3/24/2024 0 Comments Actix web stThe keystones are finally set, ready to bear load. But there’s good reason to be optimistic about the state of Rust coming into 2020 – critical features and APIs have stabilized, substrate libraries are ready and available, tooling is polished to the point of outshining everything else. The language and its ecosystem have seen a lot of change over the last few years and I would have advocated against it in serious projects for its evanescent APIs alone. ![]() I’m playing with the usual format to do a medium dive into an active frontier: web technology in Rust. If you’re viewing it on the web, as usual you can opt to receive a few more in the future by subscribing here. Theoretically you signed up for this, and probably did so in the last week or two – but if you’re looking to shore up your mail subscriptions in the new year already, there’s an easy one-click unsubscribe in the footer. You’re reading the first 2020 edition of Nanoglyph, a fledgling newsletter on software, sent weekly. Here’s to hoping that everyone had a good break (or at least a few days off), set or didn’t set resolutions, and is refreshed and ready for what comes next. ![]() ![]() It’s already been a great reading day for retrospectives on the last ten years / predictions for the next.
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