environments (3), service connections (5), or client-side MAU (1k). When do I get charged? + We offer monthly and annual billing options for credit card purchases. Monthly billing will be charged in arrears at the end of each month. Annual billing will be paid up front, and any monthly overages will be billed at the end of each month. Account management What happens if I go over my licensed events or MAUs? + Usage metrics are visible in the account settings section of the application. If your team exceeds one of the licensed limits there will be a notification in the application and an email sent to all team Administrators. Professional plans are able to add more events or MAUs as needed up to the specified limits. Enterprise plans will receive the same notifications and our customer success team will work with them to correctly size their licensed limits. Will I have visibility of my usage? + Yes. We provide visibility on all of your usage metrics. You can learn more about usage metrics in our documentation. What are custom roles? + LaunchDarkly's basic role-based permission system provides global access control levels for team members based on a set of built-in roles (reader, writer, or admin/owner). Customers on enterprise plans also have access to LaunchDarkly's custom roles system. Custom roles allow you to create flexible policies that provide fine-grained access control to everything in LaunchDarkly—from feature flags and metrics to environments and teams. With custom roles, it's possible to enforce access policies that meet your exact workflow needs. Data Can I trial experimentation? + Yes. Experimentation can be added as an unlimited 30-day trial by contacting sales . Can I use both the experimentation add-on and the data export add-on? + Yes, you pay per event that is sent for experimentation and/or to the data export add-on. Other Do you offer discounts for non-profit, academic, or open-source projects? + Yes. Please contact us to see if your organization is eligible. Case study Paramount improves developer productivity 100X. / / The ability to ship and merge code to environments safely without wincing every time we hit the ‘deploy’ button has been huge for us. Dan Skaggs Technical Director, Content Engineering, Paramount Read case study Case study CCP Games creates self-serve experimentation. / / LaunchDarkly has enabled self-serve experimentation. You don’t have to be a data scientist to run valid, actionable experiments. This is unbelievably powerful. Nick Herring Technical Director of Infrastructure, CCP Games Read case study Case study Christian Dior shortens time to market from 15 minutes to instant updates / / LaunchDarkly allowed us to progressively deliver key features with confidence, creating a safety net for developers. Fabien Gasser Retail Lead System Architect, Christian Dior Couture Read case study Case study Bayer’s digital farming arm improves reliability for critical apps. / / I can change a flag status in LaunchDarkly and see it reflected in our mobile apps instantly. I’ll pay for that any day. 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https://crypto.forem.com/
Crypto Forem Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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Posts Relevant Latest Top The Disappearing Blockchain Tim Green Tim Green Tim Green Follow Jan 8 The Disappearing Blockchain # humanintheloop # cryptoinfrastructure # tokenisationtransformation # decentralisedsocial Comments Add Comment 19 min read Where Long-Term Trust Comes From: the Reflection of Kapbe on the Capacity of a System to Carry Time czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Jan 5 Where Long-Term Trust Comes From: the Reflection of Kapbe on the Capacity of a System to Carry Time # discuss # blockchain # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read Building Infrastructure for Handling Millions of Bitcoin UTXOs at Scale 0xkniraj 0xkniraj 0xkniraj Follow Jan 5 Building Infrastructure for Handling Millions of Bitcoin UTXOs at Scale # bitcoin # infra # backend # custody Comments Add Comment 8 min read Kapbe Interprets 2025 Crypto Employment Data: Why Risk Continues to Be Pushed Down to Individuals czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 31 '25 Kapbe Interprets 2025 Crypto Employment Data: Why Risk Continues to Be Pushed Down to Individuals # crypto # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates no account no account no account Follow Dec 29 '25 ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates # crypto # tutorial # web3 Comments Add Comment 5 min read What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 Tami Stone Tami Stone Tami Stone Follow Dec 26 '25 What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 # cryptocurrency # bitcoin # ethereum # blockchain Comments Add Comment 4 min read Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Follow Dec 25 '25 Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure # blockchain # crypto # web3 1  reaction Comments 2  comments 2 min read MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies monzo monzo monzo Follow Dec 23 '25 MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies # french # bitcoin # ethereum # crypto Comments Add Comment 9 min read January 26: MSCI May Drop MicroStrategy — What It Reveals About Investor Mindsets in Crypto monzo monzo monzo Follow Dec 23 '25 January 26: MSCI May Drop MicroStrategy — What It Reveals About Investor Mindsets in Crypto # discuss # blockchain # news # cryptocurrency Comments Add Comment 8 min read Crypto Liquidity: How Market Depth Shapes Price Movements Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Follow Dec 23 '25 Crypto Liquidity: How Market Depth Shapes Price Movements # cryptoresearch # blockchaintechnology # innovation Comments Add Comment 5 min read Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 23 '25 Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? # crypto # security # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read The Sober Conclusion of Kapbe: RWA Is Not About Whether It is "Worth Investing In", but Whether It Is "Properly Understood" czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 19 '25 The Sober Conclusion of Kapbe: RWA Is Not About Whether It is "Worth Investing In", but Whether It Is "Properly Understood" # blockchain # crypto # security Comments Add Comment 3 min read When a Company Becomes an Asset: Strategy’s “Bitcoin Standard” Experiment Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 22 '25 When a Company Becomes an Asset: Strategy’s “Bitcoin Standard” Experiment # michaelsaylor # bitcoinproxy # financialsystemexperiment # continuousfinancing Comments Add Comment 3 min read Taiwan’s Stablecoin Dilemma: The Geopolitical and Technological Strategy Behind Currency Peg Choice Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 18 '25 Taiwan’s Stablecoin Dilemma: The Geopolitical and Technological Strategy Behind Currency Peg Choice # stablecoinregulation # taiwanfintech # digitalcurrency # crossborderpayments Comments Add Comment 3 min read What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 16 '25 What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure # stablecoin # enterpriseblockchain # cryptoecosystem # web3platform Comments Add Comment 5 min read Decoding Bitwise’s 2026 Crypto Forecast: Three Key Infrastructure Trends Every Developer Should Watch Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 17 '25 Decoding Bitwise’s 2026 Crypto Forecast: Three Key Infrastructure Trends Every Developer Should Watch # cryptoforecast # infrastructuretrends # bitwise # crosschaintech Comments Add Comment 4 min read What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 16 '25 What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure # circlestrategy # crosschaintechnology # stablecoin # enterpriseblockchain Comments Add Comment 5 min read Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 12 '25 Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” # bitcoin # bitcoinmena # middleeastcrypto # abudhabi Comments Add Comment 4 min read loading... #discuss Discussion threads targeting the whole community #watercooler Light, and off-topic conversation. 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Crypto Forem — A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Crypto Forem © 2016 - 2026. Uniting blockchain builders and thinkers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://crypto.forem.com/t/web3
Web3 - Crypto Forem Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Crypto Forem Close Web3 Follow Hide Web3 refers to the next generation of the internet that leverages blockchain technology to enable decentralized and trustless systems for financial transactions, data storage, and other applications. Create Post Older #web3 posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 … 75 … 208 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Where Long-Term Trust Comes From: the Reflection of Kapbe on the Capacity of a System to Carry Time czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Jan 5 Where Long-Term Trust Comes From: the Reflection of Kapbe on the Capacity of a System to Carry Time # discuss # blockchain # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read Kapbe Interprets 2025 Crypto Employment Data: Why Risk Continues to Be Pushed Down to Individuals czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 31 '25 Kapbe Interprets 2025 Crypto Employment Data: Why Risk Continues to Be Pushed Down to Individuals # crypto # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates no account no account no account Follow Dec 29 '25 ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates # crypto # tutorial # web3 Comments Add Comment 5 min read Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Follow Dec 25 '25 Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure # blockchain # crypto # web3 1  reaction Comments 2  comments 2 min read Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 23 '25 Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? # crypto # security # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read VIP Programs for Beginners: Are They Really Worth It When You're Just Starting Out? 🤔 Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Dec 10 '25 VIP Programs for Beginners: Are They Really Worth It When You're Just Starting Out? 🤔 # beginners # webdev # web3 # tutorial 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Why I Left Large Mining Pools for Smaller Ones - And The Unexpected Results Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Dec 9 '25 Why I Left Large Mining Pools for Smaller Ones - And The Unexpected Results # webdev # web3 # programming # opensource 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🔧 Developer Breakdown: How Consumer Apps Are Quietly Going On-Chain Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Follow Dec 4 '25 🔧 Developer Breakdown: How Consumer Apps Are Quietly Going On-Chain # onchainanalysis # blockchain # web3 # crypto Comments Add Comment 3 min read Account Abstraction (AA) Is Finally Going Mainstream: What It Really Means Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Follow Dec 4 '25 Account Abstraction (AA) Is Finally Going Mainstream: What It Really Means # blockchain # crypto # web3 # beginners Comments Add Comment 2 min read AI x Blockchain = The New Power Couple Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Freecodingboss Follow Dec 4 '25 AI x Blockchain = The New Power Couple # blockchain # crypto # web3 # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Trader Feedback as a Market Signal: Beyond Noise Philip Laurens Philip Laurens Philip Laurens Follow Dec 16 '25 Trader Feedback as a Market Signal: Beyond Noise # cryptocurrency # blockchain # web3 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Mitigating post-airdrop fud practical guide for Web3 teams Wevolv3 Wevolv3 Wevolv3 Follow Dec 2 '25 Mitigating post-airdrop fud practical guide for Web3 teams # management # cryptocurrency # community # web3 Comments Add Comment 6 min read South Africa vs Nigeria vs Kenya: The Battle to Become Africa's Crypto Capital Jude⚜ Jude⚜ Jude⚜ Follow Dec 3 '25 South Africa vs Nigeria vs Kenya: The Battle to Become Africa's Crypto Capital # web3 # blockchain # cryptocurrency # security 8  reactions Comments 2  comments 13 min read The Billion-Dollar Launchpad Consolidation: Why Exchanges Are Acquiring Infrastructure, Not Hype Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Follow Nov 30 '25 The Billion-Dollar Launchpad Consolidation: Why Exchanges Are Acquiring Infrastructure, Not Hype # crypto # web3 Comments Add Comment 9 min read Mantle x Bybit: The Liquidity Engine Powering the Next Wave of RWA Adoption Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Follow Nov 30 '25 Mantle x Bybit: The Liquidity Engine Powering the Next Wave of RWA Adoption # ethereum # crypto # web3 # blockchain Comments Add Comment 16 min read How to Evaluate Smart Device + Token Projects: A Checklist for Crypto Investors & Builders Asher Asher Asher Follow Dec 1 '25 How to Evaluate Smart Device + Token Projects: A Checklist for Crypto Investors & Builders # blockchain # crypto # web3 # security Comments Add Comment 2 min read Issue #3: Blockchain Real-world applications. Temiloluwa Akintade Temiloluwa Akintade Temiloluwa Akintade Follow Nov 21 '25 Issue #3: Blockchain Real-world applications. # web3 # blockchain Comments Add Comment 3 min read Reading the Blockchain: Whale Behavior and BTC Market Signals Dan Keller Dan Keller Dan Keller Follow Nov 20 '25 Reading the Blockchain: Whale Behavior and BTC Market Signals # blockchain # webdev # web3 # bitcoin 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read How $30 trillion in on-chain assets will reshape finance Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Follow Nov 19 '25 How $30 trillion in on-chain assets will reshape finance # blockchain # web3 # startup # learning Comments Add Comment 5 min read Crypto Payment Gateways Compared 2026 jimquote jimquote jimquote Follow Dec 11 '25 Crypto Payment Gateways Compared 2026 # crypto # security # web3 1  reaction Comments 2  comments 9 min read The XRPL Lending Protocol (& Why It Matters) Ed Hennis Ed Hennis Ed Hennis Follow for RippleX Developers Dec 19 '25 The XRPL Lending Protocol (& Why It Matters) # blockchain # crypto # web3 Comments Add Comment 8 min read From Wall Street to Blockchain: Why S&P Indices Matter for Crypto Traders Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Dec 22 '25 From Wall Street to Blockchain: Why S&P Indices Matter for Crypto Traders # webdev # productivity # web3 # blockchain 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read Tether's Hidden Empire: How the World's Largest Stablecoin Issuer is Building the Digital Economy's Backbone Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 18 '25 Tether's Hidden Empire: How the World's Largest Stablecoin Issuer is Building the Digital Economy's Backbone # blockchain # crypto # web3 Comments Add Comment 4 min read The new plumbing of finance: How tokenization is quietly rebuilding global markets Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Victory Adugbo Follow Nov 13 '25 The new plumbing of finance: How tokenization is quietly rebuilding global markets # blockchain # web3 # crypto # community Comments Add Comment 4 min read Learning from History: What Other Token Ecosystems Teach Us About Pump.fun's Future Hamd Writer Hamd Writer Hamd Writer Follow Nov 11 '25 Learning from History: What Other Token Ecosystems Teach Us About Pump.fun's Future # web3 # cryptocurrency # pumpfun # blockchain Comments Add Comment 7 min read loading... trending guides/resources Crypto Payment Gateways Compared 2026 Stellar's Role in the Tokenized Real-World Assets (RWA) Boom Mantle x Bybit: The Liquidity Engine Powering the Next Wave of RWA Adoption The Billion-Dollar Launchpad Consolidation: Why Exchanges Are Acquiring Infrastructure, Not Hype How Crypto Businesses Can Prepare for MiCA Authorization in the European Union ECC: Who Driving $Zcash Into the Mainstream How $30 trillion in on-chain assets will reshape finance Mitigating post-airdrop fud practical guide for Web3 teams Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? Kapbe Interprets 2025 Crypto Employment Data: Why Risk Continues to Be Pushed Down to Individuals Where Long-Term Trust Comes From: the Reflection of Kapbe on the Capacity of a System to Carry Time Learning from History: What Other Token Ecosystems Teach Us About Pump.fun's Future From Wall Street to Blockchain: Why S&P Indices Matter for Crypto Traders How Tokenization is Making Real-World Assets More Accessible Africa’s tokenization opportunity: Building markets before they mature. The new plumbing of finance: How tokenization is quietly rebuilding global markets Account Abstraction (AA) Is Finally Going Mainstream: What It Really Means 🔧 Developer Breakdown: How Consumer Apps Are Quietly Going On-Chain Trader Feedback as a Market Signal: Beyond Noise 2025 Pump.fun Livestream Tokens: An Updated, Data-Driven Playbook for Builders and Traders 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Crypto Forem — A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Crypto Forem © 2016 - 2026. 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https://dev.to/settings/account
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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/fromaline/jsxelement-vs-reactelement-vs-reactnode-2mh2#what-to-use-for-raw-children-endraw-
JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Nick Posted on Feb 14, 2022           JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode # beginners # javascript # react # webdev React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode These three types usually confuse novice React developers. It seems like they are the same thing, just named differently. But it's not quite right. JSX.Element vs ReactElement Both types are the result of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. They are both objects with: type props key a couple of other "hidden" properties, like ref, $$typeof, etc ReactElement ReactElement type is the most basic of all. It's even defined in React source code using flow! // ./packages/shared/ReactElementType.js export type ReactElement = { | $ $typeof : any , type : any , key : any , ref : any , props : any , // ReactFiber _owner : any , // __DEV__ _store : { validated : boolean , ...}, _self : React$Element < any > , _shadowChildren : any , _source : Source , | }; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This type is also defined in DefinitelyTyped package . interface ReactElement < P = any , T extends string | JSXElementConstructor < any > = string | JSXElementConstructor < any >> { type : T ; props : P ; key : Key | null ; } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode JSX.Element It's more generic type. The key difference is that props and type are typed as any in JSX.Element . declare global { namespace JSX { interface Element extends React . ReactElement < any , any > { } // ... } } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This gives flexibility in how different libraries implement JSX. For example, Preact has its own implementation with different API . ReactNode ReactNode type is a different thing. It's not a return value of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. const Component = () => { // Here it's ReactElement return < div > Hello world! </ div > } // Here it's ReactNode const Example = Component (); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode React node itself is a representation of the virtual DOM. So ReactNode is the set of all possible return values of a component. type ReactChild = ReactElement | ReactText ; type ReactFragment = {} | Iterable < ReactNode > ; interface ReactPortal extends ReactElement { key : Key | null ; children : ReactNode ; } type ReactNode = | ReactChild | ReactFragment | ReactPortal | boolean | null | undefined ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode What to use for children ? Generally speaking, ReactNode is the correct way to type the children prop. It gives the most flexibility while maintaining the proper type checking. But it has a caveat, because ReactFragment allows a {} type. const Item = ({ children }: { children : ReactNode }) => { return < li > { children } </ li >; } const App = () => { return ( < ul > // Run-time error here, objects are not valid children! < Item > { {} } </ Item > </ ul > ); } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode P.S. Follow me on Twitter for more content like this! React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode Top comments (2) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Nick Nick Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Email grechino@protonmail.com Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 • Feb 14 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Check out React+Typescript Cheatsheets for more info. Like comment: Like comment: 5  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Follow Joined May 23, 2019 • Jul 3 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide But in React 18 intrinsic property of children won't work for FC from react. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? 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Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 More from Nick 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 # ai # chatgpt # webdev # tooling My dream habit tracker # javascript # vue # pocketbase # webdev How do React Fragments work under the hood? # javascript # react # webdev # programming 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/winlanem/stop-forgetting-your-work-i-built-an-ai-career-tracker-github-jira-voice-325b#comments
Stop forgetting your work: I built an AI Career Tracker (GitHub + Jira + Voice) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse WinLanEm Posted on Jan 7           Stop forgetting your work: I built an AI Career Tracker (GitHub + Jira + Voice) # showdev # webdev # ai # career The Problem: We forget our wins As developers, we close tickets daily. But when it's time for a performance review, a promotion talk, or a resume update, we draw a blank. We remember the stress , but we forget the details of what we actually shipped. The Solution: CareerCodex I built a centralized Career Log that gathers your activity from everywhere, so you never have to "remember" what you did. It’s not just a resume builder—it’s a daily companion for your professional growth. Key Features 🔌 Auto-Import: Connects to GitHub, GitLab, Jira, and Asana . It pulls your commits and closed tasks automatically. 🗣️ Voice-to-Task: Too lazy to type? Just dictate your daily standup or a solved bug via microphone (using OpenAI Whisper). It converts speech to structured logs. ⏳ Smart Estimation: The AI analyzes your past tasks and actual time spent to predict how long a new task will take . No more guessing "uh, maybe 4 hours?" when history says it usually takes you 8. ✍️ Manual Tracking: Quickly jot down tasks or non-code achievements (like "Mentored a junior" or "Gave a tech talk"). 🤖 AI Analysis: Uses LLMs (Llama-3) to analyze your weekly/monthly activity and generate: Performance Reviews: Summaries for your manager. Resume Bullets: Quantified achievements ready for your CV. Skill Analytics: See which technologies you actually use the most. Why use a dedicated tracker? Generic note-taking apps are too manual. Jira is too noisy (and you lose access if you change jobs). CareerCodex is your personal database of achievements that travels with you. The Tech Stack Core: Laravel 12 (PHP 8.2) AI Microservice: Python (FastAPI + Whisper + Embeddings) Frontend: Vue.js 3 + Tailwind CSS Feedback Wanted I’m actively building this and would love to know: what feature is missing for you? Check it out here: careercodex.tech Public Repo: github.com/WinLanEm/careercodex-public Top comments (2) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Tracy Gilmore Tracy Gilmore Tracy Gilmore Follow After my first contact with a computer in the 1980's, I taught myself to program in BASIC and Z80 assembler. I went on to study Computer Science and have enjoyed a long career in Software Engineering. Email tracyg.gilmore+devto@gmail.com Location Somerset, UK Education BSc (Hons) Computer Science Work Software Engineer specialising in web technologies, frontend and full stack (Node & xAMPP) Joined Jul 16, 2017 • Jan 7 • Edited on Jan 7 • Edited Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Stop forgetting your work: Use AI and stop learning completely. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   WinLanEm WinLanEm WinLanEm Follow Joined Jan 7, 2026 • Jan 7 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Haha, fair point! But the goal is specifically to track the hard work I've already done (and learned from), so I don't lose it when writing a resume 6 months later. It helps me document my learning, not replace it. ) Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse WinLanEm Follow Joined Jan 7, 2026 Trending on DEV Community Hot AI should not be in Code Editors # programming # ai # productivity # discuss Stop Overengineering: How to Write Clean Code That Actually Ships 🚀 # discuss # javascript # programming # webdev How to Crack Any Software Developer Interview in 2026 (Updated for AI & Modern Hiring) # softwareengineering # programming # career # interview 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/resources/
Free Software Resources — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Resources Info Free software resources Read this page in Spanish. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/career/page/75#main-content
Career Page 75 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Career Follow Hide This tag is for anything relating to careers! Job offers, workplace conflict, interviews, resumes, promotions, etc. Create Post submission guidelines All articles and discussions should relate to careers in some way. Pretty much everything on dev.to is about our careers in some way. Ideally, though, keep the tag related to getting, leaving, or maintaining a career or job. about #career A career is the field in which you work, while a job is a position held in that field. Related tags include #resume and #portfolio as resources to enhance your #career Older #career posts 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu 🚨 Don’t let users get lost on your UI! Nuro Design Nuro Design Nuro Design Follow Jun 28 '25 🚨 Don’t let users get lost on your UI! # beginners # tutorial # career # github Comments Add Comment 1 min read LinkedIn for New Technicians Jens Båvenmark Jens Båvenmark Jens Båvenmark Follow Jul 21 '25 LinkedIn for New Technicians # career Comments Add Comment 8 min read Remote team? Hybrid team? What’s working best for your communication flow? efficient_builder efficient_builder efficient_builder Follow Aug 1 '25 Remote team? Hybrid team? What’s working best for your communication flow? # discuss # remote # productivity # career Comments Add Comment 1 min read My 13-Year Procurement Career Suddenly Made Sense After Reading About a 57-Year-Old Programmer Accio by Alibaba Group Accio by Alibaba Group Accio by Alibaba Group Follow Aug 1 '25 My 13-Year Procurement Career Suddenly Made Sense After Reading About a 57-Year-Old Programmer # discuss # ai # career # webdev Comments Add Comment 2 min read The Myth of Sisyphus in Data Engineering Ahmad Muhammad Ahmad Muhammad Ahmad Muhammad Follow Jun 27 '25 The Myth of Sisyphus in Data Engineering # dataengineering # data # career Comments Add Comment 3 min read Forging a Digital Shield Against Climate Chaos – The Birth of CarbonPro AI WLH Challenge: Building with Bolt Submission Zaynul Abedin Miah Zaynul Abedin Miah Zaynul Abedin Miah Follow Jul 27 '25 Forging a Digital Shield Against Climate Chaos – The Birth of CarbonPro AI # devchallenge # wlhchallenge # career # entrepreneurship 20  reactions Comments Add Comment 8 min read Think You Can Complete This Challenge? 🤔🔥 David Thurman @ BeyondCode.app David Thurman @ BeyondCode.app David Thurman @ BeyondCode.app Follow for Beyond Code Jul 31 '25 Think You Can Complete This Challenge? 🤔🔥 # programming # beginners # career # codenewbie 6  reactions Comments 2  comments 1 min read After the Hack: What’s Next for MyMealMind? WLH Challenge: After the Hack Submission Dmitriy Parhomenko Dmitriy Parhomenko Dmitriy Parhomenko Follow Jul 27 '25 After the Hack: What’s Next for MyMealMind? # devchallenge # wlhchallenge # career # entrepreneurship 16  reactions Comments 1  comment 2 min read woke up , started work early charan-simha charan-simha charan-simha Follow Jun 27 '25 woke up , started work early # codenewbie # learning # productivity # career Comments Add Comment 1 min read After the Hack: What Comes Next When the Build is Just the Beginning WLH Challenge: After the Hack Submission Eron Eron Eron Follow Jul 27 '25 After the Hack: What Comes Next When the Build is Just the Beginning # devchallenge # wlhchallenge # career # entrepreneurship 12  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read From Unemployed to Unstoppable: Build a Skill Empire with LivinGrimoire owly owly owly Follow Jul 1 '25 From Unemployed to Unstoppable: Build a Skill Empire with LivinGrimoire # swift # python # career # designpatterns Comments Add Comment 2 min read The Rise of Flutter Jobs in 2025: Why Now Is the Best Time to Be a Flutter Developer Flutter Flutter Flutter Follow Jun 27 '25 The Rise of Flutter Jobs in 2025: Why Now Is the Best Time to Be a Flutter Developer # flutter # career # hiring # beginners 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read How My Procurement Experience Shaped My AI Career Path Accio by Alibaba Group Accio by Alibaba Group Accio by Alibaba Group Follow Jul 31 '25 How My Procurement Experience Shaped My AI Career Path # career # webdev # programming # ai Comments Add Comment 2 min read ❤️ My Father — Mr. Brijesh Kumar Yadav Rajguru Yadav Rajguru Yadav Rajguru Yadav Follow Jul 10 '25 ❤️ My Father — Mr. Brijesh Kumar Yadav # webdev # programming # beginners # career 15  reactions Comments 2  comments 1 min read The Real Job of a Developer Isn’t What You Think Alexander Ertli Alexander Ertli Alexander Ertli Follow Jul 30 '25 The Real Job of a Developer Isn’t What You Think # career # programming # beginners # webdev 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🧠💬 After the Hack: How Building *MindMeld* Changed Me WLH Challenge: After the Hack Submission Garg garg Garg garg Garg garg Follow Jul 27 '25 🧠💬 After the Hack: How Building *MindMeld* Changed Me # devchallenge # wlhchallenge # career # entrepreneurship 14  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Hey Dev I`m new here let`s connect Faith Goodness Faith Goodness Faith Goodness Follow Jul 30 '25 Hey Dev I`m new here let`s connect # discuss # codenewbie # cybersecurity # career 2  reactions Comments 2  comments 1 min read its hard studying coding without any one to teach u,wish i had a mentor shamar shamar shamar Follow Jun 26 '25 its hard studying coding without any one to teach u,wish i had a mentor # discuss # codenewbie # mentorship # career Comments Add Comment 1 min read 🚀 Frontend Developer (React.js) Available for Projects Oli Oli Oli Follow Jul 30 '25 🚀 Frontend Developer (React.js) Available for Projects # react # tailwindcss # freelance # career Comments Add Comment 1 min read [rant] Rust: The Safety Language That Still Isn’t Safe Enough Gusthavo Lake Gusthavo Lake Gusthavo Lake Follow Jun 27 '25 [rant] Rust: The Safety Language That Still Isn’t Safe Enough # rust # programming # career # security 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read What I Wish I Knew Before Applying to My First Dev Job Vadym Vadym Vadym Follow Jun 27 '25 What I Wish I Knew Before Applying to My First Dev Job # portfolio # career # careerdevelopment 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read From Frustration to Innovation: How Building a Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator Changed Everything WLH Challenge: After the Hack Submission gabbar gabbar gabbar Follow Jul 26 '25 From Frustration to Innovation: How Building a Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator Changed Everything # devchallenge # wlhchallenge # career # entrepreneurship 12  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Introducing DEV Education Tracks: Expert-Guided Tutorials for Learning New Skills and Earning Badges Jess Lee Jess Lee Jess Lee Follow for The DEV Team Jun 30 '25 Introducing DEV Education Tracks: Expert-Guided Tutorials for Learning New Skills and Earning Badges # deved # career # ai # gemini 198  reactions Comments 33  comments 2 min read Consulting Rule #2: Don’t let your sarcasm show ... Unless you should Hatem Zidi Hatem Zidi Hatem Zidi Follow Jul 30 '25 Consulting Rule #2: Don’t let your sarcasm show ... Unless you should # career # softwareengineering # beginners # productivity 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Excited to Start My Journey with WSO2 and Open-Source Contribution Tharushi Nimeshika Tharushi Nimeshika Tharushi Nimeshika Follow Jul 30 '25 Excited to Start My Journey with WSO2 and Open-Source Contribution # discuss # codenewbie # opensource # career Comments Add Comment 1 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://crypto.forem.com#main-content
Crypto Forem Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Crypto Forem Close Welcome to Crypto Forem — part of the Forem network! Uniting blockchain builders and thinkers. Create account Log in Home About Contact Other Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Twitter Facebook Github Instagram Twitch Mastodon Popular Tags #beginners #tutorial #blockchain #security #web3 #rust #showdev #crypto #bitcoin #community #resources #trading #technicalanalysis #ethereum #marketanalysis #solidity #riskmanagement #defi #solana #collaboration #smartcontracts #governance #digitalidentity #arvr #evm #fundamentalanalysis #dex #onchainanalysis #nftart #collectibles Crypto Forem A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. 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Fantom DEX Review 2025 Tami Stone Tami Stone Tami Stone Follow Dec 26 '25 What is SpiritSwap? Fantom DEX Review 2025 # cryptocurrency # bitcoin # ethereum # blockchain Comments Add Comment 4 min read Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Follow Dec 25 '25 Institutional DeFi Is Getting Serious: SemiLiquid & Custody-Native Credit Infrastructure # blockchain # crypto # web3 1  reaction Comments 2  comments 2 min read MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies monzo monzo monzo Follow Dec 23 '25 MSCI sur l’exclusion de MicroStrategy, mentalités des investisseurs divisent le marché des cryptomonnaies # french # bitcoin # ethereum # crypto Comments Add Comment 9 min read January 26: MSCI May Drop MicroStrategy — What It Reveals About Investor Mindsets in Crypto monzo monzo monzo Follow Dec 23 '25 January 26: MSCI May Drop MicroStrategy — What It Reveals About Investor Mindsets in Crypto # discuss # blockchain # news # cryptocurrency Comments Add Comment 8 min read Crypto Liquidity: How Market Depth Shapes Price Movements Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Ale Oluwatobi Emmanuel Follow Dec 23 '25 Crypto Liquidity: How Market Depth Shapes Price Movements # cryptoresearch # blockchaintechnology # innovation Comments Add Comment 5 min read Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 23 '25 Kapbe Redefines Vaults: Why Systems Inevitably Destabilise When Yield Becomes the Only Metric? # crypto # security # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read The Sober Conclusion of Kapbe: RWA Is Not About Whether It is "Worth Investing In", but Whether It Is "Properly Understood" czof pbni czof pbni czof pbni Follow Dec 19 '25 The Sober Conclusion of Kapbe: RWA Is Not About Whether It is "Worth Investing In", but Whether It Is "Properly Understood" # blockchain # crypto # security Comments Add Comment 3 min read When a Company Becomes an Asset: Strategy’s “Bitcoin Standard” Experiment Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 22 '25 When a Company Becomes an Asset: Strategy’s “Bitcoin Standard” Experiment # michaelsaylor # bitcoinproxy # financialsystemexperiment # continuousfinancing Comments Add Comment 3 min read Taiwan’s Stablecoin Dilemma: The Geopolitical and Technological Strategy Behind Currency Peg Choice Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 18 '25 Taiwan’s Stablecoin Dilemma: The Geopolitical and Technological Strategy Behind Currency Peg Choice # stablecoinregulation # taiwanfintech # digitalcurrency # crossborderpayments Comments Add Comment 3 min read What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 16 '25 What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure # stablecoin # enterpriseblockchain # cryptoecosystem # web3platform Comments Add Comment 5 min read Decoding Bitwise’s 2026 Crypto Forecast: Three Key Infrastructure Trends Every Developer Should Watch Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 17 '25 Decoding Bitwise’s 2026 Crypto Forecast: Three Key Infrastructure Trends Every Developer Should Watch # cryptoforecast # infrastructuretrends # bitwise # crosschaintech Comments Add Comment 4 min read What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 16 '25 What Circle’s Axelar Team Acquisition Means for Cross-Chain Stablecoin Infrastructure # circlestrategy # crosschaintechnology # stablecoin # enterpriseblockchain Comments Add Comment 5 min read Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” Apnews Apnews Apnews Follow Dec 12 '25 Ondo Teams Up With Wall Street Giants: Private Funds Enter the Era of “24/7 On-Chain Operations” # bitcoin # bitcoinmena # middleeastcrypto # abudhabi Comments Add Comment 4 min read loading... #discuss Discussion threads targeting the whole community #watercooler Light, and off-topic conversation. 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Crypto Forem — A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://learn.interviewkickstart.com/ace-your-mock-interview-v2
Ace your mock interview v2 | Interview Kickstart Skip to content How it works Pricing FAQs Start Interviewing with FAANG+ Experts Start Interviewing with FAANG+ Experts Mock Interviews with FAANG+ Engineers — The Smarter Way to Prepare Gain confidence. Fix your gaps. Crack your next interview. Start Interviewing with FAANG+ Experts Interviewers from Offer: $200K - SDE @ 1.28M highest offer 4.8/5 Avg. Rating 3-5X Higher Offer 12,235 + Mock interviews Start Interviewing with FAANG+ Experts Interviewers from Interviewers from Practise mock interviews with 700+ experts Maximize Your Interviewing Potential Danielle Class Danielle Class is a Software Engineering Manager at Amazon, leading AI initiatives, and an instructor at Interview Kickstart. She brings 10+ years of experience across engineering, program management, and STEM education, with a strong focus on mentoring and curriculum development. Software Engineering Manager, Experience 16+ Years Mock interviews 230+ Rating 4.89 ★ Daniel Hoffman Daniel Hoffman is a Senior Technical Program Manager at Amazon Ring, leading cross-functional initiatives and product insights. With deep expertise in technical program management and a passion for mentoring, he helps candidates excel in TPM and PM interviews through focused mock sessions and practical feedback. Sr. Program Manager, Experience 10+ Years Mock interviews 145+ Rating 4.90 ★ Shruti Goli Shruti Goli is a Senior Product Manager at Incode, building cutting-edge ML and AI products for identity verification and deepfake detection. Formerly Chief Product Officer at Trymata and a PM at Microsoft, she brings deep expertise in AI product strategy and interview preparation. Senior Product Manager, Experience 20+ Years Mock interviews 180+ Rating 4.92 ★ James Ausman James Ausman is a Senior Technical Program Manager at Chime with deep experience spanning AWS, Eventbrite, Twilio, Google, and Square. Specializing in technical infrastructure, fintech, and program leadership, he mentors professionals preparing for TPM and PM roles at top-tier companies. Sr. Technical Program Manager, Experience 23+ Years Mock interviews 200+ Rating 4.90 ★ Praveen Kumar Kashimsetty Praveen Kumar is Director of Product Management at Rafay and a seasoned mentor at Interview Kickstart. With 16 years at Microsoft and leadership roles at Meta and Rafay, he brings deep expertise in cloud, infrastructure, and product management, helping professionals break into top-tier product and TPM roles. Director of Product Management Experience 20+ Years Mock interviews 200+ Rating 4.85 ★ Neha Ganjoo Neha Ganjoo is a seasoned Product Manager with over 20 years of experience in product development, strategy, and execution across diverse tech-driven industries. She has a proven track record of collaborating closely with engineering, design, and business teams to deliver impactful products, with expertise spanning market research, roadmap planning, user experience optimization, and leading growth initiatives in fast-paced, innovative environments. Capital Strategy Manager, Experience 16+ Years Mock interviews 230+ Rating 4.89 ★ Randy Cogill Randy Cogill is a Senior Research Scientist at Amazon with deep expertise in data science, optimization, and machine learning. He has led impactful projects in demand forecasting and inventory management, and previously taught at the University of Virginia while managing over $1M in funded research. Senior Research Scientist, Experience 20+ Years Mock interviews 200+ Rating 4.86 ★ Jacob Markus Jacob Markus is a Capital Strategy Manager at Meta with deep expertise in financial planning, data center operations, and large-scale cost forecasting. He brings experience from top tech firms like AWS and Apple, where he led strategic initiatives spanning R&D finance, risk modeling, and global forecasting. Capital Strategy Manager, Experience 12+ Years Mock interviews 155+ Rating 4.76 ★ Hanif Mahboobi Hanif Mahboobi is a seasoned AI and data science leader with over 12 years of experience across top firms like PayPal, Meta, AWS, and Albertsons. He specializes in AI strategy, personalization systems, and leadership of high-impact data teams, and also actively mentors professionals transitioning into advanced AI and ML roles. Senior Data Science Leader, Experience 16+ Years Mock interviews 270+ Rating 4.81 ★ Matt Nickens Matt Nickens is a Senior Manager of Data Science at CarMax, with prior leadership roles at Meta, Disney, and 20th Century Fox. He has deep expertise in building and scaling data science teams, driving insights across tech and entertainment, and delivering impactful analytics solutions. Sr Manager - Data Science Experience 17+ Years Mock interviews 165+ Rating 4.71 ★ Naveen Neppalli Naveen Neppalli is Vice President of AI at Viant Technology and Vouched, with 18+ years of leadership in AI, ML, and GenAI across Amazon, Disney, and more. He specializes in large-scale AI systems, computer vision, and personalized recommendations, and mentors on deep tech and engineering leadership. VP of AI & Engineering Experience 19+ Years Mock interviews 190+ Rating 4.92 ★ Thang Tran Thang Tran is a seasoned Backend and Data Software Engineer with 7+ years of experience bridging data engineering, machine learning, and backend development. He specializes in building scalable systems, robust data pipelines, and APIs that power ML models and data-driven decision-making, with deep expertise in Python, Django, Flask, Kubernetes, AWS, and GCP. Senior Data Engineer Experience 15+ Years Mock interviews 140+ Rating 4.79 ★ David Prorok David Prorok is a former Software Engineer at Facebook with 10+ years of experience in front-end engineering and product development. He now coaches engineers at Interview Kickstart and leads innovative projects blending AI, mindfulness, and creative education, bringing a unique mix of technical depth and coaching expertise. Front-end Engineering Experience 17+ Years Mock interviews 160+ Rating 4.88 ★ How Our Mock Interviews Work Your Path to Interview Success in 3 Simple Steps Pick a Domain Choose from DSA, System Design, or Behavioral based on your preparation needs. Book a Mock Interview Get matched with a real FAANG+ interviewer for a personalized 1-on-1 practice session. Sharpen Your Prep Review your mock interview recordings and feedback to fix weak spots before your next round. As seen on Mock Interview Samples A preview of the typical FAANG interview FAANG Mock Interview with Software Engineer | Recursion Interview Full Stack Mock Interview | Interview Questions with Software Engineer Google Mock Interview with Software Engineer | Object Modelling ML & DL Mock Interview by AI Reality Labs Manager at Meta Mock Interview by Co-Founder at Trebellar | Object Modelling #MAANG Pick the Perfect Package for Your Goals $199 $250 Essential Pack Ideal for candidates seeking a focused, single mock interview with expert feedback. 1 Mock Interview Resume & LinkedIn review Personalized written feedback One-on-one session with a FAANG+ expert Enroll Now $525 $750 Elite Pack Designed for professionals who want to refine their skills with more interview practice. 3 Mock Interviews Resume & LinkedIn review Personalized written feedback Access to curated prep guides & practice questions One-on-one sessions with FAANG+ experts Interviewer Selection by Request Enroll Now Why Top Professionals Choose IK Expert-Led Coaching Practice with 600+ FAANG+ interviewers who know what it takes. Realistic Experience Live sessions mirror real interviews at top tech companies. Actionable Feedback Get detailed input on both technical and soft skills. Proven Results Candidates land offers 3x–5x higher than the industry average. What our students have to say Each instructor-led session was packed with information and there were lots of problems to practice. The course was intense, but it was a great use of my time. Neelesh Tendulkar Offers from Google, Intuit Interview Kickstart is like a fitness coach which guides to achieve your dream job. It can help you identify your weak points and also suggest steps to improve them. Swapnil Tailor Offers from Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin The classes, workshops, quizzes, practice problems, and mock interviews provided me with the knowledge, tools, and the feedback that I was missing. Interview Kickstart showed me how to prepare for success. Flavia Vela Offers from LinkedIn, Amazon IK provides a nice, structured way to prepare for interviews while having a full-time job. Mock interviews helped me get better and the problem sets alleviated the need for me to source problems externally. Kushal L Offers from Facebook Read more reviews Top companies love hiring our candidates FAQs General About Interviewers About Mock Interviews Refund Policy Why should I choose Interview Kickstart? Interview Kickstart is the Gold Standard for Interview Preparation—no other program comes close. We’ve helped more than 25,000 candidates land their dream jobs at top companies (including those who previously struggled with interviews). While others focus on “hacking” interviews, we focus on making you a better professional. Top companies like Google, Meta, and Amazon have 5-7 interview rounds with experienced engineers—shortcuts just don’t work. Our interviewer quality is unparalleled—every instructor is a FAANG+ industry expert, rigorously vetted to ensure you learn from the best. This commitment to excellence is part of IK’s DNA. With years of experience assisting professionals like you in achieving their career goals, we understand what it takes to succeed in today’s competitive job market. What results can I expect? Candidates who train with us see a success rate 3 to 5 times higher in landing FAANG+ offers compared to the industry average. Do you offer guidance beyond mock interviews? Yes. We provide tailored resources to boost your prep, including resume analysis, skill gap analysis, LinkedIn profile review, target role insights, salary benchmarks, curated guides, and practice questions. Who are the Interview Kickstart interviewers? We have a team of over 600 experienced hiring managers and experts from Tier 1 tech and product companies. They know exactly what it takes to succeed in top-tier interviews. How are Interview Kickstart interviewers vetted? Our instructors are all hand-picked FAANG+ experts, personally vetted by our founder, Soham Mehta (ex-Box). They undergo a rigorous screening process, including trial interviews, and are continuously evaluated to ensure top-tier quality instruction. We aim to provide the best learning experience to ensure your success. Can I choose my mock interviewer? Can I request someone from a specific company? Yes, you can request a specific interviewer from a particular company (e.g., a Googler for a Google interview). While we do our best to accommodate such requests, interviewer selection is subject to availability. Simply submit a request, and we will inform you if we can match you with your preferred choice. What level of experience is required to take mock interviews? You don’t need to be at any specific experience level to practice interviewing with us. Our interviews are tailored for professionals at all levels, whether you’re preparing for your first technical interview or targeting a leadership position. How does Interview Kickstart’s training compare to self-practice? While practicing in front of the mirror can be helpful, Interview Kickstart Mock Interviews provide a more structured, comprehensive training with real FAANG+ experts, ensuring focused learning, faster progress, and better outcomes. How do I book a mock interview? Booking is quick and easy: Visit pricing anchor link. Select a package that fits your goals and budget Choose your preferred date and time Attend a live, interactive mock interview with FAANG+ experts and receive personalized feedback What kind of questions are asked in mock interviews? Our mock interviews mirror real FAANG+ interviews and are tailored to your role. Here is a sample of the topics you could practice for: Software Engineers: CS fundamentals, data structures, algorithms, and systems design. Product Managers: Product strategy, prioritization, user empathy, and analytical problem-solving. Engineering Managers: People management, technical leadership, project execution, and systems design. Data Scientists/ML Engineers: Statistics, machine learning, coding, data analysis, and experimental design. Technical Program Managers: Program management, cross-functional communication, and risk mitigation. What if I’m already good at coding? Will this package still benefit me? Yes. Even experienced coders benefit from advanced topics, mock interviews, and feedback that fine-tunes their problem-solving and communication skills. How realistic are these mock interviews? They’re live and designed to closely replicate actual FAANG+ interviews, ensuring you’re fully prepared for the real thing. How private are the mock interviews? Our mock interviews are designed to simulate real interview conditions, including both audio and video, though the format can be adjusted based on your preference. All our instructors have signed Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) with us, guaranteeing that any information shared during your mock interview will remain strictly confidential. You have complete control over what personal details you choose to disclose during the session. How soon can I book my mock interview? You can usually schedule your first mock interview within 24 hours of purchasing a package. Can I cancel/reschedule my mock interview? You can cancel or reschedule for free if done at least 24 hours in advance. Cancellations or reschedules within 24 hours of the session will count as a completed session with no refunds. What happens if I don’t show up for my interview? If you miss your scheduled mock interview, it will be counted as completed, and no refund or rescheduling will be available. What kind of feedback will I receive? You’ll get detailed written feedback covering the below aspects (and more): Technical skills Problem-solving approach Communication style Behavioral interview responses Can I track my progress over time? Yes! Our platform includes progress tracking tools to monitor your growth and target key improvement areas. Can I review my mock interviews afterward? Absolutely! You’ll have lifetime access to your recordings, so you can rewatch, reflect, and improve anytime. What if I’m not satisfied with my purchase? Our refund policy is outlined below: Full Refund: Available if requested within 72 hours of purchase, provided no mock interview has been scheduled. 50% Refund: Available if requested within 10 days of purchase, provided no mock interview has been scheduled. No Refunds: After 10 days from the purchase date or if at least one mock interview has been scheduled.   The refund approval process will be completed within 30 days of raising the request. Once your refund is approved, you will no longer have access to any session materials or classes. To request a refund, submit a request from your account dashboard. Can I get a refund for unused mock interviews? Yes, unused mock interview sessions are eligible for a refund within 72 hours of completing your last session. After this, refunds will no longer be available, but you can still use your remaining sessions anytime in the future. In case where you get a refund, it will be adjusted based on the original discount applied. For example: If you purchased 3 discounted sessions for $600 (3 x $200) and used only 1 session, your refund will be calculated based on the 2-session price (2 x $200 = $400). Your refund amount would be $600 – $200 = $400. If you used 2 sessions, the refund would be $600 – $400 = $200.   To request a refund, you must inform us within 72 hours of your last interview. How long does it take to process refunds after approval? After approval, refunds will be processed within 5 to 7 business days and credited to the original payment method. Privacy Policy * Terms and Conditions © Copyright 2026. All Rights Reserved. Document Wait! Let’s help you ace that interview! Our FAANG-trained coaches will pinpoint your prep gaps—on a short, FREE call. Full Name Email ID Phone Number We’ll never spam or share your details By sharing your contact details, you agree to our privacy policy. Get My Personal Interview Plan You’re all set! Our team will reach out soon to discuss your prep needs Register for our webinar How to Nail your next Technical Interview 1 hour Webinar Slot Blocked Loading... 1 Enter details 2 Select webinar slot Your name *Invalid Name Email Address *Invalid Email Address Your phone number *Invalid Phone Number I agree to receive updates and promotional messages via WhatsApp By sharing your contact details, you agree to our privacy policy. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/privacy#2-personal-information-we-collect
