Cybersecurity and AI Deep in the Heart of Texas Cyber Summit

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Austin, Texas, is the 10th largest city in the US and is constantly growing, both in population and in industry. Every year, dozens of major companies either relocate or expand into the Austin area. It is also home to six universities, like The University of Texas at Austin and Texas State. As the state capitol of Texas, many government agencies have a presence there as well. Folks from all these sectors came together in the last week of September to learn from one another at Texas Cyber Summit 2023.

Here are just a few of the highlights from this security-focused event.

How to Repurpose Content with ChatGPT: A Step-by-Step Guide

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How to repurpose content with chatgpt.Figuring out how to repurpose content with ChatGPT is one of the smartest ways to use the AI tool. With the right approach, you can take a blog post or a page and get AI to transform it or use it as the basis for all other kinds of content. That means podcast scripts, Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) pages, and many other options. In this article, we’ll show you how to repurpose content with ChatGPT.

Incident Management: Checklist, Tools, and Prevention

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What Is Incident Management?

Incident management is the process of identifying, responding, resolving, and learning from incidents that disrupt the normal operation of a service or system. An incident can be anything from a server outage, a security breach, a performance degradation, or a customer complaint. Incident management aims to restore the service as quickly as possible, minimize the impact on users and the business, and prevent the recurrence of similar incidents.

Incident Management Checklist

Incident management can be a complex and stressful process, especially when dealing with high-severity incidents that affect a large number of users or have a significant business impact. To help you navigate the incident management process, here is a checklist of the main steps and best practices to follow:

The Difference Between Taxonomies, Categories, and Tags (Oh My!)

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A common question for new WordPress users is, “what’s the difference between categories and tags?” Like everyone knows what a “category” is, but the idea of “tags” can seem very similar. And then you throw in related WordPress concepts like “taxonomy”, and things can get confusing very quickly. But no worries, it’s really not that complicated. Let’s break it down..

Contents

Taxonomies

In WordPress, Taxonomies are used to organize posts. There are different types of taxonomies. The two most familiar types of Taxonomies are Categories and Tags. Both are enabled by default when you install WordPress. So when you create a post, you can choose which categories and tags should be assigned.

Currently, WordPress provides three taxonomies by default:

  • Categories – hierarchical taxonomy
  • Tags – non-hierarchical taxonomy
  • Post Formats – non-hierarchical taxonomy

In addition to these default taxonomies, a WordPress site also may support some Custom Taxonomies that are provided by plugins. For example, an e-commerce plugin may add custom taxonomies for things like “Product Type”, “Price Range”, “Brand Name”, or any other attribute. And for each of these taxonomies, you can add any number of terms.

Note: You can learn more about Post Formats at WordPress.org.

Notice in the above list of default taxonomies, that Categories are hierarchical while Tags are not. This means that categories can have sub-categories (aka child categories), like this:

  • Hats
  • Shirts
  • Pants
  • Shoes
    • Fast shoes
    • Slow shoes
    • Nice shoes
      • Smooth shoes
      • Fancy shoes
      • Funny shoes

Categories can have as many sub-categories as needed. Tags on the other hand, are non-hierarchical, so there are no child tags or grandchild tags. It’s a “flat” taxonomy. Further, any custom taxonomies may be either hierarchical or non-hierarchical, depending on how they are configured.

Note: Some themes also provide their own custom taxonomies, although they shouldn’t. According to WordPress best practices, adding custom taxonomies is “plugin territory”. Only plugins should provide custom taxonomies.

Simple example

To illustrate, say we have a post that describes a store product, like shoes. It might have the following taxonomies (left column) and terms (right column):

Post = Shoes that don't leave any footprints

	Category:      Store
	Tags:          stealth, speed
	Product Type:  shoes
	Price Range:   $100-$300
	Brand Name:    Rolf Ahl

This shows how taxonomies are used to define relationships between posts. So on the front end, visitors can sort items based on their category, tags, product type, and so forth. Indeed, any Aspect of your posts can be classified and organized with taxonomies.

Real-world example

To check out an effective use of taxonomies, visit Amazon.com and do a search for something like “shoes”. Then look in the sidebar at all the different ways to sort the results. Each of those sidebar sections (like “Shoe Size” and “Shoe Width”) are added via custom taxonomies. Amazon doesn’t actually run on WordPress, but it’s a great example of taxonomies.

