{"results":[{"role":"subject","uri":"https://justatheory.com/2005/08/oscon-presentations-online","title":null,"description":null,"date":1776164884223,"image":null},{"role":"object","uri":"https://octothorp.es/~/open-source","title":null,"description":null,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://robida.net/entries/2026/02/24/ill-let-you-know-ive-used-freebsd-and-openbsd-in-t","title":null,"description":null,"date":1771963931624,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://blog.luiscarlospando.com/coding/2016/02/me-uno-al-movimiento-%E2%80%95-adios-sublime-text-hola-atom","title":null,"description":"Pues después de varios años usando el buen y leal Sublime Text; finalmente he hecho el switch a Atom, editor de código desarrollado y mantenido por la gente de GitHub1. La verdad es que Sublime Text nunca me dio problemas, podría llegar a asegurar que es perfecto ― es rápido, ligero, tiene infinidad de paquetes,","date":1766127463311,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://blog.luiscarlospando.com/tech/2015/04/live-webcast-sobre-docker-en-vivo-desde-don-burro","title":"#Live: Webcast sobre Docker en vivo desde Don Burro - Luis Carlos Pando","description":"Iván Chavero y GLUCH (Grupo de Usuarios de Linux de Chihuahua) están transmitiendo en estos momentos en vivo desde Don Burro un webcast para hablar de Docker, un proyecto open source para deployment de aplicaciones en contenedores de software que virtualizan ciertos elementos del kernel de Linux. Véanlo en vivo en el stream de arriba.","date":1765895908806,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://blog.luiscarlospando.com/coding/2025/11/mi-primera-contribucion-a-raycast-anadiendo-notas-a-raindrop-io","title":"Mi primera contribución a Raycast: Añadiendo Notas a Raindrop.io - Luis Carlos Pando","description":"Siguiendo con mi afán de optimizar mis flujos de trabajo, decidí poner manos a la obra yo mismo.","date":1765389223727,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://bobbyhiltz.com/posts/2025/02/dillo","title":"Dillo Web Browser | BobbyHiltz.com","description":"Dillo, a fast and lightweight browser, really is more than meets the eye. This post talks about installing and using Dillo.","date":1760471554820,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://justatheory.com/2004/08/oscon-notes","title":"OSCON 2004 Notes","description":null,"date":1751992993292,"image":null},{"role":"subject","uri":"https://justatheory.com/2009/07/pg-vs-perl-dev","title":"PostgreSQL Development: Lessons for Perl?","description":"Pondering Conservatism I’ve been following chromatic’s new blog since it launched, and have read with particular interest his posts on the Perl 5 development and release process. The very long time between releases of stable versions of Perl has concerned me for a while, though I hadn’t paid much attention until recently. There has been a fair amount of discussion about what it means for a release to be “stable,” from, among others, now-resigned Perl Pumpking Rafael Garcia-Suarez and Perl 5 contributor chromatic. Reading this commentary, I started to ponder what other major open-source projects might consider “stable,” and how they manage stability in their development and release processes. And it occurred to me that the Perl 5 code base is simultaneously treated too conservatively and – more importantly – not conservatively enough. What open-source projects treat their code highly conservatively?","date":1739892346337,"image":null}]}