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星期三 02 下午 七月 9o 2025

Bytes: Vercel expands its empire

Bytes: Vercel expands its empire

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Cool Bits

  1. Ashwin wrote about using AI without leaving the terminal, which would’ve been helpful when I was stuck in the Reno airport for 7 hours after my bachelor party.

  2. The TypeScript 5.9 beta introduces an updated tsc --init, support for the new import defer syntax, and more.

  3. Sasha Blumenfeld wrote about a major upgrade to Sentry Agent Monitoring – which now brings tracing, model performance, and deep context into one unified experience for seamless AI monitoring. [sponsored]

  4. Loren Stewart wrote about building a lightweight reactive state manager with JavaScript proxies. And the faster you build it, the faster you can sell it to Vercel and earn your first triangle-shaped waffle party.

  5. Rspack 1.4 comes with new Wasm target support, smaller bundles, and incremental build by default.

  6. The Bun team bought bun.com. Everything else about the site is the exact same, but as a fellow domain degenerate, I believe that a mid six-figure domain purchase by an open-source project is newsworthy enough.

  7. Can your coding agent run long commands and plan its next move? Warp’s can – and it just beat Claude Code by 20% on the Terminal-Bench benchmark. Warp’s eng team wrote about how they pulled it off. [sponsored]

  8. Electron 37 came out last month – and much like the Jurassic Park franchise, no matter how much you slander it, it will always succeed and never die.

  9. Una Kravets wrote about CSS conditionals with the new if() function.

  10. QA Wolf is hosting a free workshop on Patent strategy for startups with Saad Hassan, the go-to IP attorney for Sequoia and a16z founders. He’ll demystify patents vs trademarks vs copyrights and share common IP landmines to avoid. [sponsored]

  11. The Deno team took a break from suing the fourth-largest software company in the world to ship Deno 2.4 – which brings back the deno bundle subcommand for creating single-file JavaScript bundles, introduces bytes and text imports, and lots more.

  12. Brut is a new web framework for Ruby that’s presumably inspired by the green cologne you bought for $7 at Walgreens your freshman year of high school. Smells like success. And desperation. A potent combo indeed.


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