NYT’s The Mini crossword answers for July 28


The Mini is a bite-sized version of The New York Times‘ revered daily crossword. While the crossword is a lengthier experience that requires both knowledge and patience to complete, The Mini is an entirely different vibe.

With only a handful of clues to answer, the daily puzzle doubles as a speed-running test for many who play it.

So, when a tricky clue disrupts a player’s flow, it can be frustrating! If you find yourself stumped playing The Mini — much like with Wordle and Connections — we have you covered.

Mashable Top Stories

Here are the clues and answers to NYT’s The Mini for Sunday, July 28, 2024:

Across

Sunscreen bottle abbr.

With 5-Across, summer get-together at which bathing suits are worn

See 4-Across

Runs on television

Towel (off)

Down

“My bad”

Coffeemaker’s vessels

Travel Southwest, say

Flip-flops come in this

Lengthen unnecessarily, as an essay

Are you also playing NYT Strands? See hints and answers for today’s Strands.



Wordle today: Answer and hint #1135 for July 28


Feel free to give the answer to today’s Wordle a click if you need to turn Sunday’s game around in a flash, or take a look at our clue for the July 28 (1135) puzzle if you’d like to try that out first and have a few guesses to spare. Whatever makes Wordle fun for you, we’ve got something here to help you make the most of it.

Oh, that was so nearly a lightning fast win in two. If only I’d had some sort of amazing clue to help guide the way, or maybe even the chance to sneakily peek at today’s Wordle answer, I could’ve avoided being one letter off an incredible win. Go on—treat yourself.

Wordle today: A hint

(Image credit: Josh Wardle)

Wordle today: A hint for Sunday, July 28

Robert Downey Jr. Returns To The MCU In Avengers: Doomsday, But Not How You Think



Robert Downey Jr. is returning to the MCU, but Iron Man isn’t. Instead, he’ll be taking a new name and wearing a new mask–that of Victor von Doom, one of Marvel’s greatest villains. RDJ kicked off the MCU and introduced superheroes to Earth-616 in 2008’s Iron Man and ended his run as Tony Stark in 2018’s Avengers Endgame. This could be the MCU’s coolest moment–or its silliest.

Downey revealed his new role on the Hall H stage, coming out in a Dr. Doom mask and tearing it off to reveal his face to a surprised audience. His comment was simple: “New mask, same task.”

As part of Marvel Studios’ San Diego Comic-Con 2024 panel, the studio announced that directing team Joe and Anthony Russo will return to direct a pair of new Avengers films, with Avengers: Doomsday coming in 2026 and Avengers: Secret Wars following a year after. Victor von Doom will act as the primary antagonist for this pair of movies.

Downey had said in recent interviews that he would return to the MCU “happily.” “It’s too integral a part of my DNA,” Downey said. “That role chose me. And look, I always say, never, ever bet against Kevin Feige. It is a losing bet. He’s the house. He will always win.”

Victor von Doom is the long-time enemy of Marvel’s founding family, the Fantastic Four, so the character’s introduction now, just after the upcoming Fantastic Four: The First Steps, makes sense.

Details aside from the titles and directors are light; we’re very excited and very curious to see how Marvel Studios makes Robert Downey Jr.’s return–as a brand-new character, no less–make sense.

Fantastic Four: The First Steps hits theaters in one year on July 25, 2025. Avengers: Doomsday comes a year later in May 2026, followed by Avengers: Secret Wars in May 2027.

How Does Electricity Work, and When Was It Invented? A Basic Primer


Electricity means the presence or motion of electrical charge. When the charge is moving from its source (origin) to sink (destination), it’s called electrical current. Electrical charge that simply dwells on an object is referred to as static electricity.

How Electricity Works

We will explain electricity by drawing an analogy to water in a pipe.

Charge is like the drops of water inside the pipe; it describes a quantity of energy. Charge is proportional to electrical energy and can be positive or negative. The most familiar charged particles are protons and electrons. Protons have a positive electrical charge (+), and electrons have a negative charge (-). Batteries and capacitors can both store electrical charge. It’s measured in coulombs, named for Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, and its SI unit is abbreviated as Q.

