adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

Tech

Apple introduces new Mac mini with M2 and M2 Pro — more powerful, capable, and versatile than ever – Apple

Published

 on

January 17, 2023

PRESS RELEASE

Apple introduces new Mac mini with M2 and M2 Pro — more powerful, capable, and versatile than ever

Starting at just $599, Mac mini is even more affordable

300x250x1

CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA Apple today unveiled the new Mac mini, supercharged by M2 and the all-new M2 Pro. With the M2 chip, Mac mini is even more powerful, capable, and affordable with a new starting price of just $599. The new M2 Pro chip delivers pro-level performance to Mac mini for the first time, enabling users to run high-performance workflows that were previously unimaginable in such a compact design. Mac mini with M2 and M2 Pro delivers faster performance, even more unified memory, and advanced connectivity, including support for up to two displays on the M2 model, and up to three displays on the M2 Pro model. Paired with Studio Display and Magic accessories, along with the power and ease of macOS Ventura, Mac mini provides a phenomenal desktop experience that will take users’ productivity and creativity to the next level. Customers can order the new Mac mini models today, with availability beginning Tuesday, January 24.

“With incredible capabilities and a wide array of connectivity in its compact design, Mac mini is used in so many places, in so many different ways. Today, we’re excited to take it even further with M2 and M2 Pro,” said Greg Joswiak, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing. “Bringing even more performance and a lower starting price, Mac mini with M2 is a tremendous value. And for users who need powerful pro performance, Mac mini with M2 Pro is unlike any other desktop in its class.”

Even More Performance with M2 and M2 Pro

Compared to the previous-generation Mac mini, M2 and M2 Pro bring a faster next-generation CPU and GPU, much higher memory bandwidth, and a more powerful media engine to Mac mini, delivering extraordinary performance and industry-leading power efficiency. Both models feature an advanced thermal system for exceptional sustained performance.

Mac mini with M2

Mac mini with M2 features an 8-core CPU with four high-performance and four high-efficiency cores, along with a 10-core GPU — perfect for users looking for superfast performance and incredible productivity at an even more affordable starting price of $599. Everyday tasks are blazing fast — from launching and multitasking between apps to browsing the web. For users with more intensive tasks, Mac mini with M2 also powers through even more demanding workloads. With up to 24GB of unified memory and 100GB/s of bandwidth, activities like image editing in Adobe Photoshop are up to 50 percent faster1 than the previous generation. M2 also adds ProRes acceleration to Mac mini, so tasks like video editing in Final Cut Pro are more than twice as fast.1 The M2 model can also simultaneously play up to two streams of 8K ProRes 422 video at 30 fps, or up to 12 streams of 4K ProRes 422 video at 30 fps. With all this performance, Mac mini is up to 5x faster than the bestselling Windows desktop,2 delivering incredible value to first-time computer buyers, upgraders, and PC switchers.

When compared to the Mac mini with Intel Core i7,3 Mac mini with M2 offers:

  • Up to 22x faster machine learning (ML) image upscaling performance in Pixelmator Pro.
  • 9.8x faster complex timeline rendering in Final Cut Pro.

When compared to the previous-generation Mac mini with M1,1 Mac mini with M2 delivers:

  • Up to 2.4x faster ProRes transcode in Final Cut Pro.
  • Up to 50 percent faster filter and function performance in Adobe Photoshop.
  • Up to 35 percent faster gameplay in Resident Evil Village.

Mac mini with M2 Pro

M2 Pro brings pro-level performance to Mac mini for the first time. Featuring up to a 12-core CPU with eight high-performance cores and four high-efficiency cores, along with up to a 19-core GPU, M2 Pro has 200GB/s of memory bandwidth — double the amount in M2 — and supports up to 32GB of memory. The next-generation Neural Engine is 40 percent faster than M1, speeding up ML tasks like video analysis and image processing. Designed to dramatically accelerate video playback and encoding while using very little power, M2 Pro offers a powerful media engine, which speeds through the most popular video codecs and can simultaneously play up to five streams of 8K ProRes 422 video at 30 fps, or up to 23 streams of 4K ProRes 422 video at 30 fps. The M2 Pro-powered model is up to 14x faster than the fastest Intel-based Mac mini.3

When compared to the 27-inch iMac with Intel Core i7 and Radeon Pro 5500 XT,4 Mac mini with M2 Pro offers:

  • Up to 50 percent faster filter and function performance in Adobe Photoshop.
  • Up to 5.5x faster panoramic merge in Adobe Lightroom Classic.
  • Up to 4.4x faster object tracking in Final Cut Pro.

