We return to the standard edition today, one of the longest ever as it has grown significantly because many topics have accumulated. But I hope you like it :)
JVM
JVM
JVM’s Open Source All-Stars, June 2023: LLM Edition – JVM Weekly vol. 140
If you think Java hasn't gotten on the hype train associated with LLM - you're thinking wrong. That's why today we're going to take a look after new open-source projects that are just getting proper traction.
JVM
JVM
GraalVM EE is Dead, Long Live Oracle GraalVM – JVM Weekly vol. 139
It is apparent that we are slowly entering the holiday season, as the past week has been exceptionally... quiet. In fact, of the big announcements we only had to deal with news related to GraalVM. That's why we will devote today's entire edition to this very topic.
JVM
JVM
The compact overview of JDK 21’s “frozen” feature list – JVM Weekly vol. 138
Today's main topic is the "freezing" of the JEP list in JDK 21. In addition to that, however, we will also talk about Nulls in Valhalla. And finally, the obligatory Release Radar.
Frontend
Frontend
React == PHP & Angular.revolution() – Frontend Monthly May 2023
There was a lot going on in May 2023. Next.js 13.4 clearly showed the direction that React is currently heading, Angular underwent a total revolution, and Vue lived up to its long-awaited version 3.4.
JVM
JVM
Virtual Threads, CRaC, GraalVM, Spring Boot 3.1: what came with Spring I/O 2023 – JVM Weekly vol. 137
After a week's break, today we'll focus mainly on Spring I/O, hooking you up with the interesting topic of containerized Java along the way.
Career
Career
Are employer reviews worth something? – Career Weekly vol. 29
Do you know a company whose average score has risen sharply after layoffs? This is not an uncommon case, but in fact a target set for HR teams, which is being met in many different ways. In addition to the controversy around employer ratings, I'll also mention an interesting job offer leak and the stabilising situation of employees in startups.
JVM
JVM
Loial: a new player among serialization libraries – JVM Weekly vol. 136
Today we have a worthy edition, containing an overview of serialization libraries (along with a new player), the effect of the Lilliput project, and a release radar stuffed to the brim.
Career
Career
I don’t want to write about layoffs anymore – Career Weekly vol. 28
We're back to career topics after a holiday and technical break. I hope you've missed my series a bit. And that you also don't want to keep reading about the "wave of layoffs in IT".
JVM
JVM
Spring Cleaning: A review of new tools in the Spring ecosystem – JVM Weekly vol. 135
Today's edition will start with the most interesting release of recent weeks - especially for those not being contrarians and using the most popular solutions available. This is because AWS Spring Cloud version 3.0 was released, which inspired me to devote more space to the Spring ecosystem
JVM
JVM
A peek under-the-hood of Java: Dynamic Agents and “tearing” – JVM Weekly vol. 134
In today's edition, the long-awaited release of Quarkus, an AWS Lambda update, as well as JEP and a mailing presenting some little-known Java details.
JVM
JVM
The future and present of Enterprise Java: a first look at Jakarta EE 11 and MicroProfile 6 adoption – JVM Weekly vol. 133.
In today's summary, we discuss the rash of new candidate JEPs, such as JEP 447, which introduces changes to JLS, and JEP 449, which deprecates Windows x86-32 Port. Then, we learn about the first information on Jakarta EE 11 and the changes introduced by WildFly 28 and Open Liberty 23.0.0. Finally, we discuss the new releases of Micronaut and Ktor.
JVM
JVM
What does Coroutines’ creator think of Virtual Threads? – JVM Weekly vol. 132
In today's edition, we're still somewhat on the KotlinConf theme, but we'll go beyond that event by presenting changes in build systems space, as well as a digest of a very interesting informative JEP, touching on the topic of Java code encapsulation.