[フレーム]
TNS
SUBSCRIBE
Join our community of software engineering leaders and aspirational developers. Always stay in-the-know by getting the most important news and exclusive content delivered fresh to your inbox to learn more about at-scale software development.
REQUIRED
It seems that you've previously unsubscribed from our newsletter in the past. Click the button below to open the re-subscribe form in a new tab. When you're done, simply close that tab and continue with this form to complete your subscription.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Welcome and thank you for joining The New Stack community!
Please answer a few simple questions to help us deliver the news and resources you are interested in.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Great to meet you!
Tell us a bit about your job so we can cover the topics you find most relevant.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Welcome!

We’re so glad you’re here. You can expect all the best TNS content to arrive Monday through Friday to keep you on top of the news and at the top of your game.

What’s next?

Check your inbox for a confirmation email where you can adjust your preferences and even join additional groups.

Follow TNS on your favorite social media networks.

Become a TNS follower on LinkedIn.

Check out the latest featured and trending stories while you wait for your first TNS newsletter.

PREV
1 of 2
NEXT
VOXPOP
As a JavaScript developer, what non-React tools do you use most often?
Angular
0%
Astro
0%
Svelte
0%
Vue.js
0%
Other
0%
I only use React
0%
I don't use JavaScript
0%
Thanks for your opinion! Subscribe below to get the final results, published exclusively in our TNS Update newsletter:
NEW! Try Stackie AI
The Rise of the Cognitive Architect
Dec 10th 2025 1:00pm, by Frederic Lardinois
How To Create an AI Use Policy
Dec 9th 2025 9:00am, by Jennifer Riggins
One Year of MCP: Looking Back, and Forward
Dec 2nd 2025 11:00am, by Cody De Arkland
7 Non-Negotiables of AI-Driven Operations
Dec 2nd 2025 5:00am, by Cristina Dias
Shipping Syslog Data to Elasticsearch With Fluent Bit
Nov 28th 2025 7:00am, by Sharad Regoti
The New Role of Enterprise Architecture in the AI Era
Nov 27th 2025 10:00am, by Ankush Dhar and Minav Suresh Patel
Platform Engineering’s True Value Is in Application Development
Nov 27th 2025 6:00am, by Massimiliano Bianchessi
AWS, Google Build a Multicloud Bridge
Dec 2nd 2025 9:00am, by Joab Jackson
3-Hour Cloudflare Outage Knocks Out AI Chatbots, Shopify
Nov 20th 2025 7:00am, by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
How to Wrangle Cloud Bursting Costs
Nov 13th 2025 1:00pm, by Idan Yalovich
DevOps Is Still Waiting for Its Cursor Moment
Dec 5th 2025 7:00am, by Zafar Abbas
The New Role of Enterprise Architecture in the AI Era
Nov 27th 2025 10:00am, by Ankush Dhar and Minav Suresh Patel
Platform Engineering’s True Value Is in Application Development
Nov 27th 2025 6:00am, by Massimiliano Bianchessi
Kubernetes GPU Management Just Got a Major Upgrade
Dec 11th 2025 1:00pm, by Michelle Gienow
Why Open Platforms Are the Future of Kubernetes Deployments
Dec 11th 2025 11:00am, by Chris Brown and Aarthi Mahesh
Canonical Extends Kubernetes Long-Term Support to 15 Years
Dec 9th 2025 9:30am, by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
AI Can Deliver Deployment-Aware Risk Analysis for Kubernetes
Dec 5th 2025 9:00am, by Yair Allouche and Sabina Aledort
How Capital One Cut Tracing Data by 70% With OpenTelemetry
Dec 5th 2025 2:00pm, by B. Cameron Gain
When To Log, and When To Shut Up
Dec 3rd 2025 9:00am, by Mike Shi
From Cloud Native To AI Native: Where Are We Going?
Nov 28th 2025 12:00pm, by Heather Joslyn
Shipping Syslog Data to Elasticsearch With Fluent Bit
Nov 28th 2025 7:00am, by Sharad Regoti
What To Know Before Building Fluent Bit Plugins With Go
Nov 21st 2025 12:00pm, by Phil Wilkins
A Guide To Building Scalable AI Agents
Dec 8th 2025 11:00am, by Doug Sillars
The Platform PM: Building an Ecosystem, Not Just a Product
Dec 5th 2025 11:00am, by Kateryna Korotieieva
Platform Engineering’s True Value Is in Application Development
Nov 27th 2025 6:00am, by Massimiliano Bianchessi
Composable Platforms: Why You Need One
Nov 20th 2025 8:00am, by Massimiliano Bianchessi
Rust vs. C++: a Modern Take on Performance and Safety
Oct 22nd 2025 2:00pm, by Zziwa Raymond Ian
Building a Real-Time System Monitor in Rust Terminal
Oct 15th 2025 7:05am, by Tinega Onchari
SQL vs. Python: Frenemies of the Data World
Oct 14th 2025 7:00am, by Ivan Novick
Coding With the Gemini CLI Tool
Dec 12th 2025 6:00am, by Jack Wallen
AWS Tackles AI's 'Too Much Information' Problem
Dec 7th 2025 9:00am, by Darryl K. Taft
Trae IDE Auto-Installs Python Libraries as You Code
Dec 5th 2025 1:00pm, by Jack Wallen
Why Bloomberg Chose Vendor-Neutral Java Over Big Tech
Oct 2nd 2025 5:00pm, by Darryl K. Taft
Vibe Coding Fails Enterprise Reality Check
Sep 10th 2025 4:00pm, by Darryl K. Taft
New Tool Ends Java Configuration Nightmare in K8s
Aug 21st 2025 3:00pm, by Darryl K. Taft
Why Next.js Co-Creator Tony Kovanen Prefers the Sidelines
Dec 12th 2025 8:00am, by Loraine Lawson
React Server Components Vulnerability Found
Dec 6th 2025 7:00am, by Loraine Lawson
Stop Blaming React for Your State Management Hangover
Dec 4th 2025 10:00am, by Alexander T. Williams
CSS-in-JS: The Great Betrayal of Frontend Sanity
Nov 28th 2025 8:00am, by Alexander T. Williams
Build Your First HTTP Server in Python
Nov 4th 2025 3:00pm, by Jessica Wachtel
Rust vs. C++: a Modern Take on Performance and Safety
Oct 22nd 2025 2:00pm, by Zziwa Raymond Ian
Trae IDE Auto-Installs Python Libraries as You Code
Dec 5th 2025 1:00pm, by Jack Wallen
Combining Rust and Python for High-Performance AI Systems
Dec 3rd 2025 1:00pm, by Zziwa Raymond Ian
Get Started With NLP Using Hugging Face and Python
Dec 1st 2025 8:00am, by Jessica Wachtel
Rust Goes Mainstream in the Linux Kernel
Dec 10th 2025 12:00pm, by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
Combining Rust and Python for High-Performance AI Systems
Dec 3rd 2025 1:00pm, by Zziwa Raymond Ian
Debian Mandates Rust for APT, Reshaping Ubuntu and Other Linux Distros
Nov 11th 2025 12:00pm, by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
Moving From C++ to Rust? ClickHouse Has Some Advice
Nov 5th 2025 7:00am, by Joab Jackson
Why Sudo-rs Brings Modern Memory Safety to Ubuntu 26.04
Oct 28th 2025 7:30am, by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
Go Power: Microsoft's Bold Bet on Faster TypeScript Tools
Mar 12th 2025 1:00pm, by Darryl K. Taft and Loraine Lawson
Oracle Won’t Release ‘JavaScript’ Without a Fight
Jan 11th 2025 5:00am, by Loraine Lawson
Tell us a story we can’t report ourselves.

