Cypress Crashes into Drupal: Testing That Feels Like Magic
Picture this: your Drupal site implodes under a sneaky regression, right before launch. Enter Cypress, the browser-testing wizard that's about to make you unstoppable.
Picture this: your Drupal site implodes under a sneaky regression, right before launch. Enter Cypress, the browser-testing wizard that's about to make you unstoppable.
We all geek out over code sprints and hackathons birthing killer features. But docs? They rot in the backlog while projects evolve. Docathons flip that script.
Lemonade 10.1 drops, turbocharging local LLMs on AMD hardware. It's the open-source spark that could flip the script on NVIDIA dominance.
Mesa just merged two ironclad policies on Gen AI in code submissions—no bots hitting submit, and every AI assist must be flagged. It's a rare reality check in the rush to automate everything.
Forget the stereotypes—Latin America's not just adopting AI, it's rewriting the code with open source. Drones buzzing deliveries, humanoid bots in factories: this is the platform shift we've all been waiting for.
A Friday pull request hits DRM-Next. Suddenly, your decade-old Kaveri APU gets Vulkan and real performance on Linux 7.1. Valve's doing AMD's homework again.
Picture rummaging through your garage, unearthing a dusty 486 PC that once ran Doom like a champ. Linux 7.1 just slammed the door on those relics, marking the end of an era.
FreeBSD on a laptop? Often a nightmare of non-working WiFi and touchpads. The Foundation's new testing project throws the ball to you, the community.
Picture this: your favorite app loads instantly, feels intuitive, never crashes under load. That's the real-world magic when UX designers and developers truly collaborate using open principles. No more pixel-perfect designs doomed by backend bottlenecks.
Mid-stream on PeerTube, speakers live on Jitsi, chats exploding in Matrix. Fedora just proved you can run a virtual conference using only open source tools—no budget, no compromises.
Security pros, picture this: no more endless manual dismissals of test-file vulns across 100 repos. GitLab's auto-dismiss policies automate the drudgery, freeing you for real threats.
A fork of ONLYOFFICE called Euro-Office promises European control amid geopolitical jitters. But ONLYOFFICE cries foul on licenses—cynics like me smell business as usual.
Deployment shouldn't be a rite of passage involving tears and Stack Overflow. One dev's push to make django-simple-deploy actually work for PythonAnywhere free users is a welcome jab at the chaos.
Java's not just for servers anymore. TornadoVM 4.0 cracks open Apple Silicon and advanced CUDA ops, signaling a hardware pivot that's got GPU acceleration humming.
Influencer platforms hide behind 'AI discovery' — it's just a Postgres table with smart indexes. Build yours in hours, save thousands, and own the data.
Everyone figured GitHub's new React diff viewer would chug on mega PRs. Surprise: it doesn't anymore. But is this a real win or just kicking the can?
Picture this: sharp, no-BS Linux news landing in your feed, week after week, because everyday donors like you keep the lights on at FOSS Force. They've hit March's funding mark — now April's in play.
AI agents loose in your code? Freestyle's sandboxes lock 'em down with real VMs, not flimsy containers. Finally, scale without the server melt.
Your next pull request could be AI-generated — but only if it lives in your repo, not some external dashboard. Here's why 'code-native' is the line in the sand separating useful tools from vaporware.
Picture this: Godot renders megacities while your SPA stutters on 50 tabs. Game engines solved your problems decades ago. Time to borrow their homework.