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Tech News - Languages

202 Articles
article-image-rust-1-35-0-released
Vincy Davis
24 May 2019
3 min read
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Rust 1.35.0 released

Vincy Davis
24 May 2019
3 min read
Yesterday, the Rust team announced the release of Rust 1.35.0. This release highlights the implementation of Fn* closure traits for Box<dyn Fn*>. Additionally it has features like coercing closures which are extended to unsafe fn pointers, dbg! macro can now be called without passing any arguments, a number of APIs have become stable and many more. Key features explained in brief: Fn* closure traits implemented for Box<dyn Fn*> In Rust 1.35.0, the FnOnce, FnMut, and the Fn traits are now implemented for Box<dyn FnOnce>, Box<dyn FnMut>, and Box<dyn Fn> respectively. This allows users to use boxed functions in places where a function is to be implemented. It is also now possible to directly call Box<dyn FnOnce> objects. Coercing closures to unsafe function pointers In the earlier versions, it was possible to coerce closures which do not capture from the environment, into function pointers only . With this release, coercing closures has been extended to ‘unsafe’ function pointers also. Calling dbg!() with no argument ‘dbg!()’ macro allows to quickly inspect the value of some expression with context. Now, users can call dbg!() without passing any arguments. This is useful in tracing what branch your application will take. Library stabilizations In 1.35.0, a number of APIs have become stable. Few new implementations and other changes have also been made. Some are mentioned below: Copy the sign of a floating point number onto another Check whether a Range contains a value Map and split a borrowed RefCell value in two Replace the value of a RefCell through a closure Hash a pointer or reference by address, not value Copy the contents of an Option<&T> To know more about the changes in Library, head over to the release notes page. Changes in Clippy Clippy is a collection of lints to catch common mistakes and improve the Rust code. In this release of Rust, a new lint ‘drop_bounds’ has been added. Also Clippy has split the lintredundant_closure into redundant_closure and redundant_closure_for_method_calls. Changes in Cargo When passing a test filter, such as ‘cargo test foo’, the user does not have to build examples (unless they set test = true). ‘rustc-cdylib-link-arg’ key has been added to build scripts to specify linker arguments for cdylib crates. ‘Cargo clippy-preview’ is now a built-in cargo command. The verification step in ‘cargo package’ that checks if any files are modified is now stricter. It uses a hash of the contents instead of checking file system mtimes. It also checks all files in the package. To know more about the changes in Cargo, head over to the release notes page. Read more about the Rust 1.35.0 announcement on the official Rust blog. Read More Rust’s recent releases 1.34.0 and 1.34.1 affected from a vulnerability that can cause memory unsafety Rust 1.34 releases with alternative cargo registries, stabilized TryFrom and TryInto, and more Rust shares roadmap for 2019
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article-image-wolfram-engine-is-now-free-for-developers
Vincy Davis
22 May 2019
3 min read
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Wolfram Engine is now free for developers

Vincy Davis
22 May 2019
3 min read
Yesterday in a blogpost, Stephen Wolfram posted about launching a free Wolfram Engine for developers. The Wolfram Engine runs on any standard platform like Linux, Mac, Windows, RasPi, and many more. It can be used directly with a script, or from a command line. The Wolfram Engine also has access to the whole Wolfram Knowledgebase by a free basic subscription to the Wolfram Cloud. “The Wolfram Engine is the heart of all our products.”, says  Wolfram. The Wolfram Engine implements the full Wolfram Language as a software component and can immediately be plugged into any standard software engineering stack. The Wolfram language is a powerful system used for interactive computing as well as for doing R&D, education and data science. It is also being increasingly used as a key component in building production software systems. The Wolfram language has 5000+ functions, including visualization, machine learning, numerics, image computation, and many more. It has lots of  real-world knowledge too, particularly in geo, medical, cultural, engineering, scientific, etc. The Wolfram language has been increasingly used inside large-scale software projects. Wolfram added, “Sometimes the whole project is built in Wolfram Language. Sometimes Wolfram Language is inserted to add some critical computational intelligence, perhaps even just in a corner of the project.” The free Wolfram Engine for developers will help make the Wolfram language available to any software developer. It will also help build systems that can take full advantage of its computational intelligence. Wolfram concludes the blogpost stating, “We’ve worked hard to make the Free Wolfram Engine for Developers as easy to use and deploy as possible.” Many developers have welcomed the free availability of Wolfram Engine. https://twitter.com/bc238dev/status/1130868201129107456 A user on Hacker News states, “I'm excited about this change. I wish it had happened sooner so it could have had more of an impact. It certainly put Wolfram Engine back on my radar.” Another user is planning to take advantage of this situation by “using Mathematica (and its GUI) on a Raspberry Pi to explore and figure out how to do what you want to do, but then actually run it in Wolfram Engine on a more powerful computer.” To know more details about the news, head over to Stephen Wolfram blog. Read More Software developer tops the 100 Best Jobs of 2019 list by U.S. News and World Report Key trends in software development in 2019: cloud native and the shrinking stack 18 people in tech every programmer and software engineer needs to follow in 2019
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article-image-racket-7-3-releases-with-improved-racket-on-chez-refactored-io-system-and-more
Bhagyashree R
17 May 2019
2 min read
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Racket 7.3 releases with improved Racket-on-Chez, refactored IO system, and more