Interested in publishing articles on The New Stack?

This is our jam: app development and management at scale, and all the software and services that support this task. We want to know how everything works, from a sysadmin or dev angle.

Contributors have always been a vital component to The New Stack. Since the site’s inception in 2014, we have had an open door policy for those who wanted to share their own views in a contributed post. Whether you’re representing a major corporation or coding solo on weekends, we welcome your insights and experiences through contributed posts.

Interested in contributing? You can reach out to us directly. We typically review submissions within a week. However, to maximize your chances of publication and readership, consider the following guidelines.

Our readers value The New Stack for its clear, positive analysis of technology that cuts through jargon and complexity. We respect our audience – CTOs, developers, project managers, and IT professionals – and speak to them as the knowledgeable professionals they are.

We publish content that provides practical solutions to real-world technical challenges. The most impactful contributions combine technical expertise with personal experience. Share your journey – how did you discover this solution? What challenges did you face? These details provide valuable context for your insights.

Get personal with your article and tell readers how you discovered the advice. Personal anecdotes and real-life examples provided important context around your solution.

Don’t send us marketing-driven “neutral” thought leadership pieces. We want articles with excitement and passion – just ensure your claims are accurate and supported by evidence.

Finally, we maintain a strict policy against AI-generated content. We don’t publish them. Such submissions will not be considered for publication, so please only send original, human-written work.

Story Ideas

We get it. Sometimes it’s hard to come up with story ideas beyond product announcements and promotions.

But IT people tend not to read these articles – they want insights from other technologists. This is first and foremost our goal at The New Stack: to help readers do their jobs and make smart decisions. Finding where that aligns with your expertise will help position you to readers as a trusted resource.