Privacy Policy - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Privacy Policy Last Updated: September 01, 2023 This Privacy Policy is designed to help you understand how DEV Community Inc. (" DEV ," " we ," or " us ") collects, use, and discloses your personal information. What's With the Defined Terms? You'll notice that some words appear in quotes in this Privacy Policy.  They're called "defined terms," and we use them so that we don't have to repeat the same language again and again.  They mean the same thing in every instance, to help us make sure that this Privacy Policy is consistent. We've included the defined terms throughout because we want it to be easy for you to read them in context. 1. WHAT DOES THIS PRIVACY POLICY APPLY TO? 2. PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT 3. HOW WE USE YOUR INFORMATION 4. HOW WE DISCLOSE YOUR INFORMATION 5. YOUR PRIVACY CHOICES AND RIGHTS 6. INTERNATIONAL DATA TRANSFERS 7. RETENTION OF PERSONAL INFORMATION 8. SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES FOR CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS 9. SUPPLEMENTAL NOTICE FOR NEVADA RESIDENTS 10. CHILDREN'S INFORMATION 11. OTHER PROVISIONS 12. CONTACT US 1. WHAT DOES THIS PRIVACY POLICY APPLY TO? This Privacy Policy applies to personal information processed by us, including on our websites, mobile applications, and other online or offline offerings — basically anything we do. To make this Privacy Policy easier to read, our websites, mobile applications, and other offerings are all collectively called the " Services. " Beyond this Privacy Policy, your use of the Services is subject to our DEV Community Terms and our Forem Terms. The Services include both our own community forum at https://www.dev.to (the " DEV Community ") and the open source tool we provide called " Forem ," available at https://www.forem.com which allows our customers to create and operate their own online forums. We collect personal information from two categories of people: (1) our customers, who use Forem and our hosting services to run and host their own forums (we'll call them " Forem Operators "), and (2) the people who interact with DEV-hosted forums, including forums provided by Forem Operators utilizing Forem and separately our own DEV Community (we'll call them " Users "). An Important Note for Users Since we provide hosting services for Forem Operators, technically we also process your information on their behalf. That processing is governed by the contracts that we have in place with each Forem Operator, not this Privacy Policy. In other words, when you share your data on a DEV-hosted forum operated by a Forem Operator, we at DEV are basically just the "pipes" — we process the data on behalf of the Forem Operator, but don't do anything with it ourselves beyond what we're required to do under our contract (and by law). So, if you post your information on a DEV-powered forum provided by a Forem Operator, that Forem Operator's privacy policy applies, and any questions or requests relating to your data on that service should be directed to that Forem Operator, not us. Likewise, if you use our mobile application, you may also interact with forums that use DEV's open-source tools but do all their hosting and data collection themselves. For those forums, we at DEV have no access to your data, so be sure to read the privacy policy of any third-party hosted forum before posting. 2. PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT The categories of personal information we collect depend on whether you're a User or Forem Operator, how you interact with us, our Services, and the requirements of applicable law. Breaking it down, we collect three types of information: (1) information that you provide to us directly, (2) information we obtain automatically when you use our Services, and (3) information we get about you from other sources (such as third-party services and organizations). More details are below. A. Information You Provide to Us Directly We may collect the following personal information that you provide to us. Account Creation (for Forem Operators): We'll require your name and email address to get started, as well as some details about the Forem you want to run, such as: whether you're running the Forem on your own behalf or as part of an organization, and details about the community you want to support (how big is it, what topics does it cover, where do members currently communicate, how/if the community earns money, whether the community is open, invite-only or paid, any existing social media accounts, etc.) You'll need to tell us a bit about your personal coding background, and you'll have the option to provide your DEV username as well, if you are a member of the DEV.to community. Account Creation (for Users) : We collect name and email address from users that create an account on DEV Community. For other forums created by Forem Operators using Forem, the Forem Operator determines what information is required for User account creation for their respective forums. Interactive Features (for Users) . Like any other social network, both we and other Users of our Services may collect personal information that you submit or make available through our interactive features (e.g., messaging and chat features, commenting functionalities, forums, blogs, posts, and other social media pages). While we do have private messages that are only between you and the person you're messaging (as well as us and the Forem Operator, as applicable), any information you provide using the public sharing features of the Services, such as the information you post to your public profile or the topics you follow is public, including to recruiters and prospective employers, and is not subject to any of the privacy protections we mention in this Privacy Policy except where legally required. Please exercise caution before revealing any information that may identify you in the real world to others. Purchases . If you buy stuff on our shop site https://shop.dev.to/ (as either a User or Forem Operator), or otherwise if you pay us in connection with your use of the Forem service, we may collect personal information and details associated with your purchases, including payment information. Any payments made via our Services are processed by third-party payment processors, such as Stripe, Shopify, and PayPal. We do not directly collect or store any payment card information entered through our Services, but may receive information associated with your payment card information (e.g., your billing details). Your Communications with Us (Users and Forem Operators) . We may collect personal information, such as email address, phone number, or mailing address when you request information about our Services, register for our newsletter or loyalty program, request customer or technical support, apply for a job, or otherwise communicate with us. Surveys . We may contact you to participate in surveys. If you decide to participate, you may be asked to provide certain information, which may include personal information (for example, your home address). Sweepstakes or Contests . We may collect personal information you provide for any sweepstakes or contests that we offer. In some jurisdictions, we are required to publicly share information of sweepstakes and contest winners. Conferences, Trade Shows, and Other Events . We may collect personal information from individuals when we attend conferences, trade shows, and other events. Business Development and Strategic Partnerships . We may collect personal information from individuals and third parties to assess and pursue potential business opportunities. Job Applications . We may post job openings and opportunities on our Services. If you reply to one of these postings by submitting your application, CV and/or cover letter to us, we will collect and use your information to assess your qualifications. B. Information Collected Automatically We may collect personal information automatically when you use our Services: Automatic Data Collection . We may collect certain information automatically when you use our Services, such as your Internet protocol (IP) address, user settings, MAC address, cookie identifiers, mobile carrier, mobile advertising and other unique identifiers, browser or device information, location information (including approximate location derived from IP address), and Internet service provider. We may also automatically collect information regarding your use of our Services, such as pages that you visit before, during and after using our Services, information about the links you click, the types of content you interact with, the frequency and duration of your activities, and other information about how you use our Services. In addition, we may collect information that other people provide about you when they use our Services, including information about you when they tag you in their posts. Cookies, Pixel Tags/Web Beacons, and Other Technologies . We, as well as third parties that provide content, advertising, or other functionality on our Services, may use cookies, pixel tags, local storage, and other technologies (" Technologies ") to automatically collect information through your use of our Services. Cookies . Cookies are small text files placed in device browsers that store preferences and facilitate and enhance your experience. Pixel Tags/Web Beacons . A pixel tag (also known as a web beacon) is a piece of code embedded in our Services that collects information about engagement on our Services. The use of a pixel tag allows us to record, for example, that a user has visited a particular web page or clicked on a particular advertisement. We may also include web beacons in e-mails to understand whether messages have been opened, acted on, or forwarded. Our uses of these Technologies fall into the following general categories: Operationally Necessary . This includes Technologies that allow you access to our Services, applications, and tools that are required to identify irregular website behavior, prevent fraudulent activity and improve security or that allow you to make use of our functionality. Performance-Related . We may use Technologies to assess the performance of our Services, including as part of our analytic practices to help us understand how individuals use our Services ( see Analytics below ). Functionality-Related . We may use Technologies that allow us to offer you enhanced functionality when accessing or using our Services. This may include identifying you when you sign into our Services or keeping track of your specified preferences, interests, or past items viewed. Analytics . We may use Technologies and other third-party tools to process analytics information on our Services. Some of our analytics partners include Google Analytics. For more information,please visit Google Analytics' Privacy Policy . To learn more about how to opt-out of Google Analytics' use of your information, please click here . Social Media Platforms . Our Services may contain social media buttons such as Twitter, Facebook, GitHub, Instagram, and Twitch (that might include widgets such as the "share this" button or other interactive mini programs). These features may collect your IP address, which page you are visiting on our Services, and may set a cookie to enable the feature to function properly. Your interactions with these platforms are governed by the privacy policy of the company providing it. See the "Your Privacy Choices and Rights" section below to understand your choices regarding these Technologies. C. Information Collected from Other Sources We may obtain information about you from other sources, including through third-party services and organizations. For example, if you access our Services through a third-party application, such as an app store, a third-party login service (e.g., through Twitter, Apple, or GitHub), or a social networking site, we may collect whatever information about you from that third-party application that you have made available via your privacy settings. 3. HOW WE USE YOUR INFORMATION We use your information for a variety of business purposes, including to provide our Services, for administrative purposes, and to market our products and Services, as described below. A. Provide Our Services We use your information to fulfill our contract with you and provide you with our Services, such as: Managing your information and accounts; Providing access to certain areas, functionalities, and features of our Services; Answering requests for customer or technical support; Communicating with you about your account, activities on our Services, and policy changes; Processing your financial information and other payment methods for products or Services purchased; Processing applications if you apply for a job we post on our Services; and Allowing you to register for events. B. Administrative Purposes We use your information for various administrative purposes, such as: Pursuing our legitimate interests such as direct marketing, research and development (including marketing research), network and information security, and fraud prevention; Detecting security incidents, protecting against malicious, deceptive, fraudulent or illegal activity, and prosecuting those responsible for that activity; Measuring interest and engagement in our Services, including for usage-based billing purposes; Short-term, transient use, such as contextual customization of ads; Improving, optimizing, upgrading, or enhancing our Services; Developing new products and Services; Ensuring internal quality control and safety; Authenticating and verifying individual identities, including requests to exercise your rights under this policy; Debugging to identify and repair errors with our Services; Auditing relating to interactions, transactions and other compliance activities; Enforcing our agreements and policies; and Complying with our legal obligations. C. Marketing and Advertising our Products and Services We may use your personal information to tailor and provide you with content and advertisements for our Services, such as via email. If you have any questions about our marketing practices, you may contact us at any time as set forth in the "Contact Us" section below. D. Other Purposes We also use your information for other purposes as requested by you or as permitted by applicable law. Consent . We may use personal information for other purposes that are clearly disclosed to you at the time you provide personal information or with your consent. Automated Decision Making. We may engage in automated decision making, including profiling, such as to suggest topics or other Users for you to follow. DEV's processing of your personal information will not result in a decision based solely on automated processing that significantly affects you unless such a decision is necessary as part of a contract we have with you, we have your consent, or we are permitted by law to engage in such automated decision making. If you have questions about our automated decision making, you may contact us as set forth in the "Contact Us" section below. De-identified and Aggregated Information . We may use personal information and other information about you to create de-identified and/or aggregated information, such as de-identified demographic information, information about the device from which you access our Services, or other analyses we create. For example, we may collect system-wide information to ensure availability of the platform, or measure aggregate data trends to analyze and optimize our Services. Share Content with Friends or Colleagues. Our Services may offer various tools and functionalities. For example, we may allow you to provide information about your friends through our referral services. Our referral services may allow you to forward or share certain content with a friend or colleague, such as an email inviting your friend to use our Services. Please only share with us contact information of people with whom you have a relationship (e.g., relative, friend neighbor, or co-worker). 4. HOW WE DISCLOSE YOUR INFORMATION We disclose your information to third parties for a variety of business purposes, including to provide our Services, to protect us or others, or in the event of a major business transaction such as a merger, sale, or asset transfer, as described below. A. Disclosures to Provide our Services The categories of third parties with whom we may share your information are described below. Service Providers . We may share your personal information with our third-party service providers who use that information to help us provide our Services. This includes service providers that provide us with IT support, hosting, payment processing, customer service, and related services. For example, our Shop site is run by Shopify, who handle your shipping details on our behalf. Business Partners . We may share your personal information with business partners to provide you with a product or service you have requested. We may also share your personal information to business partners with whom we jointly offer products or services. Other Users . As described above in the "Personal Information We Collect" section of this Privacy Policy, our Service allows Users to share their profiles, and any posts, chats, etc. with other Users and with the general public, including to those who do not use our Services. APIs/SDKs . 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Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/shadow-dom-web-components
Shadow Dom + Web Components Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Shadow Dom + Web Components Shadow Dom + Web Components Shadow DOM & Web Components highlight.io supports both Shadow DOM and Web Components out of the box. Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) highlight.io supports Salesforce Lightning Web Components out of the box. To install highlight in a Salesforce environment, see the detailed docs here . Session Search Deep Linking Error Monitoring Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/general-features/comments
Comments Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Backend General Features / Comments Comments Comments can be made by you or anyone on your team on sessions and errors. Session Comments Session comments can be made by clicking anywhere on the session replay. Session comments are special because they connect a comment to a position on the screen and the current time. This is extremely powerful because now when you create a comment, you don't have to write more to provide the location/time context. Notifications If you tag your team when creating a comment (learn more Slack Integration ), Highlight will send them a message via email or Slack. Those messages will contain your comment text and a screenshot of the session at the current time. Collaboration You can tag a teammate in a comment by typing @ and then picking your teammate. When you tag a teammate, they will receive a notification with the message you wrote. Replies Want to have a conversation relevant to what you're looking at? You can also reply to Session or Error comments on the side panel or directly via the popup. When participating in a comment, you become subscribed to future replies. Subsequent replies will notify you via Slack (learn more Slack Integration ) or email. Any Slack channel or user tagged is also automatically subscribed. Slack Integration You can tag Slack users or channels in comments after connecting Highlight with Slack (learn more Slack Integration ). When you tag a Slack user or channel, Highlight will send them a message with your comment and a link to where the comment was made. Linear Integration You can create issues in Linear as you add comments. Within a comment, select "Create a Linear issue" from the issues dropdown. On the next page, you'll be prompted to optionally edit the issue title and description. Once you save the comment, an issue is created and linked to in Linear. Alerts Digests Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/mohammadidrees/thinking-in-first-principles-how-to-question-an-async-queue-based-design-5cf1#in-an-async-queue-design-the-implicit-answer-is
Thinking in First Principles: How to Question an Async Queue–Based Design - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Mohammad-Idrees Posted on Jan 13 Thinking in First Principles: How to Question an Async Queue–Based Design # architecture # interview # learning # systemdesign Async queues are one of the most commonly suggested “solutions” in system design interviews. But many candidates jump straight to using queues without understanding: What problems they actually solve What new problems they introduce How to systematically discover those problems This post teaches a first-principles questioning process you can apply to any async queue design—without assuming prior knowledge. Why This Matters In interviews, interviewers are not evaluating whether you know Kafka, SQS, or RabbitMQ. They are evaluating whether you can: Reason about time Reason about failure Reason about order Reason about user experience Async queues change all four. What “First Principles” Means Here First principles means: We do not start with solutions We do not assume correctness We ask basic, unavoidable questions that every system must answer Async queues feel correct because they remove blocking—but correctness is not guaranteed by intuition. The Reference Mental Model (Abstract) We will reason about this abstract pattern , not a specific product: User → API → Storage → Queue → Worker → Storage Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode No domain assumptions. This could be: Chat messages Emails Payments Notifications Image processing The questioning process stays the same. Step 1: The Root Question (Always Start Here) What is the system responsible for completing before it can respond? This is the most important question in system design. Why? Because it defines: Request boundaries Latency expectations Responsibility In an async queue design, the implicit answer is: “The request is complete once the work is enqueued.” This is different from synchronous designs, where the request completes after work finishes. So far, this seems good. Step 2: Introduce Time (What Happens Later?) Now ask: Which part of the work happens after the request is done? Answer: The worker processing This leads to an important realization: The system has split work across time Time separation is powerful—but it creates new questions. Step 3: Causality Question (Identity Across Time) Once work happens later, we must ask: How does the system know which output belongs to which input? This question always appears when time is decoupled. Typical answer: IDs in the job payload (request ID, entity ID) This introduces a new invariant: Each input must produce exactly one correct output Now we test whether the system can guarantee this. Step 4: Failure Question (The Queue Reality) Now ask the most important async-specific question: What happens if the worker crashes mid-processing? Realistic answers: The job is retried The work may run again The output may be produced twice This leads to a critical realization: Async queues are usually at-least-once , not exactly-once This is not a tooling issue. It is a fundamental property of distributed systems . Step 5: Duplication Question (Invariant Violation) Now ask: What happens if the same job is processed twice? Consequences: Duplicate outputs Duplicate side effects Conflicting state This violates the earlier invariant: “Exactly one output per input” At this point, we have discovered a correctness problem , not a performance problem. Step 6: Ordering Question (Time Without Synchrony) Now consider multiple inputs. Ask: What defines the order of processing? Important realization: Queue order ≠ business order Different workers process at different speeds Later inputs may finish first Now ask: Does correctness depend on order? If yes (and many systems do): Async queues alone are insufficient This problem emerges only when you question order explicitly. Step 7: Visibility Question (User Experience) Now switch perspectives. How does the user know the work is finished? Possible answers: Polling Guessing Timeouts Each answer reveals a problem: Polling wastes resources Guessing is unreliable Timeouts fail under load This violates a core system principle: Users should not wait blindly Case Study: A Simple Example (Problem-Agnostic) Imagine a system where users upload photos to be processed. Flow: User uploads photo API stores metadata Job is enqueued Worker processes photo Result is stored Now apply the questions: When does the upload request complete? → After enqueue What if the worker crashes? → Job retried What if it runs twice? → Two processed images What if two photos depend on order? → Order not guaranteed How does the user know processing is done? → Polling None of these issues are about images. They are about time, failure, identity, and visibility . What Async Queues Actually Trade Async queues solve one problem: They remove blocking from the request path But they introduce others: Solved Introduced Blocking Duplicate work Latency coupling Ordering ambiguity Resource exhaustion Completion uncertainty This is not bad. It just must be understood and handled . The One-Page Interview Checklist (Memorize This) For any async queue design , ask these five questions: What completes the request? What runs later? What happens if it runs twice? What defines order? How does the user observe completion? If you cannot answer all five clearly, the design is incomplete. Final Mental Model Async systems remove time coupling but destroy causality by default Your job as an engineer is not to “use queues” Your job is to restore correctness explicitly That is what interviewers are looking for. Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Mohammad-Idrees Follow Joined Mar 16, 2023 More from Mohammad-Idrees How to Identify System Design Problems from First Principles # architecture # interview # systemdesign # tutorial 🧱 The Blueprint of Success: Mastering the Technical Requirements Document (TRD) # architecture # career # systemdesign 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/swetty_sultania_834f90237/dont-let-users-get-lost-on-your-ui-1jc9
🚨 Don’t let users get lost on your UI! - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Nuro Design Posted on Jun 28, 2025 🚨 Don’t let users get lost on your UI! # beginners # tutorial # career # github 📐 Master Visual Hierarchy in UI Design 🔑 Make users notice what you want first! What is Visual Hierarchy? It’s the order in which your users process information on the screen. 👀 Your job? Guide their eyes. 5 Key Elements of Visual Hierarchy: 1️⃣ Size — Bigger = More Important 2️⃣ Color & Contrast — Use it to highlight 3️⃣ Spacing — White space adds focus 4️⃣ Alignment — Clean structure = easy scanning 5️⃣ Typography Weight — Bold grabs more attention Quick Example: 📰 Headline > Subheading > CTA Button 👁️ Design it so users instantly know what to read and click. Why It Matters? ✅ Improves UX ✅ Increases Conversion ✅ Reduces Bounce ✅ Makes designs look ✨professional✨ 💬 Do you check visual hierarchy while designing? 👇 Comment YES or NO below! 📥 Save this for your next Figma project. 🔔 Follow @nurodesign for daily UI design wisdom! Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Nuro Design Follow UI/UX designer, graphic designer, and WordPress expert with a keen eye for aesthetics and a strong focus on user-centered design. I specialize in crafting intuitive, engaging experience. Education B.Com Graduate Pronouns She/Her Work Freelancing Joined Mar 10, 2025 More from Nuro Design Typography in UI: Do it Right! # career # mobile # design # csharp Lost users = lost conversions # ai # tutorial # mobile # startup Stay ahead in the design game # ai # tutorial # career # mobile 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://crypto.forem.com/t/tutorial
Tutorial - Crypto Forem Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Crypto Forem Close # tutorial Follow Hide Tutorial is a general purpose tag. We welcome all types of tutorial - code related or not! It's all about learning, and using tutorials to teach others! Create Post submission guidelines Tutorials should teach by example. This can include an interactive component or steps the reader can follow to understand. Older #tutorial posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 … 75 … 2222 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates no account no account no account Follow Dec 29 '25 ParaSwap Trading Guide: Best Settings After Recent Updates # crypto # tutorial # web3 Comments Add Comment 5 min read VIP Programs for Beginners: Are They Really Worth It When You're Just Starting Out? 🤔 Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Dec 10 '25 VIP Programs for Beginners: Are They Really Worth It When You're Just Starting Out? 🤔 # beginners # webdev # web3 # tutorial 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 第 24.3 课:币安合约交易操作详解 Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Nov 18 '25 第 24.3 课:币安合约交易操作详解 # crypto # security # tutorial Comments Add Comment 9 min read Why Everyday Smart Devices (Yes — Even a Toothbrush) Matter in Web3 & DePIN Asher Asher Asher Follow Dec 1 '25 Why Everyday Smart Devices (Yes — Even a Toothbrush) Matter in Web3 & DePIN # blockchain # web3 # crypto # tutorial 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read The real cost of launching a crypto project: from website to dApp Polina Elizarova Polina Elizarova Polina Elizarova Follow Nov 18 '25 The real cost of launching a crypto project: from website to dApp # crypto # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read Lesson 24.4: Leverage Trading Operations Detailed Guide Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Nov 18 '25 Lesson 24.4: Leverage Trading Operations Detailed Guide # crypto # security # tutorial Comments Add Comment 19 min read Choosing the Right Bitcoin Mining Pool in 2025: A Practical, No-Nonsense Guide ⛏️⚡️ Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Nov 13 '25 Choosing the Right Bitcoin Mining Pool in 2025: A Practical, No-Nonsense Guide ⛏️⚡️ # blockchain # web3 # productivity # tutorial 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 第 14 课:Freqtrade风险管理与资金管理 Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Oct 14 '25 第 14 课:Freqtrade风险管理与资金管理 # beginners # crypto # tutorial 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read 📘 Highest and Lowest Find in ক্যান্ডেলস্টিক প্যাটার্ন ( সহজ বাংলা গাইড ) TS TS TS Follow Sep 30 '25 📘 Highest and Lowest Find in ক্যান্ডেলস্টিক প্যাটার্ন ( সহজ বাংলা গাইড ) # trading # forex # tutorial # ts2025 Comments Add Comment 1 min read Lesson 14: Risk Management Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Oct 13 '25 Lesson 14: Risk Management # beginners # tutorial # crypto # security Comments Add Comment 3 min read Investing in Bitcoin: How to Choose the Best Wallet and Set It Up on Linux Curo Tomuro Curo Tomuro Curo Tomuro Follow Sep 19 '25 Investing in Bitcoin: How to Choose the Best Wallet and Set It Up on Linux # beginners # tutorial # blockchain # linux 2  reactions Comments 1  comment 2 min read Sei "Withdrawal address is invalid" on Kraken dj code dj code dj code Follow Sep 13 '25 Sei "Withdrawal address is invalid" on Kraken # help # sei # tutorial Comments Add Comment 1 min read Altcoin Daily: How To Trade Crypto: EASY/SIMPLE Trading Tips/Tricks to MAKE BIG MONEY! [COMPLETE Beginner GUIDE] Crypto YouTube Crypto YouTube Crypto YouTube Follow Aug 15 '25 Altcoin Daily: How To Trade Crypto: EASY/SIMPLE Trading Tips/Tricks to MAKE BIG MONEY! [COMPLETE Beginner GUIDE] # crypto # blockchain # beginers # tutorial Comments Add Comment 1 min read loading... trending guides/resources Lesson 24.4: Leverage Trading Operations Detailed Guide The real cost of launching a crypto project: from website to dApp VIP Programs for Beginners: Are They Really Worth It When You're Just Starting Out? 🤔 第 24.3 课:币安合约交易操作详解 Why Everyday Smart Devices (Yes — Even a Toothbrush) Matter in Web3 & DePIN 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Crypto Forem — A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Crypto Forem © 2016 - 2026. Uniting blockchain builders and thinkers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/open-source/hosting/self-host-hobby
Self-hosted [Hobby] Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Open Source / Self-hosting / Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Hobby] Our Hobby Self-hosted Deployment Interested in deploying highlight.io on your local machine or on a small remote instance? You're in the right place. Here's a walkthrough on getting this set up: Hobby Deployment Guide Getting started with our hobby deployment. Limitations We don't recommend hosting Highlight yourself if you have more than 10k monthly sessions or 50k monthly errors. The infrastructure configuration in the docker compose is not meant to scale beyond a small number of sessions, and isn't resilient to an outage or version upgrades. That being said, if the benefits of self hosting Highlight are signficant enough, you may want to consider an enterprise deployment (see our Enterprise Self Hosted Docs ). If you have any questions, don't hesitate to reach out ! Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/server/go/chi
chi Quick Start Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Server / Go / chi Quick Start chi Quick Start Learn how to set up highlight.io monitoring on your Go chi backend. 1 Configure client-side Highlight. (optional) If you're using Highlight on the frontend for your application, make sure you've initialized it correctly and followed the fullstack mapping guide . 2 Install the Highlight Go SDK. Install the highlight-go package with go get . go get -u github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go 3 Initialize the Highlight Go SDK. highlight.Start starts a goroutine for recording and sending backend traces and errors. Setting your project id lets Highlight record errors for background tasks and processes that aren't associated with a frontend session. import ( "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go" ) func main() { // ... highlight.SetProjectID("<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>") highlight.Start( highlight.WithServiceName("my-app"), highlight.WithServiceVersion("git-sha"), ) defer highlight.Stop() // ... } 4 Add the Highlight middleware. highlightChi.Middleware is a Go Chi compatible middleware. import ( highlightChi "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go/middleware/chi" ) func main() { // ... r := chi.NewRouter() r.Use(highlightChi.Middleware) // ... } 5 Record custom errors. (optional) If you want to explicitly send an error to Highlight, you can use the highlight.RecordError method. highlight.RecordError(ctx, err, attribute.String("key", "value")) 6 Verify your errors are being recorded. Make a call to highlight.RecordError to see the resulting error in Highlight. func TestErrorHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { highlight.RecordError(r.Context(), errors.New("a test error is being thrown!")) } 7 Verify your backend logs are being recorded. Visit the highlight logs portal and check that backend logs are coming in. 8 Verify your backend traces are being recorded. Visit the highlight traces portal and check that backend traces are coming in. Highlight Integration in Go Echo Quick Start [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/highcenburg/common-data-structures-1fh
4 Common Data Structures - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Vicente G. Reyes Posted on Jul 29, 2019 • Edited on Dec 13, 2019 • Originally published at highcenburg.herokuapp.com           4 Common Data Structures # python # datastructures # beginners Originally posted on my blog 1.) Arrays A collection of elements identified by an index or a key example: ex_arr = [1, 'string', 3, 'four'] print(ex_arr[3]) answer: four 2.) Linked Lists A collection of data elements, called nodes that contain a reference to the next node in the list and holds whatever data the application needs examples: the node class class Node(object): def __init__(self, val): self.val = val self.next = None def get_data(self): return self.val def set_data(self, val): self.val = val def get_next(self): return self.next def set_next(self, next): self.next = next the linkedList class class LinkedList(object): def __init__(self, head=None): self.head = head self.count = 0 def get_count(self): return self.count def insert(self, data): new_node = Node(data) new_node.set_next(self.head) self.head = new_node self.count += 1 def find(self, val): item = self.head while (item != None): if item.get_data() == val: return item else: item = item.get_next() return None def deleteAt(self, idx): if idx > self.count: return if self.head == None: return else: tempIdx = 0 node = self.head while tempIdx < idx-1: node = node.get_next() tempIdx += 1 node.set_next(node.get_next().get_next()) self.count -= 1 def dump_list(self): tempnode = self.head while (tempnode != None): print("Node: ", tempnode.get_data()) tempnode = tempnode.get_next() create a linked list and insert some items itemlist = LinkedList() itemlist.insert(38) itemlist.insert(49) itemlist.insert(13) itemlist.insert(15) itemlist.dump_list() exercise the list print("Item count: ", itemlist.get_count()) print("Finding item: ", itemlist.find(13)) print("Finding item: ", itemlist.find(78)) delete an item itemlist.deleteAt(3) print("Item count: ", itemlist.get_count()) print("Finding item: ", itemlist.find(38)) itemlist.dump_list() answer: Node: 15 Node: 13 Node: 49 Node: 38 Item count: 4 Finding item: <__main__.Node object at 0x106568990> Finding item: None Item count: 3 Finding item: None Node: 15 Node: 13 Node: 49 3.) Stacks and Queues Stacks is a collection of operations that supports push and pop operations. The last item pushed is the first one popped. example: create a new empty stack stack = [] push items onto the stack stack.append(1) stack.append(2) stack.append(3) stack.append(4) print the stack contents print(stack) pop an item off the stack x = stack.pop() print(x) print(stack) answer: [1, 2, 3, 4] 4 [1, 2, 3] A Stack is a collection of operations that supports push and pop operations. The last item pushed is the first one popped. example: from collections import deque create a new empty deque object that will function as a queue queue = deque() add some items to the queue queue.append(1) queue.append(2) queue.append(3) queue.append(4) print the queue contents print(queue) pop an item off the front of the queue x = queue.popleft() print(x) print(queue) answer: deque([1, 2, 3, 4]) 1 deque([2, 3, 4]) 4.) Hash Tables (Dictionary) A data structure that maps keys to its associated values Benefits: Key-to-value maps are unique Hash tables are very fast For small datasets, arrays are usually more efficient Hash tables don't order entries in a predictable way example: create a hashtable all at once items1 = dict( { "key1": 1, "key2": 2, "key3": "three" } ) print(items1) create a hashtable progressively items2 = {} items2["key1"] = 1 items2["key2"] = 2 items2["key3"] = 3 print(items2) replace an item items2["key2"] = "two" print(items2) iterate the keys and values in the dictionary for key, value in items2.items(): print("key: ", key, " value: ", value) Answer: {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 'three'} {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3} {'key1': 1, 'key2': 'two', 'key3': 3} key: key1 value: 1 key: key2 value: two key: key3 value: 3 Real World Examples: Filter out duplicate items define a set of items that we want to reduce duplicates items = ["apple", "pear", "orange", "banana", "apple", "orange", "apple", "pear", "banana", "orange", "apple", "kiwi", "pear", "apple", "orange"] create a hashtable to perform a filter filter = dict() loop over each item and add to the hashtable for item in items: filter[item] = 0 create a set from the resulting keys in the hashtable result = set(filter.keys()) print(result) output: { 'kiwi', 'apple', 'pear', 'orange', 'banana' } Find a maximum value declare a list of values to operate on items = [6, 20, 8, 19, 56, 23, 87, 41, 49, 53] def find_max(items): # breaking condition: last item in list? return it if len(items) == 1: return items[0] # otherwise get the first item and call function # again to operate on the rest of the list op1 = items[0] print(op1) op2 = find_max(items[1:]) print(op2) # perform the comparison when we're down to just two if op1 > op2: return op1 else: return op2 test the function print(find_max(items)) output: 6 20 8 19 56 23 87 41 49 53 53 53 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 Counting Items define a set of items that we want to count items = ["apple", "pear", "orange", "banana", "apple", "orange", "apple", "pear", "banana", "orange", "apple", "kiwi", "pear", "apple", "orange"] create a hashtable object to hold the items and counts counter = dict() iterate over each item and increment the count for each one for item in items: if item in counter.keys(): counter[item] += 1 else: counter[item] = 1 print the results print(counter) output: {'apple': 5, 'pear': 3, 'orange': 4, 'banana': 2, 'kiwi': 1} Top comments (4) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Aurelia Naiyoma Aurelia Naiyoma Aurelia Naiyoma Follow Location Nairobi Education Bachelors of Business Information Technology Work Backend Developer Joined Jun 21, 2019 • Jul 30 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks your article was very insightful Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Rodrigo Suárez Rodrigo Suárez Rodrigo Suárez Follow Hi!👋 I'm a Software Engineer working as a full stack developer with Python 🐍 and Javascript ⚛️ I create IoT stuff too 🌱 Location Uruguay Education Software Engineer Work Full Stack Developer Joined Jul 3, 2019 • Jul 30 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Very useful article. Is very practical to review concepts and get the mind fresh instead of just use one of these data structures. Thanks for sharing. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Some comments may only be visible to logged-in visitors. Sign in to view all comments. Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Vicente G. Reyes Follow Web Developer | Technical Writer | OSS Contributor | Musician | Gamer | Cyclist Location Mars Education Bachelors of Science in Computer Science Pronouns He/Him Joined Jan 6, 2019 More from Vicente G. Reyes Problem 9: Most Frequent Element # python # beginners # learning An array is a row of boxes. Each box holds a value. Each box has a number. # algorithms # beginners # tutorial Problem 8: Count Vowels # python # beginners # learning 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/systemdesign/page/6#main-content
Systemdesign Page 6 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close # systemdesign Follow Hide Create Post Older #systemdesign posts 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner Shamim Ali Shamim Ali Shamim Ali Follow Jan 7 System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner # architecture # startup # systemdesign # webdev Comments Add Comment 2 min read Solving Latency and Pagination in Image and Keyword Based Property Search Suraj Sharma Suraj Sharma Suraj Sharma Follow Dec 26 '25 Solving Latency and Pagination in Image and Keyword Based Property Search # systemdesign # machinelearning # postgres # performance 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Legal State Governance Marcelo Filho Marcelo Filho Marcelo Filho Follow Dec 25 '25 Legal State Governance # architecture # softwaredevelopment # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 28 min read How We Prevent Ads from Interrupting Critical User Workflows Pradeep Kumar Pradeep Kumar Pradeep Kumar Follow Dec 22 '25 How We Prevent Ads from Interrupting Critical User Workflows # mobile # architecture # performance # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 2 min read How VS Code Understands Your Code: Inside the Language Server Protocol Martin Wachira Martin Wachira Martin Wachira Follow Dec 28 '25 How VS Code Understands Your Code: Inside the Language Server Protocol # lsps # devtools # systemdesign # programming 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 9 min read Microservices Communication Patterns: When to Use REST, gRPC, or Message Queues Abdullahi Yusuf Abdullahi Yusuf Abdullahi Yusuf Follow Dec 22 '25 Microservices Communication Patterns: When to Use REST, gRPC, or Message Queues # microservices # systemdesign # distributedsystems # rest Comments Add Comment 9 min read A Self-Healing System That Stays Alive When Everything Fails — Pure Python, No Dependencies System Researcher System Researcher System Researcher Follow Dec 22 '25 A Self-Healing System That Stays Alive When Everything Fails — Pure Python, No Dependencies # resilience # selfhealing # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 1 min read Building a Scalable Rate Limiting System: Token Bucket vs Leaky Bucket Abdullahi Yusuf Abdullahi Yusuf Abdullahi Yusuf Follow Dec 22 '25 Building a Scalable Rate Limiting System: Token Bucket vs Leaky Bucket # systemdesign # ratelimiting # programming # distributedsystems Comments Add Comment 6 min read Understanding Coupling: Afferent vs Efferent Dependencies in System Design Mohamed Azmy Mohamed Azmy Mohamed Azmy Follow Jan 5 Understanding Coupling: Afferent vs Efferent Dependencies in System Design # webdev # backenddevelopment # systemdesign # architecture Comments Add Comment 3 min read Understanding Coupling: Afferent vs Efferent Dependencies in System Design Mohamed Azmy Mohamed Azmy Mohamed Azmy Follow Jan 5 Understanding Coupling: Afferent vs Efferent Dependencies in System Design # webdev # backenddevelopment # systemdesign # architecture Comments Add Comment 3 min read Lessons from Building Business-Critical Software Without Offline Mode BillBoox BillBoox BillBoox Follow Dec 25 '25 Lessons from Building Business-Critical Software Without Offline Mode # architecture # learning # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 4 min read Kubernetes Journey Part 1: Why Docker? Samarth Gambhir Samarth Gambhir Samarth Gambhir Follow Dec 22 '25 Kubernetes Journey Part 1: Why Docker? # docker # kubernetes # architecture # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why static diagrams fail: simulating an e-commerce checkout flow in Robust Design Joshua Joshua Joshua Follow Dec 23 '25 Why static diagrams fail: simulating an e-commerce checkout flow in Robust Design # systemdesign # react # webdev # programming Comments Add Comment 2 min read Real-World System Design: Authentication, RBAC, and Multi-Tenant Architecture (Part 1) Shailesh Singh Shailesh Singh Shailesh Singh Follow Dec 22 '25 Real-World System Design: Authentication, RBAC, and Multi-Tenant Architecture (Part 1) # systemdesign # authentication Comments Add Comment 3 min read Securing High-Risk Zones: An Integrated RFID and Autonomous Drone Surveillance System Ashreya Bhutani Ashreya Bhutani Ashreya Bhutani Follow Dec 22 '25 Securing High-Risk Zones: An Integrated RFID and Autonomous Drone Surveillance System # systemdesign # robotics # iot # security Comments Add Comment 4 min read Building a High-Performance Real-Time Camera Capture System in C++ Jyoti Prajapati Jyoti Prajapati Jyoti Prajapati Follow Dec 22 '25 Building a High-Performance Real-Time Camera Capture System in C++ # cpp # programming # performance # systemdesign Comments Add Comment 5 min read Cars Don’t Fail Suddenly-Software Taught Me That VechtronAI VechtronAI VechtronAI Follow Dec 22 '25 Cars Don’t Fail Suddenly-Software Taught Me That # ai # systemdesign # iot # automotive 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read The Silent Security Crisis: Why Your AI Systems Need Rejection Logging (And Most Don't Have It) John R. Black III John R. Black III John R. Black III Follow Dec 23 '25 The Silent Security Crisis: Why Your AI Systems Need Rejection Logging (And Most Don't Have It) # cybersecurity # ai # systemdesign # zerotrust Comments Add Comment 4 min read Google SRE NALSD Round — A Real Interview Walkthrough Ace Interviews Ace Interviews Ace Interviews Follow Dec 22 '25 Google SRE NALSD Round — A Real Interview Walkthrough # sre # google # systemdesign # career Comments Add Comment 7 min read Fanout at Scale: Push vs. Pull Strategies in Distributed Systems Muhammad Ahsan Farooq Muhammad Ahsan Farooq Muhammad Ahsan Farooq Follow Dec 21 '25 Fanout at Scale: Push vs. Pull Strategies in Distributed Systems # programming # systemdesign # javascript # distributedsystems Comments Add Comment 4 min read System Design Interview: Autocomplete / Type-ahead System (Final Part) ZeeshanAli-0704 ZeeshanAli-0704 ZeeshanAli-0704 Follow Dec 21 '25 System Design Interview: Autocomplete / Type-ahead System (Final Part) # systemdesign # algorithms # architecture # systemdesignwithzeeshanali Comments Add Comment 5 min read Autocomplete / Type-ahead System for a Search Box - Part 2 ZeeshanAli-0704 ZeeshanAli-0704 ZeeshanAli-0704 Follow Dec 21 '25 Autocomplete / Type-ahead System for a Search Box - Part 2 # systemdesign # algorithms # interview # architecture Comments Add Comment 5 min read How We Designed Abuse Prevention Without User Accounts in an Anonymous Chat App VibeTalk VibeTalk VibeTalk Follow Jan 2 How We Designed Abuse Prevention Without User Accounts in an Anonymous Chat App # privacy # security # systemdesign 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Your Restaurant Is a Distributed System With an Unbounded Queue rohit rajak rohit rajak rohit rajak Follow Dec 20 '25 Your Restaurant Is a Distributed System With an Unbounded Queue # operations # business # systemdesign # queueingtheory 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read I Intentionally Built a Bad Decision System (So You Don’t Have To) Ertugrul Ertugrul Ertugrul Follow Dec 19 '25 I Intentionally Built a Bad Decision System (So You Don’t Have To) # systemdesign # architecture # ai # machinelearning Comments Add Comment 5 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://opensource.org/affiliates/about