Bhagyashree R
17 May 2019
2 min read
Earlier this week, the team behind Racket announced the release of Racket 7.3. This release comes with improved Racket-on-Chez, refactored IO system, a new shear function in the Pict library, and more. The Racket programming language is general-purpose, multi-paradigm, and is a dialect of Lisp and Scheme. Updates in Racket 7.3 Snapshot builds of Racket-on-Chez are now available Racket’s core was largely implemented in C, which affects its portability to different systems, maintenance, and performance. Hence, back in 2017, the team decided to make the Racket distribution run on Chez Scheme. With the last release (Racket 7.2), the team shared that the implementation of Racket on Chez Scheme (Racket CS) has reached almost complete status with all functionalities in place. With this release, the team has added more improvements to Racket-on-Chez and has made its snapshot builds available on Racket Snapshots. The team further shared that by next release we can expect Racket-on-Chez to be included as a download option. Other updates In addition to the improvements in Racket-on-Chez, the following updates are introduced: Racket’s IO system is refactored to provide better performance and a simplified internal design. The JSON reader is now dramatically faster. The Racket web library now comes with improved support for 307 redirects. The Plot library comes with color map support for renderers. The Plot library allows you to produce any kind of plot including scatter plots, line plots, contour plots, histograms, and 3D surfaces and isosurfaces. A ‘shear’ function is added to the Pict library, Racket’s one of the standard functional picture libraries. Read the full announcement on Racket’s official website. Racket 7.2, a descendant of Scheme and Lisp, is now out! Racket v7.0 is out with overhauled internals, updates to DrRacket, TypedRacket among others Swift is improving the UI of its generics model with the “reverse generics” system
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Amrata Joshi
15 May 2019
3 min read
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.NET Core releases May 2019 updates

Amrata Joshi
15 May 2019
3 min read
This month, during the Microsoft Build 2019, the team behind .NET Core announced that .NET Core 5 will be coming in 2020. Yesterday the team at .NET Core released the .NET Core May 2019 updates for 1.0.16, 1.1.14, 2.1.11 and 2.2.5. The updates include security, reliability fixes, and updated packages. Expected updates in .NET Core Security .NET Core Tampering Vulnerability(CVE-2019-0820) When .NET Core improperly processes RegEx strings, a denial of service vulnerability exists. In this case, the attacker who can successfully exploit this vulnerability can cause a denial of service against a .NET application. Even a remote unauthenticated attacker can exploit this vulnerability by issuing specially crafted requests to a .NET Core application. This update addresses this vulnerability by correcting how .NET Core applications handle RegEx string processing. This security advisory provides information about a vulnerability in .NET Core 1.0, 1.1, 2.1 and 2.2. Denial of Service vulnerability in .NET Core and ASP.NET Core (CVE-2019-0980 & CVE-2019-0981) When .NET Core and ASP.NET Core improperly handle web requests, denial of service vulnerability exists. An attacker who can successfully exploit this vulnerability can cause a denial of service against a .NET Core and ASP.NET Core application. This vulnerability can be exploited remotely and without authentication. A remote unauthenticated attacker can exploit this vulnerability by issuing specially crafted requests to a .NET Core application. This update addresses this vulnerability by correcting how .NET Core and ASP.NET Core web applications handle web requests. This security advisory provides information about the two vulnerabilities (CVE-2019-0980 & CVE-2019-0981) in .NET Core and ASP.NET Core 1.0, 1.1, 2.1, and 2.2. ASP.NET Core Denial of Service vulnerability(CVE-2019-0982) When ASP.NET Core improperly handles web requests, a denial of service vulnerability exists. An attacker who can successfully exploit this vulnerability can cause a denial of service against an ASP.NET Core web application. This vulnerability can be exploited remotely and without authentication. A remote unauthenticated attacker can exploit this vulnerability by issuing specially crafted requests to the ASP.NET Core application. This update addresses this vulnerability by correcting how the ASP.NET Core web application handles web requests. This security advisory provides information about a vulnerability (CVE-2019-0982) in ASP.NET Core 2.1 and 2.2. Docker images .NET Docker images have now been updated. microsoft/dotnet, microsoft/dotnet-samples, and microsoft/aspnetcore repos have also been updated. Users can get the latest .NET Core updates on the .NET Core download page. To know more about this news, check out the official announcement. .NET 5 arriving in 2020! Docker announces collaboration with Microsoft’s .NET at DockerCon 2019 .NET for Apache Spark Preview is out now!  
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article-image-introducing-tensorflow-graphics-packed-with-tensorboard-3d-object-transformations-and-much-more
Amrata Joshi
10 May 2019
3 min read
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Introducing TensorFlow Graphics packed with TensorBoard 3D, object transformations, and much more

Amrata Joshi
10 May 2019
3 min read
Yesterday, the team at TensorFlow introduced TensorFlow Graphics. A computer graphics pipeline requires 3D objects and their positioning in the scene, and a description of the material they are made of, lights and a camera. This scene description then gets interpreted by a renderer for generating a synthetic rendering. In contrast, a computer vision system starts from an image and then tries to infer the parameters of the scene. This also allows the prediction of which objects are in the scene, what materials they are made of, and their three-dimensional position and orientation. Developers usually require large quantities of data to train machine learning systems that are capable of solving these complex 3D vision tasks.  As labelling data is a bit expensive and complex process, so it is better to have mechanisms to design machine learning models. They can easily comprehend the three dimensional world while being trained without much supervision. By combining computer vision and computer graphics techniques we get to leverage the vast amounts of unlabelled data. For instance, this can be achieved with the help of analysis by synthesis where the vision system extracts the scene parameters and the graphics system then renders back an image based on them. In this case, if the rendering matches the original image, which means the vision system has accurately extracted the scene parameters. Also, we can see that in this particular setup, computer vision and computer graphics go hand-in-hand. This also forms a single machine learning system which is similar to an autoencoder that can be trained in a self-supervised manner. Image source: TensorFlow We will now explore some of the functionalities of TensorFlow Graphics. Object transformations Object transformations are responsible for controlling the position of objects in space. The axis-angle formalism is used for rotating a cube and the rotation axis points up to form a positive which leads the cube to rotate counterclockwise. This task is also at the core of many applications that include robots that focus on interacting with their environment. Modelling cameras Camera models play a crucial role in computer vision as they influence the appearance of three-dimensional objects projected onto the image plane. For more details about camera models and a concrete example of how to use them in TensorFlow, check out the Colab example. Material models Material models are used to define how light interacts with objects to give them their unique appearance. Some materials like plaster and mirrors usually reflect light uniformly in all directions. Users can now play with the parameters of the material and the light to develop a good sense of how they interact. TensorBoard 3d TensorFlow Graphics features a TensorBoard plugin to interactively visualize 3d meshes and point clouds. Through which visual debugging is also possible that helps to assess whether an experiment is going in the right direction. To know more about this news, check out the post on Medium. TensorFlow 1.13.0-rc2 releases! TensorFlow 1.13.0-rc0 releases! TensorFlow.js: Architecture and applications  
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article-image-apache-software-foundation-finally-joins-the-github-open-source-community
Amrata Joshi
30 Apr 2019
3 min read
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Apache Software Foundation finally joins the GitHub open source community

