The Developer Show — TL;DR 121

timothyjordan
Google Developers
Published in
2 min readAug 2, 2018

The Developer Show is where you can stay up to date on all the latest Google Developer news, straight from the experts.

Have a question? Use #AskDevShow to let us know!

TL;DR 121 — July 26, 2018

DevFest 2018

DevFest 2018 is the largest annual community event series for the Google Developer Groups program and will run from August to November. Head on over to the post for more information or to find an event near you.

Cirq: An Open Source Framework for NISQ Algorithms

The Google AI Quantum team recently announced the public alpha of Cirq, an open source framework for Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum, or NISQ, computers. Cirq is focused on near-term questions and helping you understand whether NISQ quantum computers are capable of solving computational problems of practical importance. It’s licensed under Apache 2, and is free to be modified or embedded in any commercial or open source package. The GitHub link is on the post.

Commercial Kubernetes apps in GCP Marketplace

Production-ready commercial Kubernetes apps are now available right from our marketplace, bringing you simplified deployment, billing, and third-party licensing. Now you can find the solution you need in Google Cloud Platform Marketplace and deploy quickly on Kubernetes clusters running on Google Cloud Platform, Kubernetes Engine, on-prem, or even other public clouds. Links to the marketplace and apps are on the post.

Cloud Spanner adds import/export

You can now import and export data easily in the Cloud Spanner Console. This includes exporting any Cloud Spanner database into a Google Cloud Storage bucket and importing files from a GCS bucket into a new Cloud Spanner database. For more details and links to the docs, head on over to the post.

ultramem machine types

Google Compute Engine “ultramem” memory-optimized machine types are now generally available. This means you can now provision ultramem VMs with up to 160 vCPUs and nearly 4TB of memory. That’s the most vCPUs you can provision on-demand in any public cloud. To get started, head on over to the post.

Like these updates?

Save the TL;DR Playlist and Subscribe to the Google Developers Channel.

--

--

timothyjordan
Google Developers

Developer Advocate for Google. Improving life through science and art.