The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source - The best coders should exit the feed (News)
Episode Date: October 6, 2025Abner Coimbre makes a compelling case why our biggest technical talent should abandon for-profit social platforms, Noah Brier creates a Claude Code and Obsidian starter kit, Bharath Natarajan document...s the Vercel vs Cloudflare fight, Toolbrew is a well-designed website brimming with common utilities, and Yusuf Aytas analyzes why over-engineering happens.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What up nerds?
I'm Jared and this is ChangeLog News for the week of Monday, October 6th, 2025.
Did you hear what happened to South Korea's government recently?
A fire broke out at their National Information Resources Service headquarters,
erasing work files saved by about 750,000.
civil servants over the past seven years.
The worst part?
No backups.
What, what, what?
Well, that's not technically correct.
They did have backups,
but the backups were also destroyed in the same fire.
This is why the 321 rule exists.
Your backup strategy should have three copies,
two different media types, and one.
Offsite.
Okay, let's get into this week's news.
The best coders should exit the feed.
Abner, Quamber, makes a compelling case why our biggest technical talent
should abandon for-profit social platforms like X, Instagram, and Reddit.
Quote, not as a moral crusade, but because the platforms are crumbling under heavy regulation
and cultural backlash. If you're investing your peak years shaping public narratives there,
you risk reputation and creativity. End quote.
Abner has noticed four big forces pushing the shift away.
One, the Anxious Generation Book, Convincing Parents to Restrict Phones.
Two, bipartisan school smartphone bans.
Three, growing evidence and visibility of bot farms.
And four, a cultural link between being terminally online and political violence.
My own social network of family, friends, and church, and my personal sentiment toward technology
affirms what Abner is saying.
Phone fasts and a return to analog are common discussion.
I'm having with people.
Abner says, quote,
because of everything I've already outlined,
this way of life is barreling towards collapse.
You can also find smaller signs,
like the surge in dumb phone sales,
that mainstream outlets are finally noticing.
Everywhere around us, society is wondering,
why do we keep a bottomless barrel of sugar in our pockets?
End quote.
His call for anyone in tech,
helping build these platforms,
is to stop that and start building technology
for touching grass.
And he says,
that movement has already begun.
A clod code plus obsidian starter kit.
Cod code and obsidian,
cue Julie Andrews,
because these are definitely two of my favorite things right now.
The linked repo is a pre-configured obsidian vault structure
that's designed to work seamlessly with clod code
as an AI-powered second brain.
This lets you, one, use AI as a thinking partner,
not just a writing assistant.
Two, organize knowledge using the pari,
method, that's projects, areas, resources, and archives.
Three, maintain version control with Git, and four, access your vault from anywhere, including
mobile.
The Starter Kit's creator Noah Breyer wrote all about why he loves this setup in the magic
of cloud code.
Link in the newsletter.
Versel versus Cloudflare.
Versel and Cloudflare are seriously duking it out for developer mindshare these days, and
their founders aren't pulling any punches.
In the linked post, Barath Natarajan documents the fight.
Quote, Cloudflare's camp frames Versal as a front-end delusionist.
Beautiful defaults masking AWS egress bills.
They point to screenshots of cost breakdowns, claiming that what looks like free
quickly becomes expensive once your app scales.
Cloudflare's arguments against Versel can be distilled into one line.
The people designing your abstractions don't understand the systems they're built on.
Vercell's camp fires back with equal conviction.
Gishirmo accuses cloud flare of security theater, centralizing the web under the guise of protection,
hiding pricing under tooltips, selling bandwidth under new names, his tone is defensive but principled.
Versal's abstraction isn't ignorance, it's empathy.
The idea is that the best infrastructure isn't visible, and the worst infrastructure is the one you have to keep configuring.
End quote.
Click through for many embedded tweets, a summary of the recurring themes, and Barath's personal take.
on who will win. It's now time for sponsored news.
Augment's Indy plan is here.
Augment just got a lot friendlier for indie devs.
Until now, their pricing was geared towards teams.
But with the new Indy plan, you can get Augment's full AI coding superpowers for just
$20 a month.
Why is this a big deal?
Because indie hackers, solo founders, and side project dreamers don't always have an
enterprise budget for AI tools.
But they do need that same leverage.
The Indy Plan brings Augment's repo-aware refactors, context-rich reviews, and agent features into reach for everyone.
Now you can go from Idea to shipped for $20 a month.
Check it out and get started with Augment at Augmentcode.com.
Free little tools without signups or ads.
ToolBrew is a well-designed website brimming with common utilities.
If you ever need a quick case converter, a word counter, a URL encoder, a video downloader,
a check splitter, a PDF converter, etc., check this out.
There's no need to sign up, there's no ads, and you can suggest new tools to be added to the site.
Many of the top requests are in progress.
Why Overengineering Happens.
In this article, Yousif Atis does an excellent job to finding overengineering, explaining why it happens,
how much it costs and what we can do to avoid it.
The setup, quote, if you've worked in software long enough, you've probably seen,
seen it. A CRUD app serving a handful of users deployed on a Kubernetes cluster with half
the CNCF landscape stitched together for good measure. On paper, it looks impressive. In reality,
it's a Rube Goldberg machine solving problems the team doesn't actually have. End quote.
Sound familiar? When it comes to the Y, Yusuf blames good intentions gone sideways,
misaligned incentives, or plain old human nature. The biggest drivers. One, premature optimization.
2. Resumade Driven Development.
3. Management incentives.
4. FOMO and trend chasing.
And 5. Misaligned priorities.
These forces are troublesome alone, but when combined, they can add up to some seriously
over-engineered, seriously expensive systems.
That's the news for now, but go and subscribe to the ChangeLog Newsletter for the full scoop
of links worth clicking on, such as.
Users only care about 20% of your...
app, examples are the best documentation, and write the damn code. Get in on the newsletter
at changelog. News. Last week on the pod, we hosted Charlie Marsh from Astral, talking high
performance Python tooling, and Farrasabuka DJ dove into the recent barrage of MPM hacks and what we can
do about it. Find those in your feed, and stay tuned for this week. When View and Vite Creator
Evan U joins me on Wednesday, and Elixir's own, Jose Valim, is on change logging friends on Friday.
Have yourself a great week, like, subscribe, and five-star review us if you dig the show, and I'll talk to you again real soon.
