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action collective pour délit d’initié
Published
1 year agoon
By
bb Divers
18h00 ▪
3
min de lecture ▪ par
Luc Jose A.
Elon Musk figure parmi les investisseurs les plus actifs de l’écosystème de la crypto Dogecoin. Les interventions du magnat de la technologie sur ce marché ont régulièrement de l’effet sur le cours de l’actif. Une tendance qui n’est pas du goût de certains invesitisseurs qui s’estiment floués par les actions du milliardaire.
Une action collective contre Elon Musk pour utilisation indue de sa notoriété
Récemment, Elon Musk a remplacé le logo de Twitter par celui du Dogecoin. Par ce simple changement, le milliardaire américain avait poussé les cours de l’actif à la hausse. Une action mal accueillie par plusieurs détenteurs de DOGE.
Ces derniers accusent le patron de Twitter d’utiliser indument, à son profit, sa notoriété sur les médias sociaux. Démarche qui, selon eux, léserait nombre d’utilisateurs américains parmi les plus démunis.
C’est donc fort de ces arguments qu’un collectif d’utilisateurs du Dogecoin intente une action en justice contre Elon Musk. Cette dernière révise d’ailleurs une plainte précédemment déposée, en juin 2022, contre l’homme d’affaires, peu avant l’acquisition de Twitter.
Désormais donc, le magnat de la technologie est poursuivi pour délit d’initié. On lui reproche d’avoir, en connaissance de cause, manipulé le prix du memecoin Dogecoin. Ceci, pour réaliser des opérations stratégiques. Transactions qui lui auraient permis de faire du profit au détriment d’autres investisseurs.
« Il s’agit d’un recours collectif pour fraude sur les valeurs mobilières découlant d’une manipulation délibérée du marché et d’un délit d’initié réalisé par l’homme le plus riche du monde, Elon Musk, qui a détourné un phénomène émergent de la culture populaire pour faire sa propre promotion et celle de ses entreprises, et pour gonfler sa fortune obscène », peut-on lire dans la plainte modifiée.
Pour l’instant, le milliardaire n’a pas réagi à ces allégations. Et vu la portée des accusations portées contre l’opérateur économique américain, il n’est pas exclu que la SEC s’invite dans l’affaire.
Recevez un condensé de l’actualité dans le monde des cryptomonnaies en vous abonnant à notre nouveau service de newsletter quotidienne et hebdomadaire pour ne rien manquer de l’essentiel Cointribune !
Luc Jose A.
Diplômé de Sciences Po Toulouse et titulaire d’une certification consultant blockchain délivrée par Alyra, j’ai rejoint l’aventure Cointribune en 2019.
Convaincu du potentiel de la blockchain pour transformer de nombreux secteurs de l’économie, j’ai pris l’engagement de sensibiliser et d’informer le grand public sur cet écosystème en constante évolution. Mon objectif est de permettre à chacun de mieux comprendre la blockchain et de saisir les opportunités qu’elle offre. Je m’efforce chaque jour de fournir une analyse objective de l’actualité, de décrypter les tendances du marché, de relayer les dernières innovations technologiques et de mettre en perspective les enjeux économiques et sociétaux de cette révolution en marche.
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Ktor 3.0 switches to kotlinx.io library
Published
11 hours agoon
October 12, 2024By
bb DiversKtor 3.0, the latest version of the Kotlin-based framework for building asynchronous client- and server-side applications, is now available. Ktor 3.0 switches to the kotlinx.io
library for handling data sources. The release also highlights support for server-sent events (SSE).
The JetBrains Ktor 3.0 technology, announced October 10, can be accessed from start.ktor.io. The biggest change in version 3.0 is the switch to the kotlinx.io multiplatform library. This library offers a multiplatform API that can handle data sources and provides capabilities including working with files, using compression, and more. The kotlinx.io
library also cuts down on unnecessary copying of bytes between ByteReadChannel
, ByteWriteChannel
, and network interfaces. This allows for more efficient byte transformations and parsing, thus making room for future performance improvements.
