TokioConf 2026 - Using !Send with the benefits of Send by June Welker
For most people, writing asynchronous Rust is synonymous with writing Send-compatible Rust. Non-Send code can also be regularly mistaken for async-incompatible code. In this talk, we'll use the example of an interactive Rust TUI program to examine what it looks like when you mix the two. We'll discuss what tools and solutions exist to tackle this, what their tradeoffs are, and when you might just not want to bother. Video Production by Confreaks Follow Confreaks 👇 https://confreaks.com https://x.com/confreaks https://confreaks.bsky.social

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TokioConf 2026 - Zero-Copy Chaos. When everything you knew about tokio... by Wojciech Kargul

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TokioConf 2026 - I want it, you want it, we want it: let's rewrite it in Rust! by Glauber Costa

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Mastering PowerShell Parameters: Advanced Techniques and Best Practices by Jeff Hicks

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I am done with Golang

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TokioConf 2026 - Async Rust Meets Async Python: How Daft runs... by Colin Ho, Srinivas Lade

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Why The Russian Accent Terrifies Everyone

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Co-Creator of Haskell: Why Learn Functional Programming, Useless vs Useful Languages | Simon Jones

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TypeScript, C# and Turbo Pascal with Anders Hejlsberg

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Turing Award Winner: Disagreeing with Google, Postgres, Future Problems | Mike Stonebraker

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Exposing The Solid State Donut Battery. It's Over.

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TokioConf 2026 - Less Tokio is More Tokio: Strategies for Accelerating a.... by Weston PaceLu Qiu

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TokioConf 2026 - Opening Keynote with Carl Lerche and Alice Ryhl

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Andrej Karpathy: From Vibe Coding to Agentic Engineering w/ Stephanie Zhan

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The REAL Reason Companies Have Stopped Hiring

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Why Rust is different, with Alice Ryhl

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Something is jamming GPS over Europe. Here's what we found

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Full Walkthrough: Workflow for AI Coding — Matt Pocock

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The Insane Genius of a Formula 1 Gearbox

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TokioConf 2026 - Lightning Talk: Async Function Pointers by Datong Sun

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