Become an OSI Affiliate – Open Source Initiative Skip to content Get involved About Licenses Open Source Definition Open Source AI Programs Blog Get involved About Licenses Open Source Definition Open Source AI Programs Blog Open Main Menu Home Affiliate Organizations Become an OSI Affiliate Become an OSI Affiliate Page created on May 22, 2012 | Last modified on April 19, 2024 What is an OSI Affiliate organization? The OSI Affiliates are organizations committed to public support for open source software and the role OSI plays therein. The current Affiliate membership is a whos-who of the world of open source software. How does my organization become an OSI Affiliate? Thanks for asking! Please review the Affiliate Agreement : if your organization meets the requirements , simply send us an email introducing your organization, and why you’re interested in joining the OSI via our contact form . We will follow up with more information on how to submit your signed application and how we can verify your organization is eligible. If you have any questions, please feel free to get in touch . Why Affiliates? The OSI has transitioned from its original governance model of volunteer and self-appointed directors to one driven by our membership. Our high-level objectives in doing so are to provide a broad meeting place communities of all kinds which depend upon and implement the mission of OSI, with the continuing aim of stewarding the license list and the Open Source Definition safely beyond undue influence by special interests, and in the longer term, of creating serendipity among communities so software freedom flows and grows. Who can join? OSI Affiliates include government-recognized non-profit charitable and not-for-profit industry associations, academic institutions (K12 & higher education) and user groups and communities, anywhere in the world. Why should we join? The OSI has reached a significant milestone in its history. As well as the benefit of associating your organization with OSI, your affiliation allows your organization to participate in the process of defining the future means by which OSI achieves its mission, both by joining in discussions about proposed changes and policies and by guiding the selection of members of its Board of Directors. What is the commitment? As an OSI Affiliate, your organization’s commitment would be: To express public support for open source and for the OSI To appoint a delegate to act on behalf of their group in OSI business and give direction to that delegate. While delegates will be welcome to also participate in working groups, we anticipate this delegated role involving a minimal time commitment by default. To make annual contributions towards the running of OSI where possible. How can Affiliates become more involved with OSI? In addition to its long-standing role as the standard-bearer for OSI Approved licenses, the OSI has established roles in education and open source advocacy. Replicating the success of the volunteer groups which have evaluated proposed open source licenses over the years, each new activity is supported by a volunteer group. A growing role for OSI as a coordination point for education and a meeting point for advocates for open source principles also represents opportunities for greater and more diverse participation in OSI-related activities. What about me? I don’t represent any of these organizations. A program for individual open source advocates has been established.  Please see our members page for more information. I need more information before we can make a decision. OK, that’s reasonable. Please contact us so we can help you. How does my organization sign up? Thanks for asking! 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/a-message-from-fsf-president-ian-kelling
A message from FSF president Ian Kelling — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Blogs › Community › A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Info A message from FSF president Ian Kelling by Ian Kelling Contributions — Published on Dec 30, 2025 04:53 PM As 2025, the FSF's fortieth anniversary year, draws to a close, Ian Kelling, president of the Free Software Foundation, offers his reflections on why you should become an FSF associate member. Becoming an associate member reflects a commitment to supporting free software projects, licenses, and advocacy that helps the FSF's staff and volunteers focus on the big picture and work toward software freedom for all. Join today. I have closely followed and been involved with the free software movement for twenty years now. I'm honored to be the new FSF president. I wouldn't be here if it weren't for the presidents before me, and I would like to especially thank Geoff and RMS for the work that they did in this role, as well as all the people who have supported the FSF and the free software movement over the years. The FSF turned forty this year and it was a big year for the organization. All this time, we have been working for the software freedom of all users, everywhere. We held a one day in-person event with a range of sessions including a panel of FSF board members and a panel of digital rights activists discussing topics like organizing tactics, privacy, and surveillance. We also launched Librephone , a highly technical project to directly advance freedom on phones by reverse-engineering key nonfree firmware. And we helped with the organization and promotion of thirty-plus events worldwide through our LibreLocal effort, and much more. There is an article from 2013 outlining the different elements of why you should care about free software, called " Free software is even more important now. " It makes a compelling case for freedom, opposing the unjust power inherent in proprietary software and Service as a Software Substitute (SaaSS). Today, twelve years later, I believe free software is even more important now than ever, so the title is also thought-provoking. I hear it asking: how can we sustain our commitment, grow our movement, and eventually turn the tide so that "free software isn't more important every day," so that it is no longer something we need to remind people of, but a core part of daily life? I don't have the whole answer, but I do know one important part: we, the FSF, won't stop. We will keep fighting until freedom wins. And we will never stop trying to convince more people to take up the cause. But we need your support in order to have more effect, so please join the Free Software Foundation ! There is a sentence RMS wrote in the original GNU announcement that brings me inspiration: "I consider that the golden rule requires that if I like a program I must share it with other people who like it." At that point, the idea of free software still hadn't been fully articulated or realized. It reminds me that people can figure out the basic injustices of proprietary software just by simply valuing moral principles like this golden rule. You may have seen the good news that we received two large donations totaling $900,000 this year . We are grateful for these recent major contributions, but we are immensely grateful for all the support we have received throughout the years, including during this fundraiser. The large donations will likely make it possible for us to hire a new staff person to help us support the infrastructure for GNU and FSF, especially in this time of ongoing DDOS attacks. And they will replenish our financial reserves which help us keep operating in harder times. But this is only a fraction of our expenses, and there is so much more to do! We are ready to do a lot of additional work to advance and support the free software movement, if we receive more funds. We are now only USD $52,000 away from achieving our USD $400,000 goal . By becoming an FSF associate member, you help us reach our fundraising goal, and you become part of a symbolic group of thousands of people standing behind the FSF, lending weight to our messages and helping us pave our way to software freedom. We sincerely thank everyone who gives to the FSF, and large donations make a difference, yes. But in the long run, most of our income comes from individual gifts of less than $200 a year. To carry on with this work, we need your support. Please join us today. Yours in freedom, Ian Kelling President P.S. Please also consider adding the FSF to your estate plan. You can find more information on this and other way to donate on our ways to donate page. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: featured 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! FSF community blog Licensing Compliance Lab blog Associate Membership blog System Administrator's blog Free Software Directory blog GNU Press blog Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/freejs?mtm_campaign=fsfhome
The Free JavaScript campaign — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Campaigns › The Free JavaScript campaign Info The Free JavaScript campaign by Zak Rogoff Contributions — Published on Aug 14, 2013 12:35 PM Read this article in Spanish . When looking to ensure that our computers are running free software, we usually turn our attention to the operating system and programs we install. Increasingly, we also need to look at the Web sites we visit. Simply visiting many sites loads software onto your computer, primarily JavaScript, that carry proprietary licenses. If we want to be able to browse the Web without running nonfree software, we need to work together to call for change. The Free JavaScript campaign persuades companies, governments, and NGOs to make their Web sites work without requiring that users run any proprietary software. We pick one site at a time and focus energy on it, working as a team to send many polite but firm messages to the site maintainers. The JavaScript programs in question create menus, buttons, text editors, music players, and many other features of Web sites, so browsers generally come configured to download and run them without ever making users aware of it. Contrary to popular perception, almost no JavaScript runs "on the Web site" -- even though these JavaScript programs are hidden from view, they are still nonfree code being executed on your computer, and they can abuse your trust. Join us in calling for a Web that respects our freedom by being compatible with free software. Use the action box on the right to contact the organization we're currently focusing on and ask them to make their site work without nonfree JavaScript. We're currently working on a proud badge for Web sites that work without nonfree JavaScript. The ability to display this badge will be an incentive for sites to make the transition we request of them, and sites that already respect users' freedom will use it to distinguish themselves and to welcome free software users. To receive updates and hear about the next site we'll focus on, please join the campaign's low-volume mailing list . You're also welcome to explore the campaign's area on the LibrePlanet community wiki, where you can help build the list of future sites to focus on. If you are an experienced JavaScript developer that's interested in helping with the campaign, we welcome you to submit a request to join our JavaScript Developers Task Force list. Please make sure to follow the instructions on the list info page. Examples of proprietary JavaScript abuses JavaScript can identify you by the way you type More on fingerprinting Capturing user input before submitting a form Resources GNU LibreJS , a browser extension to identify nonfree JavaScript JShelter , a browser extension meant to combat threats arising from nonfree JavaScript Setting your JavaScript Free , a step-by-step guide "JavaScript: If you love it, set it free," a video presentation about the need for free JavaScript and how to put it into practice with Web Labels, by FSF executive director John Sullivan The JavaScript Trap by Richard Stallman Blog post announcing the launch of the campaign. News and Blogs FSF JavaScript guidelines picked up by Posteo Webmail Sites focused on previously Greenpeace , a global environmental organization. Your messages to Greenpeace paid off! They sent the FSF a friendly response and are now looking in to making their Web site work without nonfree JavaScript. Regulations.gov , a Web site that American citizens can use to give feedback to their government about proposed regulatory changes. This campaign was launched with the help of FSF campaigns interns Saurabh Nair and Sankha Narayan Guria . More information about the FSF's internship program is available at https://www.fsf.org/volunteer/internships . Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! Free software campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Past campaigns Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/request-proxying
Request Proxying Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Request Proxying Request Proxying Request Proxying With tools that run from your browser, you run the risk of having requests blocked by ad blockers and chrome extensions. highlight.io supports proxying requests through your own domain. Rage Clicks Session Search Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/open-source/contributing/adding-an-sdk
Adding an SDK Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Open Source / Contributing / Adding an SDK Adding an SDK The highlight.io SDKs are powered by OpenTelemetry under the hood, and therefore report data to our deployed OpenTelemetry collector . For a better understanding of the architecture, take a look at the architecture page for a diagram of how data is sent to the collector and the public graph. In our SDKs, we instantiate the following constructs to exports data over OTLP HTTPS to https://otel.highlight.io:4318/v1/traces and https://otel.highlight.io:4318/v1/logs respectively. TracerProvider - sets the global otel sdk configuration for traces BatchSpanProcessor - batches traces so they are exported in sets OTLPSpanExporter - exports traces to our collector over OTLP HTTPS LoggerProvider - sets the global otel sdk configuration for logs BatchLogRecordProcessor - batches logs so they are exported in sets OTLPLogExporter - exports logs to our collector over OTLP HTTPS The SDK provides common methods for recording exceptions or logging, but this may depend on the language. For example, in Go, a logger hook API is provided to be configured by the application, but in Python, we automatically ingest a hook into the built in logging package. Configuring OpenTelemetry attributes Highlight follows OpenTelemetry semantic conventions to record data in Highlight with metadata you expect. However, there are a few key attributes that highlight treats distinctly. Setting the Highlight Project ID To have your OpenTelemetry data land in your Highlight project, you must provide the Highlight project identifier with the data. This can be done via an exporter HTTP header, resource attributes, or data attributes (on the individual span / log / metric records). x-highlight-project - use this HTTP header for OpenTelemetry exporter configuration highlight.project_id - use this Attribute key for Resource or Record attributes Example Node.js OpenTelemetry configuration import { NodeSDK } from '@opentelemetry/sdk-node' import { OTLPTraceExporter } from '@opentelemetry/exporter-trace-otlp-http'; import { Resource } from '@opentelemetry/resources' import type { Attributes } from '@opentelemetry/api' const attributes: Attributes = { // Provide the highlight project ID as a resource attribute or via the exporter headers // 'highlight.project_id': '<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>', 'service.name': 'my-service' } const sdk = new NodeSDK({ resource: new Resource(attributes), traceExporter: new OTLPTraceExporter({ // NB: this is the url for trace exports. if you are using a language which supports // the opentelemetry logs format, use 'https://otel.highlight.io:4318/v1/logs' url: 'https://otel.highlight.io:4318/v1/traces', // In some OpenTelemetry implementations, it's easier to provide // the project ID as a header rather than a resource attribute. headers: { 'x-highlight-project': '<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>' } }) }); const tracer = trace.getTracer('my-tracer'); sdk.start(); const log = (level: string, message: string) => { const span = tracer.startSpan('main') span.setAttributes({ ['highlight.session_id']: 'abc123', ['highlight.trace_id']: 'def456', customer: 'vadim', customer_id: 1234 }) span.addEvent('log', { ['log.severity']: level, ['log.message']: message }, new Date()) span.addEvent('metric', { ['metric.name']: 'my-web-vital', ['metric.value']: 12.34 }, new Date()) span.end() }; log('info', 'hello, world!') See the OpenTelemetry getting started guide as well for more details. Recording an Error Data we send over the OpenTelemetry specification is as a Trace with attributes set per the semantic conventions . When we create a Trace, we set three additional SpanAttributes to carry the Highlight context: highlight.project_id - Highlight Project ID provided to the SDK highlight.session_id - Session ID provided as part of the X-Highlight-Request header on the network request highlight.trace_id - Request ID provided as part of the X-Highlight-Request header on the network request Reporting an Error as an OTEL Trace An exception is represented in OpenTelemetry as a Trace Event, per the semantic convention for exceptions . Many OpenTelemetry SDK implementations offer a span.record_exception(exc) method that automatically populates the semantic convention attributes with the correct values. # create a trace for the current invocation with self.tracer.start_as_current_span("my-span-name") as span: span.set_attributes({"highlight.project_id": _project_id}) span.set_attributes({"highlight.session_id": session_id}) span.set_attributes({"highlight.trace_id": request_id}) try: # contextmanager yields execution to the code using the contextmanager yield except Exception as e: # if an exception is raised, record it on the current span span.record_exception(e) raise Reporting a Log as an OTEL Trace If a language's OpenTelemetry SDK does not support sending logs natively, we choose to send the message data as a Trace Event . Event name - log log.severity event attribute - the log severity level string log.message event attribute - the log message payload. To associate the highlight context with a log, we use the LogRecord Attributes with the following convention: highlight.project_id - Highlight Project ID provided to the SDK highlight.session_id - Session ID provided as part of the X-Highlight-Request header on the network request highlight.trace_id - Request ID provided as part of the X-Highlight-Request header on the network request package main import "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go" func RecordLog(log string) { span, _ := highlight.StartTrace(context.TODO(), "highlight-go/logrus") defer highlight.EndTrace(span) attrs := []attribute.KeyValue{ LogSeverityKey.String("ERROR"), LogMessageKey.String(entry.Message), } span.AddEvent(highlight.LogEvent, trace.WithAttributes(attrs...)) } Recording a Log If an SDK supports the experimental logs ingest endpoint (v1/logs), prefer using that. Otherwise, see above for reporting the log as a trace event. A LogRecord is exported with an associated trace. Specific attributes for the file logging, line number, and more are set based on the logging semantic convention keys . Here's an example of the interception of python logging calls in our Python SDK to emit an OpenTelemetry LogRecord. attributes = span.attributes.copy() attributes["code.function"] = record.funcName attributes["code.namespace"] = record.module attributes["code.filepath"] = record.pathname attributes["code.lineno"] = record.lineno r = LogRecord( timestamp=int(record.created * 1000.0 * 1000.0 * 1000.0), trace_id=ctx.trace_id, span_id=ctx.span_id, trace_flags=ctx.trace_flags, severity_text=record.levelname, severity_number=std_to_otel(record.levelno), body=record.getMessage(), resource=span.resource, attributes=attributes, ) End to End SDK Example Apps Application Architecture Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/career/page/7#main-content
Career Page 7 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Career Follow Hide This tag is for anything relating to careers! Job offers, workplace conflict, interviews, resumes, promotions, etc. Create Post submission guidelines All articles and discussions should relate to careers in some way. Pretty much everything on dev.to is about our careers in some way. Ideally, though, keep the tag related to getting, leaving, or maintaining a career or job. about #career A career is the field in which you work, while a job is a position held in that field. Related tags include #resume and #portfolio as resources to enhance your #career Older #career posts 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Stop forgetting your work: I built an AI Career Tracker (GitHub + Jira + Voice) WinLanEm WinLanEm WinLanEm Follow Jan 7 Stop forgetting your work: I built an AI Career Tracker (GitHub + Jira + Voice) # showdev # career # ai # webdev 2  reactions Comments 2  comments 2 min read Sustainable AI Benchmarks Developers Will Be Asked About In 2026 Arbisoft Arbisoft Arbisoft Follow Jan 2 Sustainable AI Benchmarks Developers Will Be Asked About In 2026 # career # performance # ai # devops Comments Add Comment 3 min read Full-Stack Development in 2026 Cyrus Tse Cyrus Tse Cyrus Tse Follow Jan 7 Full-Stack Development in 2026 # career # react # typescript # webdev 3  reactions Comments 1  comment 1 min read How to Avoid Getting Lost in the Vast Cybersecurity Certification World Emanuele Balsamo Emanuele Balsamo Emanuele Balsamo Follow for CyberPath Jan 2 How to Avoid Getting Lost in the Vast Cybersecurity Certification World # certification # career # careergrowth # cybersecuritycertifications Comments Add Comment 5 min read 2026 Web Dev Trends That Actually Matter Abhijeet Bhale Abhijeet Bhale Abhijeet Bhale Follow Jan 6 2026 Web Dev Trends That Actually Matter # webdev # javascript # career # performance 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read How to Stress-Test AI Skills Outside Tutorials James Patterson James Patterson James Patterson Follow Jan 2 How to Stress-Test AI Skills Outside Tutorials # ai # career # learning Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why Traditional DevOps Stops Scaling Sreekanth Kuruba Sreekanth Kuruba Sreekanth Kuruba Follow Jan 6 Why Traditional DevOps Stops Scaling # discuss # devops # platformengineering # career 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read I was a "10x Engineer" but a 1x Leader: Why I stopped optimizing code to save my career Anantha Subramaniam Anantha Subramaniam Anantha Subramaniam Follow Jan 4 I was a "10x Engineer" but a 1x Leader: Why I stopped optimizing code to save my career # career # leadership # softskills # management Comments 1  comment 2 min read Stealth Architecture: How to Design an Invisible Real-Time AI Interview Copilot for Chrome Mahdi Eghbali Mahdi Eghbali Mahdi Eghbali Follow Jan 1 Stealth Architecture: How to Design an Invisible Real-Time AI Interview Copilot for Chrome # interview # ai # career # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read The "Async" Stack: How I Built a $500/mo Side Income Without Shift Work Short Play Skits Short Play Skits Short Play Skits Follow Jan 1 The "Async" Stack: How I Built a $500/mo Side Income Without Shift Work # career # ai # llm # productivity Comments Add Comment 3 min read What a Software Engineer Should Learn Next Year to Become a Powerhouse Divine Ikhuoria Divine Ikhuoria Divine Ikhuoria Follow Dec 31 '25 What a Software Engineer Should Learn Next Year to Become a Powerhouse # career # softwareengineering # learning # ai Comments Add Comment 5 min read The Frontend Growth Funnel Xadinsx Xadinsx Xadinsx Follow Dec 31 '25 The Frontend Growth Funnel # career # frontend # learning Comments Add Comment 3 min read C#.NET - day 04 Sabin Sim Sabin Sim Sabin Sim Follow Jan 6 C#.NET - day 04 # csharp # programming # learning # career 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why I Trade the Terminal for a GUI: A Dev’s Take on GitKraken Von Cunningham Von Cunningham Von Cunningham Follow Dec 31 '25 Why I Trade the Terminal for a GUI: A Dev’s Take on GitKraken # git # productivity # career # softwareengineering Comments Add Comment 2 min read How to Negotiate Your Software Developer Salary in 2026 (Without Losing the Offer) Resumemind Resumemind Resumemind Follow Jan 6 How to Negotiate Your Software Developer Salary in 2026 (Without Losing the Offer) # career # softwaredevelopment # tutorial 4  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Is 'Fuck LeetCode' Justified? A Senior Engineer's Honest Take Alex Hunter Alex Hunter Alex Hunter Follow Jan 3 Is 'Fuck LeetCode' Justified? A Senior Engineer's Honest Take # leetcode # rant # interviewprep # career 4  reactions Comments Add Comment 7 min read Why Cloud and Cybersecurity Skills Will Be in High Demand by 2026 Patel Uday Patel Uday Patel Uday Follow Jan 1 Why Cloud and Cybersecurity Skills Will Be in High Demand by 2026 # cloud # cybersecurity # career # beginners 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Why Cloud and Cybersecurity Skills Will Be in High Demand by 2026 eren yeager eren yeager eren yeager Follow Jan 1 Why Cloud and Cybersecurity Skills Will Be in High Demand by 2026 # career # cloudcomputing # cybersecurity Comments Add Comment 2 min read The TL;DR Rule: How I Structure Files to Not Annoy My Team Doogal Simpson Doogal Simpson Doogal Simpson Follow Dec 31 '25 The TL;DR Rule: How I Structure Files to Not Annoy My Team # beginners # javascript # career # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read Discontinuing of Projects Valentin Knabel Valentin Knabel Valentin Knabel Follow Jan 2 Discontinuing of Projects # career # opensource # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read From Prompt Engineer to AI Partner: A Developer's Guide to AI Fluency hinlocaesar hinlocaesar hinlocaesar Follow Jan 5 From Prompt Engineer to AI Partner: A Developer's Guide to AI Fluency # ai # career # developer # productivity Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why Being a Software Developer Sucks in 2026 Del Rosario Del Rosario Del Rosario Follow Dec 31 '25 Why Being a Software Developer Sucks in 2026 # career # softwaredevelopment # ai # futureofwork Comments Add Comment 4 min read intelligent Engineering: A Skill Map for Learning AI-Assisted Development Karun Japhet Karun Japhet Karun Japhet Follow Jan 1 intelligent Engineering: A Skill Map for Learning AI-Assisted Development # ai # programming # career # productivity Comments Add Comment 13 min read The Dark Side of Startup Life in Hyderabad (My Honest Experience) Vasu Ghanta Vasu Ghanta Vasu Ghanta Follow Jan 11 The Dark Side of Startup Life in Hyderabad (My Honest Experience) # startup # career # hyderabadstartups # startuplife 3  reactions Comments 5  comments 2 min read Moving From Strategy to Design: 2025 Review and 2026 Roadmap Devin Rosario Devin Rosario Devin Rosario Follow Dec 31 '25 Moving From Strategy to Design: 2025 Review and 2026 Roadmap # design # ux # product # career 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/browser/replay-configuration/privacy
Privacy Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Browser / highlight.run SDK / Privacy Privacy Masking Elements One way to sanitize your recordings is by adding the highlight-block CSS class to elements that should be ignored. <div class="highlight-block">Super secret sauce</div> The Highlight snippet will in-turn measure the dimensions of the ignored element, and when the recording is being replayed, an empty placeholder will replace the content. Obfuscating Elements Alternatively, you can obfuscate specific HTML elements by adding the highlight-mask CSS class. The effect is the same of setting privacySetting: 'strict' (the randomized text in the photo above) but applies to the specific HTML element that you mask. <div class="highlight-mask">This is some sensitive data <button>Important Button</button></div> Ignoring Input The following CSS class only works for <input> elements. If you are interested in blocking the capture of other HTML elements, see the highlight-block class For sensitive input fields that your team would like to ignore user input for, you can add a CSS class highlight-ignore that will preserve the styling of the input element, but ignore all user input. <input class="highlight-ignore" name="social security number" /> Network Request Redaction Interested in redacting particular requests, responses, or the data within them? Highlight will redact certain headers out of the box, but provides a few ways to customize the redaction process to suit your specific needs and preferences. Take a look at our documentation on Recording Network Requests and Responses to learn more. Default Privacy Mode By default, Highlight will obfuscate all inputs and any text that matches commonly used Regex expressions of personally identifiable information. This offers a base level protection from recording info such as addresses, phone numbers, social security numbers, and more. It will not obfuscate any images or media content. It is possible that other, non PII text is obfuscated if it matches the expressions for larger number, or contact information on the site. If you want to turn this off, you can set privacySetting to none when calling H.init() . Note: This mode is only available in SDK versions 8.0.0 and later. Here are a list of the regex expressions used in default privacy mode : Email: '[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&'*+=?^_`{|}~-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?:.[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)*' SSN: '[0-9]{3}-?[0-9]{2}-?[0-9]{4}' Phone number: '[+]?[(]?[0-9]{3}[)]?[-\s.]?[0-9]{3}[-\s.]?[0-9]{4,6}' Credit card: '[0-9]{4}-?[0-9]{4}-?[0-9]{4}-?[0-9]{4}' Unformatted SSN, phone number, credit card: '[0-9]{9,16}' Address: '[0-9]{1,5}.?[0-9]{0,3}\s[a-zA-Z]{2,30}\s[a-zA-Z]{2,15}' IP address: '(?:[0-9]{1,3}.){3}[0-9]{1,3}' Overriding Obfuscation In default privacy mode, there may be some innocuous text or inputs that would be helpful to record, but are obfuscated by default. For example, user created names in inputs or your company address. These HTML tags can be overridden with the data-hl-record="true" attribute. Currently, this attribute must be used on the recorded HTML tag itself, and any decesendants of the element may still be redacted. Strict Privacy Mode If you don't want to manually annotate what elements to not record then you can set privacySetting to strict when calling H.init() . Strict Privacy Mode will obfuscate all text and images. The text obfuscation is not reversible and is done on the client. Here are some examples: <h1>Hello World</h1> will be recorded as <h1>1f0eqo jw02d</h1> <img src="https://my-secrets.com/secret.png" /> will be recorded as <img src="" /> <iframe height="500px" href="https://xenodochial-benz-c14354.netlify.app/" width="100%" border="none" src="https://xenodochial-benz-c14354.netlify.app/" style="border:none" ><a href="https://xenodochial-benz-c14354.netlify.app/" target="" title="xenodochial-benz-c14354.netlify.app" >null</a ></iframe > Persistent Asset Storage Proxying Highlight Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/tags
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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/fromaline/jsxelement-vs-reactelement-vs-reactnode-2mh2#-raw-jsxelement-endraw-vs-raw-reactelement-endraw-
JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Nick Posted on Feb 14, 2022           JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode # beginners # javascript # react # webdev React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode These three types usually confuse novice React developers. It seems like they are the same thing, just named differently. But it's not quite right. JSX.Element vs ReactElement Both types are the result of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. They are both objects with: type props key a couple of other "hidden" properties, like ref, $$typeof, etc ReactElement ReactElement type is the most basic of all. It's even defined in React source code using flow! // ./packages/shared/ReactElementType.js export type ReactElement = { | $ $typeof : any , type : any , key : any , ref : any , props : any , // ReactFiber _owner : any , // __DEV__ _store : { validated : boolean , ...}, _self : React$Element < any > , _shadowChildren : any , _source : Source , | }; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This type is also defined in DefinitelyTyped package . interface ReactElement < P = any , T extends string | JSXElementConstructor < any > = string | JSXElementConstructor < any >> { type : T ; props : P ; key : Key | null ; } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode JSX.Element It's more generic type. The key difference is that props and type are typed as any in JSX.Element . declare global { namespace JSX { interface Element extends React . ReactElement < any , any > { } // ... } } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This gives flexibility in how different libraries implement JSX. For example, Preact has its own implementation with different API . ReactNode ReactNode type is a different thing. It's not a return value of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. const Component = () => { // Here it's ReactElement return < div > Hello world! </ div > } // Here it's ReactNode const Example = Component (); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode React node itself is a representation of the virtual DOM. So ReactNode is the set of all possible return values of a component. type ReactChild = ReactElement | ReactText ; type ReactFragment = {} | Iterable < ReactNode > ; interface ReactPortal extends ReactElement { key : Key | null ; children : ReactNode ; } type ReactNode = | ReactChild | ReactFragment | ReactPortal | boolean | null | undefined ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode What to use for children ? Generally speaking, ReactNode is the correct way to type the children prop. It gives the most flexibility while maintaining the proper type checking. But it has a caveat, because ReactFragment allows a {} type. const Item = ({ children }: { children : ReactNode }) => { return < li > { children } </ li >; } const App = () => { return ( < ul > // Run-time error here, objects are not valid children! < Item > { {} } </ Item > </ ul > ); } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode P.S. Follow me on Twitter for more content like this! React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode Top comments (2) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Nick Nick Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Email grechino@protonmail.com Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 • Feb 14 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Check out React+Typescript Cheatsheets for more info. Like comment: Like comment: 5  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Follow Joined May 23, 2019 • Jul 3 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide But in React 18 intrinsic property of children won't work for FC from react. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 More from Nick 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 # ai # chatgpt # webdev # tooling My dream habit tracker # javascript # vue # pocketbase # webdev How do React Fragments work under the hood? # javascript # react # webdev # programming 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/sessions-search-deep-linking
Session Search Deep Linking Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Session Search Deep Linking Session Search Deep Linking The queries you build when searching for sessions are reflected in the URL parameters. You can share these URLs with others to deep link to search results, or even create them programatically. Syntax /sessions?query={key}={value} The logical combinations, and and or , are built into the query, separated by spaces ( %20 ): /sessions?query={key1}={value1}%20AND%20{key2}={value2} /sessions?query={key1}={value1}%20OR%20{key2}={value2} Implicitly, and is used, so the following two queries are equivalent: /sessions?query={key1}={value1}%20AND%20{key2}={value2} /sessions?query={key1}={value1}%20{key2}={value2} For the list of session properties, see our Session search docs For more information on operators and general search, see our Search docs Examples Viewing sessions for a particular user: /sessions?query=identifier=alice@example.com Excluding sessions from your organization: /sessions?query=identifier!=*@yourdomain.com* Viewing sessions for a particular page in your app: /sessions?query=visited-url=*/your/path/name* Multiple properties /sessions?query=identifier=Bob%20email!=alice@example.com Extracting the Session URL Shadow Dom + Web Components Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/canvas-iframe
Canvas & Iframe Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Canvas & Iframe Canvas & Iframe Recording canvas elements highlight.io supports recording canvas (and therefore WebGL) elements, although due to the nature of canvas , there are caveats regarding the quality/fidelity of the recording. Read more about how to get started with this in our canvas configuration docs . Below is a video demo of what the video recording looks like: Installing highlight.io in an iframe The highlight.io snippet supports recording within an iframe, but given the security limitations, there are caveats. Read more about this in our sdk configuration docs . Recording Cross-origin iframe s To support recording a cross-origin iframe that you own, we've added functionality into our recording client that allows the iframe to forward its events to the parent session. Read more about this in our sdk configuration docs . If you do not own the parent page that is embedding your iframe cross-origin but you still want to record the iframe contents, pass recordCrossOriginIframe: false to the H.init options to force the iframe to record as a standalone app. Otherwise, the iframe will wait for the parent page to start recording. Session Replay Features Dev-tool Window Recording Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/short_playskits_ab152535/i-built-a-reddit-keyword-monitoring-system-heres-what-actually-works-58b7#comments
I Built a Reddit Keyword Monitoring System. Here's What Actually Works. - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Short Play Skits Posted on Jan 10 I Built a Reddit Keyword Monitoring System. Here's What Actually Works. # automation # monitoring # showdev # startup Three months of browsing Reddit "strategically" taught me one thing: manual monitoring doesn't scale. I was finding perfect threads - people literally asking for what my product does - but always 6-8 hours too late. By then, 50+ comments. My response buried at the bottom where nobody scrolls. The Speed Problem The founders getting customers from Reddit aren't writing better comments. They're finding conversations faster. Respond within the first hour = one of 5-10 comments. The OP actually reads you. Respond 6 hours later = one of 50+ comments. Invisible. I tried checking Reddit more often. Set alarms. Browsed obsessively. Didn't work. My target audience hangs out in 15+ subreddits. Checking all of them multiple times daily is a full-time job. The Keyword Monitoring Approach Instead of browsing hoping to find relevant posts, I set up alerts for specific keywords. Two types of keywords: Solution keywords (obvious): "reddit lead generation" "reddit marketing tool" "find customers reddit" Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Problem keywords (where the real opportunity is): "spending hours on reddit" "manual reddit search" "frustrated with reddit" "there has to be a better way" Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Problem keywords convert better because fewer people monitor them. Someone describing a pain point might not even know a solution exists. Tools I've Tested Google Alerts : Free but brutal delay. Often notified days after posts go up. IFTTT/Zapier : Similar delay issues. Dedicated Reddit tools : I ended up building a desktop search tool that searches multiple subreddits simultaneously and filters by recency. Not fancy, but surfaces conversations within hours instead of days. My Current Workflow Morning (8 AM): - Run keyword searches across 15 subreddits - Filter: last 24 hours, < 50 comments - Respond to 3-4 relevant threads Afternoon (2 PM): - Quick check for new matches - Follow up on morning responses Evening (8 PM): - One more scan before EOD Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Total time: ~40 minutes spread across the day. Results Before keyword monitoring: 2-3 relevant conversations/week, usually found too late. After: 15-20 relevant conversations/week, most found within 2-4 hours. The conversion rate on early responses is dramatically higher. Key Takeaways Speed beats quality - A decent comment found early outperforms a great comment found late Monitor problems, not just solutions - Problem keywords have less competition Automate discovery, not engagement - Find conversations faster, but respond like a human Check twice daily minimum - Alerts are useless if you don't act on them quickly The founders winning on Reddit have systems that surface conversations before competition shows up. Build that system. Show up first. What tools are you using for Reddit monitoring? Curious what's working for others. Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Short Play Skits Follow Joined Dec 3, 2025 More from Short Play Skits From $47 to $1200/Month: What I Learned Starting Businesses in My Dorm # devjournal # motivation # startup I was doing Reddit marketing wrong for 6 months # webdev # marketing # sass # automation I Built a Local Reddit Scraper Instead of Paying $49/month for SaaS Tools # productivity # python # showdev # marketing 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/wmdn9116/system-architecture-for-startups-build-fast-without-painting-yourself-into-a-corner-2991#comments
System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Shamim Ali Posted on Jan 7 System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner # architecture # startup # systemdesign # webdev Startups don’t fail because their architecture isn’t “advanced enough”. They fail because their systems become too hard to change . I’ve helped build systems from early MVPs through growth stages, and the biggest architectural lesson is this: design for change first, scale second . This post is about building startup systems that move fast and survive growth. Start With a Clear, Boring Core In the early days, your system should answer one question well: What problem does this product solve? Avoid early complexity. A well-structured monolith with: Clear modules Simple data models Obvious ownership will outperform a rushed microservice setup every time. “Boring” architecture is a startup advantage. Boundaries Matter More Than Technologies Most early architecture mistakes aren’t about tools, they’re about boundaries. Good startup architecture has: Thin controllers Business logic in services Data access isolated This makes it easy to: Change requirements Replace components Add features without breaking everything Design for Change, Not Hypothetical Scale Premature optimisation slows teams down. Instead of asking “ Will this scale to a million users? ”, ask: “Can we change this easily?” “Can we delete this safely?” “Can we understand this in three months?” Systems that change easily scale naturally. Your Data Model Is Your Real Architecture You can rewrite services. You can replace frameworks. But your data model sticks around. Spend time on: Clear schemas Explicit relationships Migration strategies Bad data decisions are the hardest startup mistakes to undo. Keep Infrastructure Flexible Early startups should avoid tight coupling to infrastructure. Good principles: Your app should run locally Cloud services should be swappable Failures should degrade gracefully Infrastructure should support growth, not lock you in. Observability Early, Not Later You don’t need enterprise monitoring on day one, but you do need: Structured logs Basic metrics Clear error reporting Debugging production issues should not require guesswork. Architecture Should Help New Hires As soon as you hire your second or third engineer, architecture matters more. Good startup systems: Are easy to onboard into Have consistent patterns Make wrong usage obvious If new hires struggle, the system will slow the company down. The Startup Architecture Mindset My goal when designing startup systems is simple: Move fast without fear Keep complexity visible Make change cheap Great startup architecture isn’t about being clever, it’s about staying adaptable. Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Shamim Ali Follow If you enjoyed my article, follow me on github. https://github.com/debug-loop Location Gangni, Meherpur, Bangladesh Joined Jan 6, 2026 More from Shamim Ali “Just Add Caching” Is Usually the Wrong Answer # cache # webdev # backend # programming You Don’t Need More Tutorials, You Need Better Problems # programming # workplace # tutorial # webdev My Node.js API Best Practices in 2025 # api # architecture # node # performance 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/katyi
Alexandra Egorova - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Follow User actions Alexandra Egorova 404 bio not found Joined Joined on  Aug 9, 2023 github website More info about @katyi Badges Two Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least two years. Got it Close One Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least one year. Got it Close Post 0 posts published Comment 5 comments written Tag 0 tags followed Want to connect with Alexandra Egorova? Create an account to connect with Alexandra Egorova. You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/server/go/gin
Gin Quick Start Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Server / Go / Gin Quick Start Gin Quick Start Learn how to set up highlight.io monitoring on your Go Gin backend. 1 Configure client-side Highlight. (optional) If you're using Highlight on the frontend for your application, make sure you've initialized it correctly and followed the fullstack mapping guide . 2 Install the Highlight Go SDK. Install the highlight-go package with go get . go get -u github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go 3 Initialize the Highlight Go SDK. highlight.Start starts a goroutine for recording and sending backend traces and errors. Setting your project id lets Highlight record errors for background tasks and processes that aren't associated with a frontend session. import ( "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go" ) func main() { // ... highlight.SetProjectID("<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>") highlight.Start( highlight.WithServiceName("my-app"), highlight.WithServiceVersion("git-sha"), ) defer highlight.Stop() // ... } 4 Add the Highlight middleware. highlightGin.Middleware() provides is a Go Gin compatible middleware. import ( highlightGin "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go/middleware/gin" ) func main() { // ... r := gin.Default() r.Use(highlightGin.Middleware()) // ... } 5 Record custom errors. (optional) If you want to explicitly send an error to Highlight, you can use the highlight.RecordError method. highlight.RecordError(ctx, err, attribute.String("key", "value")) 6 Verify your errors are being recorded. Make a call to highlight.RecordError to see the resulting error in Highlight. func TestErrorHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { highlight.RecordError(r.Context(), errors.New("a test error is being thrown!")) } 7 Verify your backend logs are being recorded. Visit the highlight logs portal and check that backend logs are coming in. 8 Verify your backend traces are being recorded. Visit the highlight traces portal and check that backend traces are coming in. Fiber Quick Start GORM Tracing Quick Start [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/fromaline/jsxelement-vs-reactelement-vs-reactnode-2mh2#-raw-reactelement-endraw-
JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Nick Posted on Feb 14, 2022           JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode # beginners # javascript # react # webdev React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode These three types usually confuse novice React developers. It seems like they are the same thing, just named differently. But it's not quite right. JSX.Element vs ReactElement Both types are the result of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. They are both objects with: type props key a couple of other "hidden" properties, like ref, $$typeof, etc ReactElement ReactElement type is the most basic of all. It's even defined in React source code using flow! // ./packages/shared/ReactElementType.js export type ReactElement = { | $ $typeof : any , type : any , key : any , ref : any , props : any , // ReactFiber _owner : any , // __DEV__ _store : { validated : boolean , ...}, _self : React$Element < any > , _shadowChildren : any , _source : Source , | }; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This type is also defined in DefinitelyTyped package . interface ReactElement < P = any , T extends string | JSXElementConstructor < any > = string | JSXElementConstructor < any >> { type : T ; props : P ; key : Key | null ; } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode JSX.Element It's more generic type. The key difference is that props and type are typed as any in JSX.Element . declare global { namespace JSX { interface Element extends React . ReactElement < any , any > { } // ... } } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This gives flexibility in how different libraries implement JSX. For example, Preact has its own implementation with different API . ReactNode ReactNode type is a different thing. It's not a return value of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. const Component = () => { // Here it's ReactElement return < div > Hello world! </ div > } // Here it's ReactNode const Example = Component (); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode React node itself is a representation of the virtual DOM. So ReactNode is the set of all possible return values of a component. type ReactChild = ReactElement | ReactText ; type ReactFragment = {} | Iterable < ReactNode > ; interface ReactPortal extends ReactElement { key : Key | null ; children : ReactNode ; } type ReactNode = | ReactChild | ReactFragment | ReactPortal | boolean | null | undefined ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode What to use for children ? Generally speaking, ReactNode is the correct way to type the children prop. It gives the most flexibility while maintaining the proper type checking. But it has a caveat, because ReactFragment allows a {} type. const Item = ({ children }: { children : ReactNode }) => { return < li > { children } </ li >; } const App = () => { return ( < ul > // Run-time error here, objects are not valid children! < Item > { {} } </ Item > </ ul > ); } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode P.S. Follow me on Twitter for more content like this! React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode Top comments (2) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Nick Nick Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Email grechino@protonmail.com Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 • Feb 14 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Check out React+Typescript Cheatsheets for more info. Like comment: Like comment: 5  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Follow Joined May 23, 2019 • Jul 3 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide But in React 18 intrinsic property of children won't work for FC from react. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 More from Nick 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 # ai # chatgpt # webdev # tooling My dream habit tracker # javascript # vue # pocketbase # webdev How do React Fragments work under the hood? # javascript # react # webdev # programming 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/masteringjs/using-then-vs-async-await-in-javascript-2pma#comment-2jj3l
Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Mastering JS Posted on Aug 25, 2021           Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie When making async requests, you can either use then() or async/await . Async/await and then() are very similar. The difference is that in an async function , JavaScript will pause the function execution until the promise settles. With then() , the rest of the function will continue to execute but JavaScript won't execute the .then() callback until the promise settles. async function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = await fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ); console . log ( ' I will print second ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' I will print first ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you use promise chaining with then() , you need to put any logic you want to execute after the request in the promise chain . Any code that you put after fetch() will execute immediately, before the fetch() is done. function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ). then (( res ) => { console . log ( ' This is inside the then() block ' ); }); console . log ( ' This is after the fetch statement where we are now executing other code that is not async ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' this is after the entire function ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode We recommend using async/await where possible, and minimize promise chaining. Async/await makes JavaScript code more accessible to developers that aren't as familiar with JavaScript, and much easier to read. Top comments (3) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Follow Full Stack Web Developer Location Batam, Indonesia Education Associate Degree in Physics Engineering (Applied Physics) Work Full Stack Web Developer Joined Apr 26, 2019 • Aug 9 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide In my 1st experience, with minimal knowledge and skill (lack of the knowledge of async-await), I relied upon fetch API to do request to server. I tried to work around the problem I encountered with my own solution, although I thought it was not the right one. I wished I knew async-await then : I could have had better solution instead of using merely promises chaining. That being said, I think both approaches have their own best fit depending on the situation. Like comment: Like comment: 7  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Follow Software Engineer Joined Nov 17, 2024 • Nov 17 '24 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Note that async wait requires the encapsulating/calling function to be async - that is not always possible, e.g., for top-level function before ES2020 or when some callback function interface dictates non-async function. In such cases, the only way to provide code that invokes and processes a result of an async (promise) result is using the .then directive. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Follow Joined Aug 9, 2023 • Nov 10 '23 • Edited on Nov 10 • Edited Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is the best explanation! I read 10 articles before but only your explanation is more clear, thanks a lot!!! Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Mastering JS Follow Free resources for learning pragmatic, effective web development Joined Jun 23, 2021 More from Mastering JS 3 Neat toString() Tricks in JavaScript # javascript 3 Neat Tricks For Sorting Arrays of Objects in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie 3 Neat Features of JavaScript's Much-Maligned Date Class # javascript # codenewbie 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/lexiebkm
Alexander B.K. - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Follow User actions Alexander B.K. Full Stack Web Developer Location Batam, Indonesia Joined Joined on  Apr 26, 2019 github website Education Associate Degree in Physics Engineering (Applied Physics) Work Full Stack Web Developer Six Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least six years. Got it Close Five Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least five years. Got it Close Four Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least four years. Got it Close 8 Week Community Wellness Streak Consistency pays off! Be an active part of our community by posting at least 2 comments per week for 8 straight weeks. Earn the 16 Week Badge next. Got it Close 4 Week Community Wellness Streak Keep contributing to discussions by posting at least 2 comments per week for 4 straight weeks. Unlock the 8 Week Badge next. Got it Close 2 Week Community Wellness Streak Keep the community conversation going! Post at least 2 comments for 2 straight weeks and unlock the 4 Week Badge. Got it Close 1 Week Community Wellness Streak For actively engaging with the community by posting at least 2 comments in a single week. Got it Close Three Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least three years. Got it Close Two Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least two years. Got it Close One Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least one year. Got it Close More info about @lexiebkm Skills/Languages - VB6, SQL Server, Crystal Reports, FoxPro 2.6 for DOS - Javascript (ES6), React (without Redux) - PHP, Laravel - MySQL Currently learning - Redux, Redux Toolkit, RTK Query - Node.Js, Express - Java - Go aka Golang - C# - PHP, Laravel more detail - REST API Post 0 posts published Comment 300 comments written Tag 0 tags followed Want to connect with Alexander B.K.? Create an account to connect with Alexander B.K.. You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/licensing?pk_campaign=fsfhome
FSF Licensing & Compliance Team — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Licensing Info FSF Licensing & Compliance Team by Free Software Foundation Contributions — Published on Feb 10, 2005 04:06 PM For over 20 years the FSF Licensing & Compliance Team has been the preeminent resource of free licensing for free software developers. Read this page in Spanish . Education & Support We have a number of online resources as well as community-based and paid support. See our licensing recommendations, analysis, and FAQ : Guide to choosing a license for your own work Comprehensive FAQ about the GNU Licenses List of other licenses and whether they are free, copyleft, or compatible with the GPL . A Quick Guide to GPLv3 Join us at one of our regular seminars on free software licensing & GPL compliance , or view educational resources from past events. Check out the FSF events page to know when members of the compliance team are speaking at other conferences or events. I must say that the vast majority of my questions have been answered by the thorough FAQs included around the FSF Web site. I needed them, for example, when I helped someone correctly GPL their software in under 10 minutes in time for a competition deadline! Thank you for all the resources you already provide. Keep up to date with the latest licensing issues by visiting our Licensing and Compliance blog , or subscribe to the Licensing and Compliance Blog RSS feed . You can also subscribe to a mailing list which only announces updates related to FSF licensing materials . Have a question that you couldn’t find the answer to? For general free software licensing questions please email licensing@fsf.org . And of course, we would love any feedback you can provide -- good or bad! Our team of licensing volunteers are committed to answering questions and providing quality educational resources to the free software community. If your question is about developing proprietary software, then receiving an answer is contingent on payment of a fee. Copyright & Compliance The Free Software Foundation holds the copyright to many GNU packages, such as GCC and GNU Emacs. When hackers contribute to these projects, we ask that they assign their copyright to enable us to enforce the license. Visit our Contributor's FAQ guide to learn more about the process and read our article on FSF Copyright Handling to better understand why we take this approach. For any questions about assigning to the FSF, please contact us at assign@gnu.org . Free software is everywhere these days, inside our computers, phones, and even televisions. With so much free software being distributed every day, we have to remain vigilant against potential violations. You can help to make sure that free software is always free by reporting violations to our compliance team . The FSF can only enforce the license on works to which we hold the copyright, but we can still help bring about compliance even when the copyright lies elsewhere. If you need help with enforcement, please don’t hesitate to contact us at license-violation@gnu.org . Many copyright holders seek monetary damages when their license is violated. We do not — we only want violators to come back into compliance , and help repair any harm done to the free software community by their past actions. Because of that, we contact violators directly, and negotiate a strategy with them that best accomplishes those goals. We follow the Principles of Community-Oriented GPL Enforcement in all our compliance matters. Become an FSF Corporate Patron One of the benefits of becoming a Corporate Patron of the FSF is that you receive two complimentary hours of licensing and/or GPL consultation from the FSF's Compliance Team (with a reduced rate for further consultation). To sign up as a patron, please write to patron@fsf.org . Verification & Certification Fully free GNU/Linux Distributions . These distributions meet our guidelines for a fully free distro, and are fully committed to keeping their distributions free. You can help keep those distributions free and earn a GNU Buck by filing a bug regarding a licensing issue in one of our endorsed distributions and sending an email to report-nonfree@fsf.org . The Free Software Directory is our community curated listing of over 17,000 free software packages. A great resource for finding and promoting software that respects its users. The "Respects Your Freedom" (RYF) certification program encourages the creation and sale of hardware that will do as much as possible to respect your freedom and your privacy, and will ensure that you have control over your device. Looking to buy hardware that works well with free software? Check out h-node , a community run project to catalog how well different pieces of hardware work with fully free software. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/product-philosophy
Product Philosophy Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Product Philosophy Product Philosophy Overview This doc acts as a reference for our product philosophy at highlight.io, or to be more exact, how we think about what we build (not necessarily how we build it). It acts as a way for our team to prioritize work. If you'd like to learn more about our company values, check this doc . Our mission is to support developers (like you) to ship with confidence. We do this by giving you the tools you need to uncover, resolve, and prevent issues in your web app. Cohesion Our product philosophy at highlight.io is centered around the concept of "cohesion", or the idea that we're focused on building a tightly coupled suite of tools that helps developers ship software with confidence. Prior to working on highlight.io, we all worked at several tech companies of varying sizes, and had first-hand experience trying to stitch together numerous tools to reproduce bugs. It wasn't uncommon that we had to do something like: log into Sentry to see a stacktrace, log into Splunk to query logs, and after investigating with even more tools, give up and log in "as the user" to try and reproduce the issue. People may think that we're building multiple products (session replay, error monitoring, etc..) but we see it as one. To see this in action, see our fullstack mapping guide . We build for today's developer. If you're building software in today's ecosystem, you probably want to JUST focus on building software. We challenge ourselves to build developer tooling that’s simple, straightforward and opinionated, but configurable if you want to customize your setup. highlight.io is built for developers that want to develop . Leave the monitoring stuff to us 👍. The Vision With highlight.io, we're changing that by building monitoring software that "wraps" your infrastructure and application, and we do ALL the work to stitch everything together. Our long-term goal is that you can trace everything from a button click to a server-side regression with little to no effort. Now, if you were to ask, "but that's a lot to build, no?" we would reply with "Yes, give us a hand?" . Our Competitors Product Features Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Group:Freedom_Ladder
Group:Freedom Ladder - LibrePlanet Navigation menu Toggle navigation About About LibrePlanet Mission Statement Founding documents Support this Community Code of Conduct Anti-harassment policy Teams Activists Wiki Helpers LibrePlanet Artists FSF Community Team Local & Student Teams Conferences LibrePlanet Conference Non-official Get involved Participate Discussion channels Events Login Group: Freedom Ladder From LibrePlanet Jump to: navigation , search This list is a work in progress and a result of a collaborative effort between the FSF and the free software community. Contents 1 Latest updates on the campaign 2 Introduction 3 Collaborate with us to build the ladder 4 Steps 4.1 1. Understanding nonfree software 4.2 2. Finding your own reason to use free software 4.3 3. Free replacements and installing your first free program 4.4 4. Understanding encryption 4.5 5. Mobile phone freedom 4.6 6. Learning how to find help 4.7 7. Trying a free operating system Latest updates on the campaign Check our recommendations for free software in the workplace . We recently expanded step 5 with a list of mobile phone apps that respect the user's freedom and are easily adopted We're still collecting free software stories , both fictional and real-life to help us categorize and identify many of the different kinds of free software users. Share yours to help the campaigns team. We're also collecting resources , large, small, FSF origin or from other organizations that can help anyone take a step forward with free software, you can add Web sites, forums, videos, graphics, etc. Read the latest blog post from the FSF on the Freedom Ladder We encourage you to think with us on what this ladder should include, and what else to highlight by leaving notes on the discussion page , by joining us in the IRC meetings , or by emailing campaigns@fsf.org with your thoughts. This page is a shared resource, and we encourage others to add to the discussion pages, but it is possible that some entries here may be added by members of the community. We check this resource periodically, and process the comments we receive. We know that others check it too, but it's a wiki, so errors may be added before they're fixed. We encourage you to review licenses and information about resources you add, and to update this page with your findings. Introduction The “freedom ladder” is a new method the FSF campaigns team has developed to help users get their first start in software freedom. One problem with most guides introducing newcomers to GNU/Linux is that they stop them too soon on their “journey to freedom,” and end up suggesting that a partially nonfree setup is a desirable outcome. By contrast, our guide’s focus is to encourage users to not rest content with nonfree software, while at the same time recognizing that they have other pressures and obligations. We want to help them stay both motivated and determined in their gradual process to eliminate nonfree software from their lives. Collaborate with us to build the ladder The FSF campaigns team held a series of IRC meetings about the draft schema: Upcoming events: Past events: Share your free software story, January 20, 2:00pm EST 20210715-irc July 15 - Understanding nonfree software / Finding your own reason to use free software ( Meeting Notes ) 20210722-irc July 22 - “Free replacements” and installing your first free program ( Meeting Notes ) 20210729-irc July 29 - Understanding encryption / mobile phone freedom ( Meeting Notes ) 20210805-irc August 5th - Learning how to find help / Trying a free operating system ( Meeting Notes ) Join us in #fsf on Libera.Chat to contribute to these conversations! Steps This is what we’ve developed so far, and we’re asking the community to weigh in with their thoughts and suggestions. 1. Understanding nonfree software 2. Finding your own reason to use free software 3. Free replacements and installing your first free program 4. Understanding encryption 5. Mobile phone freedom 6. Learning how to find help 7. Trying a free operating system 1. Understanding nonfree software When is a program free or nonfree? What are the dangers of nonfree software, and why should a user be bothered about it? 2. Finding your own reason to use free software To stay motivated on their journey to freedom, each person needs to have a compelling reason to use free software. That reason could be the philosophy of freedom, or it could be a more practical concern like desiring security or using gratis software wherever possible. 3. Free replacements and installing your first free program The first step we recommend a user to take on their journey to software freedom is by replacing one nonfree program they use with a free replacement. As we assume these users are on a nonfree operating system like Microsoft Windows or macOS, it is acceptable to recommend a program that is mostly free software, but that poses certain problems to the more experienced free software user (e.g. Mozilla Firefox). Some free programs that are easily adopted: Office suite: LibreOffice Media player: VLC App store: F-droid Graphic editors: GIMP , Inkscape , Krita Video editing: Blender , Kdenlive Recording and simple audio editing: Audacity Game engine: Minetest Capturing and streaming videos: OBS studio Note that this is a nonexhaustive list of programs which have proved to be easily adopted by newcomers. A community maintained list of free software replacements by operating systems can be found on this Free Software Directory page dedicated to free software replacements . For a full list of free software programs the FSF recommends, see the over 17,000 entries in the Free Software Directory . 4. Understanding encryption On this step, users are encouraged to try encrypting some device or program they use on a day-to-day basis. This could be learning how to encrypt one’s email with the Email Self-Defense Guide , or using GPG to encrypt a file they would like to remain private. 5. Mobile phone freedom This step does not build off of a previous one, but is important enough of an issue that it deserves consideration. True mobile phone freedom is an impossibility at the moment given the nonfree “baseband” operating system that runs at the ring-0 level of every cell phone. However, this doesn’t mean that mobile phone freedom is a lost cause. Here we encourage the user to use free repositories like F-Droid, and at least be aware of the free Android distribution Replicant . Other mobile free operating systems can be covered in this step. Even if they have certain issues, it’s important for the user to be aware of them: PureOS , Mobian , LineageOS , Ubuntu Touch , postmarketOS , GrapheneOS , Havoc-OS , etc. Some mobile phone apps that respect the user's freedom and are easily adopted: Music player: Vanilla Music Video player: VLC Podcast player: AntennaPod Watching YouTube videos: NewPipe Messaging: GNU Jami , XMPP , Silence , Matrix , or Tox guarantee free messaging, unfortunately, newcomers often struggle with them. Therefore, an app like Signal may be a good starting point for a smooth transition, although it is centralized, which is problematic. Navigation: OsmAnd~ Proxy app to protect your privacy: Orbot For a more extensive list of popular free software applications that run on Android see the collection Replicant-expanded on the Free Software Directory. 6. Learning how to find help One common reason for burnout when it comes to learning free software is getting hung up on a technical problem, and being unable to progress. If the user isn’t especially tech-savvy, this can sometimes cause them to accept defeat and go back to a nonfree operating system. Here, we make sure the user is aware of how to find program documentation (such as through websites, manpages, or Texinfo), and also how to seek help on communication mediums used in the free software community like IRC, mailing lists, and forums. 7. Trying a free operating system During this step, the user will be encouraged to write a USB drive of the Trisquel GNU/Linux operating system and see if their hardware is compatible with it. They can then choose to install the operating system, or if there is a compatibility issue, some things they can do to address it, even if that involves a “deal with the devil.” This page was a featured resource in July 2024. Retrieved from " https://libreplanet.org/wiki?title=Group:Freedom_Ladder&oldid=71915 " The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a nonprofit with a worldwide mission to promote computer user freedom. We defend the rights of all software users. ( Read more ) Campaigns High Priority Free Software Projects Free JavaScript Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot GNU Operating System Defective by Design See all campaigns Get Involved Contact Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org . Copyright © 2013–2023 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy , JavaScript license information ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/containers/page/8
Containers Page 8 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close # containers Follow Hide Security for container technologies like Docker and orchestration platforms like Kubernetes. Create Post Older #containers posts 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Implementing Predictive Scaling for ECS Services with Custom Metrics and Termination Policies Ruween Iddagoda Ruween Iddagoda Ruween Iddagoda Follow Nov 11 '25 Implementing Predictive Scaling for ECS Services with Custom Metrics and Termination Policies # aws # containers # devops # ecs Comments Add Comment 7 min read Docker Aisalkyn Aidarova Aisalkyn Aidarova Aisalkyn Aidarova Follow Nov 10 '25 Docker # beginners # containers # docker # devops 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 9 min read Steps to Containerize a Software Application Oluwanifesimi Oluwanifesimi Oluwanifesimi Follow Nov 10 '25 Steps to Containerize a Software Application # linux # docker # containers # ubuntu Comments Add Comment 3 min read 🎯 Scenario #13 — Encrypt Secrets Using Sealed Secrets (Bitnami) in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 11 '25 🎯 Scenario #13 — Encrypt Secrets Using Sealed Secrets (Bitnami) in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read How Much Smaller Are NixNG Container Images Compared to NixOS, Really? NACAMURA Mitsuhiro NACAMURA Mitsuhiro NACAMURA Mitsuhiro Follow Nov 8 '25 How Much Smaller Are NixNG Container Images Compared to NixOS, Really? # nix # nixos # nixng # containers 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read 🌐 Understanding Container Networking: Podman, Docker, and the CNI Model Waffeu Rayn Waffeu Rayn Waffeu Rayn Follow Oct 11 '25 🌐 Understanding Container Networking: Podman, Docker, and the CNI Model # containers # podman # docker # networking Comments Add Comment 3 min read 🎯 Scenario #12 — Mount a ConfigMap as a Volume and Update It Dynamically in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 10 '25 🎯 Scenario #12 — Mount a ConfigMap as a Volume and Update It Dynamically in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🎯 Scenario #12 — To Mount a ConfigMap as a Volume and Update It Dynamically in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 10 '25 🎯 Scenario #12 — To Mount a ConfigMap as a Volume and Update It Dynamically in Kubernetes # kubernetes # cicd # devops # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🎯 Scenario #11 — Set Resource Requests and Limits for CPU/Memory in Kubernetes Pods Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 🎯 Scenario #11 — Set Resource Requests and Limits for CPU/Memory in Kubernetes Pods # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🎯 Scenario #10 — Use kubectl diff to Preview Changes Before Applying in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 🎯 Scenario #10 — Use kubectl diff to Preview Changes Before Applying in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🎯 Scenario #9 — Create a Deployment, Roll Out an Updated Version and Rollback Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 🎯 Scenario #9 — Create a Deployment, Roll Out an Updated Version and Rollback # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🎯 Scenario #8 — Deploy a ReplicaSet and Verify Self-Healing of Pods in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 🎯 Scenario #8 — Deploy a ReplicaSet and Verify Self-Healing of Pods in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Scenario #7: Inject sensitive values using Secrets into Pods in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 Scenario #7: Inject sensitive values using Secrets into Pods in Kubernetes # kubernetes # cicd # devops # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read ⭐ Scenario #6: Auto-Update ConfigMap Without Restarting the Pod (Using Volume Mount) Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 ⭐ Scenario #6: Auto-Update ConfigMap Without Restarting the Pod (Using Volume Mount) # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read ⭐ Scenario #5: Configure Environment Variables from ConfigMap in a Pod Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 ⭐ Scenario #5: Configure Environment Variables from ConfigMap in a Pod # kubernetes # cicd # devops # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read ✅ Scenario #4 — Debugging with Ephemeral Debug Containers in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 ✅ Scenario #4 — Debugging with Ephemeral Debug Containers in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read ✅ Scenario #3: Debugging a Running Container in Kubernetes Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Nov 9 '25 ✅ Scenario #3: Debugging a Running Container in Kubernetes # kubernetes # devops # cicd # containers 7  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read A Different Way to Think About Deploying Containers to the Cloud Defang.io Defang.io Defang.io Follow Nov 7 '25 A Different Way to Think About Deploying Containers to the Cloud # aws # kubernetes # containers # gcp 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read I was frustrated with AWS, so I built a new cloud platform Avin Avin Avin Follow Oct 4 '25 I was frustrated with AWS, so I built a new cloud platform # cloud # cloudnative # kubernetes # containers Comments Add Comment 2 min read How I Reduced Docker Pull Time from 3 Minutes to 3 Seconds SandeepKomal SandeepKomal SandeepKomal Follow Oct 26 '25 How I Reduced Docker Pull Time from 3 Minutes to 3 Seconds # devops # docker # containers # kubernetes 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🚀 Kubernetes Architecture Explained. SHARON SHAJI SHARON SHAJI SHARON SHAJI Follow Nov 7 '25 🚀 Kubernetes Architecture Explained. # devops # containers # kubernetes # architecture 1  reaction Comments 1  comment 2 min read Kubernetes Overkill: When Your Architecture Is More Complex Than Your Business Anderson Leite Anderson Leite Anderson Leite Follow Nov 6 '25 Kubernetes Overkill: When Your Architecture Is More Complex Than Your Business # containers # architecture 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 9 min read Podman Quadlet: Modern systemd Integration Maksym Maksym Maksym Follow Oct 3 '25 Podman Quadlet: Modern systemd Integration # webdev # containers # podman Comments Add Comment 3 min read Before there was Kubernetes, there was Borg...... kaustubh yerkade kaustubh yerkade kaustubh yerkade Follow Nov 5 '25 Before there was Kubernetes, there was Borg...... # kubernetes # containers # borg # pods Comments Add Comment 2 min read Docker networking: How to connect containers in a full-stack project Deborah Emeni Deborah Emeni Deborah Emeni Follow Nov 4 '25 Docker networking: How to connect containers in a full-stack project # dockernetworking # docker # containers # networking 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 17 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/#content
Front Page — Free Software Foundation — working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search Info The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a nonprofit with a worldwide mission to promote computer user freedom. We are hiring! 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/users/password/new
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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/open-source/contributing/frontend
Frontend (app.highlight.io) Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Open Source / Contributing / Frontend (app.highlight.io) Frontend (app.highlight.io) Frequently Asked Questions How do I change the Apollo Client GraphQL definitions? The frontend is set up to host the Apollo Client definitions in frontend/src/graph/operators . Query definitions reside in query.gql while mutation definitions reside in mutation.gql . Changing these two files regenerates frontend hooks and other Typescript definitions. Having the frontend running will watch these two files for changes and update generated code. See the development docs for more info on running the frontend. GraphQL Backend Landing Site (highlight.io) Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/general-features/webhooks
Webhooks Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Backend General Features / Webhooks Webhooks All alerts can route notifications to webhooks via a HTTP POST JSON payload. For example, if you are hosting an HTTP webserver listening on https://example.com/api/webhook , you can configure alerts on Highlight . To add an outgoing webhook destination, edit an alert and set the destination URL. Here's an example of a payload that is sent. { "AlertName": "New errors alert", "Event": "ERRORS_ALERT", "ErrorCount": 1, "ErrorTitle": "Oh no! An error occurred", "ErrorURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/errors/sqavrqpCyrkOdDoYjMF7iM0Md2WT/instances/11493", "ErrorResolveURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/errors/sqavrqpCyrkOdDoYjMF7iM0Md2WT/instances/11493?action=resolved", "ErrorIgnoreURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/errors/sqavrqpCyrkOdDoYjMF7iM0Md2WT/instances/11493?action=ignored", "ErrorSnoozeURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/errors/sqavrqpCyrkOdDoYjMF7iM0Md2WT/instances/11493?action=snooze", "Query": "environment=production", "SecureSessionID": "abc123", "SessionURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/sessions/abc123", "SessionExcluded": false, "UserIdentifier": "vadim@highlight.io", "VisitedURL": "https://app.highlight.io/1/alerts" } Session alerts, user alerts, and metric monitors can all send webhook notifications. The payload resembles a similar format for all notification types. If you are interested in customizing the payload or authenticating the webhook request with an authorization header, follow this issue on GitHub for updates. Webhook Payload Customization & Authentication # 4697 Outgoing Webhook Enhancements Services Logging Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/session-search
Session Search Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Session Search Session Search In highlight.io , you can search for a session by any of the data you send us (via the SDK) throughout a session. The data you send us can be in the form of: track calls identify calls click data This is done using search query , and we cover how search/instrumentation for each type of these queries works below. Searching for Sessions For general information on searching sessions, check out our Search docs . Default Search By default, Highlight will show completed sessions that have been fully processed, completed=true . For newer projects with less sessions, Highlight will show all sessions, and provide an example of how to use the search query, completed=(true or false) . Default Key The default key for session search searches across multiple attributes. These columns include the user's identifier and location. This could be the user's email , device_id , or given identifier , as well as their city or country . For example, if you enter an expression without a key ( highlight ) it will be used as the key for the following expression. email=*highlight* OR city=*highlight* Track Searching For track calls, you can search for sessions based on the properties that you gave to the track method. For example, if you want to filter sessions out by the value of a tracked feature toggle, FeatureFlag-Analytics , then you can use the the following query: FeatureFlag-Analytics=true Identify Searching For identify calls, you can search for sessions based on the properties that have a name of identifier , and the value corresponds to the value sent to the first argument of H.init (see here ). This looks like the following query: identifier=spencer@highlight.io Searching by User Clicks When using Highlight, you might be interested in querying for sessions where a user clicked a certain HTML element. Highlight records users' clicks on the page as two queryable properties: clickSelector and clickInnerText . clickSelector is the HTML Element's target's selector, concatinating the element's tag , id and class values. clickTextContent is the HTML Element's target's textContent property. Only the first 2000 characters are sent. You can then use the session filters to search for text in the two fields. An example of these queries are: clickSelector=svg clickTextContent="Last 30 days" Searching by Visited URL You can also search for sessions based on the URL that the user visited. This is useful if you want to search for sessions where a user visited a certain page on your site. To perform this search, you can use the visit-url filter. An example of this query is: visited-url="https://app.highlight.io/" Since many urls contains the special characters, : and = , you can wrap the value in quotations to avoid any errors. And like all of our filters, you can use contains, =** , and matches, =// , to help acheive the query you need. For example, to get all sessions that visited the sessions page, we can use the following queries: visited-url=*sessions* visited-url=/.+\d/sessions.+/ Autoinjected attributes By default, Highlight's SDKs will autoinject attributes to provide additional context to help with searching for sessions. Attribute Description Example active_length Time the user was active in milliseconds 10m browser_name Browser the user was on Chrome browser_version Browser version the user was on 124.0.0.0 city City the user was in San Francisco completed If the session is finished recording true country Country the user was in Greece device_id Fingerprint of the user's device 1018613574 environment The environment specified in the SDK production first_time If its the user's first session false has_comments If someone has commented on the Highlight session true has_errors If the session contained linked errors true has_rage_clicks If the user rage clicked in the session true identified If the session successfully identified the user false identifier The idenifier passed to H.init 1 ip The IP address of the user 127.0.0.1 length The total length of the session 10m os_name The user's operating system Mac OS X os_version The user's operating system version 10.15.7 pages_visited The number of pages visited in the session 10 sample A unique order by to sample sessions c1c9b1137183cbb1 service_version Version of the service specified in the SDK e1845285cb360410aee05c61dd0cc57f85afe6da state State the user was in Virginia viewed_by_anyone If the session has been viewed by anyone true viewed_by_me If your account has viewed the session false Helpful tips Use the completed=false to view live sessions. Create a new sample of sessions by clicking "New Random Seed" for the sample's values. Currently, length and active length are not supported by time suffixes, but this functionality is coming soon. Use time suffixes, such as s , m and h to help filter out for length durations. For example, use length>10m to find all sessions that were longer than 10 minutes. Demo Request Proxying Extracting the Session URL Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/masteringjs/using-then-vs-async-await-in-javascript-2pma#comment-20o26
Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Mastering JS Posted on Aug 25, 2021           Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie When making async requests, you can either use then() or async/await . Async/await and then() are very similar. The difference is that in an async function , JavaScript will pause the function execution until the promise settles. With then() , the rest of the function will continue to execute but JavaScript won't execute the .then() callback until the promise settles. async function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = await fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ); console . log ( ' I will print second ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' I will print first ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you use promise chaining with then() , you need to put any logic you want to execute after the request in the promise chain . Any code that you put after fetch() will execute immediately, before the fetch() is done. function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ). then (( res ) => { console . log ( ' This is inside the then() block ' ); }); console . log ( ' This is after the fetch statement where we are now executing other code that is not async ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' this is after the entire function ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode We recommend using async/await where possible, and minimize promise chaining. Async/await makes JavaScript code more accessible to developers that aren't as familiar with JavaScript, and much easier to read. Top comments (3) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Follow Full Stack Web Developer Location Batam, Indonesia Education Associate Degree in Physics Engineering (Applied Physics) Work Full Stack Web Developer Joined Apr 26, 2019 • Aug 9 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide In my 1st experience, with minimal knowledge and skill (lack of the knowledge of async-await), I relied upon fetch API to do request to server. I tried to work around the problem I encountered with my own solution, although I thought it was not the right one. I wished I knew async-await then : I could have had better solution instead of using merely promises chaining. That being said, I think both approaches have their own best fit depending on the situation. Like comment: Like comment: 7  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Follow Software Engineer Joined Nov 17, 2024 • Nov 17 '24 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Note that async wait requires the encapsulating/calling function to be async - that is not always possible, e.g., for top-level function before ES2020 or when some callback function interface dictates non-async function. In such cases, the only way to provide code that invokes and processes a result of an async (promise) result is using the .then directive. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Follow Joined Aug 9, 2023 • Nov 10 '23 • Edited on Nov 10 • Edited Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is the best explanation! I read 10 articles before but only your explanation is more clear, thanks a lot!!! 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Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Mastering JS Follow Free resources for learning pragmatic, effective web development Joined Jun 23, 2021 More from Mastering JS 3 Neat toString() Tricks in JavaScript # javascript 3 Neat Tricks For Sorting Arrays of Objects in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie 3 Neat Features of JavaScript's Much-Maligned Date Class # javascript # codenewbie 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/amigosmaker/python-gui-pyqt-vs-tkinter-5hdd#main-content
Python GUI, PyQt vs TKinter - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse amigos-maker Posted on Oct 31, 2019 • Edited on May 22, 2020           Python GUI, PyQt vs TKinter # python Both Tkinter and PyQt are useful for designing acceptable GUI’s, but at the same time, they differ in terms of adaptability and functionality. Mostly, Tkinter is all about writing GUI yourself, program your settings or functionality in the same script. On the other hand, in PyQt, you separate GUI in a script, and use your Python knowledge from another script. Instead of creating your own code for the user interface, you can simply adopt the Qt Designer functions to develop your application . Therefore, let’s see what the main differences and advantages of PyQt vs. Tkinter are. PyQt Advantages of using PyQt Coding flexibility – GUI programming with Qt is designed around the concept of signals and slots for establishing communication amongst objects. That permits flexibility when dealing with GUI events and results in a smoother codebase. More than a framework – Qt uses a wide array of native platform APIs for the purpose of networking, database creation, and many more . It offers primary access to them via a unique API. Various UI components – Qt offers several widgets, such as buttons or menus , all designed with a basic appearance across all supported platforms. Various learning resources – because PyQt is one of the most used UI frameworks for Python, you can get easy access to a wide array of documentation. Easy to master – PyQt comes with a user-friendly, straightforward API functionality, along with specific classes linked to Qt C++. This allows the user to use previous knowledge from either Qt or C++, making PyQt easy to understand. Disadvantages of using PyQt Lack of Python-specific documentation for classes in PyQt5 It requires a lot of time for understanding all the details of PyQt, meaning it is a quite steep learning curve Tkinter Advantages of using Tkinter Available out-of-charge for commercial usage. It is featured in the underlying Python library. Creating executables for Tkinter apps is more accessible since Tkinter is included in Python, and, as a consequence, it comes with no other dependencies. Simple to understand and master, as Tkinter is a limited library with a simple API, being the primary choice for creating fast GUIs for Python scripts. Disadvantages of using Tkinter Tkinter does not include advanced widgets. It has no similar tool as Qt Designer for Tkinter. It doesn't have a native look and feel What to choose? Anyhow, in most situations, the best solution is using PyQt, considering the advantages and disadvantages of both PyQt and Tkinter. GUI programming with Qt is created around signals and slots for communication amongst objects. Thus, it allows flexibility, while it gets to the programmer access to a wide array of tools. Tkinter can indeed be useful for those that want to design a fundamental and rapid GUIs for Python scripts, yet for a more advanced programming result , almost all programmers opt for the functionalities that come with PyQt . They admit it is worth mastering the advanced knowledge of PyQt due to the professional programming results that come along. Thus, when it comes to PyQt vs. Tkinter, it all depends on how much you want to learn and discover. Resources: Course: PyQt dekstop apps PyQt hello world Tkinter tutorial Top comments (5) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   robin deatherage robin deatherage robin deatherage Follow I am a retired Machine Programmer who's passion is still entrenched heavily into Computer Sciences. Location Texas Education NMU Work Machine Programmer at Namco Joined Nov 14, 2019 • Nov 14 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Actually it is Tk that is far more advanced than PyQt or Wx. I will explain why. Tk is still ahead of most all GUI Toolkits by as much as fifteen to twenty years as it is one of three of the only GUI Widget Toolkit made from the Original Toolkit Library. And is one of only three GUI Toolkits besides GTK and the NCSA Mosaic Canvas Toolkit that powers both the proprietary underlying HTML rendering Engines used by Netscape Navigator, WebKit, WebView, IE, Edge, Safari, Chrome, Chromium among a few others. The main reason it is so advanced is its ability to pre set JavaScript triggers for after render events with its tags, marks, configs() and its Binding Methods. One of these binding methods is the ability to set hyperlinks while suspending their path data for processing web request from user clicks in both regular and OpenClick() events. Many also are not aware that before 2009 there were still over fifty Web Browsers with Rendering Engines entirely developed using Tk that at that time were still being downloaded. Now Python does lack the 3D OpenGL that comes with Tk 8.6 and lacks the Video Codecs that are also in the Tk version, but they can be PyObject directly tied in and used, but only a handful of us are doing so. Also to Mimic all other GUI Libraries all one has to do is place all widgets and or create your own and ploace them individually inside Frames for each one. The Frames are the secret behind Tkinter and if placed within a Canvas give you full things such as radius buttons, cells for rendering HTML Blocks and or New Widgets. Thanks ! Like comment: Like comment: 8  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   ErtY'wek ErtY'wek ErtY'wek Follow Joined May 27, 2020 • May 27 '20 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide "The main reason it is so advanced is its ability to pre set JavaScript triggers for after render events with its tags, marks, configs() and its Binding Methods. One of these binding methods is the ability to set hyperlinks while suspending their path data for processing web request from user clicks in both regular and OpenClick() events. " Can you explain to a programming newbie? Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Victor Meunier Victor Meunier Victor Meunier Follow Joined Jun 13, 2018 • Oct 31 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Interesting comparison. I've used Qt in C++ in the past and recently used PyQt5 to make a prototype ( github.com/MrEliptik/shotty ) and I loved it! The lack of python specific documentation can be a bit painful from time to time but hopefully someone on SO faced the same issue. Also, the bindings are really similar to Qt for c++ so usually you can use the C++ docs. You talked about Widgets for PyQt but you could also use QML right? I think it's especially interesting since it enables a lot of customization and can be interesting to make good looking apps such as desktop.telegram.org/ . Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   amigos-maker amigos-maker amigos-maker Follow Joined Oct 27, 2019 • Oct 31 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Looks like a cool app you made! Right, you can use QML also Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   michael michael michael Follow Games and GUI in c++ and python. builds web scrapers with python Email michaelobi54@gmail.com Location Nigeria Work Engineering undergraduate Joined Jul 20, 2020 • Jul 20 '20 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide I think Tkinter is underrated...partly because of the learning curve as you have to code every widget.But when you get a hang of it, it’s really great. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse amigos-maker Follow Joined Oct 27, 2019 More from amigos-maker Waar kun je Flask voor gebruiken? (Dutch) # python # flask # nederlands # dutch What is Flask used for? # python # flask Wat is Flask? (Dutch) # python # flask 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/fromaline
Nick - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Follow User actions Nick Co-founder of Chainspect Location Tbilisi Joined Joined on  Jun 25, 2021 Email address grechino@protonmail.com Personal website https://www.fromaline.com github website twitter website Four Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least four years. Got it Close Three Year Club This badge celebrates the longevity of those who have been a registered member of the DEV Community for at least three years. Got it Close Writing Debut Awarded for writing and sharing your first DEV post! Continue sharing your work to earn the 4 Week Writing Streak Badge. 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Got it Close Top 7 Awarded for having a post featured in the weekly "must-reads" list. 🙌 Got it Close More info about @fromaline Organizations Chainspect GitHub Repositories fromaline Post 27 posts published Comment 56 comments written Tag 0 tags followed Block Time Nick Nick Nick Follow for Chainspect Dec 21 '23 Block Time # blockchain # performance # web3 # cryptocurrency 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Want to connect with Nick? Create an account to connect with Nick. You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in Why Hedera has the highest TPS on Chainspect? Nick Nick Nick Follow Nov 17 '23 Why Hedera has the highest TPS on Chainspect? # blockchain # hedera # performance # tps 7  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Transactions Per Second (TPS) Nick Nick Nick Follow Nov 8 '23 Transactions Per Second (TPS) # blockchain # performance # bitcoin # ethereum 14  reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read TPScore: transactions per second metrics made easy Nick Nick Nick Follow Sep 26 '23 TPScore: transactions per second metrics made easy # blockchain # polkadot # opensource # web3 10  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Examining Blockchain Transaction Speed: Real Performance vs. Marketing Claims Nick Nick Nick Follow Sep 13 '23 Examining Blockchain Transaction Speed: Real Performance vs. Marketing Claims # blockchain # performance # ethereum # bitcoin 12  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 Nick Nick Nick Follow Mar 27 '23 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 # ai # chatgpt # webdev # tooling 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read My dream habit tracker Nick Nick Nick Follow Mar 2 '23 My dream habit tracker # javascript # vue # pocketbase # webdev 2  reactions Comments 2  comments 1 min read What's the difference between compiler, transpiler, and interpreter? 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Nick Nick Nick Follow Jan 13 '22 Why you have to use className in React, but not in Preact? # react # javascript # webdev # tutorial 36  reactions Comments Add Comment 10 min read Deep dive into React codebase [EP1: Prerequisites] Nick Nick Nick Follow Jan 9 '22 Deep dive into React codebase [EP1: Prerequisites] # react # javascript # webdev # tutorial 82  reactions Comments 14  comments 9 min read Hyperscript - the hidden language of React Nick Nick Nick Follow Dec 29 '21 Hyperscript - the hidden language of React # react # javascript # webdev # tutorial 74  reactions Comments 3  comments 3 min read Play in one team with your body, not against each other Nick Nick Nick Follow Aug 13 '21 Play in one team with your body, not against each other # beginners # productivity # career 28  reactions Comments 1  comment 2 min read Have you seen the weirdest frontend-related logo? 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/wmdn9116/system-architecture-for-startups-build-fast-without-painting-yourself-into-a-corner-2991
