Release Content on InfoQ
Latest featured content about Release

- Topics
- Release,
- Team Collaboration,
- Quality,
- Version Control,
- Distributed Team,
- Kanban,
- Collaboration,
- Software Craftsmanship,
- Project Management,
- Agile Techniques,
- Lean,
- Source Control,
- Teamwork,
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile,
- WIP,
- Programming
This mini-book offers an easy to follow 10 step guide to taking the initial plunge and start using Lean principles to optimizing value and flow in your system. Each step consists of a section explaining “why” followed by examples of specific tools, practices and rules that have helped other teams better understand and optimize their system.
News about Release
- Topics
- jQuery,
- Releases,
- Release,
- Javascript,
- Web Development,
- Dynamic Languages,
- Version Control,
- Source Control,
- Languages,
- Programming
JQuery 1.7 has recently been released, with improvements such as new Event APIs, Better performance of Delegated Events, HTML5 support for IE6-8, support for AMD spec and more. The team has also started deprecating certain features in an effort to keep JQuery slim.
- Topics
- Release,
- Ruby,
- Version Control,
- Dynamic Languages,
- GarbageCollection,
- Open Source,
- Source Control,
- Licensing,
- Languages,
- Programming,
- Business,
- Ruby1.9,
- Performance & Scalability
The latest Ruby release 1.9.3 further improves the stability and performance of the 1.9 series and brings only few new features. Ruby's license changed to 2-clause BSD + Ruby License instead of GPLv2 + Ruby License.
- Topics
- Releases,
- jQuery,
- Ruby on Rails,
- Ruby,
- Release,
- Javascript,
- Web Frameworks,
- Dynamic Languages,
- Web Development,
- Version Control,
- Languages,
- WOA,
- Source Control,
- Architecture,
- Programming
Exactly one year after the last major released, the Ruby on Rails team released Rails 3.1. The highlights of this release are support for HTTP Streaming, more intelligent migrations and the new assets pipeline that makes it easier to use CoffeeScript and Sass.
- Topics
- Release,
- Version Control,
- .NET,
- Source Control,
- Programming,
- Enterprise,
- Firefox,
- Browsers,
- Mozilla
Enterprise organizations were taken by surprise with the recent release of Firefox 5.0 just three months after 4.0, citing security concern and lack of stable Firefox versions for enterprises to work with. At the same time Microsoft has reaffirmed its commitment to enterprises as well as general web consumers.
- Topics
- Team Collaboration,
- Release,
- Collaboration,
- Distributed Team,
- Version Control,
- Operations,
- Teamwork,
- Source Control,
- Agile,
- Infrastructure,
- Programming,
- Package Managers,
- github,
- MacOS
GitHub have launched a desktop client for Mac OS X called simply GitHub for Mac.
Articles about Release

- Topics
- Releases,
- Release,
- Done,
- Adopting Agile,
- Version Control,
- C++,
- Sprint,
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Unit Testing,
- Agile Techniques,
- Languages,
- Source Control,
- Compilers,
- Scrum,
- Agile,
- Programming,
- C,
- SAP,
- TDD,
- Testing,
- COBOL,
- Daily Stand-ups
The problems faced by teams that are attempting Agile in non-traditional settings aren't that Agile principles are inapplicable, nor that the feedback cycle is doomed to failure; but rather, outside of a certain Agile sweet-spot there are additional barriers and costs to applying Agile techniques. None of these obstacles prevents Agile in itself but each increases the cost of getting to Agile.

- Topics
- Releases,
- Release,
- Configuration Management,
- Artifacts & Tools,
- Version Control,
- Best Practices,
- Tools,
- ALM,
- Source Control,
- Automation,
- Agile,
- Programming,
- Enterprise Architecture,
- Testing
When several agile development teams work on the same codebase, how do we minimize chaos, and ensure there's a clean, releasable version at the end of every iteration? Here Henrik Kniberg outlines the scheme used in "Scrum and XP from the Trenches". This paper is not so much for version control experts as for the rest of us, who just want to learn simple and useful ways to collaborate.
Presentations about Release

- Topics
- Releases,
- Release,
- Collaboration,
- Version Control,
- QCon London 2008,
- Java,
- Languages,
- IDE,
- Source Control,
- Teamwork,
- QCon,
- Agile,
- Programming,
- Conferences,
- Eclipse,
- Jazz
Erich Gamma shares the lessons learnt being deeply involved in the development of the Eclipse platform over the years. From being a platform in closed development, Eclipse turned into an open source one supported by a large and growing community. Erich also talked about Jazz, IBM’s software development platform which incorporates the lessons learnt from Eclipse.

- Topics
- Releases,
- Release,
- Adopting Agile,
- User Stories,
- Qcon London 2007,
- Version Control,
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile Techniques,
- Source Control,
- QCon,
- Project Management,
- Agile,
- Programming,
- Conferences
In this presentation recorded during QCon London 2007, Rachel Davies, director of Agile Alliance, talks about the Agile development cycle starting with user stories and planning the releases. This presentation is less about "why" one should use Agile over other development process, and more about the practical "how" one should proceed about being agile.
Interviews about Release

- Topics
- Releases,
- Release,
- Version Control,
- Java,
- Artifacts & Tools,
- Collaboration,
- QCon London 2008,
- JUnit,
- Dependency Injection,
- Teamwork,
- Languages,
- Unit Testing,
- Tools,
- Object Oriented Design,
- IDE,
- Source Control,
- QCon,
- Design Pattern,
- Architecture,
- Programming,
- Agile,
- TDD,
- Design,
- Testing,
- Community,
- Eclipse,
- Conferences,
- Design Patterns,
- Patterns,
- Jazz
In this interview from QCon London 2008, Erich Gamma discusses the Jazz project, why Eclipse has been successful, the strict Eclipse release schedule, JUnit, Design Patterns, how to identify a design pattern, design patterns and the 'Don't Repeat Yourself' principle, the design pattern community, and whether dependency injection is a design pattern.
Books about Release

- Topics
- Release,
- Team Collaboration,
- Quality,
- Version Control,
- Distributed Team,
- Kanban,
- Collaboration,
- Software Craftsmanship,
- Project Management,
- Agile Techniques,
- Lean,
- Source Control,
- Teamwork,
- Agile in the Enterprise,
- Agile,
- WIP,
- Programming
This mini-book offers an easy to follow 10 step guide to taking the initial plunge and start using Lean principles to optimizing value and flow in your system. Each step consists of a section explaining “why” followed by examples of specific tools, practices and rules that have helped other teams better understand and optimize their system.