When compared to the previous-generation M1 Mac mini,1 Mac mini with M2 Pro delivers:

  • Up to 2.5x faster graphics performance in Affinity Photo.
  • Up to 4.2x faster ProRes transcode in Final Cut Pro.
  • Up to 2.8x faster gameplay in Resident Evil Village.

With M2 Pro, Mac mini users can run high-performance workflows that were previously inconceivable in such a compact form factor. Musicians can produce music with incredibly powerful plug-ins and effects without missing a beat, while photographers can adjust huge images in an instant. Creators can seamlessly work in multicam with multiple camera formats, including ProRes video, and gamers can play demanding titles in console quality. Gaming performance is up to 15x faster than the fastest Intel-based Mac mini.3

Advanced Connectivity

Mac mini continues to deliver extensive connectivity with a wide range of ports. The M2 model features two Thunderbolt 4 ports and support for up to two displays. The M2 Pro model includes four Thunderbolt 4 ports and support for up to three displays. Additionally, the M2 Pro model can support one 8K display, a first for the Mac. Both models feature two USB-A ports, an HDMI port, a Gigabit Ethernet port with a 10GB option, and an upgraded headphone jack to support high-impedance headphones. For wireless connectivity, both new models also feature the latest standards with Wi-Fi 6E5 for up to 2x faster throughput than before, as well as Bluetooth 5.3.

A Phenomenal Desktop Experience with Studio Display and Magic Accessories

Paired with Studio Display and Magic accessories, Mac mini delivers a phenomenal desktop experience. Studio Display completes the full Mac desktop setup experience with its expansive 27-inch 5K Retina display, 12MP Ultra Wide camera with Center Stage, studio-quality three-mic array, and six-speaker sound system with Spatial Audio. Customers can add matching Magic accessories that complement the elegant design of Mac mini and Studio Display.

macOS Ventura

With macOS Ventura, Mac mini delivers even more performance and productivity. Powerful updates like Continuity Camera bring videoconferencing features to any Mac, including Desk View, Center Stage, Studio Light, and more. Handoff in FaceTime allows users to start a FaceTime call on their iPhone or iPad and fluidly pass it over to their Mac, or vice versa. And tools like Stage Manager automatically organize apps and windows, so users can concentrate on the task at hand and still see everything in a single glance.

Messages and Mail are better than ever, while Safari — the world’s fastest browser on Mac — ushers in a passwordless future with passkeys. With iCloud Shared Photo Library, users can now create and share a separate photo library among up to six family members, and the new Freeform app provides a flexible canvas that helps users be more productive and expressive, whether they are planning or brainstorming on their own, or with others. With the power and popularity of Apple silicon, and new developer tools in Metal 3, gaming on Mac has never been better.

Mac mini and the Environment

Mac mini is designed to minimize its impact on the environment, including 100 percent of the following recycled materials: aluminum in the enclosure, rare earth elements in all magnets, tin in the solder of the main logic board, and gold in the plating of multiple printed circuit boards. It also features 35 percent or more recycled plastic in multiple components and meets Apple’s high standards for energy efficiency. It is free of numerous harmful substances, and 96 percent of the packaging is fiber based, bringing Apple closer to its goal of completely removing plastic from its packaging by 2025.

Today, Apple is carbon neutral for global corporate operations, and by 2030, plans to be 100 percent carbon neutral across the entire manufacturing supply chain and all product life cycles. This means that every Apple device sold, from component manufacturing, assembly, transport, customer use, charging, all the way to recycling and material recovery, will have net-zero climate impact.

