A new study suggests that increasing use of AI may narrow the number of ways humans think and reason. (Image source: iStock.) Large language models may be standardizing human expression
Can We Measure Software Slop? An Experiment April 5, 2026 Summary In this article, I propose a definition of software slop based on human attention (slop = code that hasn't been reviewed
You may have heard about 25 Gbit symmetrical internet in Switzerland. This is often cited as the fastest dedicated (non-shared) residential connection in the world. However, did you
Stefan Schüller Stefan Schüller ContentsThe ParadoxThe Natural MonopolyThe German ModelThe American ModelThe Swiss ModelThe ResultsThe OversightThe AnswerWhat Can Be DoneSourcesContentsThe
blog Home About Services Blog Resources Categories Contact Share Search Menu Home About Services Blog Resources Categories Contact Recent Posts It has never been about code April 3,
For eight years, I’ve wanted a high-quality set of devtools for working with SQLite. Given how important SQLite is to the industry1, I’ve long been puzzled that no one has invested
Mar 30, 2026 Imagine you're a new assistant professor at a research university. You just got the job, you just got a small pot of startup funding, and you just hired your first two
Claude had a leak of their source code, and people have been having a whole lot of fun laughing at how bad it is. You might wonder how this could happen. The answer is dogfooding run
Claude had a leak of their source code, and people have been having a whole lot of fun laughing at how bad it is. You might wonder how this could happen. The answer is dogfooding run
The Seed Beneath the Snow Jimmy Miller wrote a lovely response to Sean Goedecke’s “Seeing like a Software Company,” which you know is itself riffing on James C. Scott’s Seeing Like