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Namecheap's CTA Against ICANN / Groovy 3.0 / Feb. 2020 VS Code CMake Tools ext.
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PART OF NETWORK
 
FEBRUARY 11, 2020
 
 
PRESENTED BY
 
Namecheap urges public to take action against ICANN's .COM price increases
Domain registrar and web host Namecheap is urging the public to take action against ICANN's .COM price increases, which were announced earlier this year after the domain name system regulator signed a contract with Verisign Inc. to operate the top-level domain. In a post, Namecheap argues the implications of this will prove more harmful for the internet than ICANN's previous .org actions, which provoked controversy after private equity firm Ethos Capital purchased the rights to the .org registry. This is because of how many websites use .COM, Namecheap argues, thus potentially allowing Verisign to monopolize the domain registrar market. Meanwhile, the company argues price could go up by 70%, and more. As a result, Namecheap urges people to submit personalized comments using ICANN's form during the current public comment period, which will be open through Feb. 14, 2020.
 
NAMECHEAP
Groovy 3.0 released
The latest version of the Java-syntax-compatible language Apache Groovy is now available. Groovy 3.0 introduces a new default parser, Parrot, which adds a do/while loop, improves classic Java-style for loop, adds multi-assignment in combination with for loop, and more. Other new Groovy 3.0 updates include support for Java-style Lambda syntax, support for Java 8 method reference syntax using the double colon syntax, and other changes, which you can check out here.
 
GROOVY
Feb. 2020 update of Visual Studio Code CMake Tools extension
Microsoft has released the February 2020 update of the Visual Studio Code CMake Tools extension. This release introduces multi-root workspaces, which makes it possible to have multiple folders with a root CMakeLists.txt open side-by-side in Visual Studio Code. In addition, the update also comes with file-based API support, features new commands like CMake: Configure All Projects and CMake: Build All Projects, and more changes, which you can dive into in detail here.
 
MICROSOFT
10th edition of Veracode's State of Software Security report is out
Organizations that scan their code over 300 times per year boast five times less security debt, the 10th edition of Veracode's State of Software Security report reveals. In the report, Veracode also found that two in three apps fail to pass initial tests, while C++ carries three to five times more unresolved flaws than .NET. Meanwhile, it takes 171 days to fix flaws once found, compared to 59 days a decade ago, although the median remains 59 days even now. At the same time, the report also contained some good news: It found developers had addressed 76% of high-severity flaws, among other examples.
 
SDTIMES
Golang was the language most desired by employers in 2019
Golang was the language most desired by employers in 2019, recruitment firm Hired reports. Companies offered Go programmers 9.2 interviews on average over a two to six week period, more than in 2018. Scala came in second, followed by Ruby and TypeScript, although it depends on one's location; while Go programmers were offered the most interviews in New York, employers in San Francisco sought out Scala more, while TypeScript was the favorite in London. In addition, experience also determines which language employers most desire; those Go programmers with four to six years of experience landed the most interviews, while Ruby engineers with six to 10 years of experience were most desired.
 
ZDNET
UBank open-sourced accessibility kit
In case you missed it, UBank open-sourced an accessibility kit on GitHub that the company previously used internally but is now available for all iOS app developers and contributors. The new kit allows users to audit their app's accessibility, checking features such as color contrast levels and more. "The way it works is it creates an overlay over your app, which then points out where you're meeting the accessibility criteria, where you have some work to do, and what are some of the improvements you have to make. It takes all of the objectivity of building an app and what makes it accessible by design," UBank digital banking chief product officer Peter O'Malley said.
 
ZDNET
New book says we should be worried about cloud neutrality, not just net
Privately owned multibillion-dollar server infrastructure should worry those concerned about security and privacy in the internet economy, a new book says. "While its name sounds soft and fluffy, in truth the cloud is a fortress," Microsoft president and general counsel Brad Smith and co-author Carol Ann Browne write in their recent book, "Tools and Weapons: The Promise and the Peril of the Digital Age." Just like the notion of net neutrality – the idea that the companies that provide access to the internet shouldn't unfairly block, slow down, or otherwise interfere with traffic – Smith and Browne are calling for cloud neutrality. The new symbol of modern computing – the data center providing faster internet connections, offsite storage, and computing power – holds inherent risks because the infrastructure is privately owned and subject to barely any oversight. The internet is no longer the essential enabler of the tech economy, Smith and Browne say – that title now belongs to the cloud.
 
This story first appeared in Inside Cloud.
 
WIRED
Introducing Paid Content / January 2020 Review
Hey readers!
 
I’m proud to write Inside Dev because I genuinely feel passionate about contributing to the developer community in whatever way I can. That’s why, every day, I try my best to make Inside Dev as helpful as I can. Yet it’s tough to completely rely on a free model if you want to survive in the media industry. That’s why, in order to continue delivering you great content that keeps you up to date for your job (or passion!), we’ll start charging $100 a year, which comes down to the price of a coffee every week.
 
Don’t worry: I will continue to publish free content for everybody! There will just be less free material available for free subscribers. At the same time, I'll be adding even MORE content for paid Inside Premium readers. Here’s an example of just a few:
 
Weekly and Monthly Reviews: To save you time, Premium readers will receive weekly and monthly summaries of the most important and interesting stories (and tutorials!). These reviews will also occasionally contain bonus material.
Customized Content: Premium readers can ask for and receive relevant news about specific languages or topics they specifically want every week.
Exposure: I will promote a project you’re working on in Inside Dev multiple times to all of Inside Dev's readers to help you get exposure. It doesn’t even have to be fully development-related – it could even be a creative side project that helps you unwind after coding.
Freebies and Deals: Premium readers will also receive a curated list of web development-related deals and freebies that I find.
So if you’re interested in subscribing and reading the first premium-only January roundup of the most important and interesting developer stories below, click here.
 
January 2020 Web Development Review: What You Need To Know
The new decade started with a bang; Python 2 finally reached its end of life, while Microsoft resurrected from the ashes with its new Chromium-powered Edge browser released this month. Subscribe here and keep reading below to catch up with all the new significant language, tools, tech, trends, and other major development-related legal and security news and more you might have missed in January 2020:
 
 
Browsers/Operating Systems/Version Control
 
 
 
24 hour news cycles, social media, algorithms and fake news have transformed the media industry in recent years. But we can do better.
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Language Releases
 
 
 
24 hour news cycles, social media, algorithms and fake news have transformed the media industry in recent years. But we can do better.
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Other Tools:
 
 
 
24 hour news cycles, social media, algorithms and fake news have transformed the media industry in recent years. But we can do better.
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MORE NEWS: ICANN, LEGAL, TRENDS, SECURITY, NO CODE, AND MORE
 
 
 
24 hour news cycles, social media, algorithms and fake news have transformed the media industry in recent years. But we can do better.
Our writers are real humans from around the country who spend on average 3 hours a day finding and curating the most interesting, important, relevant and of course “real” news for your consumption.
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Written and curated by Inside Dev and Inside Deals Editor Sheena Vasani, a freelance journalist based in California. Proficient in Javascript and Ruby. Got my start at Dev Bootcamp and Thinkful. Follow her on Twitter.
 
EDITOR
Edited by Beth Duckett, a former reporter for The Arizona Republic who wrote a book about the solar industry and frequently covers hobby and commercial drones. You can follow her tweets here.
 
 
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--[[ผู้ใช้:"wiki"Vipadasangkaew 1311100101018|"wiki"Vipadasangkaew 1311100101018]] ([[คุยกับผู้ใช้:"wiki"Vipadasangkaew 1311100101018|คุย]]) 12:33, 12 กุมภาพันธ์ 2563 (+07)