Memory management Blogs

Page 3 of 3 (49 Blogs)
Damien Guard
12/19/2025 EN

Damien Guard

Damien Guard est un développeur logiciel et passionné de typographie partageant son expertise sur le développement web, la programmation C#, MongoDB et le lettrage pixel art. Découvrez des tutoriels complets sur l'optimisation vidéo HTML5, les solutions de contournement LINQ C# 14, le MongoDB EF Core Provider avec chiffrement interrogeable et transactions, et le lazy loading avec les proxies EF Core. Explorez des articles sur l'amélioration de contenu Nuxt3, les extraits générés, les formulaires email AWS Lambda avec Brevo et reCAPTCHA, et l'art du lettrage Amiga issu du rétrogaming. Suivez le projet annuel Advent of Fonts présentant de la typographie 8x8 pixels. Apprenez le développement .NET 10, les meilleures pratiques Entity Framework Core, l'optimisation de performance Nuxt3 et la combinaison du développement web moderne avec l'esthétique rétro du pixel art.

Gunnar Morling
12/11/2025 EN

Gunnar Morling

Morling.dev is the personal blog of Michael Morling, a software engineer and architect with deep expertise in Java, Spring, JVM internals, architecture, performance, and developer tooling. His writing focuses on practical and detailed explanations of topics such as Spring framework internals, microservices design, JVM garbage collection, performance tuning, clean architecture, Gradle builds, and language features that matter in real projects. Michael often breaks down subtle behaviors of the JVM and Spring ecosystem, helping developers understand why things work the way they do and how to improve reliability and efficiency in production systems.

Sebastian Raschka
11/29/2025 EN

Sebastian Raschka

SebastianRaschka.com is the personal blog of Sebastian Raschka, PhD, an LLM research engineer whose work bridges academia and industry in AI and machine learning. On his blog and notes section he publishes deep, well-documented articles on topics such as LLMs (large language models), reasoning models, machine learning in Python, neural networks, data science workflows, and deep learning architecture. Recent posts explore advanced themes like “reasoning LLMs”, comparisons of modern open-weight transformer architectures, and guides for building, training, or analyzing neural networks and model internals.

Daniel Janus
11/15/2025 EN

Daniel Janus

Blog.DanielJanus.pl is the personal blog of Daniel Janus, a veteran programmer from Poland who writes about Clojure, Rust, functional programming, developer culture, and personal productivity. Daniel combines deep technical insights with reflections on how code, words, and emotions interact in a developer’s life. His posts range from “Corner-cases of Comparing Clojure Numbers” to explorations of CSS compression and personal essays about ADHD and workspace clutter. The blog is bilingual (Polish and English) and features both short essays and detailed code-driven articles. With an emphasis on thinking clearly, rethinking assumptions, and learning continuously, Daniel’s writing appeals to engineers seeking both intellectual depth and human perspective.

Donny Wals
11/15/2025 EN

Donny Wals

DonnyWals.com is the technical blog of Donny Wals, an iOS engineer, author, and educator focused on Swift and iOS development. Donny writes detailed and practical tutorials on topics such as Swift concurrency, SwiftUI, Core Data, Combine, and building apps that make full use of Apple’s frameworks. His posts often explore new features in Swift, dig into how things work under the hood, and help developers build production-ready apps using modern patterns. With books, workshops, and a newsletter to accompany the blog, Donny’s writing is well suited for both intermediate and advanced iOS engineers looking for depth and clarity.

Itamar Turner Trauring
11/15/2025 EN

Itamar Turner Trauring

PythonSpeed.com is a blog created by Itamar Turner Trauring, a software engineer known for his work on Python performance, memory optimization, and practical tooling for data science and scientific computing. The site focuses on real production challenges: reducing memory usage, making Python code faster, profiling scientific workloads, improving Docker packaging, and understanding how to ship efficient applications. The writing is clear, measurable, and based on hands-on experience rather than theory. Itamar is the creator of Sciagraph, a performance and memory profiler for Python data science, and the author of open source tools such as Fil and Eliot, both designed to help developers understand how their code behaves. His broader mission is to support useful software development, cut CO2 emissions through faster computing, and encourage engineering that matters. Beyond technical work he is active in local bicycle safety advocacy in Cambridge, MA, helping cities adopt sustainable transportation policies. Thanks to this mix of engineering depth and real-world impact, PythonSpeed.com is one of the most practical and thoughtful resources for developers who want to make Python software faster and more efficient.

Simon Willison
11/13/2025 EN

Simon Willison

SimonWillison.net is the long-running blog of Simon Willison, a software engineer, open-source creator, and co-author of the original Django framework. He writes about Python, Django, Datasette, AI tooling, prompt engineering, search, databases, APIs, data journalism, and practical software architecture. The blog includes detailed notes from experiments, conference talks, and real projects. Readers will find clear explanations of topics such as LLM workflows, SQL patterns, data publishing, scraping, deployment, caching, and modern developer tooling. Simon also publishes frequent micro-posts and TIL entries that document small discoveries and tricks from day-to-day engineering work. The tone is practical and research oriented, making the site a valuable resource for anyone interested in serious engineering and open data.

Tanner Dolby
11/10/2025 EN

Tanner Dolby

TannerDolby.com is a personal blog by Tanner Dolby, a software engineer and mathematician who writes about modern web development and programming fundamentals. His articles explore topics such as JavaScript, Node.js, Eleventy, Sass, TypeScript, Python, and C++, offering clear, example-driven explanations of core concepts and real-world workflows. The blog covers everything from client-side rendering and DOM manipulation to creating custom Eleventy collections, setting up Node.js servers, and solving algorithmic challenges in different languages. Tanner also dives into accessibility, performance optimization, open-source collaboration with Git, and static site design, focusing on writing code that is both efficient and easy to understand. Each post is concise, practical, and written to help developers at all levels strengthen their problem-solving skills and coding foundations.

Dan Luu
11/2/2025 EN

Dan Luu

DanLuu.com is the personal blog of Dan Luu, known for long-form essays that mix systems thinking with careful measurement and clear writing. The topics range from computer latency and input lag, testing versus informal reasoning, and concurrency bugs, to industry pieces on developer compensation and curated lists of programming blogs worth reading. Many posts include data, historical context, and reproducible reasoning, which is why the site is often cited in courses and shared across the developer community. The design is intentionally minimal, which puts all attention on the ideas.