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- pella> especially from tech company blogs,https://engineering.fb.com/https://netflixtechblog.com/https://stripe.com/blog/engineeringhttps://eng.uber.comhttps://engineering.linkedin.com/https://engineering.atspotify.com/https://tailscale.com/bloghttps://careersatdoordash.com/engineering-blog/https://dropbox.tech/--Aggregators:( https://engineering.fyi/ ; https://diff.blog/ )+ https://hn.algolia.com/?query=engineering%20blog---create a public engineering-blog SKILL.md. ( ~ collect the writing patterns that work on HN )
- simonwThis post by Jay Kreps that introduced Kafka to the works remains one of my favorite pieces of engineering blog content of all time: https://engineering.linkedin.com/distributed-systems/log-wha...
- sateeshhttps://jvns.ca/ Not a tech. company blog. Explains technical concepts clearly and top notch technical posts. Fits 1,2, 3 criteria of what you ask, though not the 4th one.
- xnorswapYou might be more interested in books than a blog.For example: The Architecture of Open Source Applicationshttps://aosabook.org/en/index.html
- yrandEncountered one specific example about a month ago here on HackerNews - All about automotive lidar. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46110395Blog posts where I find quality really shows are usually about something I know next to nothing about how it works. A badly written article usually either goes really shallow or skips some facts when going into depth and requires catchup elsewhere to actually understand it. The lidar article from Main Street Autonomy goes beyond basics and explained everything from the ground up in such a connected way that it was a real pleasure reading it.
- qzncSounds like you look for an intersection of academic papers (1.), tech blogs (2.), text books (3.), and confidential business strategies (4.)? A very high ambition.
- OkkefArmin Ronacher's blog (of flask/jinja fame) https://lucumr.pocoo.org/Antirez' blog (of Redis fame) https://antirez.com/Simon Willison's blog (about AI) https://simonwillison.net/
- bzGoRust
- nchmyYou're probably looking for something that is more focused on specific software decisions/implementations, but https://infrequently.org is the best web development blog out there.It's not "technical" so much as it just educates you on how to be a good web developer/run a team. There's zero fluff and considerable detail (footnotes are practically blog posts themselves).
- tester756
- thundergolfer
- alzamosFrancesco Mazzoli’s blog on https://mazzo.li/archive.html. His blog has topped HN a few times with various low-level/linux topics, some deep dives into algorithms etc.
- mkosmulAllegro Tech Blog: https://blog.allegro.tech/
- avisk
- sdairs
- tekichan
- sevazhidkovIt’s not a traditional blog, but Oxide’s RFDs cover exactly what you asked — implementation details and trade-offs: https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/
- ludicityI'm a huge fan of https://eblog.fly.dev/index.html. The author, Efron, very graciously advises me on a lot of little things around my engineering practice, and I've learned a huge amount about weird holes in my practice from industry dysfunction in a very short period of time from him.
- robofanatic
- pveierlandTweag has many interesting entries with good technical depth:https://www.tweag.io/blog
- GeoAtreidesSeems to me you're describing books.
- nickmonadTigerBeetle: https://tigerbeetle.com/blog/
- gethlyThere are no such blogs. Usually companies, or individuals, will write these after they implement some feature into their products. Which makes them inherently little pieces of information scattered all over the internet and there is no one blog that is just about this.
- louiechristie
- vibesareoffAsk the LLM you wrote this post with!
- vogu66not software engineering, but https://practical.engineering/
- noam_k
- AgingcoderCloudflare, google project zero.
- rramadassNot a blog, but books detailing real-world experiences from Indian Engineers/Scientists/Researchers; Quite inspiring to see how people strive unceasingly towards a goal in spite of all the limitations and hurdles (viz. Political/Financial/Material etc.) imposed on them.There is much to learn, in these books.The Mind of an Engineer by Purnendu Ghosh et al. - https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-10-0119-2The Mind of an Engineer: Volume 2 by Purnendu Ghosh et al. - https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-15-1330-5
- louiechristie
- mitjamMaybe it's just because I'm LLMing a bit too much, recently, but this question sounds to me like a prompt.
- snvzzFor deeper understanding of seL4's developments and the historical context in which it appeared, Gernot Heiser's blog[0].0. https://microkerneldude.org/
- throw_awaitoldnewthing
- Joel_MckayThese should be read at least once in your life if interested in building industrial grade electrical, mechanical, and or software.1. https://nepp.nasa.gov/whisker/2. https://standards.nasa.gov/standard/NASA/NASA-STD-873943. https://standards.nasa.gov/NASA-Technical-Standards4. https://sma.nasa.gov/sma-disciplines/workmanship5. https://www.stroustrup.com/JSF-AV-rules.pdf6. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_of_10:_Rules_for_Dev...7. https://www.nist.gov/pml/owm/laboratory-metrology/metrology-...8. https://www.mitutoyo.com/training-education/9. "Memoirs of extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds" (Charles Mackay, 1852, https://www.gutenberg.org/files/24518/24518-h/24518-h.htm )The artifacts are usually beautiful from good Workmanship Standards, Design For Manufacturability, and systematic Metrology. Dragging us all into the future one project at a time.Note that training an ML model with such data would be pointless, as statistical saliency forms a paradox with consumer product design compromises. Note, there are _always_ tradeoffs in every problem domain.'What it actually means to be "AI Generated"' ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERiXDhLHxmo )https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXbzktx1KfUHave a nice day, and note >52% of the web is LLM slop now. YMMV =3