Pricing and Availability

  • The new Mac mini with M2 and M2 Pro is available to order today, January 17, on apple.com/store and in the Apple Store app in 27 countries and regions, including the US. It will start arriving to customers, and in Apple Store locations and Apple Authorized Resellers, beginning Tuesday, January 24.
  • Mac mini with M2 and M2 Pro will be available in Australia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Macau, and New Zealand beginning Friday, February 3.
  • Mac mini with M2 starts at $599 (US) and $499 (US) for education. Additional technical specifications are available at apple.com/mac-mini.
  • Mac mini with M2 Pro starts at $1,299 (US) and $1,199 (US) for education. Additional technical specifications are available at apple.com/mac-mini.
  • Additional technical specifications and details on Studio Display and Magic accessories are available at apple.com/store.
  • Every customer who buys a Mac from Apple can enjoy a free Online Personal Session with an Apple Specialist; get their product set up in select stores, including help with data transfer; and receive guidance on how to make their new Mac work the way they want.
  • With Apple Trade In, customers can trade in their current computer and get credit toward a new Mac. Customers can visit apple.com/shop/trade-in to see what their device is worth.
  • AppleCare+ for Mac provides expert technical support and additional hardware coverage from Apple, including up to two incidents of accidental damage protection every 12 months, each subject to a fee.

About Apple
Apple revolutionized personal technology with the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984. Today, Apple leads the world in innovation with iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. Apple’s five software platforms — iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS — provide seamless experiences across all Apple devices and empower people with breakthrough services including the App Store, Apple Music, Apple Pay, and iCloud. Apple’s more than 100,000 employees are dedicated to making the best products on earth, and to leaving the world better than we found it.

  1. Results are compared to previous-generation Mac mini systems with Apple M1, 8-core CPU, 8-core GPU, 16GB of RAM, and 2TB SSD.
  2. Testing was conducted by Apple in November and December 2022 using preproduction Mac mini systems with Apple M2, 8-core CPU, 10-core GPU, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB SSD, as well as production Intel Core i5-based PC systems with Intel UHD Graphics 730 and the latest version of Windows 11 available at the time of testing. The bestselling system is based on publicly available sales data over the prior 12 months. Performance tests are conducted using specific computer systems and reflect the approximate performance of Mac mini.
  3. Results are compared to previous-generation 3.2GHz 6-core Intel Core i7-based Mac mini systems with Intel UHD Graphics 630, 64GB of RAM, and 2TB SSD.
  4. Results are compared to previous-generation 3.8GHz 8-core Intel Core i7-based 27-inch iMac systems with AMD Radeon Pro 5500 XT with 8GB of GDDR6, 8GB of RAM, and 512GB SSD.
  5. Wi‑Fi 6E is not available in China mainland. It requires macOS 13.2 or later in Japan.

Press Contacts

Starlayne Meza

Apple

starlayne_meza@apple.com

Michelle Del Rio

Apple

mr_delrio@apple.com

(408) 862-1478

Apple Media Helpline

media.help@apple.com

(408) 974-2042

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Tech

Java News Roundup: JobRunr 7.0, Introducing the Commonhaus Foundation, Payara Platform, Devnexus – InfoQ.com

Published

 on


This week’s Java roundup for April 8th, 2024 features news highlighting: JobRunr 7.0; introducing the Commonhaus Foundation; the April 2024 edition of Payara Platform; JEP 473, Stream Gatherers (Second Preview), and JEP 469, Vector API (Eighth Incubator), Proposed to Target for JDK 23; and Devnexus 2024.

OpenJDK

Less than a week after having been declared a candidate, JEP 473, Stream Gatherers (Second Preview), has been promoted from Candidate to Proposed to Target for JDK 23. This JEP proposes a second round of preview from the previous round, namely: JEP 461, Stream Gatherers (Preview), delivered in JDK 22. This will allow additional time for feedback and more experience with this feature with no user-facing changes over JEP 461. This feature was designed to enhance the Stream API to support custom intermediate operations that will “allow stream pipelines to transform data in ways that are not easily achievable with the existing built-in intermediate operations.” More details on this JEP may be found in the original design document and this InfoQ news story. The review is expected to conclude on April 16, 2024.

Similarly, JEP 469, Vector API (Eighth Incubator), has been promoted from Candidate to Proposed to Target for JDK 23. This JEP incorporates enhancements in response to feedback from the previous seven rounds of incubation: JEP 460, Vector API (Seventh Incubator), delivered in JDK 22; JEP 448, Vector API (Sixth Incubator), delivered in JDK 21; JEP 438, Vector API (Fifth Incubator), delivered in JDK 20; JEP 426, Vector API (Fourth Incubator), delivered in JDK 19; JEP 417, Vector API (Third Incubator), delivered in JDK 18; JEP 414, Vector API (Second Incubator), delivered in JDK 17; and JEP 338, Vector API (Incubator), delivered as an incubator module in JDK 16. Originally slated to be a re-incubation by reusing the original Incubator status, it was decided to keep enumerating. The Vector API will continue to incubate until the necessary features of Project Valhalla become available as preview features. At that time, the Vector API team will adapt the Vector API and its implementation to use them, and will promote the Vector API from Incubation to Preview. The review is expected to conclude on April 16, 2024.

