Spin 2.0 shines on Wasm component composition, portability
Framework for building and running server-side WebAssembly applications allows you to compose apps from Wasm components written in different programming languages.
Framework for building and running server-side WebAssembly applications allows you to compose apps from Wasm components written in different programming languages.
Shinylive R package exports Shiny R applications as Wasm-enabled Shinylive applications that run completely in a web browser.
State of WebAssembly 2023 study finds mostly optimism among software developers about future adoption of Wasm, but also doubts and challenges.
The platform was built on wasmCloud for multifaceted app deployment for the cloud, browser, edge, and other platforms.
Wasmer says the goal of WASIX is to allow any kind of program to run on top of WebAssembly, and this requires system call extensions that fill gaps in WASI. Bytecode Alliance says WASIX is non-standard.
Microsoft works to improve web app performance with Blazor server-side rendering and streaming rendering, Blazor WebAssembly runtime improvements.
Dart 3 introduces sound null safety, major new language features, and a Wasm preview, while Flutter 3.10 fleshes out the Material 3 widget toolkit and support for macOS and iOS targets.
Cosmonic has launched an open beta of its platform as a service for WebAssembly developers and added Kubernetes integration to the platform.
Fermyon Technologies’ Spin, an open source framework for building event-driven microservice applications with WebAssembly, is now available in a stable release.
The WebAssembly JavaScript Promise Integration API suspends a Wasm application when it issues a synchronous API call and resumes it when the asynchronous I/O operation is completed.
The Shiny Web framework for R is now available for Python in an alpha version, Joe Cheng has announced at RStudio Conference.
Multi-platform UI toolkit for .NET enables WebAssembly threads and exceptions ahead of official .NET 7 support.
The Rust programming language is the most frequently used language for developing WebAssembly applications, according to a recent survey.
From blazing-fast web apps to Python data science in the browser, these programming language projects offer 10 different twists on the promise of WebAssembly.