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 2024–2026 … Continue reading Ruby 4 & Rails 8: A Multi-Front Acceleration of the Ruby Ecosystem

🧩 Ruby 4’s 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 🧩 Ruby 4’s Quiet Improvements: Small Changes That Matter in Real Code

🧡 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 🧡 Ruby 4 Concurrency Gets Real: Understanding Ractor::Port in Practice

🧠 Pluggable Garbage Collectors in Ruby: Exploring the New Modular GC API

February 23, 2026 Ruby has traditionally shipped with a single, built-in garbage collector tightly coupled to the VM. With Ruby 3.4, that assumption begins to change. Feature #20470 introduces an experimental Modular Garbage Collector API, allowing CRuby to load alternative GC implementations at runtime. This marks one of the most significant architectural shifts in Ruby’s … Continue reading 🧠 Pluggable Garbage Collectors in Ruby: Exploring the New Modular GC API

Neither Too Much nor Too Little: A β€œTouch Base” on the Current State of AI

Neither Too Much nor Too Little: A β€œTouch Base” on the Current State of AI February 23, 2026 Motivated by the many comments β€” some fearful, others excessively enthusiastic β€” about artificial intelligence, I set out to β€œtouch base”: to ground the discussion with a personal perspective on this tool which, no matter how useful … Continue reading Neither Too Much nor Too Little: A β€œTouch Base” on the Current State of AI

πŸ§ͺ Ruby in the Browser? Exploring Rubox and the Future of Ruby WASM

February 22, 2026 A fully client-side Ruby playground powered by WebAssembly β€” promising, experimental, and not quite ready for prime time Running Ruby directly inside the browser has long been a dream for educators, tooling developers, and the Ruby core community. Thanks to WebAssembly (WASM), that vision is no longer theoretical. Rubox, a browser-based Ruby … Continue reading πŸ§ͺ Ruby in the Browser? Exploring Rubox and the Future of Ruby WASM

🌍 Rendering Maps by Name: Symbolic Geographic Extents in Ruby

Working with maps usually means working with numbers β€” lots of numbers. If you want to render a map of a country, region, or continent, you normally need to know its exact bounding box: bbox = [-73.6, -55.1, -53.6, -21.7] # Argentina Not exactly readable. Not memorable. Not friendly. What if you could just say: … Continue reading 🌍 Rendering Maps by Name: Symbolic Geographic Extents in Ruby

🧠 RubyKaigi 2024: A Deep Technical Shift in Ruby’s Standard Library (With Real Examples)

February 20, 2026 RubyKaigi 2024 β€” Historical ContextAlthough this presentation discusses Ruby 3.4–3.5 and the ecosystem has already moved forward to Ruby 4 by 2026, the strategic shift it describes β€” reducing the traditional standard library and externalizing functionality as gems β€” represents a fundamental change in Ruby’s philosophy rather than a version-specific roadmap.Understanding this … Continue reading 🧠 RubyKaigi 2024: A Deep Technical Shift in Ruby’s Standard Library (With Real Examples)

What Rails Actually Wants: Tidying Controllers and Views Without Service Object Explosion

February 20, 2026 Lessons from RailsTokyo 2026 on using ActiveRecord as a relational engineβ€”not just an ORM Modern Rails teams often inherit a paradox: controllers must be β€œthin,” views must be β€œdumb,” models must be β€œfat,” and yet production apps accumulate service objects, query objects, presenters, decorators, serializers, policies, and helpers until the architecture resembles … Continue reading What Rails Actually Wants: Tidying Controllers and Views Without Service Object Explosion

Stop Checking admin?: Designing Authorization That Won’t Become Technical Debt (Kaigi on Rails 2025)

February 17, 2026 Modern Rails applications rarely fail because of authentication β€” they fail because of authorization complexity. As products grow, roles multiply, exceptions accumulate, and permission checks scatter across controllers, models, views, and frontend code. What begins as a simple current_user.admin? quickly becomes an unmaintainable web of implicit rules. At Kaigi on Rails 2025, … Continue reading Stop Checking admin?: Designing Authorization That Won’t Become Technical Debt (Kaigi on Rails 2025)