Amrata Joshi
30 Apr 2019
3 min read
In 2016, Apache decided to start integrating GitHub’s repository and tooling with their own services. After working on the integration over the years, they made a move towards simplifying how they work and move all Git projects to GitHub. By February, this year, Apache completed the migration to GitHub and enabled all the projects with a simple platform to host and review code, collaborate on projects, and build software alongside developers around the world. Greg Stein, ASF Infrastructure Administrator, said, "In 2016, the Foundation started integrating GitHub's repository and tooling, with our own services. This enabled selected projects to use GitHub's excellent tools. Over time, we improved, debugged, and solidified this integration. In late 2018, we asked all projects to move away from our internal git service, to that provided by GitHub. This shift brought all of their tooling to our projects, while we maintain a backup mirror on our infrastructure." Yesterday, Apache Software Foundation (ASF) finally joined the GitHub open source community. Apache Software Foundation has about 200M+ lines of code that are managed by an all-volunteer community of 730 individuals. Nat Friedman, Chief Executive Officer of GitHub, said on this announcement, "We're proud to have such a long standing member of the Open Source community migrate to GitHub. Whether we're working with individual Open Source maintainers and contributors or some of the world's largest Open Source foundations like Apache, GitHub's mission is to be the home for all developers by supporting Open Source communities, addressing their unique needs, and helping Open Source projects thrive." Initially, Apache projects had two version control services, Apache Subversion and Git. As the number of projects increased, ASF communities wanted to see their source code available on GitHub because the codes were read-only mirrors. Also, the ability to use the GitHub tools around those repositories was very limited. This made Apache take the decision to join GitHub. Greg Stein further added, "We continue to experiment and expand the set of services that GitHub can provide to our communities, given our own needs and requirements. The Foundation has started working closely with GitHub management to explore ways to make this happen, and what will be possible in the future." Many users think that the reason for Apache to migrate to GitHub was the increasing cost of managing the code and infrastructure. A user commented on HackerNews, “Apparently, one of the big motivating reasons for this was "cost". The foundation’s 2018 five-year strategic plan noted that infrastructure services account for more than 80 percent of the total ASF expense budget, adding: Increasingly, project communities have infrastructure requirements that strain the capabilities of the ASF. The report noted that, given burgeoning costs, encouraging the use of more externally provided services was its best option.” Another comment reads, “Holy shit, they're spending $800k a year on infrastructure! Honestly, it's difficult to understand why they haven't sooner moved to GitHub, or even GitLab or the like - it feels reckless. That money could be put to far greater use - as an Apache supporter who hasn't ever felt the need to look at their costs, I have to say that I'm very disappointed.” To know more about this news, check out Apache’s blog post. Microsoft and GitHub employees come together to stand with the 996.ICU repository ‘Developers’ lives matter’: Chinese developers protest over the “996 work schedule” on GitHub GitHub releases Vulcanizer, a new Golang Library for operating Elasticsearch    
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article-image-net-for-apache-spark-preview-is-out-now
Amrata Joshi
25 Apr 2019
3 min read
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.NET for Apache Spark Preview is out now!

Amrata Joshi
25 Apr 2019
3 min read
Yesterday, at the Spark + AI summit, the team at Apache Spark announced .NET for Apache Spark, a popular open source distributed processing engine used for analytics over large data sets. It can also be used for processing real-time streams, batches of data, machine learning, and ad-hoc query. .NET fo Apache Spark for developers .NET for Apache Spark aims at making Apache Spark accessible to .NET developers across all Spark APIs. The team at Apache Spark aims to develop .NET for Apache Spark in the open (as a .NET Foundation member project) along with the Spark and .NET community for the developers. .NET for Apache Spark comes with high-performance APIs for using Spark from C# and F#. With .NET APIs, users can now access all aspects of Apache Spark including streaming, Spark SQL, DataFrames, MLLib, etc. It lets the developers reuse all the skills, code, knowledge, and libraries. The C#/ F# language that binds to Spark will be written on a new Spark interop layer that will offer easier extensibility. .NET for Apache Spark can be used on Linux, macOS, and Windows and is compliant with .NET Standard 2.0. .NET for Apache Spark performance The first preview version of .NET for Apache Spark performs well on the popular TPC-H benchmark. This benchmark consists of a suite of business-oriented queries. .NET for Apache Spark has a better performance against Python and Scala. It is also 2 times faster than Python. What more features can be expected? In the future, the team aims to simplify the documentation and samples and work towards native integration with developer tools such as Visual Studio, Visual Studio Code, Jupyter notebooks. Developers can also expect .NET support for user-defined aggregate functions and .NET idiomatic APIs for C# and F# (e.g., using LINQ for writing queries). The team is also working towards adding support for Azure Databricks, Kubernetes, etc. and making .NET for Apache Spark part of Spark Core. Few users are excited about this news and are expecting some major improvement with .NET for Spark. A user commented on HackerNews, “I've seen the announcement about .NET interior support in Apache Spark some time ago. The benchmarks are interesting and tell the story - in few cases it is faster than Python, but slower than native (for Spark) Scala/JVM. Maybe with Arrow interchange Python's performance would increase (and for other interpose that would use Array - i.e. for .Net).” Few others are confused about the transition, as they have to get their teams shifted to the new setup. Another user commented, “Indeed the real sad part is you can’t lead teams there early (premature optimization). Everybody seems to make the same rough transition on their own.” To know more about this news, check out the post by Apache Spark. Winners for the 2019 .NET Foundation Board of Directors elections are finally declared Fedora 31 will now come with Mono 5 to offer open-source .NET support ML.NET 1.0 RC releases with support for TensorFlow models and much more!
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article-image-introducing-wapm-a-package-manager-for-webassembly
Bhagyashree R
24 Apr 2019
2 min read
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Introducing WAPM, a Package Manager for WebAssembly