300x250x1

JEP 475, Late Barrier Expansion for G1, has been promoted from its JEP Draft to Candidate status. This JEP proposes to simplify the implementation of the G1 garbage collector’s barriers, which record information about application memory accesses, by shifting their expansion from early in the C2 JIT’s compilation pipeline to later. The goal is to reduce the execution time of C2 when using the G1 collector.

JDK 23

Build 18 of the JDK 23 early-access builds was made available this past week featuring updates from Build 17 that include fixes for various issues. Further details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Spring Framework

The first milestone release of Spring Framework 6.2.0 delivers bug fixes, improvements in documentation, dependency upgrades and numerous new features such as: replace use of the deprecated Jakarta Expression Language ELContext class in favor of the Jakarta Pages VariableResolver interface in the JspPropertyAccessor; an improved DefaultMessageListenerContainer class to support first-class virtual threads; and the addition of configuration and exposure of the Java DataSource interface to the LocalEntityManagerFactoryBean class. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Similarly, versions 6.1.6, 6.0.19 and 5.3.34 of Spring Framework have been released to primarily address CVE-2024-22262, Spring Framework URL Parsing with Host Validation (3rd report), a vulnerability in which applications that use the UriComponentsBuilder class to parse an externally provided URL and perform validation checks on the host of the parsed URL, may be vulnerable to an open redirect attack or a server-side-request forgery attack if the URL is used after passing validation checks. This CVE is the same as CVE-2024-22259 and CVE-2024-22243, but with different input. New features include: log column types that aren’t supported by the database driver in the getResultSetValue() method defined in the JdbcUtils class; avoid cloning an empty array of instances of the Annotation interface in the TypeDescriptor class; and consistent support for generic FactoryBean type matching when using the getBeanProvider() method defined in the DefaultListableBeanFactory class. More details on these releases may be found in the release notes for version 6.1.6, version 6.0.19 and version 5.3.34.

The first release candidate of Spring Data 2024.0.0 provides new features: support for value expressions for improved in expressions in entity- and property-related annotations that aligns with Spring Framework @Value annotation; and compatibility with the new MongoDB 5.0 driver containing a deprecated API that has now been removed. There were also upgrades to sub-projects such as: Spring Data Commons 3.3.0-RC1; Spring Data MongoDB 4.3.0-RC1; Spring Data Elasticsearch 5.3.0-RC1; and Spring Data Neo4j 7.3.0-RC1. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Similarly, versions 2023.1.5 and 2023.0.11 of Spring Data have been released providing bug fixes and respective dependency upgrades to sub-projects such as: Spring Data Commons 3.2.5 and 3.1.11; Spring Data MongoDB 4.2.5 and 4.1.11; Spring Data Elasticsearch 5.2.5 and 5.1.11; and Spring Data Neo4j 7.2.5 and 7.1.11. These versions may also be consumed by the upcoming releases of Spring Boot 3.2.5 and 3.1.11, respectively.

Versions 2.3.0-RC1, 2.2.2 and 2.1.5 of Spring HATEOAS have been released to primarily upgrade to the latest releases of Spring Framework that address the aforementioned CVE-2024-22262 along with dependency upgrades to Project Reactor 2023.0.5 and Lombok 1.18.32. More details on these releases may be found in the release notes for version 2.3.0-RC1, version 2.2.2 and version 2.1.5.

Sergi Almar, Java and Spring Software Engineer and Spring I/O organizer, has introduced the Spring Builders initiative, an environment for Spring Framework developers to learn, present their Spring-related work, and connect with other Spring developers.

Payara

Payara has released their April 2024 edition of the Payara Platform that includes Community Edition 6.2024.4 and Enterprise Edition 6.13.0. Both editions feature a security fix for CVE-2023-4043, a vulnerability in which parsing JSON from untrusted sources would allow attackers to exploit the built-in support for parsing numbers with large scale to exploit the number of edge cases where the input text of a number can lead to much larger processing time than one would expect.

