Webassembly Blogs

Page 2 of 2 (34 Blogs)
Don McCurdy
1/6/2026 EN

Don McCurdy

Don McCurdy is a web developer, 3D graphics engineer, and technical writer focused on WebGL, three.js, glTF, and WebAssembly. He shares tutorials, insights, and experiments on interactive 3D graphics and web technologies.

Andrew Lock
12/31/2025 EN

Andrew Lock

Andrew Lock — Full-stack ASP.NET developer and creator of .NET Escapades, sharing in-depth tutorials and practical insights on ASP.NET Core, C#, and modern .NET development, backed by a PhD and author of ASP.NET Core in Action.

Brendan Eich
11/15/2025 EN

Brendan Eich

Brendaneich.com is the personal blog of Brendan Eich, the creator of JavaScript, co-founder of Mozilla, and founder of Brave Software. On the blog he writes long form essays about the history and future of JavaScript, ECMAScript standards, the open web, browser engines, WebAssembly, tokens and the metaverse economy, and why projects like Mozilla matter for the web’s independence. Many posts expand on his conference keynotes, such as the evolution from asm.js to WebAssembly or behind the scenes stories about Netscape, HTML5, and JavaScript’s early years. More recent entries touch on decentralized rendering, watermarking, and domain specific tokens like BAT and RNDR.

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.

Yasoob Khalid
11/7/2025 EN

Yasoob Khalid

Yasoob Khalid is a developer and writer best known for the free, open-source book Intermediate Python and his project-driven follow-up, Practical Python Projects. His articles and books have reached 5+ million readers across 189+ countries, and his blog remains a go-to place for clear, practical Python insights. By day, Yasoob works on Azure Cloud Networking at Microsoft, and by night he continues to publish tutorials, notes, and experiments that demystify real-world Python for learners at every level. He’s also the author behind the long-running Python Tips site and newsletter, where he focuses on approachable explanations and hands-on examples.