InfoQ Homepage Operating Systems Content on InfoQ
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Google Experiments with Key-Value Storage, Built-In Modules in Chrome 74
Google recently announced its intent to ship two new WICG proposals in a future version of Chrome. KV Storage attempts to bring the convenience of LocalStorage, but with better performance. The intent is to deliver this as the first example of a built-in module, leveraging the import maps proposal.
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Google Expands ML Kit, Adds Smart Reply and Language Identification
In a recent Android blog post, Google announced the release of two new Natural Language Processing (NLP) features for ML Kit, including Language Identification and Smart Reply. In both cases, Google is providing domain-independent APIs that help developers analyze and generate text, speak and other types of Natural Language text.
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Google Announces the General Availability of Elastifile Cloud File Service for GCP
Recently, Google announced the availability of Elastifile Cloud File Service (ECFS) for its Cloud Platform (GCP) on their blog website. With ECFS, Google provides a managed file service for its customers.
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ART Cloud Profiling to Improve Android App Performance
First introduced in Android Pie, ART optimizing profiles are a feature that leverages data sent to Play Cloud to optimize an app startup time on install or update. Data disclosed by Google show apps start 15% faster on average, with special cases reaching a 30% improvement.
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Windows Virtual Desktop Public Preview on Azure: Q&A with Microsoft's Scott Manchester
InfoQ caught up with Scott Manchester, group program manager at Microsoft for Windows Virtual Desktop, regarding the public preview on Azure announcement.
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Kubernetes 1.14 Moves Windows Nodes to Production Support and Enhances Kubectl
The latest release of Kubernetes, version 1.14, was released with production-level support for Windows nodes. The release also includes the addition of kustomize in kubectl, the kubectl plugin mechanism being moved to stable, and improved documentation for kubectl. This first release of 2019 has 10 features in total being moved into stable.
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Swift 5 Now Officially Available
Swift 5 has recently moved out of beta with the release of Xcode 10.2, including new language and standard library features, stricter memory exclusivity access guarantees, ABI stability, and more.
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Vector Performance Monitoring Tool Adds eBPF, Unified Host-Container Metrics Support
Vector, the open source performance monitoring tool from Netflix, added support for eBPF based tools using a PCP daemon, a unified view of container and host metrics, and UI improvements.
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Android Q Beta 1 Brings New Privacy Features, Foldable Support, Vulkan Extensions
The next Android version, dubbed Android Q, is now available for developers in beta, bringing new privacy features, system-wide behaviour changes, and new APIs to support foldable devices, Vulkan extensions, and more.
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Google Releases Versions 7.2 and 7.3 of V8 JavaScript Engine
The recent 7.2 and 7.3 versions of Google's V8 JavaScript engine improve JavaScript parsing performance, new JavaScript language features, and WebAssembly performance.
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Imperva Open Sources Active Directory Java Connector
Imperva has publicly released the source code to Domain Directory Controller, a Java library that simplifies common Active Directory integrations.
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Google Chrome Never-Slow Mode
Google has been working on a prototype feature called Never-Slow Mode. This prototype feature, referenced as a work in progress, aims to improve the user experience, delivering consistent quick browsing.
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Adiantum Brings Disk Encryption to Low-End Smartphones
Adiantum is a new encryption algorithm for low-end smartphones, smartwatches, and other Android Pie devices that are too slow to use the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) standard for storage encryption.
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Swift 5 Will Enforce Exclusive Access to Memory
Swift 5 will improve memory safety of Swift programs by ensuring variables cannot be accessed using a different name while they are being modified by another portion of the program. This change has important implications both on existing apps behaviour and on the Swift compiler itself.
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Android Studio 3.3 Brings Official Support for Navigation Editor, Stability Improvements, and More
Google has released Android Studio 3.3. This version is mainly focused on bug fixes and stability improvements, however it also brings official support for Navigation Editor, updates on Kotlin and IntelliJ Platform, and more.