There were also a number of component upgrades and a resolution to a NullPointerException using profiled settings with MicroProfile Config. More details on these releases may be found in the release notes for Community Edition 6.2024.4 and Enterprise Edition 6.13.0.

Open Liberty

IBM has released version 24.0.0.4-beta of Open Liberty featuring: support for JDK 22 and an updated preview of Jakarta Data that includes the recent 1.0.0-M3 release in which the static metamodel was introduced. This allows for more type-safe usage, and the ability to define repository find methods with the @Find annotation.

Micronaut

The Micronaut Foundation has released version 4.3.8 of the Micronaut Framework featuring Micronaut Core 4.3.14, bug fixes, improvements in documentation, and updates to modules: Micronaut Security and Micronaut SQL Libraries. Further details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Quarkus

Quarkus 3.9.3, the second maintenance release (3.9.0 was skipped), features notable fixes such as: the inability to access any of the static resources defined in an application using REST and servlets with a custom implementation of the Jakarta RESTful Web Services ExceptionMapper interface; and routing for the index.html file fails with a HTTP status code 404 for directories. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Helidon

The release of Helidon 4.0.7 provides notable changes such as: a disabled instance of the OidcFeature class no longer throws a NullPointerException; properly return Optional.empty() for a current span if there is no current OpenTelemetry span; and avoid using replicated default values for lists when creating from the corresponding builder pattern or instances. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

WildFly

The first beta release of WildFly 32 features bug fixes, component upgrades and improvements such as: integrate the Open Worldwide Application Security Project (OWASP) dependency check plugin into the WildFly build; mark as optional or remove references to the deprecated Jakarta Annotations @ManagedBean annotation; and the removal of some outdated Quickstart examples. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Apache Software Foundation

The first milestone release of Apache TomEE 10.0.0 delivers bug fixes, dependency upgrades and new features: a MicroProfile OpenAPI Reader example; and improved logging when failing to load a class. There was also a resolution to CVE-2023-35116, a vulnerability in Jackson Databind 2.15.2 and below such that an attacker can craft an object that uses cyclic dependencies that may result in a denial of service. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Micrometer

Version 1.13.0-RC1 of Micrometer Metrics ships with dependency upgrades and new features such as: allow for customizing Prometheus properties via the PrometheusConfig interface; announce that configuration for an instance of the OtlpMeterRegistry class has been found at startup; and a new constructor containing a logger name for the WarnThenDebugLogger class for metadata discrepancy logging. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Similarly, versions 1.12.5 and 1.11.11 of Micrometer Metrics 1.12.5 provide dependency upgrades and new features such as: use the same description for the same meter name in Log4j2Metrics class; and deprecate the DefaultUriMapper and PoolingHttpClientConnectionManagerMetricsBinder classes in httpcomponents package as they seem to have been missed when deprecating other classes in the same package. More details on these releases may be found in the version 1.12.5 and version 1.11.11.

Versions 1.3.0-RC1, 1.2.5 and 1.1.12 of Micrometer Tracing provide dependency upgrades to version 1.13.0-RC1, 1.12.5 and 1.11.11 of Micrometer Metrics. More details on these releases may be found in the release notes for version 1.3.0-RC1, version 1.2.5 and version 1.1.12

Project Reactor

The first milestone release of Project Reactor 2024.0.0 provides dependency upgrades to reactor-core 3.7.0-M1 and reactor-netty 1.2.0-M1. There was also a realignment to version 2024.0.0-M1 with the reactor-kafka 1.4.0-M1, reactor-pool 1.1.0-M1, reactor-addons 3.6.0-M1 and reactor-kotlin-extensions 1.3.0-M1 artifacts that remain unchanged. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Next, Project Reactor 2023.0.5, the fifth maintenance release, provides dependency upgrades to reactor-core 3.6.5 and reactor-netty 1.1.18. There was also a realignment to version 2023.0.5 with the reactor-kafka 1.3.23, reactor-pool 1.0.5, reactor-addons 3.5.1 and reactor-kotlin-extensions 1.2.2 artifacts that remain unchanged. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Next, Project Reactor 2022.0.18, the eighteenth maintenance release, provides dependency upgrades to reactor-core 3.5.16 and reactor-netty 1.1.18. There was also a realignment to version 2022.0.18 with the reactor-kafka 1.3.23, reactor-pool 1.0.5, reactor-addons 3.5.1 and reactor-kotlin-extensions 1.2.2 artifacts that remain unchanged. Further details on this release may be found in the changelog.