System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Shamim Ali Posted on Jan 7 System Architecture for Startups: Build Fast Without Painting Yourself Into a Corner # architecture # startup # systemdesign # webdev Startups don’t fail because their architecture isn’t “advanced enough”. They fail because their systems become too hard to change . I’ve helped build systems from early MVPs through growth stages, and the biggest architectural lesson is this: design for change first, scale second . This post is about building startup systems that move fast and survive growth. Start With a Clear, Boring Core In the early days, your system should answer one question well: What problem does this product solve? Avoid early complexity. A well-structured monolith with: Clear modules Simple data models Obvious ownership will outperform a rushed microservice setup every time. “Boring” architecture is a startup advantage. Boundaries Matter More Than Technologies Most early architecture mistakes aren’t about tools, they’re about boundaries. Good startup architecture has: Thin controllers Business logic in services Data access isolated This makes it easy to: Change requirements Replace components Add features without breaking everything Design for Change, Not Hypothetical Scale Premature optimisation slows teams down. Instead of asking “ Will this scale to a million users? ”, ask: “Can we change this easily?” “Can we delete this safely?” “Can we understand this in three months?” Systems that change easily scale naturally. Your Data Model Is Your Real Architecture You can rewrite services. You can replace frameworks. But your data model sticks around. Spend time on: Clear schemas Explicit relationships Migration strategies Bad data decisions are the hardest startup mistakes to undo. Keep Infrastructure Flexible Early startups should avoid tight coupling to infrastructure. Good principles: Your app should run locally Cloud services should be swappable Failures should degrade gracefully Infrastructure should support growth, not lock you in. Observability Early, Not Later You don’t need enterprise monitoring on day one, but you do need: Structured logs Basic metrics Clear error reporting Debugging production issues should not require guesswork. Architecture Should Help New Hires As soon as you hire your second or third engineer, architecture matters more. Good startup systems: Are easy to onboard into Have consistent patterns Make wrong usage obvious If new hires struggle, the system will slow the company down. The Startup Architecture Mindset My goal when designing startup systems is simple: Move fast without fear Keep complexity visible Make change cheap Great startup architecture isn’t about being clever, it’s about staying adaptable. Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Shamim Ali Follow If you enjoyed my article, follow me on github. https://github.com/debug-loop Location Gangni, Meherpur, Bangladesh Joined Jan 6, 2026 More from Shamim Ali “Just Add Caching” Is Usually the Wrong Answer # cache # webdev # backend # programming You Don’t Need More Tutorials, You Need Better Problems # programming # workplace # tutorial # webdev My Node.js API Best Practices in 2025 # api # architecture # node # performance 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/celebrate-the-new-year-join-the-free-software-community
Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Blogs › Community › Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! Info Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! by Heshan de Silva-Weeramuni Contributions — Published on Jan 02, 2026 03:25 PM We can't thank you enough. Your generous support, large and small, has helped us well beyond our goal of $400,000 USD! What a way to start the new year — we are very, very grateful! Because of this collective generosity, we now have the chance to boldly build for the long term in our shared movement for software freedom. That is why today we ask you to stand for freedom as we extend our appeal, and join us in achieving our new goal: welcoming 100 new FSF members by January 16! Together, we can do it. Become an associate member today. Free software plays such a vital role in guaranteeing so many other basic freedoms that are being undermined right now, like the right to be free of mass surveillance or the right to read what you want . FSF associate members are a crucial part of the global campaign for software freedom. By becoming an FSF associate member, not only will you help us reach our member goal, you will grow our collective strength by becoming part of a symbolic group of thousands of people standing behind the FSF, lending further weight to our work and helping us pave our way to software freedom. Becoming an associate member also helps the FSF build a strong, predictable funding base that fuels our collective work for a world free of the injustice of proprietary software. And because of the benefits and resources FSF provides to associate members, you will be an even more active force in pushing software freedom forward. For as little as $12 USD a month ($6 USD for students), become part of a huge global community today by joining the FSF as an associate member before our January 16 deadline . We also offer a friends-tier associate membership for those of you who have been affected by economic challenges, but still want to support the FSF. Do you know someone who is passionate about promoting computer user freedom? You can gift them a membership too . FSF members help us take on the predatory proprietary software giants and their government allies, resisting their efforts to track and trap us inside their proprietary software cages. Associate members help move us closer to a free society. Join the FSF today . FSF staff and our hard-working volunteers continue to work for software freedom. Our Free Software Licensing and Compliance Lab protects free software licenses, including the GNU General Public Licenses (GPL), for every single computer user. Our tech team continues to provide the free software the tools we all need. And our campaigns team keeps our advocacy campaigns strong and agile, navigating the many challenges we all face today. Help advance software freedom. Help us reach our goal of 100 new associate members by January 16. Join us today: become part of the global network of FSF associate members! In freedom, Heshan de Silva-Weeramuni Program Manager Illustration Copyright © 2020, Free Software Foundation, Inc., by Raghavendra Kamath, Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: featured 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! FSF community blog Licensing Compliance Lab blog Associate Membership blog System Administrator's blog Free Software Directory blog GNU Press blog Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/associate/
FSF associate membership — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Associate Member Info When you donate to the FSF as an associate member, you support the essential freedoms for all computer users, with a sustaining contribution. Read this page in Spanish. Join with over 5,000 active members in 76 countries, representing a diverse membership of computer users, artists, software engineers, hackers, students, and activists. When you donate as an associate member, you are part of an informed society working together to make a better world: respectful of individual freedom, social solidarity, personal privacy, and democracy — built on free software. The Free Software Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, so your member donation is tax-deductible in the US. “I've long been a supporter of the ideas of the FSF and the whole free software movement. Today, I wanted to make a tangible contribution to the FSF, as well as openly declaring my support for the key advocate and defender of software freedom.” — Cathal McGinley, member #5886 Why donate as an associate member? As a software developer, free software lets you build and improve on the work of others, as part of a social community — built on the principles of sharing. As an artist, you can do things with free software that proprietary software does not allow. All free software allows you to use it for any purpose. As a user, free software removes you from the power struggle of proprietary software, where you are able to help yourself and are not dependent on a single developer or company to help you. As a student, you can study and modify the software you use, learning from and enhancing the tools that you use for education. What kinds of associate memberships are there? There are two classes of associate membership: the full associate membership that receives all of the member benefits , and the friends associate membership that allows you to contribute to the FSF at a reduced rate . Both memberships are associate memberships. For the sake of simplicity, we just call the former associate membership and the latter friends membership. 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Associate membership Benefits Dues Gift a membership Member Forum ( More info ) LibrePlanet conference Renew your membership! Join or start a local LibrePlanet group Contact us   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/open-source/contributing/landing-site
Landing Site (highlight.io) Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Open Source / Contributing / Landing Site (highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Getting Started The documentation rendered on https://highlight.io/docs is rendered from the docs-content directory. The code for rendering the landing page resides in highlight.io directory. To run the app locally, install dependencies and call yarn dev as follows: yarn install; yarn dev:highlight.io; open http://localhost:4000/ Changes to docs-content may require refreshing the browser. Frequently Asked Questions How do I test the blog locally? Blog posts rely on Hygraph for rendering and use an environment variable. Reach our on our discord if you need to work on the blog. Frontend (app.highlight.io) Documentation Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/company/open-source/hosting/telemetry
Telemetry Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Company / Open Source / Self-hosting / Telemetry Telemetry How Telemetry works for self-hosted deploys Telemetry helps us understand how folks use highlight, what operating systems and hardware capabilities they have, and what features they use most. The metrics we collect are anonymized so that we can associate usage with a particular deployment, but never with a particular user email or name. We use our own highlight cloud product to collect metrics, so you can find exactly how the telemetry metrics are recorded and then stored + queried. Check out the telemetry code here to learn more. When you start highlight for development or a hobby deploy, our scripts will share the telemetry policy. If you'd like to disable telemetry, you can do so by editing the IsOptedOut function in backend/phonehome/phonehome.go . For a hobby deploy, you'll need to build the docker images from source to persist such a change. Heartbeat Metrics Name Description Type num-cpu CPU Count int mem-used-percent Percent memory used float mem-total Bytes of memory total int Self-reported User Attributes Name Description Type about-you-role Engineering / Product string about-you-referral Site visit referrer string Usage Metrics Name Description Type backend-setup Is a backend SDK integrated bool session-count Number of sessions recorded int error-count Number of errors recorded int log-count Number of logs recorded int session-view-count Number of sessions viewed int error-view-count Number of errors viewed int log-view-count Number of logs viewed int General Telemetry Name Description Type version Highlight version sha string is-onprem Value of env var ON_PREM string ssl Whether SSL is active bool public-graph-uri The URI of the public graph. string private-graph-uri The URI of the private graph. string frontend-uri The URI of the frontend. string doppler-config When doppler is used, the name of the environment. string phone-home-deployment-id A randomly-generated deployment identifier. string Self-hosted [Enterprise] Our Competitors Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#confidence-is-a-skill-not-a-setting
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/resources/jobs
Free software jobs — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Resources › Jobs in Free Software Info Free software jobs by Free Software Foundation Contributions — Published on Feb 12, 2005 11:05 AM This is a meeting place where skilled and informed individuals working in the world of free software come to find job opportunities they can believe in. Post a new job — usually $250 USD/30 days For employers It's a place where employers tired of sifting through hundreds of candidates who don't get it come to advertise, knowing the applications they get will be the right ones. All jobs must be a free software job , defined as a job that is centered on the creation, promotion, oversight, support, sales, marketing or installation of free software. Before sending us a free software position, please review our FAQs page . For job seekers It's a place where you can find an organization that gets it. Who says you can't get paid to do what you love? The positions listed below are written by the people hiring, and are not necessarily reflective of the Free Software Foundation. Testimonials Lucas C. Wagner, of Spindletop Software Dynamics, Inc. says: "The GNU jobs page represents, to me, one of the easiest and most effective ways to post jobs that require the knowledge and expertise of the free software community at large..." Free software job openings There are no free software job openings right now. Please check back soon! Free software volunteer positions C# developers at ep5 We are looking for experienced C# developers interested in contributing to /ep5BAS/. We have a nimble, responsive, and flexible organization in which everyone's voice is heard. No bureaucracy here! Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/session-replay/performance-impact
Performance Impact Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Session Replay / Performance Impact Performance Impact Overview When building Highlight, we've made technical decisions that prioritize putting your site's performance first. Highlight's performance impact on your site, therefore, is negligible, both from the perspective of your user's real-time experience as well as from a page-load perspective. Bundle Size Highlight's gzipped bundle size is a mere 11 kb . From a page load perspective, your team should have no qualms regarding Highlight's impact on page load metrics. DOM Interaction Performance Highlight uses the well-maintained MutationObserver browser API in order to record DOM mutations. When sending these changes to our platform, we buffer events periodically to ensure that Events aren't being held in memory for a prolonged time Outgoing network requests aren't interfering with user interactions Network Your client will send Highlight telemetry about every 3 seconds. We've taken extra care in making sure we don't overwhelm your end user's machine: Only 1 request will be in-flight at a given time Responsive to your end user's network speed Session Replay Concerned about session replay impacting your web application? Read our blog post about it here . Live Mode Player Session Caching Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://twitter.com/OmShree0709
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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/jokes/page/9
jokes Page 9 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close jokes Follow Hide plz post the lols Create Post submission guidelines no spam don't be offensive (sexist, racist, homophobic, crude, etc.), the DEV code of conduct is still in place! make the jokes programming related-ish Older #jokes posts 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 30 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 27  reactions Comments 42  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 23 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 46  reactions Comments 58  comments 1 min read If movies were all about software development. GrahamTheDev GrahamTheDev GrahamTheDev Follow Oct 29 '23 If movies were all about software development. # watercooler # jokes # memes 35  reactions Comments 5  comments 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 16 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 45  reactions Comments 53  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 9 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 31  reactions Comments 35  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 2 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 62  reactions Comments 55  comments 1 min read Happy Saturday with a little humor in UX writing OpenSource OpenSource OpenSource Follow for Webcrumbs Oct 14 '23 Happy Saturday with a little humor in UX writing # jokes # ux # frontend 4  reactions Comments 1  comment 1 min read It’s officially pants-are-optional day OpenSource OpenSource OpenSource Follow Oct 14 '23 It’s officially pants-are-optional day # jokes # coding 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read Weird, wacky, and hilarious OpenSource OpenSource OpenSource Follow Oct 12 '23 Weird, wacky, and hilarious # jokes # programming Comments Add Comment 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 25 '23 Meme Monday # watercooler # discuss # jokes 43  reactions Comments 53  comments 1 min read Is Open Source communism? OpenSource OpenSource OpenSource Follow Oct 9 '23 Is Open Source communism? # jokes # opensource # programming # hacktoberfest 10  reactions Comments 9  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 18 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 35  reactions Comments 58  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 11 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 37  reactions Comments 50  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 4 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 38  reactions Comments 30  comments 1 min read I Hired an AI as a Developer - This Is What Happened Dennis Persson Dennis Persson Dennis Persson Follow Sep 10 '23 I Hired an AI as a Developer - This Is What Happened # jokes # ai # chatgpt # webdev 49  reactions Comments 10  comments 14 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Aug 28 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 37  reactions Comments 90  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Aug 21 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 31  reactions Comments 45  comments 1 min read fartlang.org Maxim Saplin Maxim Saplin Maxim Saplin Follow Sep 5 '23 fartlang.org # jokes # dart # flutter # programming 7  reactions Comments 3  comments 1 min read Jokeday Funday: Part 6 - More Programming Humor to Brighten Your Day Soumyadeep Dey Soumyadeep Dey Soumyadeep Dey Follow Sep 3 '23 Jokeday Funday: Part 6 - More Programming Humor to Brighten Your Day # watercooler # jokes # programming # coding 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Aug 14 '23 Meme Monday # jokes # discuss # watercooler 31  reactions Comments 31  comments 1 min read Jokeday Funday: Part 5 - More Hilarious Programming Jokes Soumyadeep Dey Soumyadeep Dey Soumyadeep Dey Follow Aug 27 '23 Jokeday Funday: Part 5 - More Hilarious Programming Jokes # jokes # programming # watercooler # beginners 6  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Every Taylor Swift album and its corresponding programming language Allison Allison Allison Follow Aug 24 '23 Every Taylor Swift album and its corresponding programming language # discuss # swift # watercooler # jokes 5  reactions Comments 5  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Aug 7 '23 Meme Monday # watercooler # jokes # discuss 28  reactions Comments 59  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Jul 31 '23 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 44  reactions Comments 26  comments 1 min read No Framework - Eps#0: Don't-Do List Imam Ali Mustofa Imam Ali Mustofa Imam Ali Mustofa Follow for Street Community Programmer Aug 10 '23 No Framework - Eps#0: Don't-Do List # jokes # codenewbie # learning # webdev Comments Add Comment 3 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#debugging-is-just-asking-better-questions
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/startup
Startup - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Startup Follow Hide A company or project undertaken by an entrepreneur to seek, develop, and validate a scalable business model. Create Post Older #startup posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 … 75 … 188 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu DoraHacks Start-up Ideas 2026: Pt.1 Digital Finance in the Circle/Arc ecosystem DoraHacks DoraHacks DoraHacks Follow Jan 13 DoraHacks Start-up Ideas 2026: Pt.1 Digital Finance in the Circle/Arc ecosystem # cryptocurrency # startup # web3 Comments Add Comment 16 min read Lessons learned integrating Paddle (Sandbox to Live) & fixing DMARC as a solo dev yongsheng he yongsheng he yongsheng he Follow Jan 13 Lessons learned integrating Paddle (Sandbox to Live) & fixing DMARC as a solo dev # saas # security # startup # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read From Startup to Unicorn: A Blueprint for Secure Enterprise Architecture Eber Cruz Eber Cruz Eber Cruz Follow Jan 13 From Startup to Unicorn: A Blueprint for Secure Enterprise Architecture # software # architecture # springboot # startup Comments Add Comment 3 min read Case Study (Day 0): Testing a Topical Authority Burst Strategy on a Brand-New Site Topical HQ Topical HQ Topical HQ Follow Jan 13 Case Study (Day 0): Testing a Topical Authority Burst Strategy on a Brand-New Site # devjournal # marketing # startup # testing 4  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Why Automation Fails for Most Businesses & How to Appoach it like a Pro Alice Alice Alice Follow Jan 12 Why Automation Fails for Most Businesses & How to Appoach it like a Pro # startup # automation # mvp Comments Add Comment 4 min read What we intentionally removed when building a feature flag service Illia Illia Illia Follow Jan 12 What we intentionally removed when building a feature flag service # programming # saas # startup # webdev Comments Add Comment 3 min read I Built a Reddit Keyword Monitoring System. Here's What Actually Works. Short Play Skits Short Play Skits Short Play Skits Follow Jan 10 I Built a Reddit Keyword Monitoring System. Here's What Actually Works. # showdev # automation # monitoring # startup Comments Add Comment 2 min read Dealing with Non-Reproducible Bugs: Important Tips Anna Anna Anna Follow Jan 12 Dealing with Non-Reproducible Bugs: Important Tips # discuss # automation # startup # software 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read How My First Hacker News Launch Went (And What I Did About It) DDLTODATA DDLTODATA DDLTODATA Follow Jan 11 How My First Hacker News Launch Went (And What I Did About It) # startup # hackernews # productlaunch Comments Add Comment 2 min read I Built a Mock API Platform in 2.5 Months (Django + React + Redis + PostgreSQL) Marcus Marcus Marcus Follow Jan 11 I Built a Mock API Platform in 2.5 Months (Django + React + Redis + PostgreSQL) # showdev # django # webdev # startup Comments Add Comment 2 min read Instagram's Rise: Secrets and Costs Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Instagram's Rise: Secrets and Costs # discuss # product # startup Comments Add Comment 5 min read What's the Hardest Thing to Manage? - Silicon Valley VC's Management Wisdom Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 What's the Hardest Thing to Manage? - Silicon Valley VC's Management Wisdom # leadership # management # startup Comments Add Comment 11 min read Book Sharing: The One-Person Business - Why Small is Beautiful for Future Business Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Book Sharing: The One-Person Business - Why Small is Beautiful for Future Business # career # learning # startup Comments Add Comment 3 min read Book Sharing: From Zero to One - Uncovering the Secrets of How the World Works and Finding Value in Unexpected Places Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Book Sharing: From Zero to One - Uncovering the Secrets of How the World Works and Finding Value in Unexpected Places # learning # resources # startup Comments Add Comment 6 min read Book Review: Elon Musk Biography Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Book Review: Elon Musk Biography # discuss # learning # startup # leadership Comments Add Comment 4 min read 📊 2026-01-11 - Daily Intelligence Recap - Top 9 Signals Agent_Asof Agent_Asof Agent_Asof Follow Jan 11 📊 2026-01-11 - Daily Intelligence Recap - Top 9 Signals # tech # programming # startup # ai Comments Add Comment 4 min read Build something at your own Vishal Thakkar Vishal Thakkar Vishal Thakkar Follow Jan 12 Build something at your own # startup # ai # cloudnative Comments Add Comment 1 min read [Podcast] a16z Crypto's Latest Research: Four New Business Models at the Intersection of AI and Blockchain - Summary Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 [Podcast] a16z Crypto's Latest Research: Four New Business Models at the Intersection of AI and Blockchain - Summary # ai # startup # web3 Comments Add Comment 2 min read Carto: De una Factura a la ONU a Conquistar la Nube Geoespacial Daniel Daniel Daniel Follow for Datalaria Jan 11 Carto: De una Factura a la ONU a Conquistar la Nube Geoespacial # startup # cloud # datascience # spanish Comments 1  comment 5 min read Carto: From a UN Invoice to Conquering the Geospatial Cloud Daniel Daniel Daniel Follow for Datalaria Jan 11 Carto: From a UN Invoice to Conquering the Geospatial Cloud # cloud # datascience # startup Comments Add Comment 4 min read Being a Developer at a Startup: Challenges, Freedom, and Growth Gustavo Woltmann Gustavo Woltmann Gustavo Woltmann Follow Jan 11 Being a Developer at a Startup: Challenges, Freedom, and Growth # challenge # career # developer # startup Comments Add Comment 3 min read I Built an AI App Builder That Doesn't Count Tokens (Say Goodbye to Prompt Anxiety) Balram Kapoor Balram Kapoor Balram Kapoor Follow Jan 12 I Built an AI App Builder That Doesn't Count Tokens (Say Goodbye to Prompt Anxiety) # showdev # ai # startup # webdev 1  reaction Comments 1  comment 2 min read I Analyzed 1,000+ YouTube "Side Hustles"—85% Are Scams. Here is the Data. Nyanguno Nyanguno Nyanguno Follow Jan 10 I Analyzed 1,000+ YouTube "Side Hustles"—85% Are Scams. Here is the Data. # discuss # startup # webdev # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Building an AI-Powered GTM Audit Tool: A Technical Breakdown Tom Regan Tom Regan Tom Regan Follow Jan 10 Building an AI-Powered GTM Audit Tool: A Technical Breakdown # saas # startup # ai # webdev Comments Add Comment 4 min read I'm challenging myself to build 1 tool / mini startup a week this year. 52 tools Ido Cohen Ido Cohen Ido Cohen Follow Jan 9 I'm challenging myself to build 1 tool / mini startup a week this year. 52 tools # challenge # devjournal # learning # startup Comments 1  comment 1 min read loading... trending guides/resources From Idea to Launch: How Developers Can Build Successful Startups How I Built My Own AI Ecosystem Across Brands Week 3: From 0 to 30 Developers (Building in Public) Why I Migrated My Backend from Go to Elixir/Phoenix The First Week at a Startup Taught Me More Than I Expected I Spent 40 Hours Researching Business Ideas So You Don't Have To - Here's What Actually Works in ... 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(How a Reddit Comment Changed My Roadmap) I asked successful entrepreneurs about their transition from employee to founder I Built a No-Backend Form Tool That Sends Submissions to WhatsApp — Here’s Why 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/server/go/manual
Manual Go Tracing Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Server / Go / Manual Go Tracing Quick Start Manual Go Tracing Quick Start Learn how to set up highlight.io tracing for your Go application. 1 Configure client-side Highlight. (optional) If you're using Highlight on the frontend for your application, make sure you've initialized it correctly and followed the fullstack mapping guide . 2 Install the Highlight Go SDK. Install the highlight-go package with go get . go get -u github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go 3 Initialize the Highlight Go SDK. highlight.Start starts a goroutine for recording and sending backend traces and errors. Setting your project id lets Highlight record errors for background tasks and processes that aren't associated with a frontend session. import ( "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go" ) func main() { // ... highlight.SetProjectID("<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>") highlight.Start( highlight.WithServiceName("my-app"), highlight.WithServiceVersion("git-sha"), ) defer highlight.Stop() // ... } 4 Wrap your code using the Go SDK. By wrapping your code with StartTrace and EndTrace , the Highlight Go SDK will record a span. You can create more child spans using the child context or add custom attributes to each span. import ( "github.com/highlight/highlight/sdk/highlight-go" "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/attribute" ) func functionToTrace(ctx context.Context, input int) { s, childContext := highlight.StartTrace(ctx, "functionToTrace", attribute.Int("custom_property", input)) // ... anotherFunction(childContext) // ... highlight.EndTrace(s) } func anotherFunction(ctx context.Context) { s, _ := highlight.StartTrace(ctx, "anotherFunction") // ... highlight.EndTrace(s) } 5 Verify your backend traces are being recorded. Visit the highlight traces portal and check that backend traces are coming in. Logrus Quick Start gorilla mux Quick Start [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/server/python/google-cloud-functions
Google Cloud Functions Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Server / Python / Google Cloud Functions Using highlight.io with Python on Google Cloud Functions Learn how to set up highlight.io on Google Cloud Functions. 1 Configure client-side Highlight. (optional) If you're using Highlight on the frontend for your application, make sure you've initialized it correctly and followed the fullstack mapping guide . 2 Install the highlight-io python package. Download the package from pypi and save it to your requirements. If you use a zip or s3 file upload to publish your function, you will want to make sure highlight-io is part of the build. poetry add highlight-io # or with pip pip install highlight-io 3 Initialize the Highlight SDK. Setup the SDK. Add the @observe_handler decorator to your functions. import logging import random from datetime import datetime import functions_framework import highlight_io from highlight_io.integrations.gcp import observe_handler # `instrument_logging=True` sets up logging instrumentation. # if you do not want to send logs or are using `loguru`, pass `instrument_logging=False` H = highlight_io.H( "<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>", instrument_logging=True, service_name="my-app", service_version="git-sha", environment="production", ) @observe_handler @functions_framework.http def hello_http(request): return "Hello {}!".format(name) 4 Verify your installation. Check that your installation is valid by throwing an error. Add an operation that raises an exception to your function. Setup an HTTP trigger and visit your function on the internet. You should see a DivideByZero error in the Highlight errors page within a few moments. import logging import random from datetime import datetime import functions_framework import highlight_io from highlight_io.integrations.gcp import observe_handler # `instrument_logging=True` sets up logging instrumentation. # if you do not want to send logs or are using `loguru`, pass `instrument_logging=False` H = highlight_io.H( "<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>", instrument_logging=True, service_name="my-app", service_version="git-sha", environment="production", ) @observe_handler @functions_framework.http def hello_http(request): return f"This might be a bad idea: {5/0}" 5 Verify your backend logs are being recorded. Visit the highlight logs portal and check that backend logs are coming in. 6 Verify your backend traces are being recorded. Visit the highlight traces portal and check that backend traces are coming in. Flask Loguru [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/challenges/algolia-2026-01-07
Algolia Agent Studio Challenge - DEV Challenge - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Challenges > Algolia Agent Studio Challenge Challenge ends soon! Submit your entry now DAYS : HOURS : MINUTES : SECONDS See prompts Algolia Agent Studio Challenge Sign up View Entries Please sign in to follow this challenge Manage your entire search infrastructure using natural language! Challenge Status: Live Ended Submissions Due: February 08, 2026 23:59 PT Running through February 8 , the Algolia Agent Studio Challenge invites you to build intelligent, data-driven AI agents using Algolia's Agent Studio and search infrastructure. Whether you're crafting conversational shopping assistants, building smart workflow enhancements, or creating proactive user experiences, this challenge is your opportunity to explore how fast, contextual retrieval powers the next generation of AI applications. There will be four chances to win. We hope you give it a try! Key Dates Contest start: January 07, 2026 Submissions due: February 08, 2026 Winners announced: February 28, 2026 Badge Rewards Algolia Agent Studio Challenge Winner Badge Algolia Agent Studio Challenge Completion Badge Find Out More Ask questions and share your ideas on the Algolia Agent Studio Challenge Launch Post. View Launch Post Sponsored by Algolia For 200k years, humans have spent most of their waking lives searching. Once, we looked for food and shelter. Now, it's information - which keeps proliferating faster and threatens to overwhelm us. Algolia's mission is to find without foraging: to show us what we're looking for - instantly. Learn More → Challenge Prompts Consumer-Facing Conversational Experiences Craft rich, dialogue-based experiences for end users. Think shopping assistants, guided discovery tools, customer support bots, or any conversational interface that benefits from intelligent data retrieval. Your agent should demonstrate targeted prompting with retrieval from indexed data to provide contextually relevant responses. Consider incorporating Algolia's new InstantSearch chat widget to build your frontend experience. Submission Template Judging Criteria: Use of underlying technology Usability and User Experience Originality and Creativity Consumer-Facing Non-Conversational Experiences Build smart enhancements that proactively assist users within existing workflows. We're looking for solutions that inject intelligence without requiring explicit conversation. Examples include: Solution suggestions from a knowledge base during support ticket submission Fashion "look" creation from a curated index PC building with knowledge of compatibility of different components The key is showing how contextual data retrieval enhances user experience without requiring back-and-forth dialogue. Submission Template Judging Criteria: Use of underlying technology Usability and User Experience Originality and Creativity How To Participate In order to participate, you will need to create an Algolia account and publish a post using the submission template associated with each prompt. Your project should integrate Algolia's Agent Studio and demonstrate how fast, relevant data retrieval enhances your AI agent's performance. All projects must be deployed and functional. Algolia's Free Build Plan provides everything you need to complete your project—no credit card required! If your app requires logging in, please provide testing credentials and/or instructions on how judges can best test your application. Helpful Links & Resources Getting Started with Algolia: Algolia Documentation Agent Studio Overview Connect: Discord: Algolia Community X: @algolia Frequently Asked Questions Participation Can I submit to multiple prompts? Yes, you are welcome to submit to multiple prompts. Can one submission qualify for multiple prompts? Yes, if your submission offers a solution to multiple prompts, it can qualify for multiple prompts. Can I submit to a prompt more than once? Yes, you can submit multiple submissions per prompt but you'll need to publish a separate post for each submission. In the event that you may win two or more prompts, and your submission is very close with another participant, we will favor the other participant. In the event that you do win two or more prompts, you will only receive one winner badge. Can I work on a team? Yes, you can work on teams of up to four people. If you collaborate with anyone, you'll need to list their DEV handles in your submission post so we can award a badge to your entire team! Please only publish one submission per team. DEV does not handle prize-splitting, so in the event that your submission wins, you will need to split the prize amongst yourselves. Thank you for understanding! How old do I have to be to participate? Participants need to be 18+ in order to participate. If I live in X, am I eligible to participate? For eligibility rules, see our official challenge rules . Submission Can my submission include open source code? Riffing on open source code and borrowing and improving on previous work/ideas is encouraged but it's important your changes are significant enough to ensure your submission is valid. When does riffing become plagiarism? It will depend, but transparency is important, license compatibility is important. You can use someone else's code to give you a jumpstart to demonstrate your ideas on top of someone else's base, but not just re-package the base. It should be clear to the judges what you added to the project in terms of the code and conceptual inspiration. This means, you should clearly state what you were building on and what elements are original to this new submission. When building on existing code, we expect a significant change that adds something tangible to the output. i.e. a new animation, and new sprite, a new function, a new presentation. Not just changes to the source - i.e. changing colours, changing one sprite, changing one function. What happens if my submission is considered plagiarized or invalid? Anything deemed to be plagiarism will not be eligible for prizes. Incidental plagiarism may simply result in your disqualification from the challenge (regardless of the number of other valid submissions you have published). Egregious plagiarism will result in your suspension from DEV entirely. Any non-generic, non-trivial usage of prior work, including open source code must be credited in your submission. Do submissions have to be in English? Non-english submissions are eligible for a completion badge but not eligible for prizes due to the current limitations of our judges. We will not be judging on mastery of the English language, so please don't let this deter you from submitting if you are not a native English speaker! We hope to evolve this in the future to be more accommodating. Do I need a license for my code? You are not required to license your code but we strongly recommend that you do. Here are some you may consider: MIT , Apache , BSD-2 , BSD-3 , or Commons Clause . Can I use AI? Use of AI is allowed as long as all other rules are followed. We want to give you a chance to show off your skills in realistic scenarios. If you use AI tools to help you achieve your submission, all the power to you. Judging and Prizing Can there be ties? In the event of a tie in scoring between judges, the judges will select the entry that received the highest number of positive reactions on their DEV post to determine the winner. How will I know if I won? Winners will be announced in a DEV post on the winner announcement date noted in our key dates section. When will I receive my DEV badge? Both participation and winner badges will be awarded, in most cases, the same day as the winner announcement. When will I receive my prizes? The DEV Team will contact you via the email associated with your DEV profile within, at most, 10 business days of the announcement date to share the details of claiming your prizes. What steps do I need to take to receive my cash prize? 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/masteringjs/using-then-vs-async-await-in-javascript-2pma#main-content
Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Mastering JS Posted on Aug 25, 2021           Using `then()` vs Async/Await in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie When making async requests, you can either use then() or async/await . Async/await and then() are very similar. The difference is that in an async function , JavaScript will pause the function execution until the promise settles. With then() , the rest of the function will continue to execute but JavaScript won't execute the .then() callback until the promise settles. async function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = await fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ); console . log ( ' I will print second ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' I will print first ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you use promise chaining with then() , you need to put any logic you want to execute after the request in the promise chain . Any code that you put after fetch() will execute immediately, before the fetch() is done. function test () { console . log ( ' Ready ' ); let example = fetch ( ' http://httpbin.org/get ' ). then (( res ) => { console . log ( ' This is inside the then() block ' ); }); console . log ( ' This is after the fetch statement where we are now executing other code that is not async ' ); } test (); console . log ( ' this is after the entire function ' ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode We recommend using async/await where possible, and minimize promise chaining. Async/await makes JavaScript code more accessible to developers that aren't as familiar with JavaScript, and much easier to read. Top comments (3) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Alexander B.K. Follow Full Stack Web Developer Location Batam, Indonesia Education Associate Degree in Physics Engineering (Applied Physics) Work Full Stack Web Developer Joined Apr 26, 2019 • Aug 9 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide In my 1st experience, with minimal knowledge and skill (lack of the knowledge of async-await), I relied upon fetch API to do request to server. I tried to work around the problem I encountered with my own solution, although I thought it was not the right one. I wished I knew async-await then : I could have had better solution instead of using merely promises chaining. That being said, I think both approaches have their own best fit depending on the situation. Like comment: Like comment: 7  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Elazar Raab Follow Software Engineer Joined Nov 17, 2024 • Nov 17 '24 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Note that async wait requires the encapsulating/calling function to be async - that is not always possible, e.g., for top-level function before ES2020 or when some callback function interface dictates non-async function. In such cases, the only way to provide code that invokes and processes a result of an async (promise) result is using the .then directive. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Alexandra Egorova Follow Joined Aug 9, 2023 • Nov 10 '23 • Edited on Nov 10 • Edited Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is the best explanation! I read 10 articles before but only your explanation is more clear, thanks a lot!!! Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Mastering JS Follow Free resources for learning pragmatic, effective web development Joined Jun 23, 2021 More from Mastering JS 3 Neat toString() Tricks in JavaScript # javascript 3 Neat Tricks For Sorting Arrays of Objects in JavaScript # javascript # codenewbie 3 Neat Features of JavaScript's Much-Maligned Date Class # javascript # codenewbie 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/metrics/overview
Metrics (beta) Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. 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Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Metrics (beta) / Metrics (beta) Metrics (beta) OpenTelemetry Metrics with Highlight Highlight supports accepting OpenTelemetry (OTel) metrics at our dedicated endpoint: otel.highlight.io . This allows you to seamlessly integrate your application's metrics data with Highlight. To get started with sending OTel metrics to Highlight using Python, for example, you can follow the example here . We're actively working on more tutorials and examples for other languages and frameworks, so stay tuned. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://pypi.org/#content
PyPI · The Python Package Index Skip to main content Switch to mobile version Warning You are using an unsupported browser, upgrade to a newer version. Warning Some features may not work without JavaScript. Please try enabling it if you encounter problems. Help Docs Sponsors Log in Register Menu Help Docs Sponsors Log in Register Find, install and publish Python packages with the Python Package Index Search PyPI search-focus#focusSearchField" data-search-focus-target="searchField"> Search Or browse projects 724,176 projects 7,891,429 releases 16,784,376 files 996,737 users The Python Package Index (PyPI) is a repository of software for the Python programming language. PyPI helps you find and install software developed and shared by the Python community. Learn about installing packages . Package authors use PyPI to distribute their software. Learn how to package your Python code for PyPI . Help Installing packages Uploading packages User guide Project name retention FAQs About PyPI PyPI Blog Infrastructure dashboard Statistics Logos & trademarks Our sponsors Contributing to PyPI Bugs and feedback Contribute on GitHub Translate PyPI Sponsor PyPI Development credits Using PyPI Terms of Service Report security issue Code of conduct Privacy Notice Acceptable Use Policy Status: all systems operational Developed and maintained by the Python community, for the Python community. Donate today! "PyPI", "Python Package Index", and the blocks logos are registered trademarks of the Python Software Foundation . © 2026 Python Software Foundation Site map Switch to desktop version English español français 日本語 português (Brasil) українська Ελληνικά Deutsch 中文 (简体) 中文 (繁體) русский עברית Esperanto 한국어 Supported by AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#final-build-still-experimental
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/amigosmaker/python-gui-pyqt-vs-tkinter-5hdd#pyqt
Python GUI, PyQt vs TKinter - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse amigos-maker Posted on Oct 31, 2019 • Edited on May 22, 2020           Python GUI, PyQt vs TKinter # python Both Tkinter and PyQt are useful for designing acceptable GUI’s, but at the same time, they differ in terms of adaptability and functionality. Mostly, Tkinter is all about writing GUI yourself, program your settings or functionality in the same script. On the other hand, in PyQt, you separate GUI in a script, and use your Python knowledge from another script. Instead of creating your own code for the user interface, you can simply adopt the Qt Designer functions to develop your application . Therefore, let’s see what the main differences and advantages of PyQt vs. Tkinter are. PyQt Advantages of using PyQt Coding flexibility – GUI programming with Qt is designed around the concept of signals and slots for establishing communication amongst objects. That permits flexibility when dealing with GUI events and results in a smoother codebase. More than a framework – Qt uses a wide array of native platform APIs for the purpose of networking, database creation, and many more . It offers primary access to them via a unique API. Various UI components – Qt offers several widgets, such as buttons or menus , all designed with a basic appearance across all supported platforms. Various learning resources – because PyQt is one of the most used UI frameworks for Python, you can get easy access to a wide array of documentation. Easy to master – PyQt comes with a user-friendly, straightforward API functionality, along with specific classes linked to Qt C++. This allows the user to use previous knowledge from either Qt or C++, making PyQt easy to understand. Disadvantages of using PyQt Lack of Python-specific documentation for classes in PyQt5 It requires a lot of time for understanding all the details of PyQt, meaning it is a quite steep learning curve Tkinter Advantages of using Tkinter Available out-of-charge for commercial usage. It is featured in the underlying Python library. Creating executables for Tkinter apps is more accessible since Tkinter is included in Python, and, as a consequence, it comes with no other dependencies. Simple to understand and master, as Tkinter is a limited library with a simple API, being the primary choice for creating fast GUIs for Python scripts. Disadvantages of using Tkinter Tkinter does not include advanced widgets. It has no similar tool as Qt Designer for Tkinter. It doesn't have a native look and feel What to choose? Anyhow, in most situations, the best solution is using PyQt, considering the advantages and disadvantages of both PyQt and Tkinter. GUI programming with Qt is created around signals and slots for communication amongst objects. Thus, it allows flexibility, while it gets to the programmer access to a wide array of tools. Tkinter can indeed be useful for those that want to design a fundamental and rapid GUIs for Python scripts, yet for a more advanced programming result , almost all programmers opt for the functionalities that come with PyQt . They admit it is worth mastering the advanced knowledge of PyQt due to the professional programming results that come along. Thus, when it comes to PyQt vs. Tkinter, it all depends on how much you want to learn and discover. Resources: Course: PyQt dekstop apps PyQt hello world Tkinter tutorial Top comments (5) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   robin deatherage robin deatherage robin deatherage Follow I am a retired Machine Programmer who's passion is still entrenched heavily into Computer Sciences. Location Texas Education NMU Work Machine Programmer at Namco Joined Nov 14, 2019 • Nov 14 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Actually it is Tk that is far more advanced than PyQt or Wx. I will explain why. Tk is still ahead of most all GUI Toolkits by as much as fifteen to twenty years as it is one of three of the only GUI Widget Toolkit made from the Original Toolkit Library. And is one of only three GUI Toolkits besides GTK and the NCSA Mosaic Canvas Toolkit that powers both the proprietary underlying HTML rendering Engines used by Netscape Navigator, WebKit, WebView, IE, Edge, Safari, Chrome, Chromium among a few others. The main reason it is so advanced is its ability to pre set JavaScript triggers for after render events with its tags, marks, configs() and its Binding Methods. One of these binding methods is the ability to set hyperlinks while suspending their path data for processing web request from user clicks in both regular and OpenClick() events. Many also are not aware that before 2009 there were still over fifty Web Browsers with Rendering Engines entirely developed using Tk that at that time were still being downloaded. Now Python does lack the 3D OpenGL that comes with Tk 8.6 and lacks the Video Codecs that are also in the Tk version, but they can be PyObject directly tied in and used, but only a handful of us are doing so. Also to Mimic all other GUI Libraries all one has to do is place all widgets and or create your own and ploace them individually inside Frames for each one. The Frames are the secret behind Tkinter and if placed within a Canvas give you full things such as radius buttons, cells for rendering HTML Blocks and or New Widgets. Thanks ! Like comment: Like comment: 8  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   ErtY'wek ErtY'wek ErtY'wek Follow Joined May 27, 2020 • May 27 '20 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide "The main reason it is so advanced is its ability to pre set JavaScript triggers for after render events with its tags, marks, configs() and its Binding Methods. One of these binding methods is the ability to set hyperlinks while suspending their path data for processing web request from user clicks in both regular and OpenClick() events. " Can you explain to a programming newbie? Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Victor Meunier Victor Meunier Victor Meunier Follow Joined Jun 13, 2018 • Oct 31 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Interesting comparison. I've used Qt in C++ in the past and recently used PyQt5 to make a prototype ( github.com/MrEliptik/shotty ) and I loved it! The lack of python specific documentation can be a bit painful from time to time but hopefully someone on SO faced the same issue. Also, the bindings are really similar to Qt for c++ so usually you can use the C++ docs. You talked about Widgets for PyQt but you could also use QML right? I think it's especially interesting since it enables a lot of customization and can be interesting to make good looking apps such as desktop.telegram.org/ . Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   amigos-maker amigos-maker amigos-maker Follow Joined Oct 27, 2019 • Oct 31 '19 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Looks like a cool app you made! Right, you can use QML also Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   michael michael michael Follow Games and GUI in c++ and python. builds web scrapers with python Email michaelobi54@gmail.com Location Nigeria Work Engineering undergraduate Joined Jul 20, 2020 • Jul 20 '20 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide I think Tkinter is underrated...partly because of the learning curve as you have to code every widget.But when you get a hang of it, it’s really great. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse amigos-maker Follow Joined Oct 27, 2019 More from amigos-maker Waar kun je Flask voor gebruiken? (Dutch) # python # flask # nederlands # dutch What is Flask used for? # python # flask Wat is Flask? (Dutch) # python # flask 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2025/winter/why-you-shouldnt-use-a-lax-license-for-your-next-free-software-program
