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JAKARTA, Indonesia - With oxygen on a missing Indonesian submarine due to run out within hours, the chances of survival were growing increasingly slim Friday for 53 crew members aboard the vessel - if it is still intact after an underwater accident. An international rescue effort was widening, as searchers raced against the clock in hopes of finding the KRI Nanggala-402, a diesel-electric submarine, which disappeared north of Bali early Wednesday while preparing to conduct a torpedo drill. As of Friday afternoon, Indonesian navy officials had not provided further details about the detection a day earlier of an unidentified object about 160 to 330 feet below the surface that they said had a strong magnetic field. Spokespeople for the navy did not respond to text messages and calls from The Washington Post.
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Tailscale needed a better IP address type
Tailscale is a networking application so naturally we need to work with
and manipulate IP addresses and sets of IP addresses often.
Being written almost entirely in Go, the obvious choice would be for
Tailscale to use the Go standard library’s
net.IP address type for individual
IPs and
net.IPNet type for
networks. Unfortunately, the standard library’s types have a number of
problems, so we wrote a new package,
What’s wrong with Go’s net.IP type?
When I was working on Go full time, I filed Go issue
Litestream
6 min read
tl;dr Despite an exponential increase in computing power, our applications
require more machines than ever because of architectural decisions made 25 years
ago. You can eliminate much of your complexity and cost by using SQLite &
Litestream for your production applications.
When I was your age…
I can tell I’m getting old because I talk about the “good old days” of computing.
Back when knowing a single programming language and SQL was good enough to work
at most jobs. Back when you could build all your web pages with basic HTML skills.
But the good old days weren’t actually that good.