And finally, the release of Project Reactor 2020.0.43, codenamed Europium-SR43, provides dependency upgrades to reactor-core 3.4.37 and reactor-netty 1.0.44. There was also a realignment to version 2020.0.43 with the reactor-kafka 1.3.23, reactor-pool 0.2.12, reactor-addons 3.4.10, reactor-kotlin-extensions 1.1.10 and reactor-rabbitmq 1.5.6 artifacts that remain unchanged. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Hibernate

The second release candidate of Hibernate ORM 6.5.0 delivers bug fixes and improvements such as: improved use of Java time objects and timezone offsets that are now directly marshaled through the JDBC driver as defined by JDBC 4.2; a new layout to configure the format in which query results are stored in the query cache; and support for a Java record to be used as a parameter in the Jakarta Persistence @IdClass annotation. This release also provides a technical preview of the new Jakarta Data specification based on the Hibernate annotation processor.

Versions 7.1.1.Final, 7.0.1.Final and 6.2.4.Final of Hibernate Search, all maintenance releases, ship with dependency upgrades and notable changes such as: update potentially misleading error message about the minimum Elasticsearch version required for vector search capabilities; a resolution to possible issues with mass indexing when an ORM discriminator multi-tenancy is in use; and correct supported Java version discrepancies in the reference documentation. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

The Hibernate team has also announced that it has joined the Commonhaus Foundation, a new foundation described below.

JobRunr

After two release candidates, version 7.0 of JobRunr, a utility to perform background processing in Java, has been released to the Java community. New functionality and improvements include: built-in support for virtual threads that are enabled by default when using JDK 21; the InMemoryStorageProvider class now allows for a poll interval as small as 200ms that is useful for testing; and the ability to configure the shutdown period of BackgroundJobServer class. Breaking changes include: the delete(String id) method in the JobScheduler class has been renamed to deleteRecurringJob(String id); and updates to the StorageProvider interface and the Page and PageRequest classes that include new features. More details on this release may be found in the release notes. InfoQ will follow up with a more detailed news story.

Infinispan

Infinispan 15.0.1.Final, the first maintenance release, provide notable changes such as: avoid a server shutdown upon an error with Infinispan Insights; and a resolution to the SoftIndexFileStore API pointing to a non-existent data location upon clearing the index; and. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Piranha

The release of Piranha 24.4.0 delivers notable changes such as: the addition of coreprofile start, coreprofile run and coreprofile stop commands to the Piranha CLI; a rebrand of Payara Uber, the wrapper that will allow developers to run everything in a JAR file, to Payara Fin; and expose the --https-keystore-file and --https-keystore-password parameters to the Maven plugin. Further details on this release may be found in their documentation and issue tracker.

JDKUpdater

Versions 14.0.39+63 and 14.0.39+61 of JDKUpdater, a new utility that provides developers the ability to keep track of updates related to builds of OpenJDK and GraalVM. Introduced in mid-March by Gerrit Grunwald, principal engineer at Azul, these releases include updates such as: initial support of a download feature that enables developers to download JDKs from different vendors; change the menu bar icon to SVG format which will allow an automatic switch of colors depending on the text color of the menu bar; and move the switches for SDKMAN!, JBang, Homebrew and Nix to separate screen settings. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

JReleaser

April 10, 2024 marked the third anniversary of JReleaser, a release automation tool for Java and non-Java projects with the goal to simplify creating releases and publishing artifacts to multiple package managers while providing customizable options. Created by Andres Almiray, Senior Principal Product Manager at Oracle, this anniversary was celebrated with the announcement that JReleaser has joined the Commonhaus Foundation, a new foundation described below.

Apache Software Foundation

Versions 5.0.0-alpha-8 and 4.0.21 of Apache Groovy feature bug fixes, dependency upgrades and improvements such as: support for JDK 23; and a new meta instance of the Closure abstract class to enhance SQL metadata access for the five variants of the execute method. More details on these releases may be found in the release notes for version 5.0.0-alpha-8 and version 4.0.21.

