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31 Dec Happy New Year 2025: Fresh Beginnings, New Opportunities

Step into 2025 with hope and excitement! Reflect on past lessons, set meaningful goals, and embrace fresh opportunities. Let’s make this year a journey of growth, happiness, and success. Happy New Year 2025!

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30 Dec Understanding the Metropolitan Stock Exchange (MSE): A Comprehensive Guide

MSE gained recognition from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in 2012 to operate as a full-fledged stock exchange. Indices are crucial indicators of market performance, reflecting the collective movement of listed securities.

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14 Dec Improving Website Performance with LiteSpeed

At the beginning of 2019, Hostinger decided to try LiteSpeed Web Servers (LSWS) as the main web server instead of Apache. LiteSpeed is a drop-in replacement for Apache with .htaccess file support.

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14 Dec GraphQL vs. REST: Which Is the Best for API Development?

API, the acronym for Application Programming Interface, is a software intermediary that allows two applications to communicate with each other. That could be a server, a client, or an app talking to a server. The timeline below illustrates how it has evolved over the years, and it lays a great foundation for how an API can be built. REST remains a popular tool for building APIs. However, in 2012, Facebook wanted something different than REST, and that is when GraphQL (Graph Query Language) was introduced.

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14 Dec Introducing Fireactions: Self-host your GitHub runners without a sweat

Scaling and boosting GitHub Actions runners is a must for those with high Continuous Integration / Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) workloads. Self-hosting the runners is a great solution, but it’s complex and time-consuming. This inspired us to create Fireactions, an open-source orchestrator for GitHub runners.

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14 Dec Reducing the Energy Usage of a Website

Trends of the Website Energy Consumption The Internet uses roughly the same amount of electricity as the UK, one of the world’s largest economies. That is around 300 TWh/year. The trends of Internet growth actually show that by 2030, the Internet is projected to start using around 21% of the world’s electricity. Additionally, it is expected that global communication technologies will be responsible for more carbon emissions in 2025 than any country besides China, India, and the United States.

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