Why you shouldn't use a lax license for your next free software program — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Bulletins › 2025 › Winter › Why you shouldn't use a lax license for your next free software program Info Why you shouldn't use a lax license for your next free software program by Krzysztof Siewicz Contributions — Published on Dec 04, 2025 07:19 PM Software freedom is about controlling your computing. This means having the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change, and improve the software. We determine whether a program is free based on what kind of license it is under and there generally exist two kinds of free software licenses. A copyleft license, e.g., the GNU General Public License (GPL), or the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL), requires all distributors of a program to keep that program free, as well as any derivative works based on changes made to it. Conversely, a lax license (e.g., various versions of the BSD license ) allows distributors to not share the program or its modifications, thus denying downstream users control over their own computing. To be clear, software under lax licenses is still free software, but clearly malicious and immoral schemes aimed at taking software freedom a way from users are allowed. For example, when someone receives a program under a lax license and adds any modifications, but distributes it in binary form only, maybe even under a nonfree license, users who want to use it in freedom are left on their own. If these users gather enough programming skills and time, and succeed to develop their own independent, free implementation of the modifications, they may (in a way) liberate the once-free modified program. Sharing the code of programs under lax licenses is a moral act of good will, but not legally required. With a copylefted program, people can legally enforce copyleft by requesting the source code of modifications under a free license (please note that even the strongest copyleft licenses, the GNU GPL and the GNU AGPL, do not require sharing of code if it is only used privately). We hope that there will always be individuals who are technologically savvy and dedicated enough to secure freedom, for themselves and the rest of the world. But, let's not forget that the majority of users are less skilled, and thus rely on the community to provide them with free software. For the majority of people, the solution to accessible freedom lies with the skills of a small community to duplicate the work of the distributors who chose not to provide downstream users with the source code in freedom. The free software community already has more work cut out for it than there are community members with the necessary skills and time to do that work. Taxing the community even more with liberating a distribution of a previously free program should be avoided at all cost. Sharing software source code should be promoted and encouraged at all times. Theft of user freedom is often bit-by bit, instead of a grand, dramatic swipe. One or two programs under a lax license here or there might not be a problem, but there is a tipping point when considering the quantity, importance, and the interdependence of the programs involved. It is probably impossible to say for sure where this tipping point is exactly, but it is clear that the more people who choose lax instead of copyleft licenses, the closer we get to it. It also matters at which level such choices are made: a developer deciding to use a lax license for a simple, independent program probably affects the programs' users only, while the decision of a large and popular free software distribution to include software under lax licenses in the system's core usually affects the users of software, of the distribution, and may have a spill over effect on users of other distributions as well. Usually, the bigger the effect, the more resources are necessary to liberate the affected programs should someone decide to pursue an immoral scheme allowed by lax licenses. If, for example, most of free software developers who could remedy the situation end up hired away by the same company that engages into the scheme, that could set the free software community back many years — remember the times when the GNU Project started? Free software building blocks of the whole OS had to be meticulously built, step by step. Most of us would notice if someone attempted to steal user freedom from us in a single, overt move. Unfortunately, we are less observant of a creeping takeover. Such is made easier whenever a free software program is released under a lax license, instead of using a powerful copyleft license such as the GNU GPL. Opting for a program under a lax license instead of a copylefted implementation is a big win for appropriators eager to take more freedom from users. " Cartoon Network robber hacking a laptop ." 2018 by Vectortoons. This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: bulletin 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/bulletin
FSF Bulletins — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Bulletins Info FSF Bulletins by Free Software Foundation Contributions — Published on Dec 06, 2007 03:40 PM The FSF publishes its newsletter twice a year. Here you can download copies to print or read online. Issue 47 — Winter 2025 Issue 46 — Spring 2025 Issue 45 — Fall 2024 Issue 44 — Spring 2024 Issue 43 — Fall 2023 Issue 42 — Spring 2023 Issue 41 — Fall 2022 Issue 40 — Spring 2022 Issue 39 — Fall 2021 Issue 38 — Spring 2021 Issue 37 — Fall 2020 Issue 36 — Spring 2020 Issue 35 — Fall 2019 Issue 34 — Spring 2019 Issue 33 — Fall 2018 Issue 32 — Spring/Summer 2018 Issue 31 — Fall/Winter 2017 Issue 30 — Spring/Summer 2017 Issue 29 — Fall/Winter 2016 Issue 28 — Spring/Summer 2016 Issue 27 — Fall 2015 Issue 26 — Spring 2015 Issue 25 — Fall 2014 Issue 24 — Spring 2014 Issue 23 — Fall 2013 Issue 22 — Spring 2013 Issue 21 — Fall 2012 Issue 20 — Spring 2012 Issue 19 — Fall 2011 Issue 18 — Spring 2011 Issue 17 — Fall 2010 Issue 16 - Spring 2010 Issue 15 - Fall 2009 Issue 14 - Spring 2009 Issue 13 - Fall 2008 Issue 12 - Spring 2008 Issue 11 - Fall 2007 Previously, the GNU Project published a bulletin, which is also available . We also have the source code for the scripts used to generate the bulletin. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/challenges/mux-2025-12-03
DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Presented by Mux - DEV Challenge - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Challenges > DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Presented by Mux Challenge ends soon! Submit your entry now DAYS : HOURS : MINUTES : SECONDS See prompts DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Presented by Mux View Entries Please sign in to follow this challenge Record a 1-minute pitch video and show off your project Challenge Status: Ended Ended Join our next Challenge We are so thrilled to introduce DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge presented by Mux ! Running through January 4 , this challenge invites you to record a 1-minute pitch video about your project and share it with the community. Consider this our version of "Shark Tank" but without the sharks. Have you been thinking about a project for months but haven't gotten started? Take this as your signal to start building! Previous projects welcome too! This is your moment to show off that side project, startup, or previous challenge submission that you worked so hard on but didn't get the recognition for. Whether it's a weekend hack, a passion project you've been refining or thinking about for months, or something in between, we want to see it! Both the Overall Prompt Winner and Best Use of Mux Winner will receive: $1,500 USD cash prize DEV++ Membership Exclusive DEV Badge All Participants with a valid submission will receive a completion badge on their DEV profile. We hope you give it a try! Key Dates Contest start: December 03, 2025 Submissions due: January 04, 2026 Winners announced: January 22, 2026 Badge Rewards Mux Challenge Completion Badge Mux Challenge Winner Badge Find Out More Ask questions and share your ideas on the DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Presented by Mux Launch Post. View Launch Post Sponsored by Mux Mux is video infrastructure that makes it easy for development teams to ship high-performance and cost-effective video in minutes, not months. Mux solves the hardest problems developers face when building live and on-demand video into anything from websites to platforms to AI workflows. With Mux's API-first approach, developers can focus on building amazing experiences while Mux handles video encoding, transcoding, delivery, and monitoring at scale. Learn More → Challenge Prompt Overall Prompt: Show and Tell Show off any side project you're proud of. Record a 1-minute pitch video explaining what your project is, what makes it special, and why you built it. Upload the video to Mux and embed it as part of your submission! Additional Prize Category: Best Use of Mux Interested in adding or using Mux in your project? We have a dedicated prize category for participants who use Mux in a fun and interesting way. Check out these resources below for some inspiration. Project Requirements: Must be a software side project that you are building/coding or have built/coded Should be a web or mobile app Must be your own code Make testing easy for us! If your app requires logging in, please provide testing credentials in your submission and/or clear instructions on how to best test your application for judges. App Store/TestFlight links (optional) GitHub Repo (optional) Live demo link (optional) Pitch Video Requirements: Must be 1 minute or less Should clearly cover: What your app does/solves Why you built it What makes it unique or special How it works How To Participate To participate, you'll need to create a free Mux account (no credit card required), upload your video to Mux, and publish a post with your Mux video embedded using the submission template below. Submission Template Judging Criteria: Problem & Opportunity Solution & Technical Approach Value Proposition & Audience Benefit Storytelling & Pitch Quality Scalability & "Would You Invest?" Potential Helpful Links & Resources Getting Started with Mux New to Mux? Here's what you need to know: Getting Started Docs Stream Video Files Mux AI Workflows : Add AI chapter generation, translations, and summarizations to videos AI video generator with Mux & fal.ai : Repo Demo Site Video Semantic Search - Supa Search Repo Demo Site Mux MCP Server Connect: X LinkedIn YouTube Frequently Asked Questions Participation Can I submit to both prompts? Yes! You are welcome to submit to both the overall prompt and the "Best Use of Mux" additional prize category. You can submit a single post that qualifies for both. Can I submit to a prompt more than once? Yes, you can submit multiple submissions per prompt but you'll need to publish a separate post for each submission. Can I work on a team? Yes, you can work on teams of up to four people for the challenge. If you collaborate with anyone, you'll need to list their DEV handles in your submission post so we can award a badge to your entire team! Please only publish one submission per team. DEV does not handle prize-splitting, so in the event that your submission wins cash prizes, you will need to split that amongst yourselves. Thank you for understanding! How old do I have to be to participate? Participants need to be 18+ in order to participate. If I live in X, am I eligible to participate? For eligibility rules, see our official challenge rules . Submission Can I submit a previous project? Yes! Previous projects are welcome. This is your moment to show off that side project, startup, or previous challenge submission that you worked so hard on but didn't get the recognition for. Can my submission include open source code? Riffing on open source code and borrowing and improving on previous work/ideas is encouraged but it's important your changes are significant enough to ensure your submission is valid. When does riffing become plagiarism? It will depend, but transparency is important, license compatibility is important. You can use someone else's code to give you a jumpstart to demonstrate your ideas on top of someone else's base, but not just re-package the base. It should be clear to the judges what you added to the project in terms of the code and conceptual inspiration. This means, you should clearly state what you were building on and what elements are original to this new submission. When building on existing code, we expect a significant change that adds something tangible to the output, such as a new feature, a new endpoint, a new function, or a new presentation. Not just changes to styling or configuration. What happens if my submission is considered plagiarized or invalid? Anything deemed to be plagiarism will not be eligible for prizes. Incidental plagiarism may simply result in your disqualification from the challenge (regardless of the number of other valid submissions you have published). Egregious plagiarism will result in your suspension from DEV entirely. Any non-generic, non-trivial usage of prior work, including open source code must be credited in your submission. Do submissions have to be in English? Non-english submissions are eligible for a completion badge but not eligible for prizes due to the current limitations of our judges. We will not be judging on mastery of the English language, so please don't let this deter you from submitting if you are not a native English speaker! We hope to evolve this in the future to be more accommodating. Do I need a license for my code? You are not required to license your code but we strongly recommend that you do. Here are some you may consider: MIT , Apache , BSD-2 , BSD-3 , or Commons Clause . Can I use AI? Use of AI is allowed as long as all other rules are followed. We want to give you a chance to show off your skills in realistic scenarios. If you use AI tools to help you achieve your submission, all the power to you. Judging and Prizing Can there be ties? In the event of a tie in scoring between judges, the judges will select the entry that received the highest number of positive reactions on their DEV post to determine the winner. How will I know if I won? Winners will be announced in a DEV post on the winner announcement date noted in our key dates section. When will I receive my DEV badge? Both participation and winner badges will be awarded, in most cases, the same day as the winner announcement. When will I receive my prizes? The DEV Team will contact you via the email associated with your DEV profile within, at most, 10 business days of the announcement date to share the details of claiming your prizes. What steps do I need to take to receive my cash prize? The winner (including each member of a team) may be required to sign and return an affidavit of eligibility and publicity/liability release, and provide any additional tax filing information (such as a W-9, social security number or Federal tax ID number) within seven (7) business days following the date of your first email notification. DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Presented by Mux Rules NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Open only to 18+. Contest entry period ends January 4, 2026 at 11:59 PM PST. Contest is void where prohibited or restricted by law or regulation. All entries must be submitted during the contest period. For Official Rules, see DEV's Worldwide Show and Tell Challenge Contest Rules and General Contest Official Rules . 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/ben-santora
Ben Santora - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Follow User actions Ben Santora Linux OS - Local AI - Small Language Models Location Montserrat MA Joined Joined on  Jan 1, 2026 Personal website https://github.com/ben-santora github website Work Engineering Technician More info about @ben-santora Badges Writing Debut Awarded for writing and sharing your first DEV post! Continue sharing your work to earn the 4 Week Writing Streak Badge. Got it Close Currently learning Jan.ai - Qwen2_5-7B-Instruct-IQ4_XS SLM - Testing / Training / Fine-Tuning Currently hacking on Testing and fine-tuning local operation of Qwen2_5-7B-Instruct-IQ4_XS small language model. --- HP PC Specs = i7-1165G7 (AVX-512) & 11GiB RAM - CPU Only - Inference ~390% CPU load. Available for AI - SLMs Post 2 posts published Comment 4 comments written Tag 7 tags followed Is an AI Model Software? – A Low‑Level Technical View Ben Santora Ben Santora Ben Santora Follow Jan 12 Is an AI Model Software? – A Low‑Level Technical View # discuss # ai # architecture # software 9  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Want to connect with Ben Santora ? Create an account to connect with Ben Santora . You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in SLMs, LLMs and a Devious Logic Puzzle Test Ben Santora Ben Santora Ben Santora Follow Jan 12 SLMs, LLMs and a Devious Logic Puzzle Test # llm # performance # testing 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/getting-started/browser/replay-configuration/recording-network-requests-and-responses
Recording Network Requests and Responses Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Getting Started / Browser / highlight.run SDK / Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording Network Requests and Responses Highlight out of the box shows you all the network requests durations, response codes, and sizes for a session. If you'd like more data such as the headers and bodies, you can enable recording of network requests and responses by setting networkRecording.recordHeadersAndBody (see NetworkRecordingOptions ) to true when initializing Highlight. Highlight monkey patches XmlHttpRequest and fetch to record data from your app's requests/responses including status codes, headers, and bodies. Privacy Out of the box, Highlight will not record known headers that contain secrets. Those headers are: - Authorization - Cookie - Proxy-Authorization If you have other headers that you would like to redact then you can set networkRecording.networkHeadersToRedact . Recording Headers and Bodies Highlight can also record the request/response headers and bodies. You'll be able to see the headers and bodies by clicking on any XHR or Fetch requests in the session Developer Tools. H.init('<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>', { networkRecording: { enabled: true, recordHeadersAndBody: true, }, }) Redacting URLs You may have APIs that you know will always return secrets in the headers, body, or both. In this case, you can choose URLs to redact from. If a URL matches one of the URLs you specify, the header and body will not be recorded. H.init('<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>', { networkRecording: true, urlBlocklist: [ 'https://salted-passwords.com', 'https://www.googleapis.com/identitytoolkit', 'https://securetoken.googleapis.com', ], }) Out of the box, Highlight will not record these URLs: - https://www.googleapis.com/identitytoolkit - https://securetoken.googleapis.com Redacting Headers and Bodies If you are dealing with sensitive data or want to go the allowlist approach then you can configure networkRecording.headerKeysToRecord and networkRecording.bodyKeysToRecord . Using these 2 configs, you'll be able to explicitly define which header/body keys to record. You can also redact specific headers by using networkRecording.networkHeadersToRedact and redact specific keys in the request/response body with networkRecoding.networkBodyKeysToRedact . This configuration is only available for highlight.run versions newer than 4.1.0 . Custom Sanitizing of Response and Requests Create a sanitize function to gain granular control of the data that your client sends to Highlight. The sanitize function is defined in the second argument of H.init under networkRecording.requestResponseSanitizer . The networkRecording.requestResponseSanitizer method receives a Request/Response pair, and should return an object of the same type or a null value. Returning a null value means that Highlight will drop the request, and no related network logs will be seen in the session replay. Dropping logs is not recommended unless necessary, as it can cause issues with debugging due to the missing requests. Rather, it is recommended to delete or redact header and body fields in this method. This configuration is only available for highlight.run versions newer than 8.1.0 . H.init('<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>', { networkRecording: { enabled: true, recordHeadersAndBody: true, requestResponseSanitizer: (pair) => { if (pair.request.url.toLowerCase().indexOf('ignore') !== -1) { // ignore the entire request/response pair (no network logs) return null } if (pair.response.body.indexOf('secret') !== -1) { // remove the body in the response delete pair.response.body; } return pair } }, }) API See NetworkRecordingOptions for more information on how to configure network recording. GraphQL We extract GraphQL operation names and format the payloads. See GraphQL details . React.js Error Boundary Recording WebSocket Events Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/blockchain
Blockchain - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Blockchain Follow Hide A decentralized, distributed, and oftentimes public, digital ledger consisting of records called blocks that are used to record transactions across many computers so that any involved block cannot be altered retroactively, without the alteration of all subsequent blocks. Create Post Older #blockchain posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Observation State Made Simple Tensor Labs Tensor Labs Tensor Labs Follow Jan 13 Observation State Made Simple # algorithms # architecture # blockchain # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read Building a Low-Code Blockchain Deployment Platform Kowshikkumar Reddy Makireddy Kowshikkumar Reddy Makireddy Kowshikkumar Reddy Makireddy Follow Jan 13 Building a Low-Code Blockchain Deployment Platform # showdev # blockchain # devops # tooling Comments Add Comment 9 min read Crafting a Stitch-Inspired Memecoin on Sui Jinali Pabasara Jinali Pabasara Jinali Pabasara Follow Jan 13 Crafting a Stitch-Inspired Memecoin on Sui # smartcontract # blockchain # web3 # programming Comments Add Comment 7 min read Enhancing Privacy with Stealth Addresses on Public Blockchains Jinali Pabasara Jinali Pabasara Jinali Pabasara Follow Jan 13 Enhancing Privacy with Stealth Addresses on Public Blockchains # blockchain # web3 # privacy 1  reaction Comments 3  comments 5 min read Smart Contracts on Midnight: Programming Visibility, Not Storage Henry Odinakachukwu Henry Odinakachukwu Henry Odinakachukwu Follow Jan 12 Smart Contracts on Midnight: Programming Visibility, Not Storage # architecture # blockchain # privacy # web3 Comments Add Comment 1 min read Ethereum-Solidity Quiz Q18: What type of modifiers are "view" and "pure"? MihaiHng MihaiHng MihaiHng Follow Jan 12 Ethereum-Solidity Quiz Q18: What type of modifiers are "view" and "pure"? # ethereum # web3 # solidity # blockchain 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read [TW_DevRel] TECH-Verse 2022: Interesting Agenda Highlights - Day 1 Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 [TW_DevRel] TECH-Verse 2022: Interesting Agenda Highlights - Day 1 # techtalks # security # blockchain # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Rust Ownership & Design Mistakes That Break Blockchain Programs Progress Ochuko Eyaadah Progress Ochuko Eyaadah Progress Ochuko Eyaadah Follow Jan 10 Rust Ownership & Design Mistakes That Break Blockchain Programs # blockchain # security # devsecurity # rust 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Ethereum-Solidity Quiz Q17: What visibility modifiers does Solidity use? MihaiHng MihaiHng MihaiHng Follow Jan 10 Ethereum-Solidity Quiz Q17: What visibility modifiers does Solidity use? # ethereum # web3 # solidity # blockchain 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read BTC, ADA, and Cardano Hydra Heads as Paperless Digital Cash An Rodriguez An Rodriguez An Rodriguez Follow Jan 10 BTC, ADA, and Cardano Hydra Heads as Paperless Digital Cash # blockchain # cryptocurrency # web3 Comments Add Comment 8 min read Rust Series01 - Ownership is what you need to know Kevin Sheeran Kevin Sheeran Kevin Sheeran Follow Jan 10 Rust Series01 - Ownership is what you need to know # programming # rust # web3 # blockchain Comments Add Comment 1 min read Account Abstraction Explained Akshith Anand Akshith Anand Akshith Anand Follow Jan 8 Account Abstraction Explained # webdev # blockchain # web3 # programming Comments Add Comment 5 min read Ethereum UX: Account Abstraction (AA) Akim B. (mousticke.eth) Akim B. (mousticke.eth) Akim B. (mousticke.eth) Follow Jan 7 Ethereum UX: Account Abstraction (AA) # web3 # blockchain # ethereum # cryptocurrency Comments Add Comment 7 min read Tutorial: Understanding the "Proof of HODL" Consensus Mechanism georgina georgina georgina Follow Jan 6 Tutorial: Understanding the "Proof of HODL" Consensus Mechanism # cryptocurrency # blockchain # web3 # nft Comments Add Comment 2 min read I Read a 70-Page Document About Architectural Blueprint for Smart Contracts, So You Don’t Have To Lev Goukassian Lev Goukassian Lev Goukassian Follow Jan 5 I Read a 70-Page Document About Architectural Blueprint for Smart Contracts, So You Don’t Have To # ternarylogic # ethereum # blockchain # smartcontract Comments Add Comment 11 min read Privacy Without Anonymity: Why ZK-Enabled Programmable Payments Will Define Blockchain's Next Era Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Rohan Kumar Follow Jan 7 Privacy Without Anonymity: Why ZK-Enabled Programmable Payments Will Define Blockchain's Next Era # zeroknowledge # stellar # blockchain # fintech Comments Add Comment 15 min read Tutorial: How to Become a GPU Provider on a Decentralized Compute Network Peter Peter Peter Follow Jan 6 Tutorial: How to Become a GPU Provider on a Decentralized Compute Network # web3 # cryptocurrency # blockchain # nft Comments Add Comment 2 min read Tutorial: Rethinking dApp Onboarding with Account Abstraction Pierce Pierce Pierce Follow Jan 6 Tutorial: Rethinking dApp Onboarding with Account Abstraction # cryptocurrency # blockchain # web3 # webdev Comments Add Comment 2 min read Top Mistakes Crypto Projects Make Before Listing (and How to Avoid Them) Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Jan 6 Top Mistakes Crypto Projects Make Before Listing (and How to Avoid Them) # blockchain # web3 # tutorial # productivity 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Why MLOps Needs Blockchain for True Data Integrity Krunal Bhimani Krunal Bhimani Krunal Bhimani Follow Jan 5 Why MLOps Needs Blockchain for True Data Integrity # machinelearning # blockchain # devops # security 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read CES 2026 to Showcase Pervasive AI Advancements from Semiconductors to Smart Living and Ethical Debates. Stelixx Insights Stelixx Insights Stelixx Insights Follow Jan 6 CES 2026 to Showcase Pervasive AI Advancements from Semiconductors to Smart Living and Ethical Debates. # ai # web3 # blockchain # productivity Comments Add Comment 2 min read Tutorial: Understanding the Terra Classic Node & Staking Environment lilian lilian lilian Follow Jan 6 Tutorial: Understanding the Terra Classic Node & Staking Environment # web3 # cryptocurrency # bitcoin # blockchain Comments Add Comment 2 min read Tutorial: Uploading NFT Metadata to IPFS in 3 Minutes with Pinata Helena Chandler Helena Chandler Helena Chandler Follow Jan 6 Tutorial: Uploading NFT Metadata to IPFS in 3 Minutes with Pinata # cryptocurrency # web3 # blockchain Comments Add Comment 2 min read Supercharge Prediction Markets Liquidity on Sonic with Flying Tulip: The Leverage Flywheel Developers Need in 2026 ilya rahnavard ilya rahnavard ilya rahnavard Follow Jan 5 Supercharge Prediction Markets Liquidity on Sonic with Flying Tulip: The Leverage Flywheel Developers Need in 2026 # fullstack # programming # blockchain # web3 Comments Add Comment 3 min read Understanding Pallas and Mithril: Journey into Cardano Infrastructure 이관호(Gwanho LEE) 이관호(Gwanho LEE) 이관호(Gwanho LEE) Follow Jan 4 Understanding Pallas and Mithril: Journey into Cardano Infrastructure # cardano # blockchain # rust # mithril Comments Add Comment 3 min read loading... trending guides/resources Exploring XRP in DeFi and What It Teaches Us My Thoughts on the 2025 Stack Overflow Survey: The Hype, the Reality, the Gap When Telegram Cocoon Goes Live: The Future of the AI Internet Gasless Transactions on Solana Top 12 Documentation Tools for Product Teams (2025 Edition) My first flash loan protocol: A Solana adventure Build a CLMM on Solana The Arbitrage Bot Arms Race: What We Learned Running FlashArb in Production Tornado Cash Comeback: New Contracts And Changes An Overview of EIP-3009: Transfer With Authorisation From Request to Revenue with the New x402 Protocol Smart Contracts on XRPL's AlphaNet Mastering Sui DeepBook: A Hands-On DeFi DEX Series (1) Embedded wallets 101: a practical guide to digital wallet types for builders Smart Escrows Post #1: What are Smart Escrows? Build Own Blockchain - 1 episode Building a Gasless Marketplace on Polygon with x402 Protocol Oasis launches a strategic investment arm and backs SemiLiquid to build confidential RWA credit i... DevConnect 2025 Smart Escrow Series #3: Security 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/licensing/
FSF Licensing & Compliance Team — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Benutzerspezifische Werkzeuge Anmelden Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search Sie sind hier: Startseite › Licensing Info FSF Licensing & Compliance Team erstellt von Free Software Foundation — Published on 10.02.2005 16:06 For over 20 years the FSF Licensing & Compliance Team has been the preeminent resource of free licensing for free software developers. Read this page in Spanish . Education & Support We have a number of online resources as well as community-based and paid support. See our licensing recommendations, analysis, and FAQ : Guide to choosing a license for your own work Comprehensive FAQ about the GNU Licenses List of other licenses and whether they are free, copyleft, or compatible with the GPL . A Quick Guide to GPLv3 Join us at one of our regular seminars on free software licensing & GPL compliance , or view educational resources from past events. Check out the FSF events page to know when members of the compliance team are speaking at other conferences or events. I must say that the vast majority of my questions have been answered by the thorough FAQs included around the FSF Web site. I needed them, for example, when I helped someone correctly GPL their software in under 10 minutes in time for a competition deadline! Thank you for all the resources you already provide. Keep up to date with the latest licensing issues by visiting our Licensing and Compliance blog , or subscribe to the Licensing and Compliance Blog RSS feed . You can also subscribe to a mailing list which only announces updates related to FSF licensing materials . Have a question that you couldn’t find the answer to? For general free software licensing questions please email licensing@fsf.org . And of course, we would love any feedback you can provide -- good or bad! 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2025/winter/meet-fsf-president-ian-kelling
Meet FSF President Ian Kelling — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Bulletins › 2025 › Winter › Meet FSF President Ian Kelling Info Meet FSF President Ian Kelling by Zoë Kooyman Contributions — Published on Dec 04, 2025 06:25 PM Contributors: Ian Kelling Newly-appointed FSF President Ian Kelling is eager to advance software freedom and the FSF. The Free Software Foundation (FSF) has been looking for a new president ever since Geoffrey Knauth committed to leaving the position in 2021. Filling this position was not easy. There are general requirements that need to be satisfied, like where the person is located or confirmation there are no conflicts of interest. Besides these qualifications, we needed someone knowledgeable of the free software issues we're facing, and who is excited to work with the staff and myself to push the FSF forward and grow the free software movement ! After long deliberation, the board's eye fell onto an unexpected candidate: Ian Kelling. Unexpected only because Kelling has been a staff member for the last eight years as the FSF's senior system's administrator where he, among other things, maintains the FSF's infrastructure with only free software. He was elected to represent the staff as the union seat representative when the seat was created in 2021 and helped the board set up the process for electing new board members, resulting in four new board members in the past year. Kelling is filling the FSF president role as a volunteer while continuing his paid role as the FSF's senior systems administrator (non-union for the duration of his presidency). I decided to ask him some questions about who he is and about his connection to free software. Can you tell us a little about yourself? I was born in San Diego, California, in 1981, where I was introduced to activism at an early age. I was raised by my two mothers, an arrangement which was not socially acceptable to most people in our city. One of my moms founded Paradigm Women's Bookstore, a popular gathering space for San Diego lesbians that offered feminist and lesbian music, literature, and live performances in the late 1980s and early 1990s. My family and I spent a lot of time in the local lesbian community and we marched in the pride parade every year. What does free software mean to you? I got my first computer as a teenager, but had no idea that it was feasible for me to write a new program or modify an existing one . After high school, I spent one semester in college and then a few years woodworking as my day job. Eventually, I went back to college and learned about GNU and free software when I took an introductory programming class. Exploring and contributing to the world of free software quickly became a lifelong hobby. After college, I didn't find any great opportunities to work in free software and I spent some years working at mostly proprietary software companies in the Seattle area. That experience solidified my personal belief in complete software freedom. I focused on gaining skills to work exclusively on GNU/Linux , and finally made that a professional reality when I started working for the FSF in 2017 as the senior systems administrator. I've contributed to pieces of free software like GNU Emacs , community efforts like the Free Software Directory and others, and I've been a speaker at the Seattle GNU/Linux conference (SeaGL) and FOSDEM . Another theme in my life which drew me toward free software was my experience in different communities. I grew up playing soccer and learning about being on a team, and have been on adult recreational teams on and off throughout my life. As a teenager, I was part of a community of fans and friends of local music bands which centered around the Ché Café , a student-run worker co-operative on the University of California San Diego campus. In my woodworking days, I became part of a close-knit online gaming community which played a proprietary game called Ultima Online: Renaissance. That activity ended because the software vendor shut the game server down in an attempt to get players to play a related game that they had just released. Amazingly, there have been free software implementations of the game since then, but it took many years. After that, I spent several years volunteering with the San Diego Derby Dolls where I refereed, was a player in many practice sessions, and where my girlfriend was a team member. And of course, there are many communities related to free software which I've had some part in. The most influential one to me was a small LibrePlanet group in the Seattle area around 2015. The free software community is made up of all kinds of people, and is stronger for it. What do you most look forward to as FSF president? I'm excited about having a positive impact on the free software movement and the FSF. I want to do what I can to bring software freedom forward, and while I never expected it to be in this role, I am grateful for the trust that has been placed in me. Having an internal leadership role at FSF is not especially visible but there is a lot of important work to do. We live in a time where priorities for software freedom are hard to pin down because of the pervasiveness of proprietary software in our daily lives. I want us to set goals to push the organization forward and make a significant difference in people's lives. I personally also have room to grow, like in the public speaking area, but I am excited to take it all on. I can't say which part I'm looking forward to most: it is all exciting to me. I also hope I can inspire someone new to care about software freedom. We are very excited to have Ian Kelling as our new president, and confident that he will lead the free software movement and the FSF to an impactful future. " Ian Kelling speaks at LibrePlanet " © 2025 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. " A cheer for FSF40 " © 2025 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. , by Luke Canniff . This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: bulletin 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/
Current campaigns — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Benutzerspezifische Werkzeuge Anmelden Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search Sie sind hier: Startseite › Campaigns Info Current campaigns erstellt von Free Software Foundation — Published on 25.01.2013 15:52 Read this page in Italian or in Spanish. Guide to Translating Web Pages . The FSF's campaigns target important opportunities for free software adoption and development, empower people against specific threats to their freedom, and move us closer to a free society. Our successes are driven by the efforts of supporters and activists like you all around the world. Please take a moment today to make a contribution, by joining the FSF as an associate member , making a tax-deductible donation and volunteering your time . What are the latest things happening for the campaigns team? Check out the FSF Community Blog , maintained by the campaigns team. Have an idea for something we should cover? Drop us an email . Looking for simple action items, or have an idea for a simple action item for free software supporters? Check out the Action items page at libreplanet.org. Table of Contents Freedom Ladder Librephone Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Defective by Design PlayOgg End Software Patents Campaign for OpenDocument Campaign for Hardware that Supports Free Software Free BIOS Freedom Ladder The " Freedom Ladder " is a new method the FSF campaigns team is developing to help users get their first start in software freedom. Its focus is gently guide users into GNU/Linux, while at the same time encourage them to not rest content with nonfree software. We want to help them stay both motivated and determined in their gradual process to eliminate nonfree software from their lives. Librephone Librephone is an FSF initiative to research and reverse-engineer proprietary firmware used by common Android devices. Librephone's goal is not a new Android distribution, but a long-term project to understand and write free implementations for the binary blobs used in virtually all mobile phones today. Fight to Repair As the world becomes more software-driven, an individual's right to repair both the hardware and software components of the devices they rely on becomes crucial. Fight to Repair is our campaign to support right to repair initiatives around the world, and warn against the day-to-day use of proprietary software in hardware as diverse as self-driving cars, printer cartridges, and "smart" home assistants. Free JavaScript The Free JavaScript campaign is an ongoing effort to persuade organizations to make their Web sites work without requiring that users run any nonfree software. By convincing influential sites to make the transition, we raise awareness of the need for free software-friendly Web sites and influence the owners of other sites to follow. High Priority Free Software Projects The FSF's High Priority Projects list and Reverse Engineering Task List serve to foster the development of projects that are important for increasing the adoption and use of free software and free software operating systems. Some of the most important projects on our list are "replacement projects". These projects are important because they address areas where users are continually seduced into using nonfree software by the lack of an adequate free replacement. These are critical projects that need your help . Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot When done correctly, "Secure Boot" is designed to protect against malware by preventing computers from loading unauthorized binary programs when booting. In practice, this means that computers implementing it won't boot unauthorized operating systems -- including initially authorized systems that have been modified without being re-approved. This could be a feature deserving of the name, as long as the user is able to authorize the programs she wants to use, so she can run free software written and modified by herself or people she trusts. However, we are concerned that Microsoft and hardware manufacturers will implement these boot restrictions in a way that will prevent users from booting anything other than Windows. In this case, we are better off calling the technology Restricted Boot, since such a requirement would be a disastrous restriction on computer users and not a security feature at all. Learn more about Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot . Join over 30,000 others and sign the statement, Stand up for your freedom to install free software Read our white paper to find out about our recommendations for free operating system distributions considering Secure Boot ( PDF ) See the winning entry of our webcomic contest. Surveillance If we want to defang surveillance programs like PRISM, we need to stop using centralized systems and come together to build an Internet that's decentralized, trustworthy, and free "as in freedom." Check out the surveillance campaign area to get involved with the effort to make the Web in general safer and from surveillance. On an individual level, we also need to start encrypting our personal communication to make bulk surveillance much more difficult and to protect the people we communicate with. Try Email Self-Defense , our beginner's guide to email encryption, to get started in less than an hour. Upgrade from Windows Microsoft uses draconian law to put Windows, the world's most-used operating system, completely outside the control of its users. Neither Windows users nor independent experts can view the system's source code, make modifications or fixes, or copy the system. This puts Microsoft in a dominant position over its customers, which it takes advantage of to treat them as a product. Windows comes with plenty of "features" Microsoft won't tell you about. Because Windows is proprietary software, you can't modify Windows or see how it is built, which means Microsoft can use its operating system to exploit users and benefit special interests. Windows 10's privacy policy asserts the privilege to sell almost any information it wants about users. And starting with Windows 10, Microsoft will begin forcing lower-paying users to test less-secure new updates before giving higher-paying users the option of whether or not to adopt them. Learn more about our campaign and pledge to upgrade away from Windows at http://www.upgradefromwindows.com Working Together for Free Software Free software is simply software that respects our freedom — our freedom to learn and understand the software we are using. Free software is designed to free the user from restrictions put in place by proprietary software, and so using free software lets you join a global community of people who are making the political and ethical choice assertion of our rights to learn and to share what we learn with others. To make donations to specific free software projects while supporting the FSF at the same time, learn more about the Working Together for Free Software Fund . Projects interested in joining the fund can visit our fiscal sponsorship page for more information. This is a campaign aimed at getting new users into free software. The GNU Operating System The GNU operating system is a complete operating system made entirely of free software . Millions of people are using GNU every day to edit their documents, browse the web, play games, and handle their email, or as part of a GNU/Linux system on their home computer. Even people who have never heard of it use GNU everyday, because it powers many of the sites they visit and services they use. Learn more about GNU , and support progress on fully free operating systems by volunteering or donating to the FSF. Defective by Design Digital Restrictions Management (DRM) robs us of control over the technology we use and the culture we live in. DRM and the DMCA can make it illegal to share an article, back-up your kids' favorite DVD, or move your music from one player to another. Since DRM is inherently incompatible with free software, it also excludes free software users from equal participation in culture. Now, we are facing a new threat: DRM in HTML5 . Millions of Internet users came together to defeat SOPA/PIPA, but now Big Media moguls are going through non-governmental channels to try to sneak digital restrictions into every interaction we have online. DefectiveByDesign.org is our anti-DRM campaign, where we mobilize large vocal communities to reject products from businesses that insist on using to DRM to control their customers. Learn more at DefectiveByDesign.org and the campaign wiki . PlayOgg The PlayOgg campaign ( playogg.org ) promotes the use of free audio and video formats unencumbered by patent restrictions, rather than MP3, QuickTime, Windows Media, and AAC, whose patent problems threaten free software and hinder progress. We also promote the use of the new "video tag" standard as an alternative to Adobe Flash for embedding audio and video in webpages. Find out more about PlayOgg at playogg.org or at the campaign wiki . You can also join the PlayOgg volunteer team to push companies and services to use Ogg by joining the mailing list . End Software Patents Software patents create a legal nightmare for all software developers and pose particular problems for the free software movement. So as the FSF campaigns for formats that are free of software patents, we also work on the more fundamental task of ending software patents entirely, through legal and legislative action. Learn more at endsoftwarepatents.org , see the wiki , join the action alert mailing list . Campaign for OpenDocument Our OpenDocument campaign fights for the use of free formats in government documents, pushing governments to adopt policies requiring that all digital public documents and information be stored and distributed in formats that are standard, open, and royalty-free. OpenDocument Format (ODF) is one such format. Get involved and take action against Microsoft Office Open XML. Campaign for Hardware that Supports Free Software Hardware manufacturers are often negligent in offering support for free software. Our hardware directory helps people identify hardware to buy that works with their free software operating system. It is also an important part of the FSF's ongoing work to persuade hardware vendors to respect free software users. For more information on the FSF's plans, read our whitepaper: The road to hardware free from restriction , or see its most recent revisions on its LibrePlanet wiki page . Free BIOS The BIOS is a computer's Basic Input/Output System, which boots the operating system and provides the interface between it and the hardware components. Though users are rarely aware of the BIOS, its foundational role makes it a user freedom chokepoint; if it is not free, users cannot trust it not to modify their computers on behalf of the company that wrote it. Our Free BIOS campaign promotes free BIOSes like GNU Boot or Canoeboot . The FSF welcomes volunteers in all of its campaigns. You can keep up with the most important happenings in our campaigns by following our news feed , blogs feed , and the #fsf IRC channel . Artikelaktionen Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! Free software campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Past campaigns Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter Nachrichten Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick 29.12.2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations 24.12.2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory 09.12.2025 Weitere Nachrichten… Recent blogs The shop is open! Get your LibrePlanet 2024 T-shirt and our newest swag! Calling for volunteers: Help FSF staff with the GNU Press shop Keep cool with GNU summer swag Baby gnus, hoodies, and more: Show your support for free software through the GNU Press shop Recent blogs - Weiter… Termine Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) 16.01.2026 12:00 - 15:00 — #fsf on libera.chat Frühere Termine… Kommende Termine…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/error-monitoring/enhancing-errors-with-github
