Researchers and engineers working in particle physics, materials analysis, or drug discovery haven't exactly been spoiled for choice when it comes to chips capable of the highly precise double-precision calculations that these workloads depend. NextSilicon aims to change that with Maverick-2, a chip aimed not at AI but the high-performance computing (HPC) community. This week, the chip startup offered the best look yet at how its dataflow accelerators - now deployed by several customers, including Sandia National labs - hold up in the wild,
Zod is the undisputed king of TypeScript validation. In a remarkably short time, it has become the gold standard, celebrated across the ecosystem for its phenomenal developer experience, elegant chainable API, and robust type inference. For countless developers, Zod is not just a library - it's the default, instinctive choice for ensuring data integrity in their applications. But what if the tool everyone reaches for first has a hidden cost?