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by ChrisRackauckas 1135 days ago
A lot of things are shared on a daily basis. There's a lot of open discussion on the various community channels like Discourse and Slack: the #ttfx channel on slack for example is a great one to follow to keep up with the latency changes and report wins and losses of different changes. There's a lot of random package devs testing each PR to show how the different changes are effecting their package. One that comes to mind is the Trixi.jl folks which are sharing the result of almost every update with a bunch of plots to track the latency changes. See https://julialang.org/community/ for a full list of community channels.

Things of course only show up in the HN front page when they reach a sexy conclusion, which also means that what shows up on HN is a very biased subset of the discussion which omits most subtlety and posts the biggest speedup numbers. Most of the day-to-day of course is things more 10% changes in some case, where only when compounded 100 times you finally have a story the general HN public cares to hear. This also generally means that the long discussions of caveats and edge cases is also filtered from what most of the public tends to generally read (it's just difficult to capture some things in a blog post in any concise way), so if you care for the nuance I highly recommend joining some of the Slack channels.