SSE is also now supported for both the server and the client. With SSE, servers push clients over an HTTP connection and SSE provides a one-way communication channel. This approach is useful for scenarios where the server needs to send event-based updates without needing the client to repeatedly poll for new information.
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Embedded developers face mounting pressure on security
Published
16 hours agoon
October 11, 2024By
bb DiversDevelopers and software engineers face mounting pressure to balance rapid innovation with safety and security, says software provider BlackBerry Limited. The company released the results of its survey of 1,000 embedded software developers and engineers worldwide on October 8.
The survey found growing tensions between meeting tight project deadlines and maintaining functional safety, according to the report. The research is pertinent to the company’s BlackBerry QNX real-time OS and software for embedded systems.
BlackBerry found that 75% of respondents acknowledge that urgency often forces them to compromise on key safety requirements. While developers cite security (54%), cost control (52%), and safety certifications (48%) as their top considerations when selecting an operating system, the survey also highlights significant downstream challenges in these areas that have made the vast majority (74%) of respondents open to changing their existing OS. Of those who must meet international safety standards, 61% say it is extremely or very challenging to meet these specific standards with their current operating system. Security concerns (36%) and lackluster performance issues (28%) are two main reasons respondents are considering changing their current OS.
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You only need to look at the differences in power consumption between GPUs and CPUs. CPUs were fine for most traditional processing, on the cloud and on-prem. However, the shift to AI has made GPUs the preferred processors. GPUs draw more power due to their design for parallel processing, which is necessary for graphics rendering and intensive computations in AI and gaming.
Top GPUs use 200 to more than 450 watts, while high-end desktop CPUs range from 65 to 150 watts. Midrange GPUs use about 100 to 250 watts, whereas mid-range CPUs usually consume around 65 watts. Replacing CPUs with GPUs will require much more power, cooling, and data centers. Enterprises are telegraphing a high demand for AI. If you do the math, you’ll quickly figure out that there is not enough power being generated on the planet to meet those future demands.
The sound of silence
Discussing the environmental impact of massive data center expansion could tarnish the allure of AI and its seemingly endless potential. Thus, many companies focus public discussions on AI’s innovative and transformative potential rather than its environmental challenges.
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Microsoft’s Drasi: A lightweight approach to event-driven programming
Published
2 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb DiversEvent-driven architectures like this are a relatively common design pattern in distributed systems. Like other distributed development models, they have their own problems, especially at scale. When you’re getting tens or hundreds of events a minute, it’s easy to detect and respond to the messages you’re looking for. But when your application or service grows to several hundred thousands or even millions of messages across a global platform, what worked for a smaller system is likely to collapse under this new load.
At scale, event-driven systems become complex. Messages and events are delivered in many different forms and stored in independent silos, making them hard to extract and process and often requiring complex query mechanisms. At the same time, message queuing systems become slow and congested, adding latency or even letting messages time out. When you need to respond to events quickly, this fragile state of affairs becomes hard to use and manage.
That’s where Drasi comes in. It provides a better way to automate the process of detecting and responding to relevant events, an approach Microsoft describes as “the automation of intelligent reactions.” It is intended to be a lightweight tool that doesn’t need a complex, centralized store for event data, instead taking advantage of decentralization to look for events close to where they’re sourced, in log files and change feeds.
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TypeScript 5.7 improves error reporting
Published
2 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb DiversAlso in TypeScript 5.7 is a new compiler option, --rewriteRelativeImportExtensions
. When an import path is relative and ends with a TypeScript extension (.ts
, .tsx
, .mts
, .cts
), and it is a non-declaration file, the compiler will rewrite the path to the corresponding JavaScript extension (.js
, .jsx
, .mjs
, .cjs
). This allows for writing TypeScript code that can be run in-place and then compiled into JavaScript code when ready.
Following the beta, a release candidate for TypeScript 5.7 is planned for mid-November, soon to be followed by a stable release. TypeScript 5.7 comes on the heels of the September release of TypeScript 5.6, which features capabilities that include disallowing nullish and truthy checks on syntax that never varies on nullishness or truthiness.