Current is the motion of electrical charge from higher voltage to lower voltage. Completing or closing a circuit creates an electrical connection that allows current to flow. Magnetic fields can cause or induce electrical current to flow in nearby wires. Electrical power is the amount of electrical energy transferred from source to sink per unit time. A common unit of electrical power is the watt, abbreviated W. Electrical current is measured in amperes, named for André-Marie Ampère, and the SI unit for electrical current is I (from the French intensité du courant).

Resistance opposes the motion of electrical charge. Materials with high intrinsic resistance that don’t like to conduct electrical charge are called insulators. High resistance works against the conduction of electrical charge like a valve or choke works against the motion of water through a pipe. The SI unit for resistance is the ohm, named for Georg Ohm and abbreviated with the Greek letter Ω (uppercase omega).

Voltage, sometimes referred to as electrical pressure, is the electrical potential energy embodied in electricity. Electrons flow spontaneously from higher voltage to lower voltage, like water always flows downhill. The SI unit for voltage is the volt, named for Alessandro Volta and abbreviated V.

When electricity seeks a path to lower voltage, as with a bolt of lightning, it is sometimes known as seeking a path to ground. Houses and buildings are built with an electrical connection to the earth, meant to harmlessly dissipate the energy of a lightning strike or power surge. Air is an insulator. However, under high enough pressure, water will force itself through solid rock. Fluids can be compressed, it just takes a titanic amount of energy to force the molecules of a liquid closer together. Similarly, enough electrical pressure will force electrical charge to seek a path to ground through things that are normally not conductive, such as air, fresh water, church steeples, or even the human body. This is why high-voltage power lines are dangerous, requiring special insulators to prevent the electricity in the wires from grounding itself out by traveling down the tower into the earth.

Capacitor and inductive coil on a circuit board

Capacitor (center) and inductive coil (right) on a circuit board.
Credit: Harrison Broadbent/Unsplash

When Was Electricity Invented?

Our words for electricity and electrical energy derive directly from ἤλεκτρον (elektron), the Greek word for “amber.” Thales of Miletus, one of the Seven Sages of ancient Greece, recorded observations on the electrical properties of amber in ca. 600 BCE, some six hundred years before the birth of Christ. Rubbed against hair or animal fur, amber acquires a static electrical charge that attracts dust particles. (This is called the triboelectric effect, and it’s the reason electrostatic dust filters work. It’s also the reason flour sometimes jumps up onto the wall of a mixing bowl, in apparent defiance of gravity.) If you touch the amber, the electrical charge that has built up in the amber suddenly has a path to a lower-energy state, and in equalizing it delivers that energy to your fingertip in the form of a tiny electrical shock.

The philosopher Democritus suggested that all the matter in the universe, however complex, was ultimately composed of tiny, irreducible particles he called atomos. (“A-” denotes the absence or opposite of a thing, while the Greek suffix τόμος or -tómos has the same root word as an –otomy medical procedure in which something is cut.) This school of thought saw atoms as solid objects that interacted with other atoms via mechanical connections, such as a ball and socket or a hook and eye. More than two thousand years after Thales and Democritus, English scientist William Gilbert coined the term electricus in his own work, referring to the triboelectric effect.

A carbon atom, with subatomic particles labeled

I am the modern model of a carbon atom’s nucleus…
Credit: US Department of Energy

Atoms and electrons are discrete and quantized, and electrical charge is quantized for the same reason. In that sense, Democritus and Stephen Hawking agree on the nature of the atom. What Democritus didn’t know was that electrical energy is entirely enough to hold things together with as much force as a mechanical linkage; the electromagnetic force is second in strength only to the strong nuclear force. The electrostatic repulsion between two electrons is 10⁴² times as strong as their mutual gravitational attraction.

