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  • P5.js Brings Creative Coding to the Masses

    Lauren McCarthy has released the first public beta of p5.js, a JavaScript library that wants to make coding accessible for artists, designers, educators, and beginners. p5.js is an offshoot of the Processing visual programming language, and enables non-programmers to write JavaScript code and create visual projects.

  • Knockout Components to Structure Your Apps Better

    Knockout 3.2.0 has recently been released. One of the biggest improvements is the introduction of Components, which along with Custom elements, allows you to break your app into reusable widgets, sections or pages.

  • Visual Studio “14” CTP3: PerfTips and the IDE

    The third preview of Visual Studio "14" has been released, combing some evolutionary improvements to the IDE with a insightful new debugging tool called PerfTips. PerfTips increases the accessibility of debugging program performance right in the editor.

  • C++14 Is Here: Summary of New Features

    C++14, the new C++ standard succeeding C++11, has been finally approved and is heading to ISO for publication this year. While improvements in C++14 are "deliberately tiny" compared to C++11, says C++ creator Bjarne Stroustrup, they still "add significant convenience for users" and are a step on the route to make C++ "more novice friendly."

  • ASP.NET vNext Projects Get Simpler

    ASP.NET vNext alpha3 was released along with the Visual Studio "14" CTP3. Several interesting changes are around ASP.NET projects - simpler project files, ability to specify build event handlers, cleaner source folders and more.

  • research2guidance: The Most Preferred Cross-platform Tools

    research2guidance has published a study (PDF) comparing the top 40 cross-platform (CP) tools by asking 2,188 developers from 5 continents to name and rate their satisfaction with the tools they are using.

  • Mono 3.6 Delivers Improved Debugger

    Mono 3.6 has been released, and features an improved debugger, several bug fixes, and Nuget for Mac users.

  • Lyft Replaces Puppet with SaltStack

    Lyft, a "ridesharing" start-up, replaced Puppet with SaltStack as its infrastructure configuration management tool. Ansible was the other contender as Ryan Lane, a Lyft engineer, explained in his recent article. In the end, SaltStack came on top when Lyft considered each tool's ease of use, maturity, performance and the surrounding community.

  • ORTC and the Future of WebRTC

    The first stable ORTC (Object RTC) specification is out. The questions is how is it going to impact WebRTC?

  • Joda-Time 2.4 - New Methods, Improved Concurrency and Performance

    The Joda-Time 2.4 date and time Java library has been released. It's the first Joda-Time release for 2014, and it contains enhancements, bug fixes and a time zone update. No deprecations have been introduced. Joda-Time 2.4 is released under the Apache License Version 2 and requires JDK 5+.

  • Python Tools for Visual Studio 2.1 RC Released

    Microsoft continues to polish their powerful (and open source) Python Tools for Visual Studio package, which turns their famous IDE into a powerful Python development environment. This plugin does support the Web and Desktop Express editions of VS2013.

  • Xamarin.Mac and iOS Now Have a Unified API and 64-bit Support

    Xamarin now provides a single API for both Mac OS and iOS for 32-bit and/or 64-bit.

  • JavaScript Error Recorder Lets Users Report Bugs in Browser

    Bogomil Shopov and Robert Nyman have announced The Usersnap Console Recorder, a browsable JavaScript error- and XHR-logs recorder that is free to use for FOSS projects.

  • Microservices vs Monolithic Applications

    Using microservices is one way of breaking up a monolithic application to gain increased decoupling, separation of concerns and fast deployment but it’s not the only or even the best way, Todd Hoff states comparing the two architectural approaches.

  • Google unveils Mesa - Geo-Replicated Near-Realtime Scalable Data Warehouse

    Google has unveiled their new data-warehouse called Mesa. Mesa is a system that scales across multiple data centers and processes petabytes of data, while being able to respond to queries in sub-second time and maintain ACID properties.

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