Bhagyashree R
24 Apr 2019
2 min read
Yesterday, Syrus Akbary, the Founder and CEO of Wasmer, announced the release of WebAssembly Package Manager (WAPM). This package manager is introduced to make it easier for developers to use WebAssembly anywhere. Why WAPM is being introduced? With this package manager, the Wasmer team aims to improve the developer ergonomics of WebAssembly. Explaining the advantages of WAPM, Akbary said, “WebAssembly is an abstraction on top of chipset instructions, this enables wasm modules to run very easily on any machine. If we move this abstraction up we can unlock the potential of having universal binaries that can run anywhere, even on platforms/chipsets not supported at the moment of releasing the binary.” We already have Node.js Package Manager (NPM) that hosts WebAssembly modules. However, the team believes that WebAssembly on the server-side is a different use case and hence deserves a package manager specifically designed for it. What are its advantages? Following are the advantages that WAPM comes brings in: Allows developers to easily publish, download, and use WebAssembly modules. Allows developers to easily define commands on top of Wasm. Enables developers to create universal libraries in WebAssembly that can be used from all languages including Python, PHP, JavaScript, Rust, C, and C++. Enables support for different ABIs (Application Binary Interface) such as WASI, Emscripten, or even new ones in the future. This release comes with a ‘wapm’ command-line application and a website and package registry: wapm.io. Here’s a video demonstrating how WAPM works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDRcHIBFu0c After seeing the governance issues with NPM, many developers are skeptical about another private community package manager “I've grown uncomfortable with NPM being operated by NPM Inc instead of The Node.js Foundation, but it's a hard thing to change once it's established. We should hesitate to support the establishment of another community package manager by a for-profit company,” a Redditor said. To know more in detail, check out the official announcement. Mozilla introduces Pyodide, a Python data science stack compiled to WebAssembly Fastly open sources Lucet, a native WebAssembly compiler and runtime How you can replace a hot path in JavaScript with WebAssembly
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article-image-developer-community-mourns-the-loss-of-joe-armstrong-co-creator-of-erlang
Sugandha Lahoti
22 Apr 2019
5 min read
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Developer community mourns the loss of Joe Armstrong, co-creator of Erlang

