Release Date: May 20, 2026 — The most anticipated WordPress release in years is almost here. Let's explore everything you need to know before it lands. WordPress powers over 43% of the web. That's not a typo. Nearly half of every website you've ever visited runs on this open-source CMS. And yet, for much of 2025, things went oddly quiet — legal battles, contributor walkouts, and a compressed relea
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Denver likes a good origin story. The city still keeps a marker for Louis Ballast and the Humpty Dumpty Barrel, the local spot tied to the cheeseburger's Colorado claim. That detail felt oddly right for SnowFROC 2026. A cheeseburger is a small upgrade that changes the whole meal. This year's conference kept returning to the same ideas in AppSec, such as how meaningful security progress often comes
You write a Dockerfile, run docker build, and get an image. But what’s really happening under the hood? Docker isn’t just “building” your app — it’s assembling a stack of immutable filesystem layers. Docker doesn’t build applications — it builds filesystem snapshots layer by layer. Let’s break it down. A Docker image is not a single file. stack of read-only layers. Every instruction in your Docker
Metric Value Django Average Response Time 287ms Node.js Average Response Time 193ms Django Memory Usage (1000 users) 1.8GB We tested Django 4.2 and Node.js 18.16 under identical conditions to measure their performance for reporting dashboard workloads. The test environment consisted of AWS EC2 m5.2xlarge instances (8 vCPUs, 32GB RAM) running Ubuntu 22.04. Both frameworks connected to th
It’s just HTML… how hard can it be? 😎 Expectation const data = document.querySelector('.title').innerText; 💀 Reality null Data loads via API React renders everything later Class names look like passwords 403 + CAPTCHA waiting for you 🧠 Truth You don’t scrape websites. *If you’ve fought with querySelector()and lost… welcome to the club. connect with KF
GitHub has thousands of open-source apps with binary releases — but finding and downloading the right one is painful. Release pages are buried, and you're left squinting at filenames like app-1.2.3-linux-x86_64.tar.gz guessing which one is yours. So I built GHFrog — a browser-based app store on top of the GitHub API. No install, no account needed. Live: ghfrog.pages.dev · Source: github.com/iamovi
I've been building AQE (Atomic Quantum Engine), a DOM selector engine that replaces tree traversal with flat bitmask operations. Instead of walking the DOM on every query, each node gets a 64-bit BigInt mask at sync time. Matching becomes a single integer AND. AQE Light is the free, open-source version — zero dependencies, MIT license, on npm now: npm install atomic-quantum-engine I'm looking for