

Paul Krill
Editor at Large
Paul Krill is an editor at large at InfoWorld, focusing on coverage of application development (desktop and mobile) and core web technologies such as Java.

Microsoft .NET 7 will include rate limiting
Microsoft announced that the next version of .NET will provide multiple different rate limiting algorithms that allow developers to control the flow of requests to application resources.

Nvidia unveils QODA for hybrid quantum-classical computing
Nvidia’s Quantum Optimized Device Architecture allows HPC and AI experts to add quantum computing to existing applications, using C++ and Python.

Microsoft updates Visual Studio Code, unveils VS Code Server
Visual Studio Code 1.69 introduces the Command Center, while the VS Code Server streamlines connections to remote development machines.

Uno Platform advances WebAssembly support
Multi-platform UI toolkit for .NET enables WebAssembly threads and exceptions ahead of official .NET 7 support.

What’s new in Rust 1.62
Rust was designed to make it easy to develop fast and safe system-level software. Here’s what’s new.

C# language specification approved
The sixth edition of the C# language specification allows for more openness and community participation in changes to the language, Microsoft said.

TigerGraph Cloud adds IAM capabilities
Graph database as a service streamlines access management for enterprises and eases developer collaboration with a single login across multiple projects.

9 Deno runtime projects to watch
The Deno ecosystem is taking root, with a host of tools and services to challenge Node.js. Here are nine projects leveraging Deno for web development, serverless edge hosting, and more.

Ecma unveils more permissive JavaScript license
Proposed by Mozilla, the alternative license for the JavaScript specification allows for forks, aligning with the W3C software license covering HTML and CSS.

ECMAScript 2022 blesses class elements, top-level await
Next version of JavaScript standard gains formal approval, while the new capabilities are already supported by browsers.

Rust is most popular WebAssembly language, survey says
The State of WebAssembly 2022 survey of Wasm developers shows Rust on top, with Blazor and Python on the rise.