Remove 2014 Remove Applications Remove Licensing Remove Software Development
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Software Is Assembled

ForAllSecure

SOFTWARE IS ASSEMBLED. Today software is assembled, not written, meaning software developers are more likely to stitch together other people's code, and write it themselves. This allows developers to release faster without having to code features from scratch. And that's way more common than we care to admit.

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How to Choose the Best SDK for your Custom eBook Platform

Kitaboo

A software development kit or SDK is essentially a set of tools that provide a developer with the ability to build custom apps which can either be added on or connected to another program easily. The BSD-type license of Readium allows the use of this SDK in both open and closed-source for free. You May Also Like.

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Ready…Set…Start Your Containers

CIO Business Intelligence

Many developers faced difficulties porting applications developed for a particular computing environment decades ago. Consequently, operating system distributions and underlying infrastructure configurations are abstracted from application programs, allowing them to run correctly and identically regardless of the environment.

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: Fuzzing Message Brokers

ForAllSecure

Log4j is used in many applications or is present, with dependencies in enterprise applications as well as numerous cloud services, all of which makes updating all the possible uses for it hard, even if coordinated in advance. As a developer you can go to GitHub, see the license agreements, and then add the code to your next build.

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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

This episode looks at how fuzz testing has evolved over the years, how open source projects have for the most part gone untested over time, and how new efforts to match fuzzing to software development are today helping to discover dangerous new vulnerabilities before they become the next Shellshock. And it's a doozy program.

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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

This episode looks at how fuzz testing has evolved over the years, how open source projects have for the most part gone untested over time, and how new efforts to match fuzzing to software development are today helping to discover dangerous new vulnerabilities before they become the next Shellshock. And it's a doozy program.

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: EP 69 Self-Healing Operating Systems

ForAllSecure

It was not a literal time machine, but a way of capturing the software development process by recording intervals and storing them in the close. Then, when a vulnerability was discovered later on, a developer could go back in time and find the moment the fault was introduced into the code. And software? Great question.