InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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AWS Launches EBS Volume Clones for Instant, Crash-Consistent Data Copies
AWS has unveiled Volume Clones for Amazon EBS, enabling instant, point-in-time copies of storage volumes with a simple API call. This feature provides rapid access with single-digit millisecond latency, ideal for quick test setups and development. While it integrates seamlessly with the EBS CSI driver, understand its limitations, especially around encryption and management.
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MCP Support in Visual Studio Reaches General Availability
Microsoft announced in August 2025 that support for the Model Context Protocol (MCP) is generally available in Visual Studio. MCP enables AI agents within Visual Studio to connect to external tools and services via a consistent protocol.
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Google Research Open-Sources the Coral NPU Platform to Help Build AI into Wearables and Edge Devices
Coral NPU is an open-source full-stack platform designed to help hardware engineers and AI developers overcome the limitations that prevent integrating AI in wearables and edge devices, including performance, fragmentation, and user trust.
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Deno 2.5 Brings Support for Permission Sets and Test API Hooks
Deno 2.5 has arrived, enhancing the secure JavaScript/TypeScript runtime with new permission sets, refined testing hooks, and performance boosts. Upgrading to V8 14.0 and TypeScript 5.9.2, it unlocks advanced features while evolving the Temporal API. Explore improved WebSocket headers, bundling capabilities, and more for seamless development.
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Uno Platform 6.3 Adds .NET 10 Preview Support and VS 2026 Readiness
The team behind Uno Platform released version 6.3 of the cross‑platform .NET UI framework, aimed at developers targeting mobile, desktop and WebAssembly using C# and XAML. The update includes early support for .NET 10 (RC1), compatibility with Visual Studio 2026’s new .slnx format, enhanced WebAssembly image‐decoding performance and other refinements.
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JUnit 6.0.0 Ships with Java 17 Baseline, Cancellation API, and Kotlin suspend Support
Introducing JUnit 6.0.0: a transformative update that unifies versions, elevates minimum requirements to Java 17, and introduces streamlined support for Kotlin suspend tests. Enjoy enhanced testing performance with the new CancellationToken API, built-in JFR listeners, and upgraded CSV parsing using FastCSV. Embrace the future of testing—migrate today!
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Java News Roundup: OpenJDK, Spring RCs, Jakarta EE, Payara Platform, WildFly, Testcontainers
This week's Java roundup for October 13th, 2025, features news highlighting: two new OpenJDK candidates; Jakarta EE 12 specifications with milestone 1 releases; the October 2025 edition of the Payara Platform; the GA releases of WildFly 38 and Testcontainers 2.0; and the first release candidates of Spring Framework 7.0 and Spring Data 2025.1.0.
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AWS ALBs Now Support Native URL and Host Header Rewriting
AWS's Application Load Balancers (ALB) now offer native URL and Host Header Rewriting, eliminating the need for third-party proxies and custom logic. This feature enhances request routing, reduces maintenance, and lowers latency. Easily configurable via the AWS Management Console or API, it streamlines traffic management for backend services, aligning AWS with other cloud leaders.
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Bring Your Own Key (BYOK): AWS IAM Identity Center Adopts CMKs to Meet Enterprise Compliance Needs
AWS IAM Identity Center now supports customer-managed KMS keys (CMKs) for encrypting identity data at rest. This enhancement offers organizations complete control over their encryption keys, ensuring granular access management, robust auditing via AWS CloudTrail, and improved compliance for regulated industries. It’s a key evolution for data sovereignty in the cloud.
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AWS Introduces EC2 Instance Attestation
AWS has introduced EC2 instance attestation, a new security feature that enables customers to verify that their virtual machines are running approved software configurations in a cryptographically secure manner. The capability is powered by the Nitro Trusted Platform Module (NitroTPM) and Attestable AMIs.
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Terraform Google Cloud Provider 7.0 Reaches General Availability
HashiCorp has released version 7.0 of the Terraform provider for Google Cloud, introducing security-focused improvements such as ephemeral resources, write-only attributes, and stricter validation. The update enhances secret handling and reliability but introduces breaking changes requiring careful migration.
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Pixnapping: Side-Channel Vulnerability Allows Android Apps to Capture Sensitive Screen Data
A newly discovered class of attacks targets Android devices, allowing malicious apps to steal on-screen information from other apps using a technique known as pixel stealing. Dubbed Pixnapping, the attack leverages previously known side-channel vulnerabilities and affects virtually all apps, including Signal, Google Authenticator, Venmo, and many others.
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.NET 10 Release Candidate 2: Finalizes SDK, MAUI Stabilization, and MSBuild Enhancements ahead of GA
Microsoft has released .NET 10 Release Candidate 2, the final pre-release build before general availability. As reported by the .NET team, RC 2 ships with a go-live support license, enabling production deployment while allowing developers to validate the platform ahead of its official release. The build is supported in Visual Studio 2026 Insiders and Visual Studio Code with the C# Dev Kit.
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IBM Cloud Code Engine Serverless Fleets with GPUs for High-Performance AI and Parallel Computing
IBM Cloud Code Engine’s new Serverless Fleets revolutionizes how enterprises tackle compute-intensive tasks. Harnessing integrated GPU support, it simplifies the execution of large-scale workloads with a fully managed, pay-as-you-go model. This efficient platform eliminates operational complexities, enabling developers to focus on innovation while ensuring cost-effectiveness and scalability.
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HashiCorp Warns Traditional Secret Scanning Tools are Falling behind
HashiCorp has issued a warning that traditional secret scanning tools are failing to keep up with the realities of modern software development. In a new blog post, the company argues that post-commit detection and brittle pattern matching leave dangerous gaps in coverage.