Programming News and Views
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October Week 3 Oct 25 | Editor
 Take a break and catch up with the latest articles and news posted on this site. This week Mike James discusses Threading in C# which is basic to implementing asychronous code and easy to get started with, but also easy to make a mess of. In "Missing the Point of LLMs" he takes stock of progress towards general artificial intelligence.
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Scouting America Launches AI And Cybersecurity Badges Oct 24 | Kay Ewbank
 Scouting America, the organization formerly known in the U.S.A. as the Boy Scouts, has announced two new merit badges in artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity. The badges are available through the Scouts BSA (Boy Scouts of America) program.
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Mico - A Personality For Copilot Oct 24 | Lucy Black
 Microsoft has designed an animated face for Copilot, its ubiquitous AI Assistant. Is Mico, whose name rhymes with "pico", going be a worthy successor to Clippy, the highly annoying paperclip that tried to be helpful, but often came across as an infuriating distraction? Or will we love chatting to it?
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IBM Launches Granite Version 4.0 and Granite-Docling Oct 23 | Nikos Vaggalis
 IBM has launched Granite 4.0, the next generation of open-source, small but efficient, IBM language models, together with Granite-Docling, the next gen document format converter.
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.NET 10 Final Release Candidate Focuses On MAUI Oct 23 | Kay Ewbank
 The final release candidate of .NET 10, the platform created from a combination of .NET Framework and .NET Core, has been released. Overall, this release focuses on quality and stabilization, though there are improvements to .NET MAUI, support for Android devices, and Entity Framework.
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Missing The Point Of LLMs Oct 22 | Mike James
 Financial pundits are trying to frighten us into thinking that the "AI bubble" is about to burst and even AI researchers are backtracking, casting doubt on LLMs. Both are wrong - the progress towards general artificial intelligence is real, but there's a lot more to be done before we achieve it.
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Jules Coding Agent Upgraded Oct 22 | Nikos Vaggalis
 New options are now available for Jules, Google's coding Agent - a CLI and an API.
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Formae Launched As Terraform Alternative Oct 22 | Kay Ewbank
 Platform Engineering Labs has launched formae, an open-source Infrastructure as Code platform built to replace state-driven systems like Terraform.
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DH2i Launches DxEnterprise For SQL Server 2025 Oct 21 | Kay Ewbank
 DH2i has released DxEnterprise for SQL Server 2025 which brings mission-critical high availability capability for SQL Server 2025-backed AI applications.
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Apple Extends Bug Bounty Program Oct 21 | Sue Gee
 At the Hexacon offensive security conference in Paris last week, Ivan Krstić, Apple vice president of security engineering and architecture announced a new maximum payout of $2 million in Apple's Security Bounty Program for a chain of software exploits that could be abused for spyware.
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Qodana Revisited Oct 20 | Nikos Vaggalis
 It's been some years since we first looked at Qodana, the solid SAST tool from JetBrains. Let's find out what's new in its latest release, Qodana 2025.2.
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XAML.io 0.5 Adds Multi-File Project Editing Oct 20 | Kay Ewbank
 Userware has released XAML.io Preview v0.5 with improvements including multi-file project editing. The team says this is an important step toward enabling visual .NET development directly in the browser.
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Insectile Garments For Dutch Design Week Oct 19 | Lucy Black
 FashionTech is a field that blends haute couture design and mechatronics engineering. It is also something you can study at as part of an undergraduate degree at the Eindhoven University of Technology. The students there are taking part in this year's Dutch Design Week with a range of insect-inspired garments.
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October Week 2 Oct 18 | Editor
 I Programmer saw a flood of new visitors this week when a post by Mike James, There Are No Programmers In Star Trek, was picked up on Reddit. And, yes, we stand corrected, there is evidence of programming - just not as we know it with so much that can be achieved by a gesture or a voice command. Programming is evolving, but the era of programming as we knew it was a golden age.
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Steve Jobs And Cray-1 Will Appear On $1 Coins Oct 17 | Kay Ewbank
 The United States Mint has now released the designs for the 2026 American Innovation $1 Coin Program, including two related to computing - Steve Jobs and the Cray-1 supercomputer.
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Visualize The Inner Workings Of An LLM Oct 17 | Nikos Vaggalis
 Simply referred to as "LLM Visualization" this web site with interactive and intuitable graphics explains how an LLM actually works.
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Book Watch
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Book Watch is I Programmer's listing of new books and is compiled using publishers' publicity material. It is not to be read as a review where we provide an independent assessment. Some but by no means all of the books in Book Watch are eventually reviewed.
VFX Made Easy with Houdini (Packt) 24 Oct
In this book, subtitled "A mesmerizing journey into procedural modeling, simulations, visual effects, and rendering", Alasgar Hasanov shows how to create VFX (Visual Effects) in Houdini, the industry-standard 3D animation and visual effects package. Step-by-step projects guide you through particles, smoke, fire, fluids, and destruction using clear procedural workflows. This book provides a solid foundation in Houdini FX fundamentals for beginners, while also helping more experienced artists push the boundaries of innovation.
<ASIN:1835882900 >
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A Common-Sense Guide to Data Structures and Algorithms in Python, Volume 2 (Pragmatic Bookshelf) 22 Oct
This book covers advanced data structures and algorithms, exploring the efficiency of algorithms, and of data structures such as B-trees, bit vectors, and Bloom filters. Jay Wengrow shows how to use techniques like caching, randomization, and fingerprinting, using simple language, clear diagrams, and practice exercises and solutions. This Python edition uses Python exclusively for all code examples, exercises, and solutions.
<ASIN: B0DXN5SQCV >
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Computer Science From Scratch: Building Interpreters, Art, Emulators and ML in Python (No Starch Press) 20 Oct
In this book, David Kopec explores the deeper principles behind code, such as how programming languages are implemented, what does an interpreter really do, and how does the microprocessor execute instructions at a fundamental level. The book is aimed at experienced Python programmers who want to fill in those gaps; not through abstract lectures, but through carefully designed projects that bring core CS concepts to life.
<ASIN:1718504306 >
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