Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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Assign Linear issues to Copilot coding agent

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From: GitHub
Duration: 0:58
Views: 72

You can now use the GitHub app for Linear to collaborate with GitHub Copilot right inside your Linear issues. This release introduces the Copilot coding agent, built to translate issues into code and pull requests. Find out more at https://gh.io/linear

#GitHub #GitHubCopilot #CopilotCodingAgent

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alvinashcraft
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Episode 97: We Wish You A Trader Joe's Holiday Shopping List

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Oh by golly there's a lot to discover this holiday season at your neighborhood Trader Joe's! In this episode of Inside Trader Joe's, we're sharing an inside look at just a few – okay, 16, so... several? – of our favorite finds for this festive season. Breakfast goodies and crunchy cookies. A quartet of trios ready for gifting to the foodies on your list (including yourself!). Cheeses for all the occasions. And salads and apps to make every gathering great. Tune in, make a list, then hop on your sleigh and head to TJ's to pick up everything you need (and want!) to make your holidays merry and bright.

Transcript (PDF)





Download audio: https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/insidetjs/Episode_97_We_Wish_You_A_Trader_Joes_Holiday_Shopping_List.mp3?dest-id=704103
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alvinashcraft
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959: TypeScript on the GPU with TypeGPU creator Iwo Plaza

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Scott and CJ sit down live at JSNation NYC with Iwo Plaza, creator of TypeGPU, to dig into how WebGPU is unlocking a new wave of graphics and compute power on the web. They chat about shader authoring in TypeScript, the future of GPU-powered AI in the browser, and what it takes to build a killer developer-friendly graphics library.

Show Notes

  • 00:00 Welcome to Syntax!
  • 00:32 What is TypeGPU? High-level overview and why it exists
  • 01:20 WebGPU vs WebGL – the new era of GPU access on the web
  • 01:47 Why shader languages are hard + making them accessible
  • 02:24 Iwo’s background in C++, OpenGL, and discovering JS
  • 03:06 Sharing graphics work on the web vs native platforms
  • 03:29 WebGPU frustrations that inspired TypeGPU
  • 04:17 Making GPU–CPU data exchange easier with Zod-like schemas
  • 05:01 Writing shaders in JavaScript + the unified type system
  • 05:38 How the “use_gpu” directive works under the hood
  • 06:05 Building a compiler that turns TypeScript into shader code
  • 07:00 Type inference, primitives, structs, and TypeScript magic
  • 08:21 Leveraging existing tooling via Unplugin + bundler integration
  • 09:15 How TypeGPU extracts ASTs and generates TinyEST metadata
  • 10:10 Runtime shader generation vs build-time macros
  • 11:07 How the AST is traversed + maintaining transparency in output
  • 11:43 Example projects like Jelly Shader and community reception
  • 12:05 Brought to you by Sentry.io
  • 12:30 Does TypeGPU replace 3JS? How it fits the existing ecosystem
  • 13:20 Low-level control vs high-level abstractions
  • 14:04 Upcoming Three.js integration – plugging TypeGPU into materials compute shaders
  • 15:34 Making GPU development more approachable
  • 16:26 Docs, examples, and the philosophy behind TypeGPU documentation
  • 17:03 Building features by building examples first
  • 18:13 Using examples as a test suite + how docs shape API design
  • 19:00 Docs as a forcing function for intuitive APIs
  • 20:21 GPU for AI – browser inference and future abstractions
  • 21:11 How AI examples inform new libraries (noise, inference, etc.)
  • 21:57 Keeping the core package small and flexible
  • 22:44 Building “TypeGPU AI”-style extensions without bloating the core
  • 23:07 The cost of AI examples and building everything from scratch
  • 23:41 Standard library design and future of the ecosystem
  • 24:04 Closing thoughts from Iwo – OSS, GPU renaissance, and encouragement
  • 24:34 Sick Picks & Shameless Plugs

Sick Picks

  • Iwo: Perogies

Shameless Plugs

  • Iwo: Syntax Podcast

Hit us up on Socials!

Syntax: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads

Wes: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads

Scott: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads

Randy: X Instagram YouTube Threads





Download audio: https://traffic.megaphone.fm/FSI5252849311.mp3
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alvinashcraft
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Episode 505 - Interview Prep - Solo Show

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if you want to check out all the things ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠torc.dev⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ has going on head to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/taylordesseyn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ for more information on how to get plugged in!