Other features in TypeScript 5.7 include the following:
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How to use Java generics to avoid ClassCastExceptions
Published
2 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb Diversvoid copy(List> src, List> dest, Filter filter)
{
for (int i = 0; i < src.size(); i++)
if (filter.accept(src.get(i)))
dest.add(src.get(i));
}
This method’s parameter list is correct, but there’s a problem. According to the compiler, dest.add(src.get(i));
violates type safety. The ?
implies that any kind of object can be the list’s element type, and it’s possible that the source and destination element types are incompatible.
For example, if the source list was a List
of Shape
and the destination list was a List
of String
, and copy()
was allowed to proceed, ClassCastException
would be thrown when attempting to retrieve the destination list’s elements.
You could partially solve this problem by providing upper and lower bounds for the wildcards, as follows:
void copy(List extends String> src, List super String> dest, Filter filter)
{
for (int i = 0; i < src.size(); i++)
if (filter.accept(src.get(i)))
dest.add(src.get(i));
}
You can provide an upper bound for a wildcard by specifying extends
followed by a type name. Similarly, you can supply a lower bound for a wildcard by specifying super
followed by a type name. These bounds limit the types that can be passed as actual type arguments.
In the example, you can interpret ? extends String
as any actual type argument that happens to be String
or a subclass. Similarly, you can interpret ? super String
as any actual type argument that happens to be String
or a superclass. Because String
is final
, which means that it cannot be extended, only source lists of String
objects and destination lists of String
or Object
objects can be passed, which isn’t very useful.
You can fully solve this problem by using a generic method, which is a class or instance method with a type-generalized implementation. A generic method declaration adheres to the following syntax:
<formalTypeParameterList> returnType identifier(parameterList)
A generic method’s formal type parameter list precedes its return type. It consists of type parameters and optional upper bounds. A type parameter can be used as the return type and can appear in the parameter list.
Listing 5 demonstrates how to declare and invoke (call) a generic copy()
method.
Listing 5. GenDemo.java (version 5)
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class GenDemo
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
List grades = new ArrayList();
Integer[] gradeValues =
{
Integer.valueOf(96),
Integer.valueOf(95),
Integer.valueOf(27),
Integer.valueOf(100),
Integer.valueOf(43),
Integer.valueOf(68)
};
for (int i = 0; i < gradeValues.length; i++)
grades.add(gradeValues[i]);
List failedGrades = new ArrayList();
copy(grades, failedGrades, new Filter()
{
@Override
public boolean accept(Integer grade)
{
return grade.intValue() <= 50;
}
});
for (int i = 0; i < failedGrades.size(); i++)
System.out.println(failedGrades.get(i));
}
static void copy(List src, List dest, Filter filter)
{
for (int i = 0; i < src.size(); i++)
if (filter.accept(src.get(i)))
dest.add(src.get(i));
}
}
interface Filter
{
boolean accept(T o);
}
In Listing 5 I’ve declared a
generic method. The compiler notes that the type of each of the
filter)src
, dest
, and filter
parameters includes the type parameter T
. This means that the same actual type argument must be passed during a method invocation, and the compiler infers this argument by examining the invocation.
If you compile Listing 5 (javac GenDemo.java
) and run the application (java GenDemo
) you should observe the following output:
27
43
About generics and type inference
The Java compiler includes a type inference algorithm for identifying the actual type argument(s) when instantiating a generic class, invoking a class’s generic constructor, or invoking a generic method.
Generic class instantiation
Before Java SE 7, you had to specify the same actual type argument(s) for both a variable’s generic type and the constructor when instantiating a generic class. Consider the following example:
Map> marbles = new HashMap>();
The redundant String, Set
actual type arguments in the constructor invocation clutter the source code. To help you eliminate this clutter, Java SE 7 modified the type inference algorithm so that you can replace the constructor’s actual type arguments with an empty list (<>
), provided that the compiler can infer the type arguments from the instantiation context.
