Synadia and TigerBeetle Pledge $512,000 to Zig Software Foundation for Systems Programming Development
By
derekcollison
Front-window bakery material. Catches the eye, delivers the goods.
Summary
Synadia and TigerBeetle have pledged a combined $512,000 USD to the Zig Software Foundation over the next two years to support the development of Zig programming language. The companies believe Zig has the potential to shape the next era of high-performance, reliable, and maintainable software, particularly for systems programming and distributed software applications. Synadia focuses on enabling secure communication across cloud regions and edge computing, while TigerBeetle develops high-performance financial databases.
Key quotes
· 4 pulledSynadia and TigerBeetle have together pledged a combined $512,000 USD to the Zig Software Foundation (ZSF) over the next two years, demonstrating a shared belief in Zig's potential to shape the next era of high-performance, reliable, and maintainable software.
At Synadia, we help some of the world's largest enterprises design and scale innovative architectures across cloud regions, cloud providers, and all the way to the far edge.
Often described as a 'decentralized nervous system,' we enable secure, reliable communication between services and data.
Announcing a shared commitment to advancing the future of systems programming and reliable distributed software.
You might also wanna read
Kefir C compiler development moves to private mode indefinitely
The developer of the Kefir C compiler announces the cessation of public development, transitioning the project to private mode indefinitely.
Zig Devlog: Build System Rework Separates Maker and Configurer Processes
This devlog entry from the Zig programming language project announces a major rework of the build system, separating the maker process from
magiblot/tvision: A modern cross-platform port of Turbo Vision 2.0 with Unicode support
A modern, cross-platform port of Turbo Vision 2.0, the classical framework for text-based user interfaces (TUI). Originally started as a per
Why a Software Maintainer is Rejecting External Pull Requests
The article is a personal reflection from a software maintainer explaining why they are rejecting pull requests (PRs) from external contribu
GitHub Repository: Chip8 Emulator Project for Virtual Machine Emulation
The article appears to be a GitHub repository page for a Chip8 emulator project called 'navid-m/chip8emu'. The content shows GitHub's interf
10-year-old unit test with future cookie expiry date breaks Servo browser CI system
A developer shares a story about a unit test written 10 years ago for the Servo browser engine that included a cookie expiry date of April 1