These articles might help you write articles that appeal to The New Stack’s audience:

Writing for Software Engineers: Read Me First
Writing for Software Engineers: Beyond the Basics

Looking to develop content that resonates with The New Stack’s audience? Here’s your strategic guide for uncovering valuable insights and expertise:

  • Talk with your developer relationship advocates and IT project leaders – Your developer advocates and IT project managers are invaluable resources for content ideas. They regularly interact with users, understanding their challenges and needs firsthand. Even when topics don’t directly relate to your products, sharing these insights positions your organization as a trusted knowledge source in the broader tech community.
  • Leverage your TNS sponsorship effectively – For sponsors, include your developer advocates in meetings with The New Stack team. Their presence enriches the discussion and helps generate relevant topic ideas through collaborative brainstorming.
  • Ask your social media feed – Beyond product promotion, your social channels can reveal compelling content opportunities. User discussions about technical challenges, unexpected use cases, or problem-solving experiences can transform into engaging articles. When you help solve a unique user problem, consider sharing that journey to benefit others facing similar situations.
  • Check with the Help Desk – Your help desk team often spots recurring patterns in user challenges. These patterns can inspire articles that address common pain points and provide solutions at scale.
  • Showcase your team’s side projects – Many developers pursue personal projects or contribute to open source initiatives. While these might not directly connect to your product line, sharing these experiences demonstrates your team’s technical depth and active participation in the broader technology community.
  • Share technical deep-dives – When discussing your tools, present them through an engineer’s perspective, offering detailed technical insights rather than marketing overviews.

Here are some more examples of great content that worked:

Your take on a story in the news, especially with an engineering or startup angle:
What We Can Learn from Twitter’s Outages
How Tech Leaders Are Managing Anxieties after SVB Failure

How you deal with a problem within your own company:
How We Manage Incident Response at Honeycomb
GitLab Data Loss Incident Prompts a Review of its Restore Processes

Why did you take this approach, and not that one, to deal with a technical problem:
Why We’re Sticking with Ruby on Rails at GitLab

Comparing technologies:
Redis Pub/Sub vs. Apache Kafka
Terraform vs. CloudFormation: Which Is Better for You?

Explain something:
How to Use Terraform’s for_each, with Examples
K8s Resource Management: An Autoscaling Cheat Sheet

Your take on a trend:
A New Architecture for APIs
Coding Sucks Anyway — Matt Welsh on the End of Programming

Why you chose a certain programming language:
Why Is Python so Popular? GitHub Knows What’s up
Rust vs. Go: Why They’re Better Together

Other Things to Keep in Mind

Please note that all contributed content we run must be original. We exclusively publish work that hasn’t appeared elsewhere online, and we require writers agree to a two-week exclusivity period. This approach ensures maximum visibility for your content, both with our readers and search engines. After this period, you’re welcome to republish the material on other platforms, including your own website or Medium.

Don’t feel pressured to write lengthy technical treatises. We value concise, insightful pieces – a 800-word article describing a technical discovery, useful technique, or valuable lesson can be just as impactful. We welcome code snippets, visual elements, and quantitative data to support your narrative.

Please note: ALL post images/illustrations/charts should be 1,800 pixels wide (the size of the page) or 350 pixels tall. This includes feature images.

For technical tutorials with code samples, please note our WordPress platform’s specific requirements:

  • Plain text formatting only – no syntax coloring or special formatting
  • ASCII characters exclusively – avoid smart quotes
  • No HTML or bracket-containing code
  • Space and tab formatting is handled on a best-effort basis, with no guarantees of preserving original structure (particularly relevant for Python code)
  • Markdown is not supported
  • We encourage the use of dynamic elements through third-party tools like please contact our sales team about sponsorship opportunities.

    Ready to contribute? Contact us here. Our typical review process takes 2-3 weeks for proposals or completed posts.

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /

Your brand can partner with The New Stack editorial team to build sponsored thought leadership that resonates with our community of cloud native decision-makers.

How We Collaborate With Brands

We offer brands the opportunity to share their expertise with our audience through our Content Platform Package. We start by learning about your campaign goals, target audience, and subject matter experts. Our team will offer insights and suggestions for how to deploy a strong content strategy that will resonate with readers. When you submit articles, our dedicated editors, fact-check, apply optimizations and ensure your voice shines while meeting our standards for clarity and technical accuracy. Once the article is published, we distribute and promote the content across our channels for maximum visibility.

THE NEW STACK'S CONTENT PLATFORM — BUILT ON AUDIENCE TRUST
Our sponsors have the opportunity to contribute unlimited articles and consult with our expert team in personalized content strategy sessions.
How to contribute

The New Stack welcomes contributions from technologists to share their expertise on topics that matter most. Research has proven that a diverse and inclusive culture is better for business and society, and allows the entire ecosystem to flourish. We actively identify and include diverse voices throughout the platform.