Do larger rockets tend to have a better mass ratio due to the square cube law?
It's not the size of the rocket, it's the structural integrity of the fuel tank.
Ben welcomes back friend of the show Eliot Horowitz, cofounder and CTO of Viam, who’s also the cofounder and former CTO of MongoDB. They talk about the current status of robot assistants, why Viam is hardware-agnostic, and building robots to train cats (good luck with that).

Being an effective coder with a code generation tool still requires you to be an effective coder without one.

Over the last 15 years, we’ve built Stack Overflow into an industry-crucial knowledge base for millions of developers and technologists. During this time we’ve experienced years filled with opportunities and challenges. This year is no different.

Ben talks with Doug Seven, a director of software development at AWS and the GM for CodeWhisperer, an AI-powered coding companion, about his career building dev tools and how he hopes AI will give people more bandwidth for creative work.

For AI tools to be useful to your team, they have to fit into your existing workflows.

What exactly is a vector database? And how does it relate to generative AI?

Highlighting one of the interesting discussions going on in our Collectives.

When all the other languages go one way, time to change direction.

From Angular JS to Raspberry Pi, from React to Prompt Engineering, our community has been asking questions and sharing knowledge that helps the entire world build better.

Go behind the scenes to learn how we designed our new search.

Semantic search and augmenting LLMs have sent everyone turning their text into vectors. But where do you store all that vector data?

The conventional metaphor for career success is a ladder, but there are a lot of problems with this narrative.

How does our emphasis on impostor syndrome keep us from having bigger, harder conversations about how to improve life for developers?

A series of amazing breakthroughs are allowing paralyzed people to speak and emote. With each passing month, we get closer to a brain-computer interface that might unlock some of the deepest mysteries of our grey matter.

We needed to remove the dependency on the Sites database and contain all Teams infrastructure and data within the TFZ which is all part of Phase II.

We're updating things to highlight community contributions, make it easier to keep tabs on our latest releases, and connect your Stack Overflow account to the discussion happening on the blog.

Stack Overflow for Teams' journey to the cloud started with a new name.

If you want the tech debt metaphor to really shine, get some numbers behind it.

A Qualcomm expert breaks down some of the tools and techniques they use to fit GenAI models on a smartphone.


If edge functions were an onion, most of the layers would be caching.

Semantic search allows users to search using natural language instead of a rigid syntax of keyword manipulation.

Let’s highlight the new features and products we announced today from the stage of WeAreDevelopers.

DevOps has helped lots of organizations improve their processes, but others have only seen frustration and burnout.

A novice developer fixed a bug that sprung up around the same time he was born!
Behold the relative rainbow: you can now make colors based on other colors!
Did you know that you could run neural networks entirely in the browser without contacting a server? This fun demo shows you how.
What are CSS container queries, really?
Should certain things we study just...end?
The web is now powerful enough to handle the robust image editor, Photoshop.
Domain squatting is a hobby for a lot of developers, but the economics behind it are fascinating.
Using examples from the Sims, you can learn about Bezier curves and the math behind them. Do reticulated splines next!
Check out some contemporary testing strategies and evaluate the famous Test Pyramid’s relevance.
There's a bunch of open-source companies out there, but they don't "win" because they are cheap, and self-hostable. They win because they're better.
HTTP/3 solves some big problems, which might explain why it's being adopted quickly in spite of its limitations.
Hacktoberfest is here. Could your contributions lead to your next job?