Sugandha Lahoti
22 Apr 2019
5 min read
Dr. Joe Armstrong, one of the creators of Erlang passed away over the weekend at the age of 68. Dr. Armstrong’s wife specified that he died from an infection of the lungs which occurred due to a quite recent diagnosis of pulmonary fibrosis. His lungs were donated to lung research. Francesco Cesarini, founder of Erlang solutions tweeted about Joe’s demise. https://twitter.com/FrancescoC/status/1119596234166218754 Robert Virding, co-creator of Erlang also payed his regards. https://twitter.com/rvirding/status/1119610591885307904 The developer community has also mourned the loss of Joe Armstrong with a large number of developers taking to various social media platforms to offer their condolences to Dr. Armstrong's family and paying their respects for him. Dr. Armstrong’s work with concurrency programming Dr. Armstrong was best known for helping lay foundations in the '70s and '80s to the most widely spread concurrency models as we know them today. In concurrent programming, multiple events, code snippets or programs are perceived to be executing at the same time. Unlike imperative languages, which uses routines or object-oriented languages, which use objects. Concurrency oriented languages use processes, actors, and agents as the main building blocks. Dr. Armstrong helped propel concurrency programming at a time when there was no IoT, web, massive multi-user online games, video streaming, and automated trading or online transactions. The Erlang programming language Erlang was co-created by Joe Armstrong alongside Robert Virding and Mike Williams in the 1980s at the Ericsson Computer Science Labs. While working there, Dr. Armstrong and his colleagues were looking for an approach to developing fault-tolerant and scalable systems. This resulted in the Erlang-style concurrency. He later received a Ph. D. in computer science from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden in 2003. He is also the author of a number of key books on the topic of Erlang including Concurrent Programming in Erlang, Programming Erlang: Software for a Concurrent World, and Coders At Work. Erlang was originally built for use only at Ericsson, as a proprietary language, to improve telephony applications. It was designed to be a fault-tolerant, distributed, real-time system that offered pattern matching and functional programming in one handy package. It was then open-sourced to the public in 1998. Since then, it has been responsible for business, big and small, to create reliable systems. Since then, Erlang has been one of the most popular open source languages with compelling features like concurrent processes, memory management, scheduling, distribution, networking, etc. WhatsApp, the most popular messaging platform’s server is almost completely implemented in Erlang. In 2018, Erlang celebrated 20 years of its open sourcing tracing its journey from Ericcson to Whatsapp. Erlang also inspired Elixir, a general-purpose programming language that runs on the Erlang virtual machine. Elixir is built on top of Erlang and shares the same abstractions for building distributed, fault-tolerant applications. Using Erlang modules in Elixir has helped in the creation of Nerves, which helps in building embedded software, and the web framework Phoenix. Remembering Dr. Joe Armstrong Many developers have shared their sentiments on Dr. Armstrong’s demise, with most of them describing him as a kind and compassionate developer who was more interested in teaching than his ego. Thomas Gebert, a software developer shared an email thread where he asked Joe Armstrong about concurrency. He states, “Dr. Armstrong’s enthusiasm about Erlang, distributed programming, and pretty much everything else about computers was really a good springboard for self-education.” Even though Thomas asked some serious noobie questions about concurrency, Dr. Armstrong responded back with an incredibly long, well-written email explaining a lot of the minutia of how Erlang avoids a lot of pitfalls and generic concurrency theory. Thomas adds, “He was really good about explaining things in a way simple-enough for me to understand, without coming off as patronizing or rude.” A lot of people also took to Twitter to share their experiences working with Dr. Armstrong. https://twitter.com/zxq9_notits/status/1119602063506206725 https://twitter.com/glv/status/1119706037689491456 https://twitter.com/ktosopl/status/1119612076190601217 https://twitter.com/jboner/status/1119651034933100544 “He and I discussed distributed storage. Well detailed response from him that sent me reading for days. I aspire to be like him.” reads a comment on Hacker News. Such was his popularity. Here are some of his memorable quotes on a varied set of topics of interest to him. “All significant energy gains in the last 50 odd years are the result of new hardware NOT software.” https://twitter.com/joeerl/status/1115988725111169025 Prediction: One day computers might become useful https://twitter.com/joeerl/status/1114558139217711104 “One on the disadvantages of having a PhD in computer science is that I get asked really difficult questions. Like - "In gmail on my iPhone I press archive - can I get my mail back?" and "Why have they changed the interface?" Why no easy questions like what's a monad?” https://twitter.com/joeerl/status/1113847695612022785 The Erlang Ecosystem Foundation launched at the Code BEAM SF conference Elixir 1.7, the programming language for Erlang virtual machine, releases Introducing Mint, a new HTTP client for Elixir
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Amrata Joshi
19 Apr 2019
2 min read
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Crystal 0.28.0 released with improved language, ranges, library lookup and more

Amrata Joshi
19 Apr 2019
2 min read
Yesterday, the team at Crystal released Crystal 0.28.0, a new version of the general-purpose, object-oriented programming language. This release comes with improvements to language, library, networking and much more. What’s new in Crystal 0.28.0 Enums Enums are declared with one line per each member. In the previous versions, users could use spaces or commas, but in this version, users have to use a semicolon. The formatter will now migrate commas to a semicolon. Improved ranges Sometimes users don’t know where to start or finish, from this release users can now understand it better with the help of ranges as they have been categorized as begin-less and end-less ranges. Library lookup The team at Crystal has worked towards simplifying how some libraries and static libraries are looked up and therefore can be overridden in case it is needed. In this release, an env var CRYSTAL_LIBRARY_PATH is used in the process of determining the location of libraries to link to. Numbers now in human readable format In this release, numbers can now be printed in a human-readable form with the help of Number#humanize, Int#humanize_bytes and Number#format. Networking The team has improved HTTP and URI and have made it easy for users to migrate to the new setup. Issues in the URI implementation have been fixed. Collections The team has dropped Iterator#rewind. Users can implement #cycle by storing elements in an array. Bug fixes The issues in the compiler have now been fixed and even the errors in some code constructs have been handled. Issues related to method lookup have been fixed. Type inference has been improved. The team has worked on the error messages, they have been improved. To know more about this news, check out Crystal’s post. Crystal 0.27.0 released Qt Creator 4.9.0 released with language support, QML support, profiling and much more Redox OS 0.50 released with support for Cairo, Pixman, and other libraries and packages    
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Sugandha Lahoti
16 Apr 2019
4 min read
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Swift is improving the UI of its generics model with the “reverse generics” system