Enhancing Errors with GitHub Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Error Monitoring / Enhancing Errors with GitHub Enhancing Errors with GitHub Highlight has the capability to enhance your backend errors using GitHub (errors on the frontend are enhanced using sourcemaps ). With our GitHub integration, Highlight is able to enhance a stacktrace with context, as well as other enhancements such as "link to a file" and attribution to a code change. In order to turn on GitHub Enhancements, 3 actions need to be completed for your project: 1. Create a service via the SDK 2. Add the GitHub Integration to Highlight 3. Link your service to a GitHub repo Create a service via the SDK Services are created to group your logs, errors, and traces by the application that is running the code. Having a service can make it helpful to decipher which application caused an error, especially in code paths shared by multiple applications. They can also be used also filters for logs and traces. Services are created by passing in a service name via the SDK. For example, in Golang, the following SDK will create a new service named "my-app": highlight.SetProjectID("<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>") highlight.Start( highlight.WithServiceName("my-app"), highlight.WithServiceVersion("git-sha"), ) defer highlight.Stop() Reference the SDK start up guides for more help. For more information about services, see Services documentation . Note: There is also a service version that is provided in the example above. This is not necessary to enable GitHub enhancements, but is recommended that this be the current GIT SHA of the deployed code to use the most accurate files. If not provided, Highlight will fallback to your current default branch (e.g. main) GIT SHA. Add the GitHub Integration to Highlight Enable GitHub on Highlight by going to the integrations and click the "Connect" button in the GitHub section. More information on the GitHub Integration can be found at GitHub Integration . Link your service to a GitHub repo Once a service is created, the service will be visible in the metadata of your error. The last step to enable stacktrace enhancements is to link your service to its respective GitHub repo, the one that should be used to enhance your errors. In addition to linking the repo, there are two fields to configure file path mappings from your deployment process to the correct file in GitHub. Build path prefix - This path prefix represents a path added in your deployment process, and is also the path in your server that contains your files. After removing this path (and possibly adding something else), you should be able to point this string to a GitHub file. GitHub path prefix - This path prefix is a string that can be appended to the front of the stacktracepath, and will be prepended to your files in order to correctly find the file in GitHub. It is recommended to complete with the form while viewing an error, to be able to test your configuration on the viewed error. This can also be completed from the services table , where all your services can be viewed and managed. An example: 1. An error received has a stacktrace path /build/main.go . 2. The GitHub repo was selected to be the Highlight repo . 3. Since Highlight's deployment process moves all files out of the /backend directory and into the /build directory, we would set "Build prefix path" to /backend and GitHub prefix path to /backend . This will result in the following mapping: /build/main.go -> https://github.com/highlight/highlight/blob/HEAD/backend/main.go . Having Issues? You may notice your service is in an "error" state, and is no longer attempting to enhance errors. This may be due to a bad configuration when linking your service to a repo. If this does not seem to be the case, please reach out to us in our discord community . Error Monitoring Features Error Search Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#humor-is-my-favorite-framework
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/mebularts/why-do-developers-like-dark-mode-because-light-attracts-bugs-24hp
Why do developers like dark mode? Because light attracts bugs. - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Mehmet Bulat Posted on Jan 9 Why do developers like dark mode? Because light attracts bugs. # community # devbugsmash # jokes # devlive I will start with a classic: Why do developers like dark mode? Because light attracts bugs. Now it is your turn. Drop your best developer jokes / one-liners / "I can't believe this is real" coding humor in the comments. Anything is welcome: puns dad jokes debugging trauma (lightly roasted, not deeply painful) "works on my machine" energy A few ground rules: Keep it friendly (no personal attacks) No spam Bonus points if it is short enough to fit in a commit message I will reply to a bunch and pick a few favorites. Go! Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Mehmet Bulat Follow Full-Stack Dev. If it can be automated, I probably already tried. Location Istanbul, Turkiye Work Founder & Full-Stack Developer at mebularts Joined Jan 7, 2026 More from Mehmet Bulat The Commit Message Comedy Club: Drop your funniest "git commit -m" lines # community # devbugsmash # jokes # git 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/gcp
Gcp - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close # gcp Follow Hide Discussions specific to Google Cloud Platform, its services, and best practices. Create Post Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu You See Increased Latency in API Response — What Are the Possible Causes in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Jan 13 You See Increased Latency in API Response — What Are the Possible Causes in Apigee X? # apigeex # apigee # api # gcp 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Serverless Picture Gallery on Google Cloud - Part 2 Piotr Pabis Piotr Pabis Piotr Pabis Follow Jan 12 Serverless Picture Gallery on Google Cloud - Part 2 # googlecloud # gcp Comments Add Comment 8 min read 🚀 Build, Push, and Deploy a Python App image to Cloud Run Using Google Cloud Build Triggers Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Latchu@DevOps Follow Jan 9 🚀 Build, Push, and Deploy a Python App image to Cloud Run Using Google Cloud Build Triggers # devops # gcp # cicd # containers 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read How Do You Handle Orchestration in Apigee X Using ServiceCallout & FlowCallout? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Jan 8 How Do You Handle Orchestration in Apigee X Using ServiceCallout & FlowCallout? # apigee # interivew # gcp # apigeex 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read I Completely Moved from Google Cloud AI to Azure OpenAI Service Because of This One Feature Pratik Pathak Pratik Pathak Pratik Pathak Follow Jan 8 I Completely Moved from Google Cloud AI to Azure OpenAI Service Because of This One Feature # discuss # azure # gcp # openai Comments Add Comment 6 min read Your Backend Sends 200 OK Even When an Order Fails — How Do You Fix It in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Jan 5 Your Backend Sends 200 OK Even When an Order Fails — How Do You Fix It in Apigee X? # apigee # apigeex # gcp # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read ☁️ What If I Move to the Cloud? Part 1 – What Is This Cloud, Really? Venkata Pavan Vishnu Rachapudi Venkata Pavan Vishnu Rachapudi Venkata Pavan Vishnu Rachapudi Follow for AWS Community Builders Jan 10 ☁️ What If I Move to the Cloud? Part 1 – What Is This Cloud, Really? # aws # azure # gcp # oracle 4  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Google Already Won the AI Race. Here's Why Everyone Else Lost. inboryn inboryn inboryn Follow Jan 4 Google Already Won the AI Race. Here's Why Everyone Else Lost. # gcp # gemini # webdev # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read Building a Production-Grade E-Commerce Platform on GCP: A Complete DevOps Journey Deepanshu Deepanshu Deepanshu Follow Jan 8 Building a Production-Grade E-Commerce Platform on GCP: A Complete DevOps Journey # kubernetes # gcp # devops # microservices 6  reactions Comments 1  comment 17 min read The Hidden Tax on Your Cloud Bill: How Data Transfer Costs Are Silently Draining Your Budget Mateen Anjum Mateen Anjum Mateen Anjum Follow Jan 2 The Hidden Tax on Your Cloud Bill: How Data Transfer Costs Are Silently Draining Your Budget # aws # gcp # cloud # azure Comments Add Comment 6 min read You Want Correlation IDs for Logging Across All Proxies — Here’s How to Do It in Apigee X realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Jan 5 You Want Correlation IDs for Logging Across All Proxies — Here’s How to Do It in Apigee X # apigee # apigeex # gcp # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read When Would You Group Multiple API Proxies Into a Single Product in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 31 '25 When Would You Group Multiple API Proxies Into a Single Product in Apigee X? # apigee # apigeex # interview # gcp 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Cloud Computing Trends 2026: Why AI Workloads Are Completely Moving to the Cloud (No More On-Prem) inboryn inboryn inboryn Follow Dec 30 '25 Cloud Computing Trends 2026: Why AI Workloads Are Completely Moving to the Cloud (No More On-Prem) # ai # cloud # aws # gcp Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🎯 What Is the Purpose of API Products in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 29 '25 🎯 What Is the Purpose of API Products in Apigee X? # apigee # gcp # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Azure’s New GCP Connector: Single Pane of Glass for Multi-Cloud Management (AWS, Azure, GCP in 2026) inboryn inboryn inboryn Follow Dec 29 '25 Azure’s New GCP Connector: Single Pane of Glass for Multi-Cloud Management (AWS, Azure, GCP in 2026) # gcp # ai # aws # azure Comments Add Comment 3 min read [Gemini 3.0][Google Search] Using the Google Search Grounding API with Gemini 3.0 Pro to Build a News and Information Assistant Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow for Google Developer Experts Jan 11 [Gemini 3.0][Google Search] Using the Google Search Grounding API with Gemini 3.0 Pro to Build a News and Information Assistant # gcp # gemini 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 10 min read How AI + GCP Work Together to Build Scalable, Real-World Intelligent Applications realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 28 '25 How AI + GCP Work Together to Build Scalable, Real-World Intelligent Applications # gcp # cloud # cloudnative 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Top 10 IaC Tools for DevOps in 2026: Which One Wins for Multi-Cloud? (Terraform, Pulumi, OpenTofu Compared) inboryn inboryn inboryn Follow Dec 27 '25 Top 10 IaC Tools for DevOps in 2026: Which One Wins for Multi-Cloud? (Terraform, Pulumi, OpenTofu Compared) # kubernetes # gcp # security # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Serverless Africa: Building Smarter Apps with Google Cloud Functions A practical demo from DevFest Mt Kenya Gilbert Chris Gilbert Chris Gilbert Chris Follow Dec 22 '25 Serverless Africa: Building Smarter Apps with Google Cloud Functions A practical demo from DevFest Mt Kenya # devfest # gcp # pubsub # serverless Comments Add Comment 3 min read Explain the Relationship Between API Proxy API Product App Developer in Apigee X realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 21 '25 Explain the Relationship Between API Proxy API Product App Developer in Apigee X # apigee # apigeex # gcp # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read When Cloud Giants Compete, Local Data Centers Win the Trust Ketan Sonar Ketan Sonar Ketan Sonar Follow Dec 22 '25 When Cloud Giants Compete, Local Data Centers Win the Trust # cloud # datacenter # aws # gcp 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Building a Cloud-Native SaaS Backend on GCP Juan Carlos González Cabrero Juan Carlos González Cabrero Juan Carlos González Cabrero Follow Dec 20 '25 Building a Cloud-Native SaaS Backend on GCP # gcp # cloud # microservices # python Comments Add Comment 19 min read What Is the Impact of Quota and Spike Arrest on Latency in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 20 '25 What Is the Impact of Quota and Spike Arrest on Latency in Apigee X? # gcp # apigee # apigeex # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read How Do You Measure API Performance in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 19 '25 How Do You Measure API Performance in Apigee X? # apigee # gcp # apigeex # interview 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read How Do You Cache Partial Responses or Specific Elements in Apigee X? realNameHidden realNameHidden realNameHidden Follow Dec 17 '25 How Do You Cache Partial Responses or Specific Elements in Apigee X? # apigee # gcp # google # apigeex 5  reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read loading... trending guides/resources Google Cloud SQL: x86 N2 vs ARM C4A Transforming Code into AI Power: Creating a watsonx Orchestrate Tool in Python ☁️ How to Host Your Side Projects for $0: The Ultimate GCP Free Tier Guide AWS and Google Cloud officially announced a jointly engineered multicloud Google Cloud Options for Storing Data 🚀Getting Started With Google Cloud Build Building an AI-Powered Community Assistant with Google Cloud Platform,Vercel AI SDK, and Calendar... Terraform Basics GCP for Developers Who Hate Cloud Jargon When Cloud Giants Compete, Local Data Centers Win the Trust Real-World Distributed Tracing: Java, OpenTelemetry, and Google Cloud Trace in Production How Do You Handle Orchestration in Apigee X Using ServiceCallout & FlowCallout? Building a Production-Grade E-Commerce Platform on GCP: A Complete DevOps Journey Building a Cloud-Native Booking System with GCP OAuth, Calendar & Meet APIs 🚀How to Create Your First GitHub Trigger & Connections in Google Cloud Build How Do You Measure API Performance in Apigee X? ☁️ What If I Move to the Cloud? Part 1 – What Is This Cloud, Really? Easy Deployment of Vertex AI Agent Engine with vaiae I Completely Moved from Google Cloud AI to Azure OpenAI Service Because of This One Feature Building a Scalable API Event Logger using Pub/Sub, and BigQuery 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://x.com/yohanes
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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/aws-builders/the-complete-guide-to-prometheus-metric-types-promql-alerting-and-troubleshooting-5a69
The Complete Guide to Prometheus Metric Types - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Sunny Nazar for AWS Community Builders Posted on Jan 11 The Complete Guide to Prometheus Metric Types # prometheus # monitoring # devops # observability The Complete Guide to Prometheus Metric Types: PromQL, Alerting and Troubleshooting Reading Time : 15 minutes Table of Contents The 3 AM Call Quick Reference Card Which Metric Type Should I Use Meet the Four Metric Types Counter: The Tireless Bookkeeper Gauge: The Live Reporter Histogram: The Distribution Detective Summary: The Solo Performer Comparison Matrix PromQL Functions by Metric Type Alerting Strategies Troubleshooting Quick Reference The Cardinality Monster Best Practices References Conclusion The 3 AM Call It's 3:17 AM. Your phone buzzes violently on the nightstand. You grab it with one eye open. PagerDuty. Of course. "CRITICAL: API latency exceeds threshold" You stumble to your laptop, coffee-less and bleary-eyed. Grafana loads. The dashboard is a mess of red lines spiking upward. Your mind races: Is this a traffic spike? A memory leak? Did someone deploy something? You stare at the metrics. http_requests_total is climbing. process_resident_memory_bytes looks normal. But wait... what does that histogram actually mean? Why is the p99 showing NaN? And why on earth did someone create a metric with user_id as a label? Sound familiar? This guide exists because I've been there. We've all been there. And the truth is, most Prometheus pain comes down to one thing: not fully understanding the four metric types. Let me introduce you to them. Think of them as four tools in your observability toolkit. Each has a job. Each has rules. Use the wrong one, and you'll be back at 3 AM wondering why your alerts are lying to you. Let's fix that. Quick Reference Card Need a quick answer? Start here. Metric Type Best For Key Function Suffix Can Aggregate? Counter Totals (requests, errors, bytes) rate() _total ✅ Yes Gauge Current state (memory, CPU) Raw value None ✅ Yes Histogram Latency distributions histogram_quantile() _seconds ✅ Yes Summary Per-instance percentiles Direct read _seconds ⚠️ Only sum/count The Essential Queries You'll Use Every Day # Counter: "How many requests per second are we getting?" rate(http_requests_total[5m]) # Gauge: "How much memory are we using right now?" (1 - node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes / node_memory_MemTotal_bytes) * 100 # Histogram: "What's our p99 latency across all pods?" histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le) (rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m]))) # Summary: "What's the average latency?" (works across instances, unlike quantiles) sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_sum[5m])) / sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_count[5m])) Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Which Metric Type Should I Use Before diving into the details, let me save you some time. Here's a decision flowchart that I wish someone had shown me years ago: The Quick Decision Table If you would say... Use "How many X happened?" Counter "What is the current X?" Gauge "What's the p99 latency across all pods?" Histogram "What's the p99 on this specific pod?" Summary Now let me tell you the stories behind each of these tools. Meet the Four Metric Types Counter: The Tireless Bookkeeper Picture a diligent accountant who sits at the entrance of your application. Every time a request comes in, she makes a tally mark. Every error? Another tally. Bytes transferred? She counts them all. The Counter never forgets. She never erases. Her numbers only go up. The only time they reset is when she goes home for the night (your process restarts). The Counter's Personality A Counter is a cumulative metric that only increases. Think of it as an odometer in your car. The number only goes up. You don't care about the current number per se; you care about how fast it's changing. This is the crucial insight: raw counter values are almost useless. What you want is the rate . When to Use a Counter Counters thrive when tracking: Total HTTP requests received Bytes sent over the network Errors encountered Background jobs completed Messages processed from a queue Counter Characteristics Property Value Direction Only goes up (monotonically increasing) Reset Behavior Resets to 0 when the process restarts Typical Suffix _total Raw Value Usefulness Low (always use rate() or increase() ) Talking to the Counter: PromQL Patterns # The WRONG way: Raw value tells you nothing useful http_requests_total # The RIGHT way: Rate of requests per second over 5 minutes rate(http_requests_total[5m]) # Filter by label (e.g., only 500 errors) rate(http_requests_total{status="500"}[5m]) # Total increase over the last hour increase(http_requests_total[1h]) # Sum rates across all instances sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) # Group by HTTP method sum by (method) (rate(http_requests_total[5m])) # The money query: Error rate as a percentage sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[5m])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) * 100 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Counter Alerts That Actually Work # "Our error rate is too high" - alert : HighErrorRate expr : | sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[5m])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) > 0.05 for : 5m labels : severity : critical annotations : summary : " Error rate exceeds 5%" # "Traffic dropped suddenly - possible outage" - alert : TrafficDrop expr : | sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) < sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m] offset 1h)) * 0.5 for : 10m labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " Traffic dropped by more than 50% compared to 1 hour ago" # "We're getting zero requests - something is very wrong" - alert : NoTraffic expr : sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) == 0 for : 5m labels : severity : critical annotations : summary : " No HTTP requests received in the last 5 minutes" Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Gauge: The Live Reporter If the Counter is an accountant tallying historical records, the Gauge is a live news reporter telling you what's happening right now. "Memory usage is at 78%!" she reports. A moment later: "It dropped to 72%!" Unlike the Counter, the Gauge's numbers go up and down. She reflects the current state of the world. The Gauge's Personality A Gauge represents a single numerical value that can arbitrarily go up and down. It's a snapshot of reality at any moment. Think of a thermometer, a fuel gauge, or your current queue depth. The beautiful thing about gauges? The raw value is immediately meaningful. When someone asks "How much memory are we using?", the gauge has the answer. When to Use a Gauge Gauges excel at: Current memory or CPU usage Number of active connections Queue depth Temperature readings Number of goroutines running Disk space remaining Gauge Characteristics Property Value Direction Can increase or decrease Reset Behavior Not applicable (always reflects current state) Typical Suffix None specific Raw Value Usefulness High (the current value is what you want) Talking to the Gauge: PromQL Patterns # Direct reading - totally valid and useful node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes # Calculate percentage (1 - (node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes / node_memory_MemTotal_bytes)) * 100 # Average, min, max over time avg_over_time(node_load1[1h]) max_over_time(node_load1[1h]) min_over_time(node_load1[1h]) # Predict the future: "When will we run out of disk?" predict_linear(node_filesystem_avail_bytes[6h], 3600 * 24) # Rate of change (unusual for gauges, but useful for capacity planning) deriv(node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes[5m]) # Find the top consumers topk(5, node_memory_MemTotal_bytes - node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes) Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Gauge Alerts That Actually Work # "Memory is running low" - alert : HighMemoryUsage expr : | (1 - (node_memory_MemAvailable_bytes / node_memory_MemTotal_bytes)) * 100 > 90 for : 5m labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " Memory usage above 90% on {{ $labels.instance }}" # "Disk will fill up in 24 hours" - this is the kind of proactive alert that makes SREs heroes - alert : DiskFillingUp expr : | predict_linear(node_filesystem_avail_bytes{fstype!~"tmpfs|overlay"}[6h], 24 * 3600) < 0 for : 1h labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " Disk {{ $labels.mountpoint }} will fill within 24 hours" # "Connection pool is almost exhausted" - alert : ConnectionPoolNearExhaustion expr : db_pool_active_connections / db_pool_max_connections > 0.8 for : 5m labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " Connection pool is 80% utilized" Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Histogram: The Distribution Detective Now we get to the interesting ones. The Histogram is a detective who doesn't just count crimes; she categorizes them by severity and gives you the full picture. "Out of 1000 requests," she reports, "150 completed in under 100ms, 700 completed in under 500ms, and 950 completed in under 1 second. The remaining 50 took longer." This is the power of the Histogram. It doesn't just tell you the average. It shows you the distribution . When to Use a Histogram Histograms are perfect for: Request latency (how long did API calls take?) Response sizes Any measurement where you need percentiles When you need to aggregate percentiles across multiple pods (this is the killer feature) Histogram Characteristics Property Value Components Three time series: _bucket , _sum , _count Aggregation Fully aggregatable across instances (this is huge!) Configuration Bucket boundaries must be defined upfront Typical Suffix _seconds , _bytes The Histogram's Secret: Buckets Here's what a histogram actually creates behind the scenes: http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.1"} --> 150 requests were <= 100ms http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.5"} --> 700 requests were <= 500ms http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="1"} --> 950 requests were <= 1s http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="+Inf"} --> 1000 requests total http_request_duration_seconds_sum --> Total time spent (e.g., 423.7 seconds) http_request_duration_seconds_count --> Total count (1000) Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode The le label means "less than or equal to." Buckets are cumulative. Talking to the Histogram: PromQL Patterns # Calculate the 50th percentile (median) histogram_quantile(0.5, rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m])) # Calculate p99 latency histogram_quantile(0.99, rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m])) # P99 latency per endpoint (aggregated correctly!) histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le, endpoint) (rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m])) ) # Average request duration (simpler alternative) rate(http_request_duration_seconds_sum[5m]) / rate(http_request_duration_seconds_count[5m]) # "What percentage of requests complete in under 500ms?" (Apdex-style) sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.5"}[5m])) / sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_count[5m])) * 100 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Histogram Alerts That Actually Work # "P99 latency is too high" - alert : HighP99Latency expr : | histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le, service) (rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m])) ) > 2 for : 5m labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " P99 latency exceeds 2 seconds for {{ $labels.service }}" # "Latency doubled compared to an hour ago" - alert : LatencyDegradation expr : | histogram_quantile(0.95, sum by (le) (rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m]))) > histogram_quantile(0.95, sum by (le) (rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m] offset 1h))) * 2 for : 10m labels : severity : warning annotations : summary : " P95 latency is 2x higher than 1 hour ago" # SLO violation: "Less than 99% of requests are fast" - alert : SLOViolation expr : | sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.5"}[30m])) / sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_count[30m])) < 0.99 for : 5m labels : severity : critical annotations : summary : " SLO Violation: Less than 99% of requests complete within 500ms" Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Summary: The Solo Performer The Summary is the Histogram's cousin. She can also give you percentiles, but with one crucial difference: she calculates them herself, on the client side. This makes her fast and precise for a single instance. But here's the catch: she can't collaborate. If you have 10 pods running, you cannot simply combine their percentiles to get a global percentile. Averaging p99s does not give you the true p99. It's mathematically wrong. ⚠️ The Summary Trap : I've seen teams spend hours debugging "wrong" percentiles, only to discover they were accidentally averaging Summary quantiles across instances. Don't be that team. If you need to aggregate, use Histograms. When to Use a Summary Summaries are appropriate when: You genuinely only care about a single instance You don't know bucket boundaries ahead of time You're maintaining legacy code (most new projects should use Histograms) Summary Characteristics Property Value Components Pre-calculated quantiles, plus _sum and _count Aggregation Cannot aggregate quantiles (only sum/count) Percentile Calculation Done on the client side Typical Suffix _seconds , _bytes Talking to the Summary: PromQL Patterns # Read quantiles directly (only meaningful per-instance) http_request_duration_seconds{quantile="0.99"} # Average latency - this DOES work across instances! sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_sum[5m])) / sum(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_count[5m])) # DON'T DO THIS - averaging quantiles is mathematically wrong # avg(http_request_duration_seconds{quantile="0.99"}) # If you must look at quantiles, do it per-instance http_request_duration_seconds{quantile="0.99", instance="pod-1:8080"} Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Comparison Matrix Feature Counter Gauge Histogram Summary Direction Only up ⬆️ Up and down ↕️ N/A N/A Raw value useful ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No Partial Use rate() Required Rare On buckets On sum/count Aggregatable ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ⚠️ Only sum/count Percentiles ❌ No ❌ No ✅ Server-side ✅ Client-side Storage cost Low Low Higher Medium PromQL Functions by Metric Type Function Counter Gauge Histogram Summary rate() ✅ Primary ❌ No ✅ On buckets ✅ On sum/count irate() ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes ✅ Yes increase() ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes ✅ Yes deriv() ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No delta() ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No predict_linear() ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No histogram_quantile() ❌ No ❌ No ✅ Required ❌ No Alerting Strategies The Golden Signals Google's SRE book teaches us to monitor four things. Here's how metric types map to them: # 1. LATENCY (Histogram) - "How long do things take?" - alert : HighLatency expr : histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le) (rate(http_duration_seconds_bucket[5m]))) > 1 # 2. TRAFFIC (Counter) - "How much are we doing?" - alert : TrafficAnomaly expr : | abs(sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) - sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m] offset 1w))) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m] offset 1w)) > 0.5 # 3. ERRORS (Counter) - "How often do things fail?" - alert : HighErrorRate expr : sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[5m])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) > 0.01 # 4. SATURATION (Gauge) - "How full is our system?" - alert : HighSaturation expr : avg by (instance) (1 - rate(node_cpu_seconds_total{mode="idle"}[5m])) > 0.9 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode SLO-Based Multi-Burn Rate Alerts For the more advanced: burn rate alerts that catch both fast and slow burns of your error budget. # Fast burn: 2% of monthly error budget consumed in 1 hour - alert : SLOFastBurn expr : | (sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[1h])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[1h])) > 14.4 * 0.001) and (sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[5m])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[5m])) > 14.4 * 0.001) labels : severity : critical # Slow burn: Steady consumption over days - alert : SLOSlowBurn expr : | (sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[6h])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[6h])) > 1 * 0.001) and (sum(rate(http_requests_total{status=~"5.."}[3h])) / sum(rate(http_requests_total[3h])) > 1 * 0.001) labels : severity : warning Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Troubleshooting Quick Reference When things go wrong at 3 AM, use this table: General Issues (All Metric Types) Symptom Likely Cause Fix Debug Query No data at all Target not scraped Check target status up{job="my-service"} Gaps in graph Scrape failures Check scrape duration scrape_duration_seconds{job="..."} Too many series High cardinality Add label filters topk(10, count by (__name__)({__name__!=""})) Counter Issues Symptom Likely Cause Fix Flat line No events occurring Check application logic Sudden drops Counter reset Use rate() (it handles resets) Negative rate Label churn Check for recreated series Gauge Issues Symptom Likely Cause Fix Value unchanged Stale metric Check scrape status Noisy graph High variance Use avg_over_time() Wrong scale Unit mismatch Check metric units Histogram Issues Symptom Likely Cause Fix Wrong percentile Bad bucket boundaries Add more buckets Most values in +Inf Buckets too small Increase upper bounds NaN result No samples Increase time window Summary Issues Symptom Likely Cause Fix Wrong global p99 Averaged quantiles Switch to Histogram The Cardinality Monster Let me tell you about the monster that has brought down more Prometheus instances than any other: cardinality. Cardinality is the number of unique time series in your system. And it can explode faster than you think. How Cardinality Explodes Every unique combination of labels creates a new time series: 1 metric × 5 methods × 10 status codes × 100 endpoints × 50 instances = 250,000 time series from ONE metric Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Labels That Will Destroy Your Prometheus Never use these as labels: Label Type Example Why It's Bad User IDs user_id="12345" Millions of values Request IDs request_id="abc-123" One per request Timestamps timestamp="2024-01-01" Infinite growth IP addresses client_ip="192.168.1.1" Thousands of values Session tokens session="..." One per session Error messages error="Connection refused..." Unbounded strings Detecting the Monster # How bad is it? Count all series. count({__name__!=""}) # Find the offenders topk(10, count by (__name__) ({__name__!=""})) # Check per-label cardinality count by (endpoint) (http_requests_total) Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Cardinality Guidelines Level Series Count Action 🟢 Low Under 1,000 You're fine 🟡 Moderate 1K - 10K Monitor it 🟠 High 10K - 100K Investigate 🔴 Critical Over 100K Fix immediately Best Practices Do These Things Always use rate() with counters - Raw values are useless Set rate window to 2-4x scrape interval - Ensures enough data points Include le in your by clause before histogram_quantile() Use histograms for percentiles - They aggregate correctly Add for duration to alerts - Prevents flapping Define bucket boundaries based on SLOs - Know what matters Avoid These Mistakes Averaging summary quantiles - Mathematically wrong Using irate() for alerting - Too volatile Alerting on raw gauge spikes - Use for duration High cardinality labels - They'll kill your Prometheus avg_over_time(rate(...)) - Just use a larger rate window References Prometheus Official Documentation: Metric Types Prometheus Official Documentation: Querying Basics Prometheus Official Documentation: Querying Functions Prometheus Official Documentation: Alerting Rules Google SRE Book: Monitoring Distributed Systems Google SRE Workbook: Alerting on SLOs Robust Perception: How does a Prometheus Histogram work? Robust Perception: How does a Prometheus Summary work? Dash0: Understanding the Prometheus Metric Types Better Stack: Prometheus Metrics Explained Conclusion So here we are. It's 4:15 AM, but you're no longer panicking. You know that the Counter is your reliable bookkeeper, always tallying but never forgetting. You query her with rate() . You know that the Gauge is your live reporter, giving you the current state. Her raw values make sense. You know that the Histogram is your distribution detective, revealing the patterns in your latency. She aggregates correctly across all your pods. And you know to be careful with the Summary , the solo performer who can't collaborate across instances. Most importantly, you've learned to respect the Cardinality Monster and keep him caged. The pager may buzz again. But next time, you'll know exactly what you're looking at. Now go get some sleep. You've earned it. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2025/winter/new-nintendo-drm-bans-consoles-makes-users-beg-for-forgiveness
New Nintendo DRM bans consoles, makes users beg for forgiveness — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Bulletins › 2025 › Winter › New Nintendo DRM bans consoles, makes users beg for forgiveness Info New Nintendo DRM bans consoles, makes users beg for forgiveness by Free Software Foundation Contributions — Published on Dec 08, 2025 10:10 AM Contributors: Miles Wilson In the lead up to its Switch 2 console release, Nintendo updated its user agreement and asserted broad authority to make consoles owned by its customers permanently unusable. Under Nintendo's most aggressive digital restrictions management (DRM) update to date, game console owners are now required to give Nintendo the unilateral right to revoke access to games, security updates, and the Internet, at its sole discretion. The new agreement states: "You acknowledge that if you fail to comply with [Nintendo's restrictions], Nintendo may render the Nintendo Account Services and/or the applicable Nintendo device permanently unusable in whole or in part." These new, wide-sweeping restrictions affect a large number of users for many different reasons. There are probably other reasons that Nintendo has and will justify bricking game consoles, but here are some that we have seen reported: "Tampering" with hardware or software in pretty much any way; Attempting to play a back-up game; Playing a "used" game; or Use of a third-party game or accessory. When Nintendo remotely bricks a perfectly-functional device, the game console becomes effectively useless. Users are blocked from ever accessing the Internet again with the system, which in turn restricts services like eShop (the digital distribution service for the Nintendo Switch), online play, using the subscription-based Nintendo Switch Online (which includes access to retro game catalogs and the ability to back up game data), game download (including previously-purchased codes and " game-key " cartridges ), and security patches. As if blocking Internet access alone wasn't enough, a bricked device is no longer able to play downloaded games, either. These restrictions don't just apply to the user who broke the Nintendo's extremely strict user agreements: the block is for the life of the device, no matter who owns it. No proprietor should have the power to brick your device at its discretion. Nintendo's promise to block a user from using their game console isn't just an empty threat: it has already been wielded against many users. For example, within a month of the Switch 2's release, one user unknowingly purchased an open-box return that had been bricked, and despite functional hardware, it was unusable for many games . In another case, a user installing updates for game cartridges purchased via a digital marketplace had their console disabled. Though it's unclear exactly why they were banned, it's possible that the cartridge's previous owner made a copy and an online DRM check determined that the current and previous owner's use were both "fraudulent." The user only had their console released through appealing to Nintendo directly and providing evidence of their purchase, a laborious process. Nintendo's new console banning spree is just one instance of the threat that nonfree software and DRM pose to users. DRM is but one injustice posed by nonfree software, and the target of the FSF's Defective by Design campaign . Like with all software, users ought to be able to freely copy, study, and modify the programs running on their devices. Proprietary software developers actively oppose and antagonize their users. In the case of Nintendo, this means punishing legitimate users and burdening them with proving that their use is "acceptable." Console users shouldn't have to tread so carefully with a console that they own, and should they misstep, beg Nintendo to allow them to use their consoles again. " Brick ." 2010 by Andrew Lister . This image is dedicated to the public domain under a Creative Commons CC0 No Rights Reserved license. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: bulletin 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2025/winter/dont-be-fooled-by-amazons-claims-that-ring-video-doorbells-give-you-freedom-and-security
Don’t be fooled by Amazon’s claims that Ring video doorbells give you freedom and security — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › Bulletins › 2025 › Winter › Don’t be fooled by Amazon’s claims that Ring video doorbells give you freedom and security Info Don’t be fooled by Amazon’s claims that Ring video doorbells give you freedom and security by Michael McMahon Contributions — Published on Dec 08, 2025 11:37 AM Contributors: Miriam Bastian Mass surveillance, and legislation supporting it, is on the rise in the Western world. We have seen examples in the Australian Surveillance Devices Act , the French Intelligence Act , and the American PATRIOT Act . At the FSF we also regularly receive reports of threats to privacy. To pick only one example: the number of surveillance cameras in Romania has massively increased in all kinds of places, including stairways of apartment complexes, private and public parking lots, roofs of corporate and government buildings, government buildings, hospitals, metro stations, public parks, churches, schools, kindergartens, and universities, trains and buses and pedestrian road crossings. Some of these cameras upload their video footage to websites, where one can watch the public space 24/7. Sadly, this growing issue in Romania is a well-established standard in the US. With fifty million Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras (i.e. a system with surveillance cameras transmitting their signals to monitors or recorders), the US ranks second by number of CCTV cameras , surpassed only by China. To break this number down, the US has about one camera for every 4.6 people. While publicly-owned cameras certainly make up a significant portion of cameras in the US, privately-owned cameras also contribute significantly to the growing mass surveillance issue. Ring doorbells, one of the most popular privately-owned cameras in the US, has some parts of the source code published under the Expat license , which may come across as an ethical effort, but make no mistake: Amazon's (the proprietor of Ring doorbells) intentions should never be confused as ethical or free as in freedom. All videos recorded by Ring doorbell are forcibly uploaded to an Amazon-owned server, and can only be accessed by the user through payment of a monthly subscription fee. Amazon is in full control of the videos taken by all Ring doorbells, and with it the power to access, save, and share video recordings, not the users who put these cameras up. If the Ring doorbells were made with user freedom in mind, it would put you in control. Because Amazon controls access to these videos instead of the users, it also has the unjust power to exploit these private videos as it sees fit, including providing a plethora of customers' personally identifiable information to whoever asks. Amazon has been criticized by several social justice organizations, including Fight for the Future, for partnering with at least 200 law enforcement agencies to carry out surveillance via its Ring doorbells. In 2022 , Ring revealed that it had been giving videos obtained through Ring doorbells to police without warrants or user consent if it was an "emergency", as defined by Ring and the police. While police had lost this access for a few years, earlier this year the company reintroduced the ability for police to request footage directly from Ring users, and is now looking into integrating Ring with police surveillance technology from Axon to stream 24/7 live videos from Ring devices, only if "customers" allow it, as the Electronic Frontier Foundation reported recently. We should have control over our software, not some unethical proprietary provider. Just to be clear: there are many other proprietary camera systems and video doorbells that are just as bad or even when worse when it comes to privacy — Ring doorbell is just an example. Regardless of the proprietary camera, mass surveillance puts many freedoms at risk, including software freedom. So what do you do if you want to install a camera in your home for security or to keep an eye on a pet, but not contribute to mass surveillance? Set up your own security cam or video doorbell by using a simple webcam, making sure that the camera only records your house and not surrounding homes, and store the video footage on a server under your control. Ideally, keep the data in a secondary location in case the first location is compromised. Give a trusted friend access to the server in case you are unable to retrieve the footage. A DIY system or going low-tech are the only ethical options with regard to software freedom and the voluntary mass surveillance trend, since there is unfortunately no libre commercial option. We are well aware that not everyone can set up a DIY system. We also note that without an off-site storage video solution, a DIY system unfortunately does not match the features of most of the commercial, nonfree systems. However, before you pay a great amount of money for a subscription to a company like Amazon or Apple, we ask you to consider setting up your own DIY system or paying someone to set a libre system up for you. The more of us that can reduce use or completely stop use of proprietary or privacy-violating software that robs us of our rights, the stronger we as a collective become to fight for those who can't. " Gobierno Espía Ojo ." © 2022 by Gibrán Aquino. This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU Filed under: bulletin 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#my-brain-runs-on-todo-comments
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#comment-33hb8
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.fsf.org/community/
Community Resources — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more   Join   Renew   Donate Skip to content , sitemap or skip to search . Personal tools Log in Help! Members forum About Campaigns Licensing Membership Resources Community ♥Donate♥ Shop Search You are here: Home › community Info Community Resources by Free Software Foundation Contributions — Published on Oct 30, 2017 05:24 PM Free software is only as successful as the communities that create, use, support, and advocate for it. Free software activists and enthusiasts live all over the world, and you can join them locally or remotely. Read this article in Spanish . FSF initiatives We help maintain the LibrePlanet community . LibrePlanet is a global network of local groups, known as teams, that work within their geographic communities. For example, Free Software Melbourne meets monthly to talk about free software, and LibrePlanet Algeria focuses on providing access to free software. Find your team! LibrePlanet is also the name of the annual FSF conference , which takes place every spring in or near Boston, MA. There are also a number of mailing lists managed by the FSF. FSF staff maintain a community blog . If you're interested in writing for the community blog, contact us . FSF also maintains several IRC channels on Libera.Chat . Join us on the #fsf channel to interact with FSF staff and other free software supporters, participate in Free Software Directory meetings on Fridays at 16:00-19:00 UTC, and give your feedback in planned meetings on FSF initiatives. Other FSF channels include #libreplanet and #dbd. Other free software organizations and projects Free software is for everyone, from the most hardcore Linux kernel hacker to the person installing their first piece of free software on an otherwise proprietary system. There are a myriad of ways to get started with the free software community. Pieces of free software are made by individuals and communities of contributors. As part of the Working Together Campaign , we have a curated list of free software projects and interviewed community members about why free software matters to them. Want to learn even more about what kinds of free software are out there? The Free Software Directory is regularly updated by community members and FSF staff. There are people dedicated to user freedom all around the world. You can watch videos from past LibrePlanet conferences. These talks are given on a range of topics, introducing you to just a few people from the worldwide free software community and the wide variety of things they do. Social media and what's happening elsewhere We maintain social media accounts on GNU social , Mastodon , and Twitter. On these we share the latest in news related to free software and the greater space of digital rights. Curious as to why we use Twitter, even though we find Twitter problematic? Read more about our reasons. Even though we are using Twitter, you still won't find us on Facebook or on LinkedIn, which we object to because of its use and promotion of nonfree software, though on any such site, you may find free software supporters congregating in unofficial groups. Photo credits Francois Schnell , Creative Commons Attribution 2.0. Lisa Brewster , Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 2.0 Document Actions Share on social networks Syndicate: News Events Blogs Jobs GNU 1PC9aZC4hNX2rmmrt7uHTfYAS3hRbph4UN Help the FSF stay strong Ring in the new year by supporting software freedom and helping us reach our goal of 100 new associate members ! Sign up Enter your email address to receive our monthly newsletter, the Free Software Supporter News Eko K. A. Owen joins the FSF board as the union staff pick Dec 29, 2025 Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations Dec 24, 2025 Free Software Awards winners announced: Andy Wingo, Alx Sa, Govdirectory Dec 09, 2025 More news… Recent blogs Turning freedom values into freedom practice with the FSF tech team December GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali featuring sixteen new GNU releases: GnuPG, a2ps, and more! Celebrate the new year: join the free software community! A message from FSF president Ian Kelling Recent blogs - More… Upcoming Events Free Software Directory meeting on IRC: Friday, January 16, starting at 12:00 EST (17:00 UTC) Jan 16, 2026 12:00 PM - 03:00 PM — #fsf on libera.chat Previous events… Upcoming events…   The FSF is a charity with a worldwide mission to advance software freedom — learn about our history and work. Copyright © 2004-2026 Free Software Foundation , Inc. Privacy Policy . This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Skip sitemap or skip to licensing items About Staff and Board Contact Us Press Information Jobs Volunteering and Internships History Privacy Policy JavaScript Licenses Hardware Database Free Software Directory Free Software Resources Copyright Infringement Notification Skip to general items Campaigns Freedom Ladder Fight to Repair Free JavaScript High Priority Free Software Projects Secure Boot vs Restricted Boot Surveillance Upgrade from Windows Working Together for Free Software GNU Operating System Defective by Design End Software Patents OpenDocument Free BIOS Connect with free software users Skip to philosophical items Licensing Education Licenses GNU GPL GNU AGPL GNU LGPL GNU FDL Licensing FAQ Compliance How to use GNU licenses for your own software Latest News Upcoming Events FSF Blogs Skip list Donate to the FSF Join the FSF Patrons Associate Members My Account Working Together for Free Software Fund Philosophy The Free Software Definition Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism Free Software and Free Manuals Selling Free Software Motives for Writing Free Software The Right To Read Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software Complete Sitemap fsf.org is powered by: Plone Zope Python CiviCRM HTML5 Arabic Belarussian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Cornish Czech Danish English French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Portuguese (Brazil) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Urdu Welsh   Send your feedback on our translations and new translations of pages to campaigns@fsf.org .