Informally, <>
is referred to as the diamond operator, although it isn’t a real operator. Use of the diamond operator results in the following more concise example:
Map> marbles = new HashMap<>();
To leverage type inference during generic class instantiation, you must specify the diamond operator. Consider the following example:
Map> marbles = new HashMap();
The compiler generates an “unchecked conversion warning” because the HashMap()
constructor refers to the java.util.HashMap
raw type and not to the Map
type.
Generic constructor invocation
Generic and non-generic classes can declare generic constructors in which a constructor has a formal type parameter list. For example, you could declare the following generic class with a generic constructor:
public class Box
{
public Box(T t)
{
// ...
}
}
This declaration specifies generic class Box
with formal type parameter E
. It also specifies a generic constructor with formal type parameter T
. Consider the following example:
new Box("Aggies")
This expression instantiates Box
, passing Marble
to E
. Also, the compiler infers String
as T
’s actual type argument because the invoked constructor’s argument is a String
object.
We can go further by leveraging the diamond operator to eliminate the Marble
actual type argument in the constructor invocation, as long as the compiler can infer this type argument from the instantiation context:
Box box = new Box<>("Aggies");
The compiler infers the type Marble
for formal type parameter E
of generic class Box
, and infers type String
for formal type parameter T
of this generic class’s constructor.
Generic method invocation
When invoking a generic method, you don’t have to supply actual type arguments. Instead, the type inference algorithm examines the invocation and corresponding method declaration to figure out the invocation’s type argument(s). The inference algorithm identifies argument types and (when available) the type of the assigned or returned result.
The algorithm attempts to identify the most specific type that works with all arguments. For example, in the following code fragment, type inference determines that the java.io.Serializable
interface is the type of the second argument (new TreeSet
) that is passed to select()
— TreeSet
implements Serializable
:
Serializable s = select("x", new TreeSet());
static T select(T a1, T a2)
{
return a2;
}
I previously presented a generic static
class method that copies a source list to a destination list, and is subject to a filter for deciding which source objects are copied. Thanks to type inference, you can specify
Filtercopy(/*...*/);
to invoke this method. It’s not necessary to specify an actual type argument.
You might encounter a situation where you need to specify an actual type argument. For copy()
or another class method, you would specify the argument(s) after the class name and member access operator (.
) as follows:
GenDemo.copy(grades, failedGrades, new Filter() /*...*/);
For an instance method, the syntax is nearly identical. Instead of following a class name and operator, however, the actual type argument would follow the constructor call and member access operator:
new GenDemo().copy(grades, failedGrades, new Filter() /*...*/);
Type erasure and other limitations of generics in Java
While generics as such might not be controversial, their particular implementation in the Java language has been. Generics were implemented as a compile-time feature that amounts to syntactic sugar for eliminating casts. The compiler throws away a generic type or generic method’s formal type parameter list after compiling the source code. This “throwing away” behavior is known as type erasure (or erasure, for short). Other examples of erasure in generics include inserting casts to the appropriate types when code isn’t type correct, and replacing type parameters by their upper bounds (such as Object
).
Erasure prevents a generic type from being reifiable (exposing complete type information at runtime). As a result, the Java virtual machine doesn’t know the difference between. Take, for example, Set
and Set
; at runtime, only the raw type Set
is available. In contrast, primitive types, non-generic types (reference types prior to Java 5), raw types, and invocations of wildcards are reifiable.
The inability for generic types to be reifiable has resulted in several limitations:
- With one exception, the
instanceof
operator cannot be used with parameterized types. The exception is an unbounded wildcard. For example, you cannot specifySet
. Instead, you need to change theshapes = null; if (shapes instanceof
ArrayList) {} instanceof
expression toshapes instanceof ArrayList>
, which demonstrates an unbounded wildcard. Alternatively, you could specifyshapes instanceof ArrayList
, which demonstrates a raw type (and which is the preferred use). - Some developers have pointed out that you cannot use Java Reflection to obtain generics information, which isn’t present in the class file. However, in Java Reflection: Generics developer Jakob Jenkov points out a few cases where generics information is stored in a class file, and this information can be accessed reflectively.
