Will Crichton
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Socket adds support for Java, Ruby, and Socket Optimize. You know we're fans of Socket, and we're even bigger fans of secure open source dependencies. Socket recently announced three major wins, taking us another huge step in this direction. One, Java support.
Socket adds support for Java, Ruby, and Socket Optimize. You know we're fans of Socket, and we're even bigger fans of secure open source dependencies. Socket recently announced three major wins, taking us another huge step in this direction. One, Java support.
With this release, Java teams can now leverage Socket's comprehensive security tools to protect their software supply chain from the rising threat of attacks. Whether you're building large-scale Java enterprise apps, maintaining a legacy Java monolith, or shipping an Android app, Socket has your back.
With this release, Java teams can now leverage Socket's comprehensive security tools to protect their software supply chain from the rising threat of attacks. Whether you're building large-scale Java enterprise apps, maintaining a legacy Java monolith, or shipping an Android app, Socket has your back.
Two, Ruby support is now in beta and ready to try for all users, enabling security scanning and zero-day supply chain attack prevention to your Rails projects in just two clicks via the free Socket for GitHub app. And three, Socket Optimize is a new powerful CLI command you can use for proactive dependency hygiene.
Two, Ruby support is now in beta and ready to try for all users, enabling security scanning and zero-day supply chain attack prevention to your Rails projects in just two clicks via the free Socket for GitHub app. And three, Socket Optimize is a new powerful CLI command you can use for proactive dependency hygiene.
It's designed to make it easy for devs to reduce dependencies, leverage new platform features, improve performance, and address security issues all with a simple CLI command. Learn more about these announcements at Socket's awesome blog, socket.dev slash blog. You should go to conferences.
It's designed to make it easy for devs to reduce dependencies, leverage new platform features, improve performance, and address security issues all with a simple CLI command. Learn more about these announcements at Socket's awesome blog, socket.dev slash blog. You should go to conferences.
Sophie Coonan, whose website is too cool by the way, makes her case for you spending time and money on attending conferences. I agree with all of her major points, but especially this one. Quote, the talks are obviously very important, but one of the best things about conferences is the hallway track. That is, meeting and chatting to like-minded folks.
Sophie Coonan, whose website is too cool by the way, makes her case for you spending time and money on attending conferences. I agree with all of her major points, but especially this one. Quote, the talks are obviously very important, but one of the best things about conferences is the hallway track. That is, meeting and chatting to like-minded folks.
organizers will often encourage the pac-man rule standing in a circle with a gap to always allow new people to join in end quote we love the hallway track so much and we're coming soon to raleigh fyi that we created an entire flavor of the changelog in its image Yes, changelogging friends is like putting the hallway track at your favorite conference on repeat year round.
organizers will often encourage the pac-man rule standing in a circle with a gap to always allow new people to join in end quote we love the hallway track so much and we're coming soon to raleigh fyi that we created an entire flavor of the changelog in its image Yes, changelogging friends is like putting the hallway track at your favorite conference on repeat year round.
Sophie also gives some conference attending advice and shares some of her favorite smaller web conferences in the UK, Europe, and the rest of the world. Press onward, putting WordPress on SQLite. M. Hoy says, But ultimately, his tantrum doesn't matter. It's all free software. People might depend on the code, but nobody depends on the companies. That's sort of the point. End quote.
Sophie also gives some conference attending advice and shares some of her favorite smaller web conferences in the UK, Europe, and the rest of the world. Press onward, putting WordPress on SQLite. M. Hoy says, But ultimately, his tantrum doesn't matter. It's all free software. People might depend on the code, but nobody depends on the companies. That's sort of the point. End quote.
To make life easier on those of us caught up in the crossfire, he created a repo, which we will link to, that takes the WordPress tarball and modifies it to run on SQLite. Quote, it's nice. You can have WordPress without needing Babysit MySQL, run a big machine, or really much of anything.
To make life easier on those of us caught up in the crossfire, he created a repo, which we will link to, that takes the WordPress tarball and modifies it to run on SQLite. Quote, it's nice. You can have WordPress without needing Babysit MySQL, run a big machine, or really much of anything.
Installation is a breeze, and if you turn off comments and put WP Super Cache in front of it, it'll be perfectly happy humming along day to day on the tiniest VM you can find.
Installation is a breeze, and if you turn off comments and put WP Super Cache in front of it, it'll be perfectly happy humming along day to day on the tiniest VM you can find.
That's the news for now, but do scan our companion newsletter for even more stories worth your attention, like why Ben Wordmuller is still excited about the web, a new Node.js MVC web app framework, and everyone's favorite pyramid scheme of awesome links. If you don't get the newsletter, fix that bug at changelog.com slash news. We have some sweet episodes coming up this week.
That's the news for now, but do scan our companion newsletter for even more stories worth your attention, like why Ben Wordmuller is still excited about the web, a new Node.js MVC web app framework, and everyone's favorite pyramid scheme of awesome links. If you don't get the newsletter, fix that bug at changelog.com slash news. We have some sweet episodes coming up this week.