code visibility

Tech Optimizer
December 16, 2025
EnterpriseDB (EDB) has made advancements in its offerings, particularly with EDB Postgres AI (EDB PG AI) for WarehousePG, focusing on petabyte-scale analytics and real-time streaming capabilities. A unified platform is gaining traction, with 42% of enterprises adopting such solutions and 35% standardizing on Postgres. Companies using AI in warehouse operations report ROI up to five times higher. EDB PG AI offers deploy-anywhere flexibility, predictable economic models, and potential cost savings of up to 62% compared to leading cloud data warehouses. It also allows for rapid migrations, including a zero-migration binary swap for Greenplum workloads. EDB is committed to open source, managing WarehousePG as an Apache 2.0-licensed project. Key features include a per-core pricing model, hybrid deployment capabilities, AI-ready architecture, unified analytics, and improved observability and governance. Customers like MNTN and Euronext FX have benefited from EDB's solutions, achieving stability and control over their data management. Kyobo Book Centre has transitioned to EDB PG AI to regain predictable costs and compliance control. The latest enhancements in EDB PG AI's Q4 release include no-code visibility tools for automated storage optimization and proactive security recommendations. EDB is also publishing a guide on building data and AI platforms with PostgreSQL.
AppWizard
March 29, 2025
A recent report indicates that Android's development is shifting towards a more private model, despite its perception as an open-source initiative. Google retains ultimate control over the code, dictating project direction, feature development, and release timelines. Currently, Android 16 is in development, with a main branch that remains private during development and an experimental branch that serves as a testing ground for features. While some code from the experimental branch is accessible, its visibility is expected to decrease. Companies involved in smartphone manufacturing will continue to receive early access to private code, allowing them to prepare devices ahead of public releases. Developers of custom ROMs will still rely on the stable version of the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) for compatibility with essential components. The shift towards a more private development model may impact online discussions and speculation within the Android community.
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