- You cannot use type parameters in array-creation expressions; for example
elements = new E[size];
. The compiler will report ageneric array creation
error message if you try to do so.
Given the limitations of erasure, you might wonder why generics were implemented with erasure. The reason is simple: The Java compiler was refactored to use erasure so that generic code could interoperate with legacy Java code, which isn’t generic (reference types cannot be parameterized). Without that backward compatibility, legacy Java code would fail to compile in a Java compiler supporting generics.
Generics and heap pollution
While working with generics, you may encounter heap pollution, in which a variable of a parameterized type refers to an object that isn’t of that parameterized type (for instance if a raw type has been mixed with a parameterized type). In this situation, the compiler reports an “unchecked warning” because the correctness of an operation involving a parameterized type (like a cast or method call) cannot be verified. Consider Listing 6.
Listing 6. Demonstrating heap pollution
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.TreeSet;
public class HeapPollutionDemo
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
Set s = new TreeSet();
Set ss = s; // unchecked warning
s.add(Integer.valueOf(42)); // another unchecked warning
Iterator iter = ss.iterator();
while (iter.hasNext())
{
String str = iter.next(); // ClassCastException thrown
System.out.println(str);
}
}
}
Variable ss
has parameterized type Set
. When the Set
that is referenced by s
is assigned to ss
, the compiler generates an unchecked warning. It does so because the compiler cannot determine that s
refers to a Set
type (it does not). The result is heap pollution. (The compiler allows this assignment to preserve backward compatibility with legacy Java versions that don’t support generics. Furthermore, erasure transforms Set
into Set
, which results in one Set
being assigned to another Set
.)
The compiler generates a second unchecked warning on the line that invokes Set
’s add()
method. It does so because it cannot determine if variable s
refers to a Set
or Set
type. This is another heap pollution situation. (The compiler allows this method call because erasure transforms Set
’s boolean add(E e)
method to boolean add(Object
, which can add any kind of object to the set, including the
o)Integer
subtype of Object
.)
Generic methods that include variable arguments (varargs) parameters can also cause heap pollution. This scenario is demonstrated in Listing 7.
Listing 7. Demonstrating heap pollution in an unsafe varargs context
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
public class UnsafeVarargsDemo
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
unsafe(Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C"),
Arrays.asList("D", "E", "F"));
}
static void unsafe(List... l)
{
Object[] oArray = l;
oArray[0] = Arrays.asList(Double.valueOf(3.5));
String s = l[0].get(0);
}
}
The Object[] oArray = l
; assignment introduces the possibility of heap pollution. A value whose List
type’s parameterized type doesn’t match the parameterized type (String
) of the varargs parameter l
can be assigned to array variable oArray
. However, the compiler doesn’t generate an unchecked warning because it has already done so when translating List
to List[] l
. This assignment is valid because variable l
has the type List[]
, which subtypes Object[]
.
Also, the compiler doesn’t issue a warning or error when assigning a List
object of any type to any of oArray
’s array components; for example, oArray[0] = Arrays.asList(Double.valueOf(3.5));
. This assignment assigns to the first array component of oArray
a List
object containing a single Double
object.
The String s = l[0].get(0);
assignment is problematic. The object stored in the first array component of variable l
has the type List
, but this assignment expects an object of type List
. As a result, the JVM throws ClassCastException
.
Compile the Listing 7 source code (javac -Xlint:unchecked UnsafeVarargsDemo.java
). You should observe the following output (slightly reformatted for readability):
UnsafeVarargsDemo.java:8: warning: [unchecked] unchecked generic array
creation for varargs parameter of
type List[]
unsafe(Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C"),
^
UnsafeVarargsDemo.java:12: warning: [unchecked] Possible heap pollution
from parameterized vararg type
List
static void unsafe(List... l)
^
2 warnings
Earlier in this article, I stated that you cannot use type parameters in array-creation expressions. For example, you cannot specify elements = new E[size];
. The compiler reports a “generic array creation error” message when you try to do so. However, it’s still possible to create a generic array, but only in a varargs context, and that is what the first warning message is reporting. Behind the scenes, the compiler transforms List
to
lList
and then to List[] l
.