Search results for 'shoe' at Amazon.comAll the sidebar options are examples of custom taxonomies.

As shown here, taxonomies enable your visitors to easily sort through your posts and find related and similar content.

Categories vs. Tags

As discussed, both Categories and Tags are types of Taxonomies. The only technical difference is that Categories are hierarchical, while Tags are not. So with categories, you can create sub-categories (or child categories). With tags, you cannot. Tags always have a “flat” organizational structure.

Other than that, the main difference between Categories and Tags has to do with scope. With WordPress:

  • Categories are used to broadly organize posts into groups
  • Tags are used to denote any specific post characteristics

I know that’s a bit abstract, so let’s go through some “real-world” examples..

Categories: real-world example

Let’s say it’s our job to clean up a house that has tons of junk in it. There are piles of stuff all over the place, and it’s our job to go in there and clean it all up. First we create two piles: “stuff that stays”, and “stuff that goes”. Those two piles represent categories.

After hauling away the “stuff that goes” pile, it’s time to organize the “stuff that stays”. Again, we use categories to make things easier. There are many ways we could categorize all the remaining items. We could organize by room, so our categories would be like:

  • Living Room
  • Kitchen
  • Bathroom
  • Bedroom

Makes sense, right? It’s the same idea with WordPress posts. Categories simply group similar types of posts together. For the purpose of organizing content and making it easier for visitors to find.

Categories: another example

Generally categories represent broad similarities among items, but you can get as specific as you’d like. For example, it’s common for a web-development site to group posts into the following categories:

  • CSS
  • HTML
  • PHP
  • JavaScript
  • Etc.

..such that each coding language gets its own category. That’s gonna keep posts broadly organized based just on the language. All posts about CSS go into the “CSS” category. All posts about HTML into the “HTML” category, and so forth.

But you can get more specific with categories. Say our tutorial site has a LOT of posts on all the coding languages. We might want to refine our categories to include version information, for example:

  • CSS
    • CSS 1.0
    • CSS 2.0
    • CSS 3.0
  • HTML
    • HTML 4.0
    • HTML 5.0
  • Etc.

Because categories can be hierarchical, we can get as specific or as broad as is necessary to organize your posts. And to organize things even further, we can throw tags into the mix..

Tags: real-world example

Returning to our “hoarder house” example, let’s look at how we can use tags to help further organize things. Recall that all the stuff currently is organized by room. So our categories are:

  • Living Room
  • Kitchen
  • Bathroom
  • Bedroom

In each room, we can further organize things by adding a tag to each item. For example, we tag the “chairs”, “tables”, “desks”, “electronics”, “clothes”, “food”, “towels”, and so on. And the nice thing about tags is that they can be added across categories. There may be “chairs” in both Living Room and Kitchen categories. Or there may be “electronics” in all categories. So when visitors arrive at your house, they can click the “food” tag and eat all of your food, regardless of which room it’s in :)

10-second summary

The difference between Taxonomies, Categories, and Tags:

  • Taxonomies are used to organize posts. WordPress provides two default Taxonomies: Categories and Tags. It’s also possible to create Custom Taxonomies. Taxonomies may be hierarchical or non-hierarchical.
  • Categories are used to broadly organize posts into groups. Categories may have a hierarchical structure.
  • Tags denote any specific post characteristics. Tags are non-hierarchical, flat organizational structure.

Resources


Writing Better Code: Symfony Dependency Injection

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Dependency Injection (DI) is widely used to manage class dependencies and avoid issues that can arise from implicit dependency usage. Most modern frameworks have native support for the DI feature or can use third-party libraries for it. In this article, we will describe the implementation of DI in the Symfony framework.

Symfony uses the PSR-11 compatible service container to store and obtain services. The service container is aware of all registered services and their dependencies and can provide an already initialized and properly created instance of the required service.

SQL Server to Postgres Database Migration

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In this article, specialists of Intelligent Converters share their experience on database migration from SQL Server to Postgres. It covers tips and tricks, the most important bottlenecks, and best practices of migration.

