Pleopods Weekly #2 — March 13, 2026
Pleopods Weekly #2 — March 13, 2026
This Week on Lobste.rs
Trending topics: hardware release graphics ai culture
1. Tony Hoare (1934-2026) person
submitted by hwayne — 201 points (+194 this week) — 6 comments
Tony Hoare, who died last week, pioneered formal verification and concurrent programming—work that influenced how we build reliable software today.
2. Ghostty 1.3.0 release
submitted by BD103 — 187 points (+167 this week) — 58 comments
Ghostty 1.3.0 adds new features and improvements to rendering and the user experience.
3. Some Words on WigglyPaint graphics
submitted by fleebee — 144 points (+142 this week) — 13 comments
WigglyPaint is a lightweight painting app that shows how to build responsive graphics software with minimal dependencies, covering rendering, input handling, and UI design.
4. You Bought Zuck’s Ray-Bans. Now Someone in Nairobi Is Watching You Poop ai privacy
submitted by krinkle — 138 points (+129 this week) — 42 comments
Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses send video footage to remote moderators worldwide, raising questions about what gets captured, who sees it, and how the data is protected during moderation.
5. Lenovo’s New T-Series ThinkPads Score 10/10 for Repairability hardware
submitted by Signez — 131 points (+115 this week) — 41 comments
Lenovo's latest T-Series ThinkPads scored perfectly on repairability, with easy access to batteries, storage, and RAM using standard tools.
6. your ai slop bores me culture
submitted by dropalltables — 99 points (+84 this week) — 17 comments
Developers are tired of generic AI commentary cluttering technical forums—the kind that restates obvious facts without insight or specificity. What separates useful technical writing from noise is whether it actually helps someone solve a problem or understand something new.
7. FrameBook hardware
submitted by hugoarnal — 85 points (+79 this week) — 3 comments
FrameBook is a system for managing visual content that shows developers how to efficiently store, retrieve, and manipulate frame-based data across platforms.
8. Put the ZIP code first a11y web
submitted by diktomat — 81 points (+78 this week) — 60 comments
A designer argues that asking for postal codes first in address forms actually improves data quality and user experience, even though it breaks conventional address ordering.
9. 10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflips hardware
submitted by glacambre — 83 points (+77 this week) — 15 comments
Firefox telemetry shows that about 1 in 10 crashes stem from single-bit memory errors—a hardware reliability issue that often goes unnoticed in production systems.
10. Pushing and Pulling: Three Reactivity Algorithms programming
submitted by Johz — 84 points (+73 this week) — 32 comments
React uses push-based updates (components notify parents of changes), Vue combines push and pull (watchers + dependency tracking), and Svelte compiles reactivity at build time—each trade-off between developer ergonomics and runtime performance.
11. Too Much Color graphics web
submitted by polywolf — 76 points (+73 this week) — 26 comments
A look at how too many colors in UI design hurt usability and readability, plus practical tips for using restraint and hierarchy to improve accessibility.
12. Just Use Postgres databases
submitted by amattn — 74 points (+71 this week) — 27 comments
PostgreSQL has matured into a versatile database that handles traditional SQL workloads while supporting specialized use cases like full-text search, JSON, and time-series data—making it a solid default choice for most applications.
13. EUPL: European Union Public License law
submitted by mhm — 74 points (+71 this week) — 40 comments
The European Union Public License is a copyleft alternative to GPL-family licenses, built specifically for EU legal frameworks and available in multiple languages.
14. Writing my own text editor, and daily-driving it editors
submitted by Aks — 81 points (+70 this week) — 12 comments
A developer shares what they learned building a custom text editor and using it daily—bridging the gap between textbook implementations and actual usability needs.
15. Announcing Rust 1.94.0 release rust
submitted by theelx — 72 points (+69 this week) — 10 comments
Rust 1.94.0 is out with stabilized features and standard library improvements. Check the release notes for what changed.
16. A grand vision for Rust plt rust
submitted by lffg — 78 points (+68 this week) — 21 comments
Rust's leadership is prioritizing improved error handling, a better async story, and broader accessibility for systems programming.
17. AI should help us produce better code vibecoding
submitted by simonw — 70 points (+68 this week) — 82 comments
The piece argues AI tools should be judged on code quality improvements, not just speed—particularly how they help with architecture and maintainability.
18. Relicensing with AI-assisted rewrite ai law
submitted by tuananh — 69 points (+68 this week) — 159 comments
This guide walks through relicensing legacy code with AI assistance, covering the legal hurdles and technical steps needed to rewrite components while keeping them functional.
19. Do the Illegible culture
submitted by ashwinsundar — 71 points (+66 this week) — 35 comments
Engineers building novel systems often find that traditional metrics miss what matters most—the real value of their work only becomes clear once it exists, not before.
20. Amazon holds engineering meeting about GenAI based outages vibecoding
submitted by dustyweb — 68 points (+64 this week) — 36 comments
Amazon's engineering team breaks down how AI-driven systems fail and how to respond when they cause infrastructure outages, highlighting reliability and observability gaps in GenAI-assisted operations at scale.
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