Notice that the heap pollution warning is generated at the unsafe()
method’s declaration site. This message isn’t generated at this method’s call site, which is the case with Java 5 and Java 6 compilers.
Not all varargs methods will contribute to heap pollution. However, a warning message will still be issued at the method’s declaration site. If you know that your method doesn’t contribute to heap pollution, you can suppress this warning by declaring it with the @SafeVarargs
annotation—Java SE 7 introduced the java.lang.SafeVarargs
annotation type. For example, because there is no way for the Arrays
class’s asList()
method to contribute to heap pollution, this method’s declaration has been annotated with @SafeVarargs
, as follows:
@SafeVarargs
public static List asList(T... a)
The @SafeVarargs
annotation eliminates the generic array creation and heap pollution warning messages. It is a documented part of the method’s contract and asserts that the method’s implementation will not improperly handle the varargs
formal parameter.
Do you want to practice more with Java generics? See How to use generics in your Java programs.
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Drasi: A lightweight approach to event-driven programming
Published
2 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb DiversEvent-driven architectures like this are a relatively common design pattern in distributed systems. Like other distributed development models, they have their own problems, especially at scale. When you’re getting tens or hundreds of events a minute, it’s easy to detect and respond to the messages you’re looking for. But when your application or service grows to several hundred thousands or even millions of messages across a global platform, what worked for a smaller system is likely to collapse under this new load.
At scale, event-driven systems become complex. Messages and events are delivered in many different forms and stored in independent silos, making them hard to extract and process and often requiring complex query mechanisms. At the same time, message queuing systems become slow and congested, adding latency or even letting messages time out. When you need to respond to events quickly, this fragile state of affairs becomes hard to use and manage.
That’s where Drasi comes in. It provides a better way to automate the process of detecting and responding to relevant events, an approach Microsoft describes as “the automation of intelligent reactions.” It is intended to be a lightweight tool that doesn’t need a complex, centralized store for event data, instead taking advantage of decentralization to look for events close to where they’re sourced, in log files and change feeds.
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Microsoft previews AI ‘building blocks’ for .NET
Published
2 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb DiversCore benefits of the Microsoft.Extensions.AI libraries include:
- Providing a consistent set of APIs and conventions for integrating AI services into .NET applications.
- Allowing .NET library authors to use AI services without being tied to a specific provider.
- Enabling .NET developers to experiment with different packages using the same underlying abstractions, maintaining a single API throughout an application.
- Simplifying the addition of new capabilities and facilitating the componentization and testing of applications.
Instructions on getting started with the Microsoft.Extensions.AI packages can be found in the October 8 blog post. Microsoft’s current focus is on creating abstractions that can be implemented across various services, the company said. There is no plan to release APIs tailored to any specific provider’s services. Microsoft’s goal is to act as a unifying layer within the .NET ecosystem, enabling developers to choose preferred frameworks and libraries while ensuring integration and collaboration across the ecosystem.
In explaining the libraries, Microsoft’s Luis Quintanilla, program manager for the developer division, said AI capabilities are rapidly evolving, with common patterns emerging for functionality such as chat, embeddings, and tool calling. Unified abstractions are crucial for developers to work across different sources, he said.
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Deno 2.0 arrives, ready to battle Node.js
Published
3 days agoon
October 10, 2024By
bb DiversDeno 2.0, a major update to the open source Deno runtime for JavaScript, TypeScript, and WebAssembly, is now available as a production release. It emphasizes backward compatibility with the rival Node.js runtime and NPM and a stabilized standard library.
Proponents say the Deno 2.0 update was designed to make JavaScript development simpler and more scalable. The production release, from Deno Land, was announced October 9 and can be installed from dotcom–2.deno.