JHipster

The release of JHipster 8.3.0 provides bug fixes, dependency upgrades to Spring Boot 3.2.4 and Gradle 8.7, and notable changes such as: a replacement of the jhipster-dependencies in favor of Spring Boot’s dependency management; experimental support for Spring Cloud Gateway MVC; and an improvement in Spring context caching during tests. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

JetBrains Ktor

JetBrains has released version 2.3.10 of Ktor, the asynchronous framework for creating microservices and web applications, that include improvements and fixes such as: a resolution to inconsistent behavior of Netty that return null or an empty string for query parameters without values; support for IPv6 addresses in the NettyConnectionPoint and CIOConnectionPoint classes; and s​​upport for the ZIP64 format to overcome limitation of 65535 entries. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Commonhaus Foundation

The Commonhaus Foundation, a new non-profit organization dedicated to the sustainability of open source libraries and frameworks, was introduced to the Java community this past week to provide succession planning and fiscal support for self-governing open-source projects.

Their mission is to:

Empower a diverse community of developers, contributors, and users to create, maintain, and evolve open source libraries and frameworks, ensuring long-term growth and stability through shared stewardship and community collaboration.

Founders, Erin Schnabel, Distinguished Engineer at Red Hat, Ken Finnigan, OpenTelemetry Architect at Lumigo, and Cesar Saavedra, Senior Technical Marketing Manager at GitLab, will serve as Chair, Board Member and Treasurer, respectively.

Open source projects having already joined Commonhaus at its launch include Hibernate, Jackson, OpenRewrite, JBang, JReleaser, and Morphia.

Devnexus

The 20th edition of Devnexus 2024, held at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, Georgia, this past week, featured speakers from the Java community who delivered workshops and talks on topics such as: Jakarta EE, Java Platform, Core Java, Architecture, Cloud Infrastructure and Security.

Devnexus, hosted by the Atlanta Java Users Group (AJUG), has a history that dates back to 2004 when the conference was originally called DevCon. The Devnexus name was introduced in 2010.

The conference also featured on-site live interviews with speakers interested in participating. Entitled DevOps Speakeasy and Build Propulsion Lab, these interviews were facilitated by employees representing JFrog and Gradle, respectively. An example interview that has already been published, Brian Demers, Developer Advocate at Gradle, interviewed Matt Brown, Solutions Architect at Endor Labs. InfoQ will follow up with a more detailed news story.

About the Author

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Top 7 benefits of managed IT service provider

Published

 on

Whether you are a business executive or a competent IT pro, managed services can ease your job by helping you to concentrate on important tasks. Key benefits of managed IT include the expertise of the whole IT team, commitment, and industry knowledge that are aimed at your core business.

All these advantages help you focus on the core competencies of your business, whereas a managed IT service provider can assist you with complex and time-consuming tasks such as:

 

  • Cloud computing
  • Datacenter solutions
  • End-user support
  • Cyber security, asset management, and computer systems
  • Disaster recovery planning

 

300x250x1

It seems like a lot is taken off your plate, right? Believe it or not, you could get all these and more with the right IT service provider. Continue reading to learn more about its benefits and what you need to know before hiring one.

 

Managed IT services: What to consider before hiring one

If this is your first time hiring or outsourcing IT support in Canada, for instance, you might be wondering about costs, security, convenience, and many other relevant aspects. If so, you’re not alone, and it’s perfectly understandable to feel hesitant about it. After all, having access to competitive IT support can significantly influence your business’s growth.

 

So, what must you know before hiring IT experts to help you take care of your business? See the quick list below to get a better idea:

 

  • Experience and expertise: Look for IT support with experience in your industry or have worked with businesses of similar size and complexity. They must have expertise in the specific technologies and systems your company uses.
  • Scope of services: Determine if they provide the services you need, such as help desk support, network management, cybersecurity, and cloud services. Understand the terms of their SLAs, including response times, resolution times, and uptime guarantees.
  • Costs: Understand their pricing model and what is included in their fees. Consider both upfront costs and long-term expenses. Evaluate if the cost aligns with the value and level of service provided.
  • Scalability and flexibility: Consider if they can scale their services to meet your company’s growth. Look for flexibility in their service offerings, allowing you to customize services based on your changing needs.