Sugandha Lahoti
16 Apr 2019
4 min read
Last week, Joe Groff of the Swift Core Team published a post on the Swift forums discussing refining the Swift Generics model which was established by the Generics Manifesto, almost three years ago. The post introduced new changes to improve the UI of how generics work in the Swift language. The first part of this group of changes is the SE-0244 proposal. This proposal introduces some features around function return values. SE-0244 proposal The SE-0244 proposal addresses the problem of type-level abstraction for returns.  At present Swift has three existing generics features in Swift 5. Type-level abstraction The syntax of a type level abstraction is quite similar to generics in other languages, like Java or C#. In this users type out the function definitions, use angle brackets, and conventionally use T for a generic type, all of it happening at the function (or type) level. Each of the functions for Type-level abstraction has a placeholder type T. Each call site then gets to pick what concrete type is bound to T, making these functions very flexible and powerful in a variety of situations. Value-level abstraction Value-level abstraction deals with individual variables. It is not concerned with making general statements about the types that can be passed into or out of a function; instead, developers need to worry only about the specific type of exactly one variable in one place. Existential type Many swift libraries consist of composable generic components which provide primitive types along with composable transformations to combine and modify primitive shapes into more complex ones. These transformations may be composed by using the existential type instead of generic arguments. Existential types are like wrappers or boxes for other types. However, they bring more dynamism and runtime overhead than desired. If a user wants to abstract the return type of a declaration from its signature, existentials or manual type erasure are the two choices. However, these come with their own tradeoffs. Tradeoffs of existing generics features The biggest problem of the original genetic manifesto is generalized existentials. Present existentials have a variety of use cases that could never be addressed. Although existentials would allow functions to hide their concrete return types behind protocols as implementation details, they would not always be the most desirable tool for this job. This is because they don’t allow functions to abstract their concrete return types while still maintaining the underlying type's identity in the client code. Also, Swift follows in the tradition of similar languages like C++, Java, and C# in its generics notation, using explicit type variable declarations in angle brackets. However, this notation can be verbose and awkward. So new improvements need to be made for existing notations for generics and existentials. Reverse generics Currently Swift has no way for an implementation to achieve type-level abstraction of its return values independent of the caller's control. If an API wants to abstract its concrete return type from callers, it must accept the tradeoffs of value-level abstraction. If those trade-offs are unacceptable, the only alternative in Swift today is to fully expose the concrete return type. These tradeoffs led to the introduction of a new type system feature to achieve type-level abstraction of a return type. Coined as reverse generics by Manolo van Ee, this system behaves similar to a generic parameter type, but whose underlying type is bound by the function's implementation rather than by the caller. This is analogous to the roles of argument and return values in functions; a function takes its arguments as inputs and uses them to compute the return values it gives back to the caller. This process has already begun with a formal review in progress on SE-244: Opaque Result Types. This proposal covers the “reverse generics” idea and some keyword in return types. “If adopted”, says Tim Ekl, a Seattle-area software developer, “it would give us the ability to return a concrete type hidden from the caller, indicating only that the returned value conforms to some protocol(s)”. He has also written an interesting blog post summarizing the discussion by Joe Groff on the swift forums page. Note: The content of this article is taken from Joe Groff’s discussion. For extensive details, you may read the full discussion on the Swift forums page. Swift 5 for Xcode 10.2 is here! Implementing Dependency Injection in Swift [Tutorial] Apple is patenting Swift features like optional chaining
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Amrata Joshi
12 Apr 2019
3 min read
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Red Hat team announces updates to the Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) program

Amrata Joshi
12 Apr 2019
3 min read
The Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) certification program has certified skilled IT professionals for around 20 years now. This program has also one of the leading certification programs for Linux skills. As new technologies are coming up and industries are equally evolving, the focus has now shifted to hybrid cloud implementations. With this new development, shift automation has become an important skill to learn for Linux system administrators. So, the team behind RHCE thought that there is a need for evolving the RHCE program for Red Hat Certified Professionals. What changes are expected? In the updated RHCE program, the team is shifting the focus to automation of Linux system administration tasks with the help of Red Hat Ansible Automation and will also be changing the requirements for achieving an RHCE credential. With the upcoming release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, the team at RHCE will be offering a new course and a new certification exam. Red Hat System Administration III: Linux Automation (RH294) The team at RHCE has designed this course for Linux system administrators and developers who are into automating provisioning, configuration, application deployment, and orchestration. The ones’ taking up this course will learn how to install and configure Ansible on a management workstation and will get a clear idea about preparing managed hosts for automation. Red Hat Certified Engineer exam (EX294) The RHCE exam will focus on the automation of Linux system administration tasks that uses Red Hat Ansible Automation and shell scripting. The ones who pass this new exam will become RHCEs. What will remain the same? Ken Goetz, vice president of Training and Certification at Red Hat writes in a blog post, “One thing that we want to assure you is that this is not a complete redesign of the program.” The candidates can still get an RHCE by having first passed the Red Hat Certified System Administrator exam (EX200) and then later passing an RHCE exam while still being an RHCSA. The Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 based RHCE exam (EX300) will remain available for a year post the new exam gets released. How does it impact candidates? Current RHCE The RHCE certification is valid for three years from the date the candidate has become an RHCE. The period of the RHCE can be extended by earning additional certifications that can be applied towards becoming Red Hat Certified Architect in infrastructure. Candidates can renew the RHCE before it becomes non-current by passing the new RHCE exam (EX294). Aspiring RHCE An RHCSA who is progressing towards becoming an RHCE can continue preparing for the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 version of the course and take the current RHCE exam (EX300) till June 2020. Or else they can prepare for the new exam (EX294), based on the upcoming release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8. Red Hat Certified Specialist in Ansible Automation The ones who are currently Red Hat Certified Specialist in Ansible Automation can continue to demonstrate their Ansible automation skills and knowledge by earning RHCE via the new process. Ken Goetz, vice president of Training and Certification at Red Hat writes in the post, “We are aligning the RHCE program, and the learning services associated with that program, to assist individuals and organizations in keeping up with these changes in the industry.”   To know more about this news, check out Red Hat’s blog post. Red Hat Satellite to drop MongoDB and will support only PostgreSQL backend Red Hat announces CodeReady Workspaces, the first Kubernetes-Native IDE for easy collaboration among developers Red Hat drops MongoDB over concerns related to its Server Side Public License (SSPL)  
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Bhagyashree R
12 Apr 2019
2 min read
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Rust 1.34 releases with alternative cargo registries, stabilized TryFrom and TryInto, and more