Humans were aware of electrical energy for thousands of years before anyone understood what electrons or electricity are, which we know because they wrote about electric fish. For example, the electric catfish of the Nile, when full-grown and mature, is capable of delivering a painful 350-volt shock to an assailant or prospective prey: enough to stun an adult human. Ancient Egyptian papyri discuss electric fishes of the Nile basin, such as the electric catfish and the aba aba or African knifefish, calling them “Thunderers of the Nile” and revering them as protectors of all other fish.  

Electric catfish appeared in Egyptian murals ca. 3100 BCE, around the time of Narmer, a predynastic Egyptian ruler and attested founder of the First Dynasty. Narmer’s very name may refer to the electric catfish. However, some sources give a wholly different use for the electric catfish’s powers. Doctors of the day are reputed to have used smaller, immature fish—only capable of using a small fraction of their full electrical potential—to treat arthritis and gout, like a kind of living TENS unit.

The same electric fish that caught our attention so long ago catapulted electricity back into the public eye in 1775, with two scientific papers on the shocks delivered by the electric eel, as well as the anatomy and physiology of its electric organs. Shortly thereafter, physicist Luigi Galvani literally and figuratively galvanized the field when he demonstrated, with his experiments on frogs’ legs, that neurons carry electrical impulses that control muscles.

Charles-Augustin de Coulomb discovered, in his experiments with friction, that like charges repel while unlike charges attract. Rubbing two lightweight glass or metal balls with charged amber, de Coulomb demonstrated, made the balls move away from one another, just as rubbing them with a charged glass rod caused them to repel one another—but rubbing one with amber and the other with glass caused the balls to attract one another. 

Mathematics also contributed much to what we understand about electricity. Carl Friedrich Gauss was a student of mathematician Leonhard Euler, who popularized the concept of pi. Euler’s sense of cycles informed the work Gauss did with electromagnetism, periodicity, and noise: work that would one day underlie the calculation of electrical phases that made alternating current possible. Not long afterward, Georg Ohm published a mathematical analysis of the electrical circuit so precise that one of the major laws of electricity now bears his name.

Fifty years of revelations like these touched off a century of explosively rapid research and development in electrical engineering. In 1820, Hans Christian Ørsted published his discovery that a compass needle could be deflected away from magnetic north just by holding an electrified wire near it—without touching the compass at all. Within two years, Michael Faraday made history with the invention of the electric motor. Soon, entrepreneurs like Edison, Brush, Ferraris, von Siemens, Tesla, and Westinghouse were making headlines. 

An electric motor, with stator visible and inductive coils of copper wire arranged in a circle.

An assembly much like this stator lies at the heart of every electric motor.
Credit: Mika Baumeister – Unsplash

By the turn of the twentieth century, the race to bring electricity into the home was well underway. But what form would it take? The desire to see their own vision for electrification take hold spurred a three-way industrial knock-down-drag-out between Edison, Westinghouse, and the Thomson-Houston Electric company, a saga we now refer to as the war of the currents. 

War of the Currents

The broad strokes go like this: Edison had invented a low-voltage direct current (DC) electrical system that worked very well in dense commercial and residential areas. However, DC has very limited range and high line losses, so using it for long-distance power transmission was impractical. Nikola Tesla, who started out working for Edison, favored alternating current (AC) because of smaller line losses. AC required higher voltages and more insulation, but Tesla believed that the ease of converting AC between higher and lower voltages made it ultimately the superior technology. 

Edison didn’t see things that way. He may or may not have sincerely believed that AC power was more dangerous than his own low-voltage DC, but he saw the threat it posed to his business interests in the crowded DC space. But Tesla’s AC patents had caught the attention of George Westinghouse, an inventor and railroad baron who sought an inexpensive way to power the far-flung switches and signals that coordinated his company’s trains. Westinghouse licensed Tesla’s patents for $2.50 per AC horsepower, soon introducing high-voltage AC systems for residential and business use thanks to the invention of a far more efficient step-down transformer.

High voltage power lines in front of a sunset sky

High-voltage power lines like these can carry AC electricity over long distances.
Credit: Matthew Henry – Unsplash

In response, the Edison Electric Light Company distributed an 80+ page pamphlet of propaganda warning customers that both Westinghouse and Thomson-Houston (another competitor building AC and DC systems) were in violation of relevant patents and likely putting their customers and the general public at risk if they dared to install electrical systems built by either company.