 

Eventually, reliable managed IT service provider will boost your business competitiveness and efficiency. Shifting towards a trustworthy IT service provider will provide you extra benefits, like:

  • Control over OPEX costs

Investment in IT infrastructure and systems can be expensive. It will require upfront, which will make operating expenses tough as your company grows. When choosing an outsourced managed IT service, these expenditures are combined into a fixed, single OPEX cost. Because a managed IT service provider usually works with fixed monthly charges, things like maintenance, repairs, and breakdowns are computed into your operating budget without breaking your bank.

 

  • Avoid operational and sunk costs

Working with an in-house team requires adequate sunk costs like monthly salaries, office upkeep, benefits, and insurance. Also, it consumes both money and time to train employees to let them learn about your current processes and systems. By outsourcing IT initiatives to an expert, you can decrease huge capital expenses that are otherwise spent on in-house IT management systems. Together with reducing your capital expenses, managed IT service can also decrease your IT related costs. For example, managed services can save your expenses on:

 

  • Licensing
  • Consulting
  • Emergency repairs
  • Training
  • Also, you benefit from decreased labor rates

 

·      Experience and expertise

Your outsourced managed IT service provider has required certifications, qualifications, expertise, and training specific to your field. Your service provider will provide you access to the best administrators with special skill sets. Also, you will have access to the latest technology, which can be executed smoothly and rapidly.

  • Quick response time

These days, business operations can’t be delayed by downtime or technical issues. Particularly during peak traffic hours, having 24/7 support is essential to ensure high productivity. In this way, support service will always be available to you no matter whether it’s day or night, weekday, weekend, or holiday.

·      Cyber security support

A managed IT service provider who complies with PCI will help decrease risks relating to the use of credit card, client’s data, and any sensitive information. Your service provider will apply security strategies to make sure your business complies with security standards.

  • Quick time to market

Cloud computing by IT management will bring high-speed outcomes, eliminating IT inefficiencies. It means quick time to the market and high productivity.

  • Decrease risk

Investment in business always carry some risk, irrespective of its nature. Some of the most common risks include:

  • Changing technologies
  • Financial conditions
  • Government laws and
  • Changing market conditions

 

With a managed IT service, you can reduce your risks.

Continue Reading

Tech

Realme P1 and P1 Pro official with 120Hz OLED screens, 50MP main cams – GSMArena.com news – GSMArena.com

Published

 on


Realme went ahead and announced its first P-series with the Realme P1 and P1 Pro. Both phones bring 120Hz AMOLED displays, 50MP main cameras and 5,000 mAh batteries with 45W fast charging.


Realme P1

Realme P1

Realme P1 and P1 Pro bring 6.7-inch AMOLEDs with FHD+ resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. The Pro model gets a curved display while the P1 makes do with a flat panel. Both offer 2,000 nits peak brightness, a 16MP front-facing camera and an in-display fingerprint scanner.

300x250x1

Realme P1 and P1 Pro official with 120Hz AMOLEDs, 50MP main cams and 45W charging

Realme P1 is equipped with a Dimensity 7050 chipset alongside 6/8GB RAM and 128/256GB storage while P1 Pro gets a Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 SoC with 8GB RAM and 128/256GB storage.

Realme P1 Pro
Realme P1 Pro

Realme P1 Pro

Both Realme P-series phones get 50MP main cameras using Sony’s LYT600 sensor. Realme P1 brings a 2MP monochrome sensor while the P1 Pro goes with an 8MP ultrawide lens and a 2MP macro lens. Realme P1 series boot Realme UI 5.0 based on Android 14 and bring 5,000 mAh batteries with 45W SuperVOCO fast charging.

Realme P1 and P1 Pro official with 120Hz AMOLEDs, 50MP main cams and 45W charging

Realme P1 comes in Phoenix Red and Peacock Green colors. Pricing starts at INR 15,999 ($191) for the 6/128GB version and goes up to INR 18,999 ($227) for the 8/256GB. Open sales in India are scheduled to begin on April 22.

Realme P1 and P1 Pro official with 120Hz AMOLEDs, 50MP main cams and 45W charging

Realme P1 is available in Phoenix Red and Parrot Blue colors. Pricing starts at INR 21,999 ($263) for the 8/128GB trim and goes up to INR 22,999 ($275) for the 8/256GB version. Open sales in India are scheduled to begin on April 30.

Realme P1Realme P1 Pro

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending