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News and Resources

Developer News This Week: GitHub GPT-5, VS Code 1.103 & Chrome 139 (Aug 8, 2025)

If your sprint blurred into code reviews and hotfixes, this roundup catches you up fast. We cover GitHub’s GPT-5 in Models, arm64 hosted runners for GitHub Actions, VS Code 1.103, Chrome 139, iOS 26 dev beta 5, and AWS’s weekly updates – plus OpenAI’s GPT-5 announcement and Google’s latest on AI in software engineering.

OpenAI introduces GPT-5

OpenAI formally announced GPT-5, describing it as a unified model tuned for deeper reasoning and longer context windows. Now integrated across ChatGPT and partner ecosystems, GPT-5 sets a new bar for agentic and complex information workflows but invites teams to approach migrations methodically, assessing results against their own metrics and requirements.

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GitHub Models adds GPT-5 (GA)

GitHub took a big step forward by bringing GPT-5 to its Models platform, opening up new possibilities for developers to evaluate and integrate the latest LLMs without jumping between different providers. With general availability now in place, users can experiment with task-relevant evaluations or compare accuracy and costs directly in GitHub-native workflows.

GitHub Actions: arm64 hosted runners (GA for public repos)

Developers targeting ARM architectures got a boost as GitHub Actions rolled out general availability for arm64 hosted runners in public repositories. This long-awaited feature unlocks native Apple silicon and Graviton CI builds, eliminating the need for emulation or self-hosted runners and promising more reliable performance for open-source projects.

VS Code 1.103 (July release)

Visual Studio Code’s July update (version 1.103) introduced several highly anticipated features, including integrated GPT-5 in the AI Chat experience, expanded Git worktrees support for streamlined multi-branch workflows, and a new agent session interface. The improvements aim to tighten the development loop and reduce friction in daily code review and refactoring tasks.

Chrome 139 Stable

Google released Chrome 139 (Stable and Extended Stable), rolling out an array of developer-facing updates and fixes. As with every browser update, frontend engineers and CI/CD maintainers are advised to keep an eye out for subtle shifts that may affect testing suites or key functionality in web apps.

iOS 26 developer beta 5

Apple continued its summer platform cycle by shipping iOS 26 developer beta 5 on August 5, packaged with refreshed SDKs in Xcode. This latest beta sets the stage for the public beta and comes with the usual set of permissions and UI tweaks that will keep iOS developers and QA teams busy preparing for the fall release.

AWS weekly roundup

Amazon’s latest AWS Weekly Roundup, posted August 4, put the spotlight on several new and expanded cloud services. Serverless Amazon DocumentDB promises to lower operational overhead for high-variance workloads, while Lambda now supports streaming payloads up to 200MB, simplifying data-heavy and batch processing pipelines. The update also includes enhanced SNS filtering and more granular CloudFront timeout controls.

Google: AI in Software Engineering – progress & path ahead

Google shared findings from internal studies on AI in software engineering, reporting measurable productivity gains and faster code review cycles in select scenarios. As more organizations consider AI assistants for development workflows, these data points provide valuable perspective on rollout strategies and expected impact.

That’s it for this week’s updates.

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Categories
News and Resources

Developer News This Week – T-Mobile & Starlink Launch, iOS 26 Beta, Gemini Drops, Python 3.14 RC1, SharePoint Zero-Day – July 25, 2025

Stay in the loop with the most significant updates shaking up the tech and developer landscape this week! From breakthroughs in satellite connectivity to major OS releases and urgent security alerts, let’s dive into what matters most for developers right now.

T-Mobile & Starlink Launch Nationwide Satellite Texting

T-Mobile, in partnership with SpaceX’s Starlink, has launched “T-Satellite”—the nation’s first direct-to-cell satellite texting service. Now, users across the US can send text messages (including to 911) from virtually any location, directly via their smartphone. Available for T-Mobile subscribers and, for a fee, other major carrier users, this service works without extra apps or hardware. Picture messaging is rolling out soon, and broader features are on the horizon.

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iOS 26 Beta 4 Arrives: Liquid Glass & AI News Summaries

Apple has released iOS 26 beta 4, packed with refreshed Liquid Glass UI tweaks and the return of AI-powered news summary notifications. The update delivers enhanced customization and smarter, contextual news delivery, continuing Apple’s push into everyday automation for users and developers.

Google Debuts Gemini Drops – Monthly AI Feature Bundles

Google is rolling out “Gemini Drops,” bringing a wave of new AI-powered features every month. The first drop introduces Gems for workflow automation and a robust coding/math mode powered by Gemini 2.5 Pro. This modular, developer-friendly delivery speeds up innovation for both end-users and app builders.

Python 3.14 RC1: Final API Freeze for Library Authors

Python 3.14 RC1 is here, marking the final API freeze before the October release. Developers and library maintainers are urged to begin compatibility checks to ensure readiness for the new version. This is a key milestone for the Python community and future-ready projects.

Microsoft SharePoint “ToolShell” Zero-Day Under Active Exploit

Developers, sysadmins, and IT teams take notice: A new SharePoint “ToolShell” zero-day (CVE-2025-53770) is being actively exploited. CISA and Qualys have issued urgent guidance, with Microsoft releasing emergency security updates and recommendations for remediation. Prioritize patching and network monitoring!

That’s it for this week’s updates.

You can now publish your blogs on the Developer Nation site. Whether it’s your side project, a tutorial, or an opinion piece your post could be seen by tens of thousands of developers. Bonus: earn 20 community points for every blog we publish. It’s a great way to build your online portfolio and increase your luck surface area. Just email your blog draft or topic you want to write about and we will take it forward.