The Daily WTF In the mid-00s, famous Web plugin Flash tried to make a pivot. It wasn’t going to be for games or little animations anymore,
The Daily WTF Bruce W‘s employer was best described as The Mega Bureaucracy. It’s the kind of place where it takes twenty weeks to
The Daily WTF Mindy recently had an interview. It started off quite well. The company seemed to be well run, the first few folks Mindy talked too
The Daily WTF There’s no real theme to be gleaned from this week’s submissions, just the usual sort of things and a tiny serving of
The Daily WTF While browsing one day, Emma clicked a link on a site and nothing happened. That was annoying, but Emma wasn’t about to give
The Daily WTF NoSQL databases frequently are designed to shard or partition across many nodes. That, of course, makes enforcing unique IDs
The Daily WTF David was poking around in some code for a visualization library his team uses. It’s a pretty potent tool, with good code
The Daily WTF Michael was assigned a short, investigatory ticket. You see, their PHP application allowed file uploads. They had a rule: the files
The Daily WTF England and the United States, according to the old witticism, are two countries separated by a common language. The first sample
The Daily WTF The startup life is difficult, at the best of times. It’s extra hard when the startup’s entire bundle of C-level