Open Responses is an open-source specification and ecosystem for building multi-provider, interoperable LLM interfaces based on the OpenAI Responses API. It defines a shared schema, and tooling layer that enable a unified experience for calling language models, streaming results, and composing agentic workflows—independent of provider. Why Open Responses LLM APIs have largely converged on similar
Not your standard vector iconsPixelarticons are presented in a singular color scheme, embodying a line art variant that captures the essence of minimalist and brutalist design principles. The Pro version expands this offering to 1,944 icons, available in four distinct styles, ensuring versatility and adaptability across a broad range of design projects. Perfect for designers looking to add a touch
ESLint has been the leading web ecosystem linter for a decade. Its dominance is being challenged by new native speed linters such as Biome and Oxlint that implement blazing fast linting using native speed languages. Even TypeScript’s source is being ported from TypeScript to Go. Yet, this Flint project -a new, experimental linter- is implemented in TypeScript rather than Go or Rust. Why does Flint
Rails follows the Ruby guidelines for conduct in all collaborative spaces, such as mailing lists, submitted patches, commit comments: Participants are expected to be tolerant of opposing views. Participants must ensure that their language and actions are free from personal attacks and disparaging remarks. When interpreting the words and actions of others, participants should always assume good int
We gave Claude the ability to fine-tune language models using a new tool called Hugging Face Skills. Not just write training scripts, but to actually submit jobs to cloud GPUs, monitor progress, and push finished models to the Hugging Face Hub. This tutorial shows you how it works and how to use it yourself. Claude Code can use "skills"—packaged instructions, scripts, and domain knowledge—to accom
Today, we’re announcing our plans to create the React Foundation and a new technical governance structure. We open sourced React over a decade ago to help developers build great user experiences. From its earliest days, React has received substantial contributions from contributors outside of Meta. Over time, the number of contributors and the scope of their contributions has grown significantly.
I work on the Go team at Google, but this is my personal opinion as someone who built a career on Open Source both at and outside big companies. Open Source software runs the Internet, and by extension the economy. This is an undisputed fact about reality in 2021. And yet, the role of Open Source maintainer has failed to mature from a hobby into a proper profession. The catastrophic consequences a
Committing to a better futureLend your skills to an open source project focused on the Digital Public Goods (DPGs). From fighting climate change, to solving world hunger, your efforts will contribute to creating a better future for everyone. Together, we can drive positive and lasting contributions to the world, one commit at a time. Explore a DPG repo below to get started.
HomeNewsSecuritynpm 'accidentally' removes Stylus package, breaks builds and pipelines npm has taken down all versions of the real Stylus library and replaced them with a "security holding" page, breaking pipelines and builds worldwide that rely on the package. A security placeholder webpage is typically displayed when malicious packages and libraries are removed by the admins of npmjs.com, the wo
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