Category: Technology



00:00:00.000 Introduction
00:30.680 TIS-100
00:44.960 WebAssembly
01:08.040 Basic stack operations
02:07.640 Numeric commands
02:44.680 Boolean operations
03:21.400 Port operations
04:00.240 Control flow
05:15.720 Modules
06:14.480 Puzzle
08:33.040 The game loop
09:35.200 Tic-tac-toe
11:25.880 Text properties
12:07.800 Code cells
14:00.920 Undo
14:37.560 Parentheses
14:52.360 Assembly text to executable code PUBLICATION PERMISSIONS:
Original video was published with the Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed). Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-WEUbGSPUo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQ_o3AFi7Jc



We created a prototype that runs Kubernetes operators in WebAssembly (wasm) and suspends them to disk when they are not used. This greatly reduces the memory overhead of the Kubernetes control plane. It also works towards a serverless k8s control plane where controllers scale to zero when not needed. PUBLICATION PERMISSIONS: Original video was published with the Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed). Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5o81Wldshk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdTEeNQQnKg



Wasm has evolved greatly as a standard and technology from the early design days in 2015. Some standards take a long time, while others can be quick evolutionary events. But sometimes, it is hard to know all of the history and work that has gone into bringing Wasm to the point it is at today. This talk will focus on bringing to light all of the work that has been done and what is being worked on by the ever-growing Wasm community. To start, we will delve into the history and evolution of Wasm, explore its current capabilities and use cases, and discuss the future of Wasm. With that knowledge, we will review the component model and its potential impact to how we write applications today. By the end of this talk, attendees will have a better understanding of what Wasm is and why it matters, as well as a glimpse into its potential as a game-changer for the software industry. PUBLICATION PERMISSIONS:
Original video was published with the Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed). Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_BRLqxiZPU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5HHyb1d4Ys