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/t/jokes/page/5
jokes Page 5 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close jokes Follow Hide plz post the lols Create Post submission guidelines no spam don't be offensive (sexist, racist, homophobic, crude, etc.), the DEV code of conduct is still in place! make the jokes programming related-ish Older #jokes posts 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Dec 9 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # jokes # watercooler 36  reactions Comments 43  comments 1 min read If Computers Could Talk, What Would They Say About Us? Valt aoi Valt aoi Valt aoi Follow for Valt Verse Dec 27 '24 If Computers Could Talk, What Would They Say About Us? # jokes # coding # programming # productivity Comments Add Comment 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Dec 2 '24 Meme Monday # jokes # discuss # watercooler 41  reactions Comments 46  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Nov 25 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # jokes # watercooler 53  reactions Comments 61  comments 1 min read The world without CSS Jackie Yio Hex 🍥 Jackie Yio Hex 🍥 Jackie Yio Hex 🍥 Follow Dec 16 '24 The world without CSS # jokes # css # watercooler 3  reactions Comments 1  comment 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Nov 18 '24 Meme Monday # jokes # discuss # watercooler 26  reactions Comments 44  comments 1 min read The Memes Of The Day Hanzla Baig Hanzla Baig Hanzla Baig Follow Dec 5 '24 The Memes Of The Day # jokes # watercooler # devto # webdev 11  reactions Comments 1  comment 1 min read Programmers' workplaces always have a special vibe 😍 it development | coding it development | coding it development | coding Follow Dec 4 '24 Programmers' workplaces always have a special vibe 😍 # jokes # programming # productivity # career 3  reactions Comments 1  comment 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Nov 11 '24 Meme Monday # jokes # discuss # watercooler 44  reactions Comments 43  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Nov 4 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 42  reactions Comments 69  comments 1 min read Agile Body Snatchers ESDDave ESDDave ESDDave Follow Nov 13 '24 Agile Body Snatchers # jokes # agile # programming 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Automate Saving the Planet... Or Just Your Computer's Energy 🐍 Wlad Radchenko Wlad Radchenko Wlad Radchenko Follow Nov 19 '24 Automate Saving the Planet... Or Just Your Computer's Energy 🐍 # discuss # devto # jokes # python 13  reactions Comments 6  comments 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 28 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 25  reactions Comments 41  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 21 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 24  reactions Comments 57  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 14 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # jokes # watercooler 24  reactions Comments 46  comments 1 min read 8 ways to scare the hell out of a system administrator ispmanager.com ispmanager.com ispmanager.com Follow for Ispmanager Oct 31 '24 8 ways to scare the hell out of a system administrator # jokes # systems # halloween # linux 13  reactions Comments 2  comments 3 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Oct 7 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 24  reactions Comments 51  comments 1 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 30 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 25  reactions Comments 37  comments 1 min read 🔥 CSS Jokes That Will Make You LOL 🔥 WEBDEVTALES WEBDEVTALES WEBDEVTALES Follow Sep 12 '24 🔥 CSS Jokes That Will Make You LOL 🔥 # jokes # webdev # html # funny Comments Add Comment 1 min read 🔥 Front End Frenzy: 7 Concepts Explained with a Side of Sizzle 🔥 WEBDEVTALES WEBDEVTALES WEBDEVTALES Follow Sep 12 '24 🔥 Front End Frenzy: 7 Concepts Explained with a Side of Sizzle 🔥 # jokes # webdev # html # frontend Comments Add Comment 2 min read Edition 4: Funniest Monday Memes You Can’t Miss! Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Follow for Monday Memes Oct 14 '24 Edition 4: Funniest Monday Memes You Can’t Miss! # watercooler # jokes # programming # discuss 8  reactions Comments 2  comments 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 23 '24 Meme Monday # discuss # watercooler # jokes 43  reactions Comments 50  comments 1 min read How to Flirt with a Developer: Learn to Debug Your Love Life Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Follow Oct 9 '24 How to Flirt with a Developer: Learn to Debug Your Love Life # watercooler # webdev # jokes # discuss 197  reactions Comments 58  comments 6 min read Edition 3 — Monday Memes Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Sukhpinder Singh Follow for Monday Memes Oct 7 '24 Edition 3 — Monday Memes # watercooler # jokes # programming # discuss 8  reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Meme Monday Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Ben Halpern Follow Sep 16 '24 Meme Monday # jokes # watercooler # discuss 43  reactions Comments 49  comments 1 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/fromaline/jsxelement-vs-reactelement-vs-reactnode-2mh2#main-content
JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Nick Posted on Feb 14, 2022           JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode # beginners # javascript # react # webdev React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode These three types usually confuse novice React developers. It seems like they are the same thing, just named differently. But it's not quite right. JSX.Element vs ReactElement Both types are the result of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. They are both objects with: type props key a couple of other "hidden" properties, like ref, $$typeof, etc ReactElement ReactElement type is the most basic of all. It's even defined in React source code using flow! // ./packages/shared/ReactElementType.js export type ReactElement = { | $ $typeof : any , type : any , key : any , ref : any , props : any , // ReactFiber _owner : any , // __DEV__ _store : { validated : boolean , ...}, _self : React$Element < any > , _shadowChildren : any , _source : Source , | }; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This type is also defined in DefinitelyTyped package . interface ReactElement < P = any , T extends string | JSXElementConstructor < any > = string | JSXElementConstructor < any >> { type : T ; props : P ; key : Key | null ; } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode JSX.Element It's more generic type. The key difference is that props and type are typed as any in JSX.Element . declare global { namespace JSX { interface Element extends React . ReactElement < any , any > { } // ... } } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This gives flexibility in how different libraries implement JSX. For example, Preact has its own implementation with different API . ReactNode ReactNode type is a different thing. It's not a return value of React.createElement() / jsx() function call. const Component = () => { // Here it's ReactElement return < div > Hello world! </ div > } // Here it's ReactNode const Example = Component (); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode React node itself is a representation of the virtual DOM. So ReactNode is the set of all possible return values of a component. type ReactChild = ReactElement | ReactText ; type ReactFragment = {} | Iterable < ReactNode > ; interface ReactPortal extends ReactElement { key : Key | null ; children : ReactNode ; } type ReactNode = | ReactChild | ReactFragment | ReactPortal | boolean | null | undefined ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode What to use for children ? Generally speaking, ReactNode is the correct way to type the children prop. It gives the most flexibility while maintaining the proper type checking. But it has a caveat, because ReactFragment allows a {} type. const Item = ({ children }: { children : ReactNode }) => { return < li > { children } </ li >; } const App = () => { return ( < ul > // Run-time error here, objects are not valid children! < Item > { {} } </ Item > </ ul > ); } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode P.S. Follow me on Twitter for more content like this! React Internals (3 Part Series) 1 How does React allow creating custom components? 2 How do React Fragments work under the hood? 3 JSX.Element vs ReactElement vs ReactNode Top comments (2) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Nick Nick Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Email grechino@protonmail.com Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 • Feb 14 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Check out React+Typescript Cheatsheets for more info. Like comment: Like comment: 5  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Sohail Haider Follow Joined May 23, 2019 • Jul 3 '22 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide But in React 18 intrinsic property of children won't work for FC from react. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Nick Follow Co-founder of Chainspect Location Tbilisi Joined Jun 25, 2021 More from Nick 10 Must-Have Tools for Every Developer in 2023 # ai # chatgpt # webdev # tooling My dream habit tracker # javascript # vue # pocketbase # webdev How do React Fragments work under the hood? # javascript # react # webdev # programming 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://www.highlight.io/docs/general/product-features/dashboards/drilldown
Drilldown Star us on GitHub Star Docs Sign in Sign up General Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Menu Highlight Docs Welcome to highlight.io Get Started Roadmap Company Values Compliance & Security Open Source Contributing Overview GraphQL Backend Frontend (app.highlight.io) Landing Site (highlight.io) Documentation End to End SDK Example Apps Adding an SDK Application Architecture GitHub Code Spaces Code Style Good First Issues Self-hosting Self-hosted [Dev] Self-hosted [Hobby] Self-hosted [Enterprise] Telemetry Our Competitors Product Philosophy Product Features Session Replay Overview Canvas & Iframe Dev-tool Window Recording Tracking Users & Recording Events Filtering Sessions GraphQL Live Mode Performance Impact Player Session Caching Rage Clicks Request Proxying Session Search Extracting the Session URL Session Search Deep Linking Shadow Dom + Web Components Error Monitoring Overview Enhancing Errors with GitHub Error Search Filtering Errors Grouping Errors Managing Errors Manually Reporting Errors Sourcemaps General Features Overview Alerts Comments Digests Environments Search Segments Services Webhooks Logging Overview Log Alerts Log Search Tracing Overview Trace Search Dashboards Overview Dashboard Management Metrics Tutorials Service Latency Web Vitals & Page Speed User Engagement User Analytics Graphing Drilldown Event Search Dashboard Variables SQL Editor Metrics (beta) Overview Frequently Asked Questions. Integrations Integrations Overview Amplitude Integration ClickUp Integration Discord Integration Electron Support Front Integration GitHub Integration Grafana Integration Overview Setup Dashboards Alerts Height Integration Intercom Integration Jira Integration LaunchDarkly Integration Linear Integration Mixpanel Integration Nuxt Integration Pendo Integration Segment Integration Slack Integration Vercel Integration WordPress Plugin Highlight.io Changelog Overview Changelog 12 (02/17) Changelog 13 (02/24) Changelog 14 (03/03) Changelog 15 (03/11) Changelog 16 (03/19) Changelog 17 (04/07) Changelog 18 (04/26) Changelog 19 (05/22) Changelog 20 (06/06) Changelog 21 (06/21) Changelog 22 (08/07) Changelog 23 (08/22) Changelog 24 (09/11) Changelog 25 (10/03) Changelog 26 (11/08) Changelog 27 (12/22) Changelog 28 (3/6) Changelog 29 (4/2) Getting Started Getting Started with Highlight Fullstack Mapping Browser React.js Next.js Remix Vue.js Angular Gatsby.js SvelteKit Electron highlight.run SDK Overview Canvas & WebGL Console Messages Content-Security-Policy Identifying Users iframe Recording Monkey Patches Browser OpenTelemetry Persistent Asset Storage Privacy Proxying Highlight React.js Error Boundary Recording Network Requests and Responses Recording WebSocket Events Salesforce Lightning Web Components (LWC) Data Export Sourcemap Configuration Tracking Events Troubleshooting Upgrading Highlight Versioning Sessions & Errors Other React Native (beta) Server Go Overview chi Echo Fiber Gin GORM gqlgen Logrus Manual Tracing gorilla mux JS Overview Apollo AWS Lambda Cloudflare Workers Express.js Firebase Hono Nest.js Next.js Node.js Pino tRPC Winston Python Overview AWS Lambda Azure Functions Django FastAPI Flask Google Cloud Functions Loguru Other Frameworks Python AI / LLM Libraries Python Libraries Ruby Overview Other Frameworks Ruby on Rails Rust Overview actix-web No Framework Hosting Providers Overview Metrics in AWS Logging in AWS Logging in Azure Fly.io NATS Log Shipper Logging in GCP Heroku Log Drain Render Log Stream Logging in Trigger.dev Vercel Log Drain Elixir Overview Elixir App Java: All Frameworks PHP: All Frameworks C# .NET ASP C# .NET 4 ASP Docker / Docker Compose File Fluent Forward curl OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) Syslog RFC5424 Systemd / Journald Native OpenTelemetry Overview Error Monitoring Logging Tracing Browser Instrumentation Metrics Fullstack Frameworks Overview Next.js Fullstack Overview Next.js Page Router Guide Next.js App Router Guide Edge Runtime Advanced Config Remix Walkthrough Self Host & Local Dev Overview Development deployment guide. Integrations Microsoft Teams self-hosted Hobby deployment guide. Traefik SSL Proxying. Docs Home SDK Client SDK API Reference Cloudflare Worker SDK API Reference Go SDK API Reference Hono SDK API Reference Java SDK API Reference Next.JS SDK API Reference Node.JS SDK API Reference Python SDK API Reference Ruby SDK API Reference Rust SDK API Reference Docs / Highlight Docs / Product Features / Dashboards / Drilldown Drilldown Overview Graph drilldown is a way to look closer at the underlying data from the graphs in your dashboards. You can get started with dashboards here . Using graph drilldown When the tooltip is shown on any graph, you can click to freeze the tooltip and show drilldown links. Clicking on one of these drilldown links will open a panel with the relevant logs, traces, errors, or sessions. The data points shown in the panel list view are filtered using the graph's filters and the grouping, time range, or metric bucket for the specific data point that was selected. From here, you can click into rows to see an instance view. Some resources are also associated with sessions - clicking the session cell will open the session player in the panel. Graphing Event Search Community / Support Suggest Edits? Follow us! [object Object]
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/charan_gutti_cf60c6185074
Charan Gutti - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Follow User actions Charan Gutti 404 bio not found Location Hyderbad, India Joined Joined on  Sep 13, 2025 Personal website https://cportfolio-zeta.vercel.app/ Pronouns He/Him More info about @charan_gutti_cf60c6185074 Badges 1 Week Community Wellness Streak For actively engaging with the community by posting at least 2 comments in a single week. Got it Close Writing Debut Awarded for writing and sharing your first DEV post! Continue sharing your work to earn the 4 Week Writing Streak Badge. Got it Close Currently learning Learning go, devops, cloud systems, ui and low level programming. Available for Feel free to talk to me about anything related to tech or just programming in general. Post 31 posts published Comment 3 comments written Tag 0 tags followed ⚡ Qdrant: The Engine Powering Smart Search and Production-Ready AI Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 21 '25 ⚡ Qdrant: The Engine Powering Smart Search and Production-Ready AI # ai # beginners # learning 3  reactions Comments 1  comment 4 min read Want to connect with Charan Gutti? Create an account to connect with Charan Gutti. You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in 🧠 RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation): The Secret Sauce Behind Smarter AI Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 20 '25 🧠 RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation): The Secret Sauce Behind Smarter AI # ai # programming # beginners # learning 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🤖 How to Build a Chatbot Using Python: A Complete Guide for Beginners and Experts Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 19 '25 🤖 How to Build a Chatbot Using Python: A Complete Guide for Beginners and Experts # programming # ai # beginners # tutorial 3  reactions Comments 1  comment 3 min read ⚙️ Understanding package.json in VS Code Extensions — The Heartbeat of Your Extension Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 18 '25 ⚙️ Understanding package.json in VS Code Extensions — The Heartbeat of Your Extension # learning # vscode # beginners 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read ⚡ Next.js Advanced Patterns — From Pro Code to Production-Ready Systems Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 16 '25 ⚡ Next.js Advanced Patterns — From Pro Code to Production-Ready Systems # nextjs # beginners # webdev # learning 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🧩 Understanding npm, Yarn, Bun & Deno — The Secret Life of Package Managers (and Why Vite Loves Them) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 15 '25 🧩 Understanding npm, Yarn, Bun & Deno — The Secret Life of Package Managers (and Why Vite Loves Them) # programming # beginners # productivity # learning 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read ⚡ Next.js Mastery — Building Fast, Scalable, and Future-Proof Apps Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 14 '25 ⚡ Next.js Mastery — Building Fast, Scalable, and Future-Proof Apps # nextjs # beginners # productivity # learning 2  reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read 🌎 “i18n Demystified: How to Make Your App Speak Any Language Effortlessly” Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 13 '25 🌎 “i18n Demystified: How to Make Your App Speak Any Language Effortlessly” # beginners # productivity # tutorial # learning 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🧱 The SOLID Principles Explained (Like You’re a Developer Who Actually Writes Code) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 12 '25 🧱 The SOLID Principles Explained (Like You’re a Developer Who Actually Writes Code) # programming # beginners # learning # python 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🎨 CSS Mastery: Practical Rules, Tips & Mindsets for Modern Frontend Developers Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 11 '25 🎨 CSS Mastery: Practical Rules, Tips & Mindsets for Modern Frontend Developers # css # productivity # learning # beginners 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read ⚙️ C in Action: Real Projects You Can Build to Master It Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 10 '25 ⚙️ C in Action: Real Projects You Can Build to Master It # programming # beginners # learning # c 4  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🧠 Why Learning C Still Matters in 2025 (And Why Employers Love It) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 10 '25 🧠 Why Learning C Still Matters in 2025 (And Why Employers Love It) # learning # c # programming # beginners 2  reactions Comments 1  comment 4 min read 🖥️ Mastering the Terminal: From Beginner to Power User Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 9 '25 🖥️ Mastering the Terminal: From Beginner to Power User # programming # beginners # productivity # learning 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🎨 Flexbox vs Grid: The Ultimate CSS Layout Showdown Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 8 '25 🎨 Flexbox vs Grid: The Ultimate CSS Layout Showdown # css # beginners # tutorial # ui 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🧱 Docker Mastery: Scaling, Volumes & Secrets Like a Cloud Engineer Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 7 '25 🧱 Docker Mastery: Scaling, Volumes & Secrets Like a Cloud Engineer # beginners # tutorial # devops # docker 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🐳 Docker in Action: How I Containerized a Fullstack App Like a Pro (and You Can Too) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 7 '25 🐳 Docker in Action: How I Containerized a Fullstack App Like a Pro (and You Can Too) # docker # containers # beginners # tutorial 3  reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read 🐳 Docker Demystified — From Basics to Power Moves You’ll Actually Use Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 7 '25 🐳 Docker Demystified — From Basics to Power Moves You’ll Actually Use # docker # beginners # devops # containers 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 5 min read ⚡ Tailwind CSS Essentials, Tools & VS Code Extensions You’ll Wish You Knew Earlier Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 6 '25 ⚡ Tailwind CSS Essentials, Tools & VS Code Extensions You’ll Wish You Knew Earlier # tailwindcss # beginners # productivity 2  reactions Comments 1  comment 4 min read 🧙‍♂️ The Ultimate Git Wizard Guide — Time-Saving Tricks, Hidden Powers & Tools That Make You Unstoppable Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 5 '25 🧙‍♂️ The Ultimate Git Wizard Guide — Time-Saving Tricks, Hidden Powers & Tools That Make You Unstoppable # git # github # productivity # beginners 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read 💬 The Art of Writing Comments: How to Talk to the Future You (and Everyone Else) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 4 '25 💬 The Art of Writing Comments: How to Talk to the Future You (and Everyone Else) # productivity # softwaredevelopment # writing 5  reactions Comments 2  comments 4 min read 🚀 Mastering VS Code Without the Mouse: Shortcuts and Smart Navigation Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 2 '25 🚀 Mastering VS Code Without the Mouse: Shortcuts and Smart Navigation # basic # learning # programming # tutorial 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read Mastering .gitignore: Keep Your Git Repo Clean and Professional Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Oct 1 '25 Mastering .gitignore: Keep Your Git Repo Clean and Professional # git # basic # beginners # coding 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read 🌱 Environment Variables: The Secret Sauce of Modern Apps Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 30 '25 🌱 Environment Variables: The Secret Sauce of Modern Apps # explainlikeimfive # beginners # basic # programming 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read How to Create a VS Code Extension Using `yo code` (Step-by-Step for Beginners) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 28 '25 How to Create a VS Code Extension Using `yo code` (Step-by-Step for Beginners) # explainlikeimfive # beginners # basic # vscode 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read what is Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 26 '25 what is Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) # ai # machinelearning # beginners # basic 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Adding custom fonts in tailwind ( Simple guide ) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 25 '25 Adding custom fonts in tailwind ( Simple guide ) # explainlikeimfive # tailwindcss # css # beginners 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read How to Build, Test, and Check Your Own SDK Locally (Beginner-Friendly) in Javascript Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 24 '25 How to Build, Test, and Check Your Own SDK Locally (Beginner-Friendly) in Javascript # explainlikeimfive # javascript # beginners # basic 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read Stuck on Design? 5 Lifesaving Websites for Developers (and Non-Designers) Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 23 '25 Stuck on Design? 5 Lifesaving Websites for Developers (and Non-Designers) # uidesign # ui # ux # beginners 1  reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read Simple guide to pointers and struct pointers in c Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 22 '25 Simple guide to pointers and struct pointers in c # explainlikeimfive # programming # c # beginners 1  reaction Comments 4  comments 2 min read Vite Electron in simple terms and its setup Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 15 '25 Vite Electron in simple terms and its setup # explainlikeimfive # beginners # basic Comments Add Comment 3 min read What is Devops Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Charan Gutti Follow Sep 13 '25 What is Devops # devops # newbie # codenewbie # programming Comments Add Comment 5 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/charan_gutti_cf60c6185074/environment-variables-the-secret-sauce-of-modern-apps-59i8
🌱 Environment Variables: The Secret Sauce of Modern Apps - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Charan Gutti Posted on Sep 30, 2025           🌱 Environment Variables: The Secret Sauce of Modern Apps # beginners # basic # explainlikeimfive # programming Environment variables may look boring—just key-value pairs—but they are one of the most important parts of modern software development . They keep your apps secure, flexible, and portable . In this blog, we’ll explore: What env variables are (in plain English). Why they are so important. A simple .env setup with an example. Beginner tips (3 golden rules). Best practices for teams. Using env variables with Docker . Using env variables in CI/CD pipelines . By the end, you’ll understand why they are the way they are and how to use them like a pro. 🚀 🌍 What Are Environment Variables? An environment variable is like a secret note you keep outside your code. Your app can read it at runtime, but it doesn’t live inside the source code. Example: DB_USER=admin DB_PASSWORD=secret123 API_KEY=abcd1234 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode 👉 Instead of writing sensitive info directly in code, you store it here and access it when needed. 🤔 Why Are They Important? Environment variables exist to solve three big problems: Security → No one wants passwords and API keys pushed to GitHub. Flexibility → The same code should work in development , testing , and production —without rewriting. Portability → Anyone running your app can configure it differently without changing the source. That’s why they are the way they are: they separate configuration from code . ⚡ A Simple .env Setup Create a file called .env in your project: DB_USER=admin DB_PASSWORD=secret123 PORT=4000 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Install the dotenv package (for Node.js projects): npm install dotenv Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Use it in your code: require ( ' dotenv ' ). config (); const dbUser = process . env . DB_USER ; const dbPassword = process . env . DB_PASSWORD ; console . log ( `Connecting with ${ dbUser } : ${ dbPassword } ` ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Now your secrets are outside the code, but still accessible when your app runs. ✅ 🖼️ Example Scenario: Database Connection Without env variables: const dbUser = " admin " ; const dbPassword = " secret123 " ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode ❌ Hardcoding = insecure + inflexible. With env variables: const dbUser = process . env . DB_USER ; const dbPassword = process . env . DB_PASSWORD ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode ✅ Secrets hidden, and you can change them per environment. 💡 3 Golden Tips for Beginners Never commit .env files Add .env to your .gitignore . Secrets should never end up on GitHub. Use defaults for local development const port = process . env . PORT || 3000 ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If no env variable is set, your app still runs on port 3000 . Use separate .env files .env.development .env.production .env.test Keeps environments clean and avoids costly mistakes. 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Best Practices for Teams When working with others, managing env variables becomes tricky. Here’s how to do it right: ✅ Share a .env.example file → This contains variable names, but not the real secrets. DB_USER= DB_PASSWORD= API_KEY= Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode ✅ Use secret managers for real apps → Tools like AWS Secrets Manager , Vault , or Doppler are safer than .env files. ✅ Document everything → Make sure teammates know which env variables are required. 🐳 Using Env Variables with Docker Docker makes it easy to pass env variables into containers. Define them in a .env file: DB_USER=admin DB_PASSWORD=secret123 Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Reference them in docker-compose.yml : version : ' 3' services : app : image : my-app env_file : - .env Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Inside your container, your app can read process.env.DB_USER as usual. 👉 This keeps your container flexible—no need to rebuild when you change configs. ⚙️ Using Env Variables in CI/CD Pipelines In CI/CD (like GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, or Jenkins), environment variables are the standard way to pass secrets securely. GitHub Actions example: name : Deploy App on : push jobs : build : runs-on : ubuntu-latest steps : - name : Checkout Code uses : actions/checkout@v3 - name : Run App run : node app.js env : DB_USER : ${{ secrets.DB_USER }} DB_PASSWORD : ${{ secrets.DB_PASSWORD }} Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode 👉 The real secrets are stored in GitHub’s Secrets Manager , not in your repo. 🎯 Final Thoughts Environment variables might seem small, but they are the glue that makes modern apps secure and adaptable . They keep secrets out of your code . They let the same app run in different environments with ease. They make apps portable across laptops, servers, Docker, and CI/CD pipelines. Whether you’re building a personal project or deploying to production, always remember: 👉 Don’t hardcode it. Env it. 🌱 Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Charan Gutti Follow Location Hyderbad, India Pronouns He/Him Joined Sep 13, 2025 More from Charan Gutti ⚡ Qdrant: The Engine Powering Smart Search and Production-Ready AI # ai # beginners # learning 🧠 RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation): The Secret Sauce Behind Smarter AI # ai # programming # beginners # learning 🤖 How to Build a Chatbot Using Python: A Complete Guide for Beginners and Experts # programming # ai # beginners # tutorial 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57
https://dev.to/kawano_aiyuki/i-debug-code-like-i-debug-life-spoiler-both-throw-exceptions-e69#the-compiler-is-honest-people-are-not
I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Alyssa Posted on Jan 13           I Debug Code Like I Debug Life (Spoiler: Both Throw Exceptions) # discuss # career # programming # beginners Being a software developer is a lot like being human. Being a woman software developer is like being human with extra edge cases. I write code for a living. Sometimes I write bugs professionally. And occasionally, I write code that works on the first run — which is deeply suspicious and should be reviewed by science. The Compiler Is Honest. People Are Not. One thing I love about code: If it doesn’t like you, it tells you immediately. If you’re wrong, it throws an error. If you forget a semicolon, it remembers forever. Life, on the other hand, waits three years and then says: “Hey… remember that decision you made? Yeah. About that.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode In programming, we call this technical debt. In life, we call it experience. As a Woman in Tech, I Learned Early About “Undefined Behavior” There are two kinds of bugs: The ones you expect. The ones that happen because the environment is… creative. Sometimes I walk into a meeting and: I’m the only woman. I’m also the backend. And somehow still expected to fix frontend CSS. This is not imposter syndrome. This is runtime context awareness. My Brain Runs on TODO Comments My mind is basically: // TODO: fix sleep schedule // TODO: refactor life choices // TODO: stop overthinking edge cases Every time I say “I’ll do it later,” a TODO comment is silently added to my soul. And just like in real projects: Some TODOs become features. Some become bugs. Some live forever and scare new contributors. Debugging Is Just Asking Better Questions People think debugging is about being smart. It’s not. It’s about asking questions like: “What did I assume?” “What did I change?” “Why does this work only on my machine?” “Why does it stop working when someone is watching?” Honestly, debugging taught me emotional intelligence: Don’t panic. Observe. Reduce the problem. Remove assumptions. Take breaks before you delete everything. Humor Is My Favorite Framework Tech moves fast. Trends change. Frameworks come and go. But humor? Zero dependencies. Backward compatible. Works across teams. Excellent for handling production incidents at 3 AM. When the server is down and everyone is stressed, sometimes the most senior move is saying: “Okay. This is bad. But also… kinda funny.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Then you fix it. Obviously. Confidence Is a Skill, Not a Setting I didn’t wake up confident. I compiled it over time. Confidence came from: Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking “stupid” questions. Shipping anyway. Learning that perfection doesn’t deploy. The best developers I know aren’t fearless. They just commit despite the warnings. Final Build: Still Experimental I’m still learning. Still refactoring. Still discovering bugs in old logic. But I ship. I learn. I laugh. I write code. And I’m very comfortable saying: “I don’t know yet — but I will.” Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode If you’re a developer reading this: Your bugs don’t define you. Your errors are data. Your weird brain is probably a feature. And if today feels broken… Try restarting. With coffee ☕ And maybe fewer assumptions. Thanks for reading. If this resonated, you’re probably running the same version of reality as me. Top comments (8) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This is such a sharp, thoughtful piece — witty, honest, and deeply relatable, especially the way you blend debugging with real-life growth. Your humor and clarity turn real experience into insight, and it’s genuinely inspiring to read.😉 Like comment: Like comment: 4  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks💛I'm really glad it resonated with you and made you smile. Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Art light Art light Art light Follow Trust yourself🌞your capabilities are your true power. ❤Telegram - ✔lighthouse4661 ❤Discord - ✔lighthouse4661 Email art.miclight@gmail.com Pronouns He/him Work CTO Joined Nov 21, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Good!😎 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Thread Thread   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thanks. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   darkbranchcore darkbranchcore darkbranchcore Follow Joined Dec 28, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Such a great read—smart, funny, and painfully relatable in the best way. I love how you turned real dev struggles into something empowering and human. That takes real confidence 👏 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Hi there! I am Alyssa. ❤I can see success in my mind's eye🌞 Email Location UK Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you so much! 💙 That really means a lot to me—turning those struggles into something empowering was exactly the goal. Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Hadil Ben Abdallah Follow Software Engineer • Technical Content Writer • LinkedIn Content Creator Email hadilbenabdallah111@gmail.com Location Tunisia Education ENET'COM Pronouns she/her Work Content Writer & Social Media Manager Joined Nov 13, 2023 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide This was such a refreshing read. The way you map debugging principles to real life is not just funny, it’s surprisingly insightful 😄 Like comment: Like comment: 2  likes Like Comment button Reply Collapse Expand   Alyssa Alyssa Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 • Jan 13 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Thank you! I love how you picked up on that—turning coding chaos into life lessons is exactly the kind of perspective that makes tech both fun and relatable 😄 Keep sharing these gems! Like comment: Like comment: 1  like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Alyssa Follow Designer, developer, & entrepreneur. Founder of Screenity + other ventures. Best woman maker of 2018 (Maker Mag) & nominated as Maker of The Year (Product Hunt) ✅Discord 🌟alyssa945 Location UK Education Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science Pronouns She/her Work CPO Joined Dec 4, 2025 Trending on DEV Community Hot What makes a good tech Meet-up? # discuss # community # a11y # meet What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 🧗‍♂️Beginner-Friendly Guide 'Max Dot Product of Two Subsequences' – LeetCode 1458 (C++, Python, JavaScript) # programming # cpp # python # javascript 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account
2026-01-13T08:48:57