Image Processing in Ruby with GD: Exploring ruby-libgd v0.3.0 March 4, 2026 Image processing is usually associated with languages like Python or C++, but Ruby can also manipulate images efficiently thanks to bindings for native libraries. One of those libraries is libgd, a well-known C library used to dynamically generate and manipulate images such as … Continue reading Image Processing in Ruby with GD: Exploring ruby-libgd v0.3.0
Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5)
Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5) March 3, 2026 Today I implemented support for custom convolution filters in Ruby-LibGD, enabling the application of kernels such as blur, sharpen, and edge detection directly from Ruby. At first glance, this may look like just another image filter. In reality, convolution is … Continue reading Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5)
π The Production-Grade Ruby Microservices Stack (2026)
The Production-Grade Ruby Microservices Stack (2026) March 2, 2026 Microservices donβt fail because of Ruby. They fail because of architecture. Most βmicroservicesβ I see in Ruby are: β’ HTTP chains tightly coupled together β’ Shared databases behind the scenes β’ No tracing β’ No event replay β’ No contract validation Thatβs not distributed architecture. Thatβs … Continue reading π The Production-Grade Ruby Microservices Stack (2026)
π―π΅ Kaigi 2026 Is Approaching β Why the Global Ruby Community Should Pay Close Attention
Kaigi 2026 Is Approaching β Why the Global Ruby Community Should Pay Close Attention March 2, 2026 With April approaching, RubyKaigi 2026 is about to take place in Hakodate, Japan β and for the global Ruby community, this is not just another date on the calendar. It is a moment that often defines the technological … Continue reading π―π΅ Kaigi 2026 Is Approaching β Why the Global Ruby Community Should Pay Close Attention
π Terminal UX in Ruby: Beautiful Tools Without Leaving the Shell
March 1, 2026 The Modern CLI Stack Beyond puts Ruby is often associated with web applications, background jobs, and scripting. But quietly β almost underground β a rich ecosystem has emerged for building modern, interactive, polished terminal applications. Not the old βprint some text and parse ARGVβ style. Weβre talking about tools that feel closer … Continue reading π Terminal UX in Ruby: Beautiful Tools Without Leaving the Shell
π¦ Rust Inside Ruby Core: A New Systems Layer for MRI
February 27, 2026 For nearly three decades, CRuby (MRI) has been overwhelmingly a C codebase. That stability has been both a strength and a constraint. Recently, however, something genuinely new appeared inside the official Ruby repository: Parts of Ruby itself are now written in Rust. This is not theoretical, experimental folklore, or third-party tooling. It … Continue reading π¦ Rust Inside Ruby Core: A New Systems Layer for MRI
π§± Rack Is Still Innovating: The Backbone of Rubyβs Web Stack Keeps Evolving
Rack Is Still Innovating: The Backbone of Rubyβs Web Stack Keeps Evolving February 26, 2026 In recent months, much of the conversation in the Ruby ecosystem has focused on Ruby 4, Rails 8, concurrency, JIT compilers, and runtime capabilities. But while attention was on the language and frameworks, one critical component β present in every … Continue reading π§± Rack Is Still Innovating: The Backbone of Rubyβs Web Stack Keeps Evolving
Ruby 4 & Rails 8: A Multi-Front Acceleration of the Ruby Ecosystem
February 26, 2026 In recent years, Ruby and Ruby on Rails have quietly entered a phase of rapid, multidimensional evolution. Rather than a single disruptive change, what we are witnessing is a coordinated advance across the runtime, the framework, infrastructure tooling, and application capabilities. This shift has been especially visible in talks from RubyKaigi 2024β2026 … Continue reading Ruby 4 & Rails 8: A Multi-Front Acceleration of the Ruby Ecosystem
π§© Ruby 4βs Quiet Improvements: Small Changes That Matter in Real Code
When Ruby 4 was announced, most discussions focused on experimental features like Ractors, new JIT work, or isolation mechanisms. However, beneath the headline features lies a set of quieter improvements β refinements to the core language and standard library that directly affect everyday development. These changes may not generate conference talks, but they improve performance, … Continue reading π§© Ruby 4βs Quiet Improvements: Small Changes That Matter in Real Code
π§΅ Ruby 4 Concurrency Gets Real: Understanding Ractor::Port in Practice
Ruby has long balanced developer happiness with safety, but parallel performance has historically been constrained by the Global VM Lock (GVL). Ractors β introduced in Ruby 3 β were the first serious attempt to bring true multicore parallelism to MRI without sacrificing thread safety. With Ruby 4, the introduction of Ractor::Port significantly improves how Ractors … Continue reading π§΅ Ruby 4 Concurrency Gets Real: Understanding Ractor::Port in Practice