Getting ‘Westinghoused’

The danger of alternating current wasn’t something Edison dreamed up just to slander his competitors. AC lines carrying as much as 6,000 volts stretched across New York City. Many of these lines weren’t built to the safety standards of the 1890s, a time when “safety standards” cheerfully allowed companies to sell heroin in children’s cough syrups. Downed AC power lines and repair mistakes had killed people, felling their victims by instantly stopping their hearts, and the public was primed to think of AC power as more dangerous than DC. 

And thus, we arrive at the electric chair.

Just before the turn of the century, scientists were looking for a more humane and reliable way to kill prisoners. New York settled on the idea of using electricity after a string of botched hangings. Still, the scientists on the recommendation committee had a problem: They didn’t know how many volts they needed to use to kill a person, and they weren’t sure what type of current would do the job most effectively. Edison wanted nothing to do with the matter but seized the opportunity to paint AC as dangerous. Initially, the first execution by electricity was to be carried out using Thomson-Houston generators. The company got wind of this and brought three Westinghouse generators. These were installed instead. Westinghouse appears to have paid for a lawyer for the defendant in question, William Kemmler, in the hopes that the court would find the electric chair to be cruel and unusual punishment.

Spoiler: The Court did not so find. Kemmler was executed, the execution was a botched horror show, and the term “Westinghoused” was briefly put forward to describe what we now call “electrocution.”

How did it all end? In the most anticlimactic way you can think of. Edison left his company, and his anti-AC attitude went with him. Four years after Westinghouse poached Tesla, the Edison Electric Light Company merged with Thomson-Houston to form General Electric. The Edison Illuminating Company would be purchased by Consolidated Gas in 1901 before changing its name to Consolidated Edison, or ConEd. After a few intense years of public spectacle and tit-for-tat patent trolling, the war was over. AC had won.

10 Companies Hiring For Remote QA/Testing Roles


As companies continue to embrace remote work, the opportunities for skilled QA testers to work from anywhere in the world are expanding rapidly. Whether you’re an experienced QA engineer or just starting your career in software testing, the remote job market offers a wealth of opportunities to grow and thrive in your profession.

In this blog, we will explore ten leading companies that are currently hiring for remote QA/testing roles. These organizations not only provide the flexibility to work from home but also offer competitive salaries, robust benefits, and the chance to be part of innovative projects.

If you’re looking to take your QA career to the next level while enjoying the perks of remote work, read on to discover the top companies that could be your next employer.

10 Companies Hiring For Remote QA/Testing Roles

1. FullStack Labs

FullStack Labs is a software development consultancy that specializes in building web and mobile applications. They offer remote positions for QA professionals to help ensure the quality of their diverse projects.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • QA Engineer
  • QA Automation Engineer
  • Manual Tester

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

2. Veeva

Veeva Systems is a cloud-computing company focused on pharmaceutical and life sciences industry applications. They hire remote QA professionals to ensure the quality and compliance of their software solutions.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Test Automation Engineer
  • Performance Tester
  • QA Analyst

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

3. Social Discovery Group

Social Discovery Group is a technology company that creates and manages social discovery platforms. They offer remote QA positions to help ensure the quality and performance of their applications.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Functional Tester
  • QA Analyst
  • Test Lead

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

4. ClickHouse

ClickHouse is an open-source columnar database management system for online analytical processing (OLAP). They hire remote QA professionals to ensure the reliability and performance of their database solutions.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • QA Engineer
  • Test Automation Engineer
  • Software Tester

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

5. Creative Chaos

Creative Chaos is a software development company that provides digital transformation services to businesses. They offer remote QA roles to help maintain the quality of their software projects.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Manual Tester
  • Performance Tester
  • QA Analyst

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

6. Token Metrics

Token Metrics is a cryptocurrency investment research platform that provides data-driven insights and analysis. They hire remote QA professionals to ensure the accuracy and functionality of their platform.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Test Engineer
  • Software Tester
  • QA Analyst

