Yesterday, the project manager of Homebrew, Mike McQuaid, announced the release of Homebrew 2.2. This is the third release of Homebrew this year. Some of the major highlights of this new version include support to macOS Catalina, faster implementations of HOMEBREW_AUTO_UPDATE_SECS and brew upgrade’s post-install dependent checking, and more.
Read More: After Red Hat, Homebrew removes MongoDB from core formulas due to its Server Side Public License adoption
Read More: Apple’s MacOS Catalina in major turmoil as it kills iTunes and drops support for 32 bit applications
Many users are excited about this release and have appreciated the maintainers of Homebrew for their efforts.
https://twitter.com/DVJones89/status/1199710865160843265
https://twitter.com/dirksteins/status/1199944492868161538
A user on Hacker News comments, “While Homebrew is perhaps technically crude and somewhat inflexible compared to other and older package managers, I think it deserves real credit for being so easy to add packages to. I contributed Homebrew packages after a few weeks of using macOS, while I didn't contribute a single package in the ten years I ran Debian.
I'm also impressed by the focus of the maintainers and their willingness for saying no and cutting features. We need more of that in the programming field. Homebrew is unashamedly solely for running the standard configuration of the newest version of well-behaved programs, which covers at least 90% of my use cases. I use Nix when I want something complicated or nonstandard.”
To know about the features in detail, head over to Hombrew’s official page.
Announcing Homebrew 2.0.0!
Homebrew 1.9.0 released with periodic brew cleanup, beta support for Linux, Windows and much more!
Homebrew’s Github repo got hacked in 30 mins. How can open source projects fight supply chain attacks?
ActiveState adds thousands of curated Python packages to its platform
Firefox Preview 3.0 released with Enhanced Tracking Protection, Open links in Private tab by default and more