“Deno 2.0 is fully compatible with existing Node.js projects, allowing developers to run their existing applications seamlessly while also taking advantage of Deno’s modern, all-in-one toolchain,” Ryan Dahl, creator of both Deno and Node.js, said. “It’s designed to help teams cut through the complexity of today’s JavaScript landscape with zero-config tooling, native TypeScript, and robust support for frameworks like Next.js, Astro, and more.” Dahl said full compatibility with Node.js and NPM makes it easy to adopt Deno incrementally. Long-term support (LTS) releases, meanwhile, provide stability in production environments.
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Gemini Code Assist Enterprise woos enterprise developers
Published
3 days agoon
October 9, 2024By
bb DiversGoogle Cloud has announced Gemini Code Assist Enterprise, billed as an enterprise-grade tool that lets developers generate or transform code that is more accurate and relevant to their applications.
Generally available on October 9, Gemini Code Assist Enterprise is a cloud-based, AI-powered application development solution that works across the technology stack to provide better contextual suggestions, enterprise-grade security commitments, and integrations across Google Cloud. The tool supports developers in being more versatile and working with a wider set of services faster, Google Cloud said
Supported by Gemini’s large token context window, Gemini Code Assist Enterprise moves beyond AI-powered coding assistance in the IDE, Google Cloud said. The company emphasized the following features of Gemini Code Assist Enterprise:
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What is Addison’s disease? The debilitating illness revealed that killed TikTok star Taylor Rousseau Grigg’s cause of death
Spread the love TikToker Taylor Rousseau Grigg died last week from complications of a one-in-100,000 hormonal illness, her family revealed. ...
Vous galérez à enlever les chevilles des murs ? Une technique super simple va vous sauver : Femme Actuelle Le MAG
Spread the love Nous avons un cadeau pour vous Créez un compte et inscrivez-vous à la newsletter Femme Actuelle pour...
« Terrifier 3 » interdit aux moins de 18 ans cartonne au box-office, mais choque de nombreux spectateurs
Spread the love ESC Distribution « Terrifier 3 » a réalisé un excellent démarrage au box-office en France. ESC Distribution « Terrifier 3 »...
Triste sort : Adèle Mballa de la Crtv perd à nouveau un enfant
Spread the love Adèle Mballa est encore éprouvée. L’ange de la mort aurait visiblement décidé d’en finir avec les fruits...
« Un vent de paranoïa souffle à Téhéran » : autour du chef de la force Al Qods, l’ombre d’une infiltration israélienne en Iran
Spread the love L’incertitude règne autour du sort d’Esmaïl Qaani depuis son arrivée au Liban, peu après l’assassinat de Nasrallah....
China to issue $325 billion in bond funds to boost ailing economy
Spread the loveChina’s finance minister on Saturday said the country would issue $325 billion in special bonds in a effort...
Barcelone dans une guerre de transfert à cinq pour l’objectif du Real Madrid avec une clause libératoire de 100 millions d’euros
Spread the love Dans une récente interview avec Monde Deportivole sélectionneur espagnol Luis de la Fuente a abordé un large...
Souveraineté nationale, emplois… L’annonce d’un possible passage du Doliprane sous pavillon américain inquiète la classe politique
Spread the love Youenn Madec, édité par Ugo Pascolo // Crédit photo : Frederic Scheiber / Hans Lucas / Hans...
How can England use Jude Bellingham, Phil Foden and Cole Palmer?
Spread the love There are a few different ways the trio could fit into a 4-2-3-1. One option is to...
Ronald Koeman is left fuming by Virgil van Dijk red card – after the Liverpool star was sent off for the first time for the Netherlands in Hungary draw
Spread the love Koeman was furious after Van Dijk picked up a yellow for protesting a challenge Van Dijk was...
Les mères de famille des séries glorifient la consommation d’alcool et cette « mommy wine culture » pose problème
Spread the love andresr / Getty Images L’image de la « wine mom », qui boit un verre de vin pour se...
En couple, Marc Lavoine se confie sur ce qu’il aime chez Adriana Karembeu : Femme Actuelle Le MAG
Spread the love Nous avons un cadeau pour vous Créez un compte et inscrivez-vous à la newsletter Femme Actuelle pour...