Welcome to ISSUE #69 of the Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams at Netlify. Our menu this week: branch out with Git, fade to black in old video games, and prevent code injection in JavaScript and Node. From the blog A look under the hood:… The post The Overflow #69: When internal devs are your customers appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/04/16/the-overflow-69-when-internal-devs-are-your-customers/
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group
A look at some of the current thinking around chunking data for retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) systems. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/27/breaking-up-is-hard-to-do-chunking-in-rag-applicatio
During the holidays, we’re releasing some highlights from a year full of conversations with developers and technologists. Enjoy! We’ll see you in 2025. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/24/balancing-
There’s no silver bullet for this type of ghost. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/26/the-ghost-jobs-haunting-your-career-search/
Single individuals make less of a difference to the success or failure of a technology project than you might think (and that’s a good thing). https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/25/the-real-10x-devel
A developer’s journal is a place to define the problem you’re solving and record what you tried and what worked. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/24/you-should-keep-a-developer-s-journal/
During the holidays, we’re releasing some highlights from a year full of conversations with developers and technologists. Enjoy! We’ll see you in 2025. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/24/how-develo
Computer science deals with concurrency, but what about simultaneity? https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/12/23/can-a-programming-language-implement-time-travel/