Articles

Since its conception in the late 1980s, HyperText Markup Language (HTML) has persisted as a critical element in displaying web pages online.  This ubiquitous programming language continues to offer a detailed framework for structuring the content we see and interact with on the web, allowing us to format text and multimedia components in plain-text code, which is simple enough to change when the need arises.

The Transformation of HTML

As is the case with nearly all programming languages, HTML has transformed to incorporate dozens of new features over the decades since its introduction, accommodating typical contemporary pressures such as community feedback/critique and the rapid growth of adjacent web development technologies. The results of this transformation are easily visible to us in the output of modern HTML code; for example, the most recent HTML iteration–HTML5, introduced in 2014–offers new, simple elements for embedding video and audio files, as well as much-needed improvements in mobile display and overall mobile functionality.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

Le 27 mai 2022, un chercheur a identifié un document Word piégé sur la plate-forme Virus Total. Lorsque ce document est ouvert, l’un des objets OLE (Object Linking and Embedding) présent dans celui-ci télécharge du contenu situé sur un serveur externe contrôlé par …
Source de l’article sur CERT-FR

In previous blog articles, we have successively introduced the deletion, bitset, and compaction functions in Milvus 2.0. To culminate this series, we would like to share the design behind load balance, a vital function in the distributed cluster of Milvus.

Usage

Milvus 2.0 supports automatic load balance by default. But you can still trigger load balance manually. Please note that only sealed segments can be transferred across query nodes.

Source de l’article sur DZONE