“Introducing the AWS Amplify GraphQL Client” showcases the new GraphQL client that was built by the Amazon Amplify team. It’s pretty sweet.
Category: All
All posts across the whole website belong to this category. They might also belong to some other categories as well, but this one holds all of them. Hence the descriptive name – All.
Why programmers are not paid in proportion to their productivity
Here are a couple of bits that I liked in “Why programmers are not paid in proportion to their productivity” blog post:
How can someone be 10x more productive than his peers without being noticed? In some professions such a difference would be obvious. A salesman who sells 10x as much as his peers will be noticed, and compensated accordingly. Sales are easy to measure, and some salesmen make orders of magnitude more money than others. If a bricklayer were 10x more productive than his peers this would be obvious too, but it doesn’t happen: the best bricklayers cannot lay 10x as much brick as average bricklayers. Software output cannot be measured as easily as dollars or bricks. The best programmers do not necessarily write 10x as many lines of code and they certainly do not work 10x longer hours.
Programmers are most effective when they avoid writing code.
… and:
The romantic image of an über-programmer is someone who fires up Emacs, types like a machine gun, and delivers a flawless final product from scratch. A more accurate image would be someone who stares quietly into space for a few minutes and then says “Hmm. I think I’ve seen something like this before.”
Drunk People Are Better at Creative Problem Solving
Harward Business Review runs this article: “Drunk People Are Better at Creative Problem Solving“. Here are a few quotes to get you started:
Tipsy subjects solved 13% to 20% more problems than sober subjects did.
Intoxicated subjects had more “Aha!” moments than their sober counterparts.
People under the influence submitted answers more quickly than people in the control group.
I rest my case, ladies and gentlemen.
What’s new and changing in PHP 7.3
Here’s a list of things that are upcoming in the PHP 7.3 release. According the release plan, the work on PHP 7.3 starts on June 7 2018 and it should be generally available November 29 2018.
PHP : Preparing for the Penetration Testing
Chris Cornutt wrote “PREPARING FOR PENTESTING (@ LONGHORN PHP 2018)” blog post for his upcoming talk at the conference. I’d gladly attend the talk, but the time and place didn’t work out for me this time. Here are a few useful links from his blog post that might come in handy for anyone evaluating the security of their PHP application and preparing for the penetration testing:
- OWASP Top 10 2017 – the ten most critical web application security risks
- PortSwigger Burp Suite (community edition)
- PHP Security Cheat Sheet
- Top 7 PHP Security Blunders
- The 2018 Guide to Building Secure PHP Software
The above are not a replacement for the talk, but if you are like me and can’t attend, these should at least get you started in the right direction.