Most  SQL Server to Postgres migration projects consist of the following steps:

Is digital marketing effective for your business?

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  • Digital marketing uses electronic devices and the internet for marketing efforts.
  • It includes channels like search engines, social media, email, and websites.
  • Businesses use digital marketing to connect with current and potential customers.
  • Strategies include creating and sharing valuable content, advertising, and engaging with audiences.
  • The goal is to increase brand awareness, drive traffic, and generate leads or sales.

Reverse engineering minified JS with ChatGPT

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#​703 — September 5, 2024

Read on the Web

JavaScript Weekly

An SSR Performance Showdown — Fastify’s Matteo Collina set out to find the current state of server-side rendering performance across today’s most popular libraries. The first attempt faced negative feedback due to implementation issues, but the showdown has been improved and re-run.

Matteo Collina

Announcing Vue 3.5 — While v3.5 is a minor release, it’s one Vue users will love, with big performance and memory usage improvements in its reactivity system. With no breaking changes, upgrade and watch memory consumption drop.

Evan You

WorkOS: The Modern Identity Platform for B2B SaaS — WorkOS is a modern identity platform for B2B SaaS, offering flexible and easy-to-use APIs to integrate SSO, SCIM, and RBAC in minutes instead of months. It’s trusted by hundreds of high-growth startups such as Perplexity, Vercel, Drata, and Webflow.

WorkOS sponsor

Reverse Engineering Minified JavaScript with ChatGPTWriting new code with AI is one thing, but could it be even better at understanding existing code that you’re struggling to grok? Yes, it seems.

Frank Fiegel

Inside ECMAScript: JavaScript Standards Get an Extra Stage — After nine years of annual updates, TC39 has tweaked the process to make rolling out new features faster and smoother. The so-called ‘Stage 2.7’ has been around for a while, but this is a neat primer to what it represents.

Mary Branscombe (The New Stack)

IN BRIEF:

⭐ Vercel goes deep into what’s new in React 19.

💰 Alpine.js creator Caleb Porzio shares his tale of passing $1m on GitHub Sponsors.

Bye NgModules, the future of Angular is standalone! Angular v19 will make standalone: true the default for components, directives, and pipes. This is already the recommended best practice, however.

Angular’s product lead, Minko Gechev, has also shared a little about what it means to mange the Angular project.

OpenAI has switched ChatGPT from Next.js to a Remix-based app, according to Remix’s Ryan Florence on X.

🇵🇱 Poland’s WarsawJS community is holding a 10th anniversary meetup on September 11. They invite you to ▶️ watch live on YouTube.

🤖 Lee Robinson shows off ▶️ the latest enhancements to Vercel’s v0, an AI-based tool for creating apps and components from prompts you supply.

[Workshop] Fix Your Front-End: JavaScript Edition — Learn practical tips to make debugging more tolerable. Join our JavaScript team live for a masterclass on Sept 24.

Sentry sponsor

RELEASES:

Node.js v22.8.0 (Current) – Adds a new API for enabling on-disk code caching at runtime, as well as options to set thresholds for code coverage success.

Astro 4.15 – The popular content site framework stabilizes Astro Actions, a solution for fully type-safe backend functions.

Jimp 1.3 – Pure JS image processing library for Node.

Turborepo 2.1, Puppeteer 23.3, Mermaid 11.1

📒 Articles & Tutorials

▶  Behind the Scenes: The Making of VS Code — A detailed conversation with two of the popular editor’s principal engineers on what makes it tick. VS Code is surely one of the world’s most widely distributed JavaScript-powered apps.

Holland, Rieken and Pasero (Microsoft)

How I Created a 3.78MB Docker Image for a JavaScript Service — The smallest JavaScript app container images tend to run into tens of megabytes, but tailoring your app to run on a lighter runtime like llrt can yield striking results.

Shenzilong

Leave Forms to SurveyJS and Get Back to What You Love Coding — Extensible JavaScript libraries for form management. Drag-and-drop UI, JSON form definitions, and seamless integration with any backend for full data control.

SurveyJS sponsor

Exploring Goja: A Go-Powered JavaScript RuntimeGoja is a pure Go(lang) JS runtime that makes it possible to embed JS into Go apps.