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

7. SurveyMonkey

SurveyMonkey is an online survey development cloud-based software as a service company. They offer remote QA positions to help maintain the quality and reliability of their survey tools.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • QA Automation Engineer
  • QA Analyst
  • Manual Tester

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

8. LastPass

LastPass is a password management service that provides secure password storage and autofill functionality. They hire remote QA professionals to maintain the security and reliability of their software.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Security Tester
  • Performance Tester
  • QA Analyst

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

9. Payable

Payable is a financial technology company that offers payment solutions for businesses. They hire remote QA professionals to ensure the accuracy and functionality of their payment systems.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Test Engineer
  • Software Tester
  • QA Analyst

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

10. Circle

Circle is a global financial technology firm that provides internet-based payments and financial infrastructure. They offer remote QA roles to help maintain the quality and security of their products.

Common Remote QA/Testing Roles:

  • Performance Tester
  • QA Analyst
  • Software Tester

Find more remote qa/testing jobs here!

Find Work-From-Home QA/Testing Jobs with DailyRemote

If you’re interested in remote qa jobs with flexible hours and are searching for high-paying remote jobs  from a trustworthy source, sign up for DailyRemote.

DailyRemote is home to thousands of employers looking to hire remote workers, and the best part some of the highest-paying remote jobs are also here. Search and apply for remote, work from home and hybrid jobs that interest you. If you get any responses, follow up with them on the spot. Always be connected to relevant remote jobs.

If you’re interested in looking for remote work, there’s no better place to start than DailyRemote. So, what are you waiting for? Get started today. Working remotely is the need of the hour. And now that you know how to find the remote job of your dreams, start applying today. Join like-minded people in our



Donald Trump Backs ‘Strategic Bitcoin Stockpile’ in Speech to Crypto Faithful


Former president Donald Trump outlined a plan to turbocharge crypto growth and make the US a crypto mining powerhouse in his keynote address to the 2024 Nashville Bitcoin Conference on Saturday.

Trump announced that if elected, he would create a strategic bitcoin reserve in the US. “It will be the policy of my administration to keep 100 percent of all bitcoin the US government currently holds or acquires in the future … as a core of the strategic national bitcoin stockpile,” he said.

Right now, the US government owns more than 210,000 bitcoins that were seized via illegal operations like the online dark market Silk Road and the ponzi scheme BitConnect. It’s worth approximately $14 billion at time of writing.

This move confirmed rumors spread by bitcoin enthusiasts who are hopeful that endorsement of a reserve from Trump could bolster the price of the cryptocurrency.

Trump also announced plans to appoint a bitcoin and crypto advisory council, whose task would be to “design transparent regulatory guidance to the benefit of your industry” in the first 100 days of his next presidency. He said he wanted the US to become the “crypto capital of the world.”

Trump also pledged to create a framework for ensuring the safe expansion of stablecoins, “allowing us to extend the dominance of the USD to other places around the world,” and doubled down on his vow to scrap any effort to create a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) or digital dollar, saying “there will never be a CBDC while I’m president of the United States.”

“I will always defend the right to self-custody,” he told the exultant crowd. What got perhaps the biggest cheer was a day one promise to fire Securities and Exchange Commission chair Gary Gensler.

“The moment I am sworn in, the persecution stops and the weaponization against your industry ends,” he said, name-checking Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts as the industry’s sworn enemy.

He promised to make regulations friendly to crypto mining operations in the US, so workers wouldn’t have to “move to China.” Trump promised, again, to free Ross Ulbricht, imprisoned for life for his involvement with online underground market Silk Road, where people could buy items like illegal drugs before it was shut down in 2013.

The crowd expected the bitcoin strategic reserve announcement. On July 22, Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming posted “Big things … in store this week” on X, two days before Fox Business reported she would “announce legislation for a strategic bitcoin reserve” at the conference.

Lummis appeared before the crowd just after Trump walked off to announce a “present to President Donald Trump”: the bitcoin reserve bill she’d been drafting.

