Release Radar · December 2018
We’re sharing new and exciting releases from world-changing technologies to weekend side projects in the December 2018 edition of Release Radar.
Explore the latest blogs from GitHub on all things software development from the newest capabilities on the GitHub platform to research and insights—and guides to help you level up your engineering skills.
We’re sharing new and exciting releases from world-changing technologies to weekend side projects in the December 2018 edition of Release Radar.
Do you contribute to open source software (OSS)? We’d love to hear your perspective.
We are excited to release GitHub Desktop 1.6, bringing new features and improvements around onboarding, suggested next steps, and large file restrictions.
Welcome to the new dashboard. Get closer to the stuff you care about most.
Multiple diffs are now displayed in Atom before making a commit.
With their new “Star” button, every GitHub Topic gets you closer to the stuff you care about most.
Today we’re announcing two major updates to make GitHub more accessible to developers.
You created over 300 great games during November—here are a few of our winners and favorites for you to enjoy.
A list of open source releases that caught our attention last month.
A roundup of our favorite 2018 ships for collaboration, business, platform, security, and learning.
GitHub for Unity version 1.2.0 now supports GitHub Enterprise.
Now you can request an archive of your data from your account settings page.
GitHub has achieved SOC 2 Type 1 and SOC 1 Type 1 compliance for GitHub Business Cloud.
Get more information when reviewing pull requests with check runs and annotations.
As the year comes to a close, we’re sharing our final Octoverse report of 2018 to look back and highlight some of your most active, new open source projects of the year.
Performance and reliability conversations as a GitHub product
Learning Lab for organizations is now available for GitHub Enterprise customers.
Use the Content Attachment API to add more context to issues and pull requests.
To get a sense of how our community expresses themselves with emoji, we looked at which ones they use in (and in reaction to) issue and pull request comments.
Code Nation creates real impact with their curriculum built and improved through GitHub.
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
Last chance: Save $700 on your IRL pass to Universe and join us on Oct. 28-29 in San Francisco.