Bhagyashree R
12 Apr 2019
2 min read
Yesterday, the Rust team announced the release of Rust 1.34. This release introduces alternative cargo registries, includes support for ‘?’ operator in documentation tests, stabilized TryFrom and TryInto, and more. Support for alternative cargo registries Rust provides a public crate registry called crates.io where developers can publish crates with the cargo publish command. However, as this crate registry is not for people maintaining proprietary code, they are forced to use git or path dependencies. This release brings support for alternate cargo registries, which coexists with crates.io. So, users will now be able to write software that depends on crates from both crates.io and their custom registry. Support for the ‘?’ operator in documentation tests It was proposed in RFC 1937 to add support for the ‘?’ operator in the main() function, #[test] functions, and doctests allowing them to return Option or Result with error values.  This ensured a non-zero exit code in the case of the main() function and a test failure in the case of the tests. Support for the main() and #[test] functions were already implemented in previous versions. However, in the case of documentation tests, support for ‘?’ was limited to doctests that have an explicit main() function. In this release, the team has implemented full support for ‘?’ operator in doctests. Stabilized TryFrom and TryInto The TryFrom and TryInto traits that were proposed in an RFC back in 2016 are finally stabilized in this release to allow fallible type conversions. A ‘Infallible’ type is added for conversions that cannot fail such as u8 to u32. In future versions, the team plans to convert Infallible to an alias for the (!) never type. Library stabilizations This release comes with an expanded set of stable atomic integer types with signed and unsigned variants from 8 to 64 bits available. In the previous versions, non-zero unsigned integer types, for example, NonZeroU8 were stabilized. With this release, signed versions are also stabilized. The ‘iter::from_fn’ and ‘iter::successors’ functions are also stabilized. To know more about the updates in Rust 1.34, check out its official announcement. Chris Dickinson on how to implement Git in Rust The npm engineering team shares why Rust was the best choice for addressing CPU-bound bottlenecks Rust 1.33.0 released with improvements to Const fn, pinning, and more!  
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Amrata Joshi
02 Apr 2019
3 min read
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Chris Dickinson on how to implement Git in Rust

Amrata Joshi
02 Apr 2019
3 min read
Chris Dickinson, a developer working on implementing Git in Rust shared updates on his project Git-rs. This is his second try over the same project. He writes, “I'm trying again this year after reading more of "Programming Rust" (Blandy, Orendorff).” Dickinson has maintained a ‘To Do’ list wherein he has written the steps right from reading the objects from loose store to creating a packfile and publishing it to crates. You can checkout his full project for his day-by-day updates. It is also quite interesting to see how developers are sharing their projects on Git and learning something new on a daily basis based on their experience. Users are overall happy to see Dickinson’s contribution. A user commented on Reddit, “Maybe everybody is happy just to use this as a personal learning experience for now, but I think there will be a lot of interest in a shared project eventually.” Users are also sharing their experiences from their own projects. A user commented on HackerNews, “I love to see people reimplementing existing tools on their own, because I find that to be a great way to learn more about those tools. I started on a Git implementation in Rust as well, though I haven't worked on it in a while.” Why work with Rust? Rust has been gaining tremendous popularity in recent times. Steve Klabnik, a popular blogger/developer shares his experiences working with Rust and how the language has outgrown him. He writes in his blog post, “I’m the only person who has been to every Rust conference in existence so far. I went to RustCamp, all three RustConfs, all five RustFests so far, all three Rust Belt Rusts. One RustRush. Am I forgetting any? Thirteen Rust conferences in the past four years.” He further adds, “ I’m starting to get used to hearing “oh yeah our team has been using Rust in production for a while now, it’s great.” The first time that happened, it felt very strange. Exciting, but strange. I wonder what the next stage of Rust’s growth will feel like.” Rust is also in the top fifteen (by the number of pull requests) as of 2018 in the GitHub Octoverse report. Moreover, according to the Go User Survey 2018, 19% of the respondents ranked it as a top preferred language which indicates a high level of interest in Rust among this audience. Last month, the team at Rust announced the stable release, Rust 1.33.0. This release brought improvements to const fns, compiler, and libraries. Last week, the Rust community organized the Rust Latam 2019 Conference at Montevideo for the Rust community. It involved 200+ Rust developers and enthusiasts from the world. https://twitter.com/Sunjay03/status/1112095011951308800 ‘Developers’ lives matter’: Chinese developers protest over the “996 work schedule” on GitHub Sublime Text 3.2 released with Git integration, improved themes, editor control and much more! Microsoft open sources the Windows Calculator code on GitHub  
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Fatema Patrawala
02 Apr 2019
8 min read
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Surprise NPM layoffs raise questions about the company culture

