Mozilla: Framework, WebAssembly, Taskcluster
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Mozilla uncovers ‘new conceptual framework’ for open source
A report has been generated which claims to offers ‘a new conceptual framework’ of open source project archetypes.
This research cover aspects of open source spanning business objectives, licensing, community standards, component coupling and project governance.
It also contains some practical advice on how to use the framework (it actually is a working framework) and on how to set up projects.
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Qt for WebAssembly – check out the examples!
WebAssembly is now supported by all major web browsers as a binary format for allowing sand-boxed executable code in web pages that is nearly as fast as native machine code. Qt for WebAssembly makes it possible to run Qt applications on many web browsers without any download steps or special server requirements (other than serving the wasm file).
To give you a closer look, we compiled some demos. For best performance, use Firefox.
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Redeploying Taskcluster: Hosted vs. Shipped Software
The Taskcluster team’s work on redeployability means switching from a hosted service to a shipped application.
A hosted service is one where the authors of the software are also running the main instance of that software. Examples include Github, Facebook, and Mozillians. By contrast, a shipped application is deployed multiple times by people unrelated to the software’s authors. Examples of shipped applications include Gitlab, Joomla, and the Rust toolchain. And, of course, Firefox!
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