Download audio: https://anchor.fm/s/ce6260/podcast/play/111853482/https%3A%2F%2Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%2Fstaging%2F2025-10-28%2F233adafa-f6ed-45e9-87dd-2a30521f9aa7.mp3
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What you need to know about Red Hat's .NET container images

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Red Hat provides .NET container images that are freely available to everyone under the UBI license. It is distinguished by their end-to-end security and trusted software supply chain practices, including active CVE monitoring and detailed SBOMs. These images offer optional enterprise support on Red Hat platforms and are available for multiple architectures, including IBM Z and Power Systems, with separate repositories for the .NET SDK, ASP.NET Core runtime, and .NET runtime. This article discusses why you might choose Red Hat's .NET images and provides an overview of available images.

Why use a .NET image from Red Hat

Red Hat .NET images are available under Red Hat's Universal Base Image (UBI) license, which means you can freely use, modify, extend, and redistribute them. You don’t need a Red Hat subscription.

Enterprise support available

When running on a Red Hat supported platform, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) or OpenShift, these images are supported by Red Hat. On other platforms, community support is available.

Regardless of the support model, the images receive security fixes and patches.

Security and software supply chain

Building a container image is easy. Building a trusted one is very difficult.

Red Hat container images are completely built by Red Hat. This is different from, for example, an image that uses the Alpine base image (maintained by the Alpine community) which adds Microsoft built .NET packages on top.

Everything in the image is open-source. For each component, the process starts with obtaining the sources in a secure manner. Once those are in a trusted Git repository, there are different builds, tests, reviews, artifact stores until we get to the image from the Red Hat Container Registry. This software supply chain uses software bill of materials (SBOMs), hermetic builds, and attestations to have a detailed, immutable record of what is in the image and how it was built.

Red Hat actively monitors all these components for CVEs. The software supply chain enables us to know exactly what images are affected and need an update to address vulnerabilities.

Additional architectures

In addition to 64-bit AMD/Intel and 64-bit ARM architectures provided by Microsoft, Red Hat images are also available for IBM Z and IBM Power Systems, Little Endian (POWER9).

.NET images

The Red Hat Container Registry (registry.access.redhat.com) provides .NET SDK images and .NET runtime images. Previously, each .NET version had its own image repository, such as ubi8/dotnet-80 for the .NET 8 SDK image. For easier usage, the images are now also available from dotnet/<name> repositories that provide different .NET versions through tags, such as dotnet/sdk:8.0. These repositories are available.

The dotnet/sdk repository provides the SDK images. Use this repository to build .NET applications and libraries.

# Run the .NET 8.0 SDK container image.
$ podman run registry.access.redhat.com/dotnet/sdk:8.0 dotnet --version
8.0.122

The dotnet/aspnet repository provides base images for ASP.NET Core applications. A straightforward way to use it is with the .NET SDK's built-in container tooling by setting the ContainerBaseImage property.

# Publish an ASP.NET Core 9.0 app as a container image using Red Hat's ASP.NET Core runtime image as the base image.
$ dotnet publish /p:ContainerBaseImage=registry.access.redhat.com/dotnet/aspnet:9.0 /t:PublishContainer -v detailed

Starting with .NET 10, the dotnet/runtime repository provides smaller base images for framework-dependent non-web worker applications. These are also directly usable with .NET’s built-in container tooling.

# Publish a (non-web) .NET 10.0 app as a container image using Red Hat's .NET runtime image as the base image.
$ dotnet publish /p:ContainerBaseImage=registry.access.redhat.com/dotnet/runtime:10.0 /t:PublishContainer -v detailed

Learn more

Now that you've learned about the advantages of .NET container images from Red Hat, you can find more information in the Red Hat .NET documentation. To learn more about building container images with the .NET SDK, you can go through the Containerize a .NET app tutorial and consult the reference documentation.

The post What you need to know about Red Hat's .NET container images appeared first on Red Hat Developer.

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Interesting links of the week 2025-49

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Here are the most interesting articles, blog posts, videos, podcasts, and GitHub repositories I’ve run into over the last week (November 24, 2025 - November 30, 2025). Enjoy!

Microsoft / Dotnet / Azure - Other Software Dev - AI - Tech and Science - Leadership - Project Management / Agile - Social Media - Non-Tech / Random - Videos - GitHub Repos

Here are some posts I’ve written in the past week

  • Nothing this week; more coming soon

Microsoft / Dotnet / Azure

Other Software Development

AI

Technology and Science

Leadership

Project Management / Agile

  • Nothing this week; more coming soon

Social Media

  • Nothing this week; more coming soon

Non-Technology / Random

  • Nothing this week; more coming soon

Videos

GitHub Repos

  • gitlogue - A cinematic Git commit replay tool for the terminal, turning your Git history into a living, animated story
  • bentopdf - A Privacy First PDF Toolkit
  • SpotifyUtils PowerShell Module - PowerShell Gallery
  • bitcheck - BitCheck - The simple and fast data integrity checker!

A seal indicating this page was written by a human



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