Fatema Patrawala
02 Apr 2019
8 min read
Headlines about the recent NPM layoff has raised questions about the company culture and ethics. NPM which stands for Node Package Manager is now being regarded as “Not Politely Managed”. The San Francisco startup, NPM Inc, the company behind the widely used NPM JavaScript package repository,  laid off 5 employees in a wrong, unprofessional and unethical manner. The incident stands imperative of the fact that many of us while accepting those lucrative job offers merely ask companies not to be unethical, and seldom expect them to actually be good. Indeed, social psychologist, Roy Baumeister convincingly argues there’s an evolutionary reason to focus more on getting people to avoid bad things than to do good things; among other reasons, humans are hardwired to consider potential threats that could harm us. Bob Sutton, author of fantastic and influential books like Good Boss, Bad Boss and The No Asshole Rule, draws on Baumeister’s work to highlight why it’s so critical to stamp out poorly behaving leaders (and employees) in organizations. Frédéric Harper, a developer advocate who was among those who lost their jobs, posted at length about the situation on Twitter. His concerns, did not come from being laid off. That happens, he said, and will happen again. "It’s the total lack of respect, empathy and professionalism of the process," he said. In an email to The Register, he said there appeared to be a disconnect between the company's professed values and its behavior. NPM layoff took its roots under the new leadership The layoffs actually started last summer when the company hired a new CEO, Bryan Bogensberger, to take the company from about $3m in annual revenue to 10x-20x, explained an early NPM employee who spoke with The Register on condition of anonymity. Bogensberger was previously the CEO and co-founder of Inktank, a leading provider of scale-out, open source storage systems that was acquired by Red Hat, Inc. for $175 million in 2014. , He has been running NPM since around July or August 2018, a source explained, but wasn't actually announced as CEO until January 2019 because his paperwork wasn't in order. Bryan brought in his own people, displacing longtime NPM staffers. "As he stacked the management ranks with former colleagues from a previous startup, there were unforced errors," another source explained to the Register. A culture of suspicion and hostility emerged under the new leadership. At NPM an all-hands meeting was held at which employees were encouraged to ask frank questions about the company's new direction. Those who spoke up were summarily fired last week, the individual said, at the recommendation of an HR consultant. https://twitter.com/ThatMightBePaul/status/1112843936136159232 People were very surprised by the layoffs at NPM. "There was no sign it was coming. It wasn't skills based because some of them heard they were doing great." said CJ Silverio, ex-CTO at NPM who was laid off last December. Silverio and Harper both are publicizing the layoff as they had declined to sign the non-disparagement clause in the NPM severance package. The non-disparagement clause prevents disclosure of the company’s wrongdoing publicly. A California law which came into effect in January, SB 1300 prohibits non-disparagement clause in the employment severance package but in general such clauses are legal. One of the employees fired last Friday was a month away from having stock options vest. The individual could have retained those options by signing a non-disparagement clause, but refused. https://twitter.com/neverett/status/1110626264841359360 “We can not comment on confidential personnel matters," CEO Bryan Bogensberger mentioned. "However, since November 1, we have approximately doubled in size to 55 people today, and continue to hire aggressively for many positions that will optimize and expand our ability to support and grow the JavaScript ecosystem over the long term.” Javascript community sees it as a leadership failure The community is full of outrage on this incident, many of them have regarded this as a 100% leadership failure. Others have commented that they would put NPM under the list of “do not apply” for jobs in this company. This news comes to them as a huge disappointment and there are questions asked about the continuity of the npm registry. Some of them also commented on creating a non profit node packages registry. While others have downgraded their paid package subscription to a free subscription. Rebecca Turner, core contributor to the project and one of the direct reportees to Harper has voluntarily put down her papers in solidarity with her direct reports who were let go. https://twitter.com/ReBeccaOrg/status/1113121700281851904 How goodness inspires goodness in organization Compelling research by David Jones and his colleagues finds that job applicants would prefer to work for companies that show real social responsibility–those that improve their communities, the environment, and the world. Employees are most likely to be galvanized by leaders who are actively perceived to be fair, virtuous, and self-sacrificing. Separate research by Ethical Systems founder, Jonathan Haidt demonstrates that such leaders influence employees to feel a sense of “elevation”—a positive emotion that lifts them up as a result of moral excellence. Liz Fong, a developer advocate at Honeycomb tweets on the npm layoff that she will never want to be a manager again if she had to go through this kind of process. https://twitter.com/lizthegrey/status/1112902206381064192 Layoffs becoming more common and frequent in Tech Last week we also had IBM in news for being sued by former employees for violating laws prohibiting age discrimination in the workplace: the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA) and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). Another news last week which came as a shocker was Oracle laying off a huge number of employees as a part of its “organizational restructuring”. The reason behind this layoff round was not clear, while some said that this was done to save money, some others said that people working on a legacy product were let go. While all of these does raise questions about the company culture, it may not be wrong to say that the Internet and social media makes corporate scandals harder than ever to hide. With real social responsibility easier than ever to see and applaud–we hope to see more of “the right things” actually getting done. Update from the NPM statement after 10 days of the incident After receiving public and community backlash on such actions, NPM published a statement on Medium on April 11 that, "we let go of 5 people in a company restructuring. The way that we undertook the process, unfortunately, made the terminations more painful than they needed to be, which we deeply regret, and we are sorry. As part of our mission, it’s important that we treat our employees and our community well. We will continue to refine and review our processes internally, utilizing the feedback we receive to be the best company and community we can be." Does this mean that any company for its selfish motives can remove its employees and later apologize to clean its image? Update on 14th June, Special report from The Register The Register published a special report last Friday saying that JavaScript package registry and NPM Inc is planning to fight union-busting complaints brought to America's labor watchdog by fired staffers, rather than settling the claims. An NLRB filing obtained by The Register alleges several incidents in which those terminated claim executives took action against them in violation of labor laws. On February 27, 2019, the filing states, a senior VP "during a meeting with employees at a work conference in Napa Valley, California, implicitly threatened employees with unspecified reprisals for raising group concerns about their working conditions." The document also describes a March 25, 2019, video conference call in which it was "impliedly [sic] threatened that [NPM Inc] would terminate employees who engaged in union activities," and a message sent over the company's Keybase messaging system that threatened similar reprisals "for discussing employee layoffs." The alleged threats followed a letter presented to this VP in mid-February that outlined employee concerns about "management, increased workload, and employee retention." The Register has heard accounts of negotiations between the tech company and its aggrieved former employees, from individuals apprised of the talks, during which a clearly fuming CEO Bryan Bogensberger called off settlement discussions, a curious gambit – if accurate – given the insubstantial amount of money on the table. NPM Inc has defended its moves as necessary to establish a sustainable business, but in prioritizing profit – arguably at the expense of people – it has alienated a fair number of developers who now imagine a future that doesn't depend as much on NPM's resources. The situation has deteriorated to the point that former staffers say the code for the npm command-line interface (CLI) suffers from neglect, with unfixed bugs piling up and pull requests languishing. The Register understands further staff attrition related to the CLI is expected. To know about this story in detail check out the report published by The Register. The npm engineering team shares why Rust was the best choice for addressing CPU-bound bottlenecks npm Inc. announces npm Enterprise, the first management code registry for organizations npm JavaScript predictions for 2019: React, GraphQL, and TypeScript are three technologies to learn
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