Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
If it seems like each new day carries with it yet another announcement that threat actors have successfully launched cyberattacks using the vulnerabilities found in open source code — think Log4Shell — it’s not just your imagination.
Investment in and adoption of the cloud continues to thrive. It’s also set to grow further, with enterprise IT spending on public cloud computing overtaking traditional IT spend by 2025.
Well, that’s annoying! For years, the Gorilla Web Toolkit was a popular, open source Go toolkit for web-based applications. It consists of packages that augment Go’s base libraries to add important features such as parameterized routing and session management.
This guest post is written by Prakhar Srivastav, Senior Software Engineer at Google. Anyone who’s built their own containers, either for local development or for cloud deployment, knows the advantages of keeping container sizes small.
Almost 10 years ago, the book “The New Kingmakers” explored the rise of a developer class that would fundamentally reshape the way technology decisions are made in organizations.
When Tony Grant, a UK-based digital marketing professional, set out to analyze data around local businesses, he found Excel too limited and too memory intensive, even on a powerful Windows machine.
The healthcare industry has been plagued by inadequate security measures and common protocol mistakes that result in significant penalties imposed by HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act).
Put simply, Golang is best for the backend side of a web application or website. There are many reasons that this is the case, so let’s dive in, but before we do, let’s cover some quick definitions. Golang, also called Go, was developed by Google in 2009.
We are half way between the re:Invent conference and the end-of-year holidays, and I did expect the cadence of releases and news to slow down a bit, but nothing is further away from reality. Our teams continue to listen to your feedback and release new capabilities and incremental improvements.
Blackmailers are using Flutter’s framework in a newly-discovered Android malware campaign. Mobile security platform Zimperium’s zLabs team publicly identified the threat, which it dubbed MoneyMonger, on Thursday.
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