
Product
Introducing Scala and Kotlin Support in Socket
Socket now supports Scala and Kotlin, bringing AI-powered threat detection to JVM projects with easy manifest generation and fast, accurate scans.
github.com/stackgl/webgl-workshop
Learn the basics of WebGL in small, manageable chunks. The sequel to shader-school, created for CampJS IV by Mikola Lysenko and Hugh Kennedy.
First, you need to get a browser with WebGL, as well as a copy of node.js and git. Once you have all of that set up, you can install the workshop using npm, which is included with node:
sudo npm install -g webgl-workshop
After that completes, you should be able to run the workshopper with the command:
webgl-workshop
The script will ask you if you want to create an answer directory, press y
to
accept. This will populate your current directory with shader files for you to
edit for each lesson.
There are also local copies of the following documentation available in the docs directory in this repository.
Feedback and criticism is welcome, please log your troubles in issues.
Full curriculum reviews like this one are very helpful. More feedback like this please!
MIT. See LICENSE.md for more details.
Many thanks to Raph Levien for designing Inconsolata which is used in this project, and licensed under the SIL Open Font License.
FAQs
Unknown package
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Product
Socket now supports Scala and Kotlin, bringing AI-powered threat detection to JVM projects with easy manifest generation and fast, accurate scans.
Application Security
/Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh and a16z partner Joel de la Garza discuss vibe coding, AI-driven software development, and how the rise of LLMs, despite their risks, still points toward a more secure and innovative future.
Research
/Security News
Threat actors hijacked Toptal’s GitHub org, publishing npm packages with malicious payloads that steal tokens and attempt to wipe victim systems.