
GitHub Issues & Projects – August 10th update
Today’s Changelog brings you the brand new slice by, updates to issue forms, and a group menu across layouts! 🍕 Slice by You can now slice by field values in…
Today’s Changelog brings you the brand new slice by, updates to issue forms, and a group menu across layouts! 🍕 Slice by You can now slice by field values in…
GitHub environments can be configured with deployment branch policies to allow-list the branches that can deploy to them. We are now security hardening these branch policies further by blocking runs…
Learn how you can structure your enterprise to get the most value out of GitHub and provide the best experience for your developers!
Today’s Changelog includes updates to project templates, a pinned item side panel, and pull request support in tasklists! 🎨 Project template updates Since we announced the public beta of project…
As a design organization, we have the opportunity to make a significant impact on designing the platform for all developers. How does the emergence of creative AI impact our work? How can we achieve an inclusive experience for a spectrum of all abilities? What does designing for developer happiness look like?
We continue our momentum with new capabilities for administrators and many improvements to Chat in our Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio extensions. 🤖 Automate GitHub Copilot access for your…
In June, we experienced two incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services. June 7 16:11 UTC (lasting 2 hours 28 minutes) On June 7 at 16:11 UTC, GitHub…
Level up your use of GitHub Projects on the command line and in GitHub Actions with the new project CLI command.
GitHub’s Information Security and Privacy Management System (ISPMS) has been certified against ISO/IEC 27701:2019 (PII Processor) and 27018:2019 standards, as well as the Cloud Controls Matrix (CCM). These standards and frameworks are internationally recognized for security and privacy program best practices.
GitHub Enterprise Server 3.9 is now generally available. Organizations can now take advantage of more features that enable deeper collaboration, greater observability and faster workflows.
Today’s Changelog brings you copy and paste improvements, updates to the API in projects and a flurry of tasklist updates. 📋 Copy and paste improvements Copying table cells has been…
In May, we experienced four incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services. This report also sheds light into three April incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services.
The accessibility-alt-text-bot leaves automated reminders in a comment when a user shares an image without providing meaningful alt text.
With GitHub Enterprise Importer, you can seamlessly move to GitHub Enterprise Cloud, bringing your code and collaboration history with you so your team doesn’t miss a beat.
The option to use SMS on the sudo page on GitHub.com has been removed. Users can still use other 2FA methods as well as their password to pass the sudo…
The GitHub Enterprise Server 3.9 release candidate is here GitHub Enterprise Server 3.9 brings new capabilities to help companies create and ship secure software, more often. Here are a few…
With a new Fill-in-the-Middle paradigm, GitHub engineers improved the way GitHub Copilot contextualizes your code. By continuing to develop and test advanced retrieval algorithms, they’re working on making our AI tool even more advanced.
GitHub recently experienced several availability incidents, both long running and shorter duration. We have since mitigated these incidents and all systems are now operating normally. Read on for more details about what caused these incidents and what we’re doing to mitigate in the future.
Here’s how, in seven steps, I built my first browser extension with GitHub Copilot—and my three major takeaways about learning and pair programming in the age of AI.
How Primer’s updated light and dark theme color contrast strategy resolved hundreds of color-contrast-related accessibility issues over one thousand use cases.
Consider the typical software development practices in an organization. Projects are commonly closed, and causes friction across engineering teams. But open source communities work asynchronously, openly, remotely and at global-scale. What if our internal teams could reuse those same practices?
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
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