JT Archie

How to Use React Compiler — The compiler feature in React 19 is generating a lot of buzz — this “complete guide”, as described by this author, covers much of what you’ll need to get started.

Tapas Adhikary

Multithreaded Programming in Node.js using AtomicsWorker threads enable you to write multi-threaded Node apps, but sharing resources across them can quickly become tricky. Atomics can help avoid some of the pain.

Pavel Romanov

📄 A Complete Guide to Beginning with JavaScript – A rather epic article packed with background knowledge, context, and third party resources for starting a modern JavaScript learning journey. Cody Lindley

📄 Implementing Filtered Semantic Search Using pgvector and JavaScript Team Timescale

📄 How to Quickly (and Weightlessly) Convert Chrome Extensions to Safari Nina Torgunakova (Evil Martians)

📄 How Sentry Uses Mutation Testing on its JavaScript SDKs Lukas Stracke (Sentry)

🎤 Talking Deno 2 with Ryan Dahl Syntax․fm Podcast

🛠 Code & Tools

jsdiff 6.0: A JavaScript Text Diffing Implementation — Can compare strings for differences in various ways including creating patches. There’s an online demo. (Don’t worry – we’re not going monthly ;-))

Kevin Decker

Redwood v8.0 Released — A long standing, opinionated React & GraphQL (and/or RSC) full-stack framework that covers all the bases for professional dev teams with best-in-class tool support. v8.0 introduces a background jobs system, Docker support, and easier SSR and RSC setup.

Redwood Team

Tests Are Dead. Meticulous Is Here — Automatically creates & maintains E2E UI tests. Zero flakes. Backed by YC, CTO of GitHub, CPO of Adobe, CEO of Vercel.

Meticulous sponsor

🇬🇧 GOV.UK Vue 1.0: Build Vue Apps, the British Way — The UK government is known for having an effective, well-designed site where Brits can complete various official tasks. Now you can get all of their components in Vue 3 form.

UK Government

👀 style-observer: A Mutation Observer for CSS — Attach JavaScript callbacks to changes in computed values of CSS properties.

Bramus Van Damme

Goxygen: Quickly Generate a Go Backend for a JS Project — A tool that sets up a new Go-based project with Angular, React, or Vue in the front-end, and Docker and Docker Compose files to make it all work.

Sasha Shpota

Typist 7.0: Tiptap-Based Rich Text Editor Component — Simple and opinionated. You can try several examples in the sidebar. Well suited for basic rich text situations like writing comments or messages and has a single-line mode.

Doist

Belt: A New Tool for Starting React Native Apps — A CLI tool for starting a new React Native app that takes various mundane decisions away from you and uses tooling and conventions established by a productive app development team.

Thoughtbot

Tinybase 5.2 – Powerful reactive data store for local‑first apps. Now with Postgres support (which can even work in-browser!)

jsdoc-to-markdown 9.0 – Generate Markdown docs from JSDoc-annotated code.

LogTape 0.5 – No-dependency logging lib for Deno, Node, Bun & browsers.

Plasmo 0.89 – Imagine Next.js but for building browser extensions.

JsonTree.js 3.0 – Customizable tree views for JSON data.

Poku 2.6 – Cross-platform JavaScript test runner.

Faker 9.0 – Generate large amounts of fake data.

Commercial Property Data Organizing

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Organizing business property info enables organization users to get the observations needed to generate defendable short and long term commercial proper property decisions. While it might sound like an arduous process, CRE specialists can streamline the procedure with the help of data platforms that provide foundational data sets in a single easy-to-navigate dashboard. These types …

Commercial Property Data Organizing Read More »

The Evolution and Coexistence of Web 2.0 and Web 3.0

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Web 3.0 has grown in popularity over the last few years and has fast become a tool for the empowerment of users in regard to ownership and sharing of data. The premise is that Web 3.0 will bring back the digital industry to a decentralized model, driving forwards, monetization, ownership, and governance, that was not as prominent through Web 2.0’s centralized model.

The basic principles of technological evolution dictate that when a new model is created, it replaces the previous version; that’s precisely what happened between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. However, Web 3.0 will not follow the same pattern; instead, it has the potential to enhance instead of replace Web 2.0.