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| 🔗 Stories, Tutorials & Articles |
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| Design Patterns Are Dead. Long Live Design Patterns. |
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| Design patterns were created for human comprehension, not machines, serving as a shared vocabulary to communicate complex ideas quickly, manage working memory, and standardize solutions. Even in the era of AI-generated code, design patterns are crucial for containing the limitations of AI models and ensuring reliable outputs. It's not about obsolete practices but rather evolving the role of design patterns to provide architectural guardrails and intent compression for AI-generated code. |
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| AI costs how much? GitHub Copilot users react to new usage-based pricing system. |
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GitHub began usage-based Copilot billing, and some developers say they used up the AI credits GitHub grants for a month in under 24 hours.
Developers burn credits through "premium requests". GitHub counts prompts to advanced models, agent tasks, edits, and some Copilot features against the allowance. During a long agent run, you can consume many requests fast. A team that treats Copilot like an open-ended coding agent can hit the cap sooner than expected.
Team admins should check:
- Plan allowance for each seat
- Models that consume premium requests
- Per-user usage in the Copilot dashboard
- Spending limits and policy controls
- IDE settings that default to costlier models
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| I Did 11 Technical Interviews in 60 Days. Here Is the Pattern Nobody Tells You. |
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| The key insight from the article is that at mid-to-senior backend levels, coding rounds matter least while judgment, communication, structure, and ability to defend decisions are critical. Focus on rehearsing key design, incident, and behavioral answer structures to succeed, not just LeetCode. |
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| When Code Becomes Cheap, What's Left? |
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| Teams that use Claude Opus 4.6 for spec-driven development generate code at low cost, so they spend scarce developer time on review and QA. Developers create more value by judging code than by typing it. |
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| GitHub breach: The development ecosystem is in the hot seat |
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| GitHub is reeling from an infrastructure breach by TeamPCP, highlighting the vulnerability of developer environments. Privileged access was achieved not through traditional perimeter exploitation, but by targeting trusted developer tools like IDE extensions. This incident serves as a stark reminder that organizations must prioritize security measures like least privilege, continuous validation of plugins, and zero-trust enforcement to safeguard their software supply chain. Trust in the supply chain is at an all-time low, necessitating a shift towards a more resilient security strategy to combat the escalating threat landscape posed by cybercriminals like TeamPCP and their sophisticated attack vectors. |
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