StatusCode Weekly Covering the week's news in software development, ops, platforms, and tooling. AWS CodeArtifact: A Managed Software Artifact Repository Service — Another week, another new Amazon Web Service :-) This time we get pay-as-you-go (S3 style: requests, egress, and storage) 'artifact' and package management that works with common systems like Maven, Gradle, npm, yawn, pip, and twine. Amazon Web Services | How The Most Popular Chrome Extensions Impact Browser Performance — Anything you add to a browser is going to have performance repercussions in terms of memory consumption, any JavaScript to be run, effects on page rendering, etc. These results demonstrate the costs pretty well but there's one nice exception: the effect of ad blockers on 'noisy' pages! DebugBear | The Startup's Guide to AppSec — In this whitepaper, learn more about how to approach and prioritize application security in the different phases of your company's growth and learn about app sec use cases and how to solve them. Sqreen | JetBrains' 'State of the Developer Ecosystem' 2020 — The results of the fourth annual JetBrains survey come from the insights of around 20,000 developers and the languages, tools, and technologies they use. JavaScript is the most popular language, Python the most studied, but Go is the one folks are most keen to adopt. JetBrains | Convergent Evolution, CDNs and the Cloud — An insightful piece about the contrasts between CDNs and other forms of infrastructure and how all types of provider are offering each other's types of service, such as AWS offering CDN services or Cloudflare offering a serverless platform. Stephen O'Grady | Apple Threatens to Move Basecamp's New Email App to Trash — Scrutiny of Apple's App Store policies has heated up a week prior to its annual WWDC developer conference, particularly after the creator of Ruby on Rails, David Heinemeier Hansson, shared some recent communications involving Basecamp's new Hey email client. Lauren Goode (WIRED) | You Can Now Mount a Shared File System in AWS Lambda Functions — This is one of those things that's a huge deal if you do serverless, and perhaps harder to understand if you don't, but you can now mount Amazon Elastic File System (EFS) file systems in AWS Lambda functions which opens up a lot of new use cases. Amazon Web Services | Find a Job Through Vettery — Vettery specializes in tech roles and is completely free for job seekers. Create a profile to get started. Vettery | ℹ️ Interested in running a job listing in StatusCode Weekly? There's more info here. An Accessible Intro to Cloudflare Workers — If you've ever wondered why you might use Cloudflare's Workers platform (a FaaS platform built on V8) rather than AWS Lambda or Azure Functions, this might give you some ideas or at least tempt you to have a play. Kay Plößer | How x86_64 Addresses Memory — Just the right balance of technical spelunking and attitude here, which is well deserved given this is a surprisingly complex matter. William Woodruff | Best Practices for Managing and Storing Secrets — Even the most vigilant team needs to take care when dealing with tokens, credentials, and other project related secrets. This post covers some of the most common best practices. Mackenzie Jackson | 💡 Ideas, Stories and Opinions | Photo credit: Irene Fertik, USC News Service. © 1994, USC. Port 19: Good Intentions on the Old-Timey Internet — Ah, there's nothing like an early Internet story. This one is pretty straightforward but comes with nice Python reproductions of a 'character generation' protocol Jon Postel developed that ran on port 19.. but which ultimately fell out of favor due to how it could be used to cause floods of data. John Pignata | ▶ Tim Tries: Azure Static Web Apps — It's pretty basic, but if you want to see how Azure's new static webapp deployment service works without trying it for yourself, this 13 minute screencast is as good as any. Tim Benniks | The Rise of Embarrassingly Parallel Serverless Compute — A thought-piece on how distributed serverless compute can change the game on what's possible (an example is to imagine an hour long task split into 3600 1 second long lambdas running simultaneously) although there are clearly speed bumps and challenges along the way. David Wells | A Jupyter Kernel for SQLite — Jupyter is a set of data visualization and interactive coding tools most commonly associated with the Python world (but it works with many languages). It now has a fully functional interface with SQLite which opens up a lot of new datavis opportunities. Mariana Meireles | |
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