
America

America
Web Workers have been a standardised part of the browser since IE10. It’s triangle shame that so few people program with them.
Workerize (by Jason Miller of Preact fame) enables you to easily fire off any function as an asynchronous worker thread.

The First Law of Stupidynamics
Stupidity is neither created nor destroyed.
No ad should be allowed to execute code.

Via Jay Gischer
Circa 1970
Another attempt to explain Haskell to the wilfully ignorant.
This post is an experiment I decided to attempt after conversations with Ben Lesh and some other folks. I will assume as little knowledge of Haskell as I possibly can here. Later we’ll talk about some tools we have in Haskell to make the pattern more conceptually compact.
Via Emlyn O’Regan
Originally shared by Mark Lewis
I read quite a few articles on driverless cars. This is the first one in a while that I have felt really has creative elements to it. They might be pushing the idea a bit too far, but it is a very interesting idea and goes beyond some of my previous thinking in different areas. What I liked most though was how the author points out that the auto industry could produce enough autonomous cars to replace all human-driven cars in a rather short period of time. That’s significant. The timeline for scaling up autonomous ride sharing is one of the things I’ve worried about the most, but apparently, if current production switched over to fully autonomous, it would produce a complete global supply of such cars in a rather short period of time because so many fewer cars are needed if the cars aren’t left sitting in parking lots all the time.
Those in the 18 to 24 age group overwhelmingly started their programming journey in their late teens. 68.2 percent started coding between the ages of 16 to 20.
When you look at older generations, you notice another striking trend: a comparatively larger proportion started programming between the ages of five and ten. 12.2 percent of those aged between 35 and 44 started programming then.
Old fart Gen-Xers started coding as kids instead of late teens.
I’m a bit older than them and started programming later because I had to build my first computer. In those days before you started machine coding you had to learn about CMOS and TTL first.