“This is our Louisiana Purchase moment,” she said, elaborating that the bill would take “the bitcoin President Trump just mentioned and pull it into the reserve—[and] that’s only the beginning.”

“Over five years, the United States will assemble 1 million bitcoin,” she added, “Five percent of the world’s bitcoin, and it will be held for a minimum of 20 years and can be used for one purpose—reduce our debt.”

Marvel shows footage from Thunderbolts*, the MCU Suicide Squad, at SDCC


When Marvel Studios first announced Thunderbolts* at 2022’s San Diego Comic-Con as part of its ambitious lineup for Phase 5 and 6 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe franchise, the movie didn’t yet have that odd asterisk in the title. It didn’t come with many details, either, apart from a July 26, 2024 release date that shifted along with many other MCU projects in the wake of the 2023 WGA strike.

In the wake of the Thunderbolts* segment of 2024’s San Diego Comic-Con, we don’t know much more! The asterisk is still a mystery: Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige said at a CinemaCon appearance, “we won’t talk more about that until after the movie comes out,” and confirmed it again at Comic-Con.

But as the core cast of Thunderbolts* took the stage, the Hall H audience was treated to a teaser in which all their characters came under fire from a mysterious foe who, according to Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova, wants them all dead.

Traditionally in Marvel Comics, the Thunderbolts are a team-up of second-string villains or anti-heroes, though their membership and motives vary significantly depending which iteration you’re talking about. The MCU team is built of not-exactly-always-good characters introduced in previous films in the franchise: Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen, of Ant-Man and the Wasp), Red Guardian (David Harbour, Black Widow), the Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan, the Captain America movies), U.S. Agent, aka John Walker (Wyatt Russell, Falcon and the Winter Soldier), and Taskmaster (Olga Kurylenko, Black Widow). Pugh’s Yelena, from Black Widow and Hawkeye, leads the team, with slimy mastermind Valentina Allegra de Fontaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Falcon and the Winter Soldier) behind the scenes.

Who might want all those folks dead? What might those folks do to stay alive? And what the heck is that asterisk about after all? We’ll have to wait for the theatrical debut of Thunderbolts* on May 2, 2025, as the final movie in the MCU’s Phase 5.

You can find all Polygon’s coverage of SDCC 2024 news, trailers, and more here.

visual studio – How to automatically publish NuGet packages to a local feed on build?


After digging through a lot of documentation, I believe I finally arrived at a convenient and reusable solution. So, here it is:

Set up a local NuGet feed

If you already have a local feed, you may skip this section.

  1. Create the local NuGet feed directory, where your private packages will be stored. In my case, I created a directory called LocalNugetFeed inside my user profile directory.

  2. Add the directory as a NuGet source. You can do this in Visual Studio settings, or you can edit the file “AppData\Roaming\NuGet\NuGet.Config” and add your directory as a package source. In my case, I added <add key="local" value="%UserProfile%\LocalNugetFeed" /> inside the <packageSources> element. I used “local” as the name of the source, but you can use any name you wish. This name will be used later, to configure the build process.

Set up a scoped build process

This will allow you to automate the publishing of NuGet packages to your local feed at the scope of a directory and all solutions and projects inside it. For convenience, it will still be an opt-in, on a per-project basis, though.

  1. In the directory where your Visual Studio solutions and projects are stored (for example, “%UserProfile%\repos”), create a file called Directory.Build.props and add the following content to it:
<Project>

    <PropertyGroup>
        <PackagePublishLocalSource>local</PackagePublishLocalSource>
        <PushPackageToLocalSource>false</PushPackageToLocalSource>
    </PropertyGroup>

</Project>

The previous file provides default settings for your projects. PackagePublishLocalSource specifies your local NuGet feed, and you can use the source name or a directory path. PushPackageToLocalSource specifies whether the NuGet package of a project should be published to the feed when the project is built.

  1. In the same directory where you created the Directory.Build.props file, also create a file called Directory.Build.targets and add the following content to it:
<Project>

    <Target Name="PublishPackageToLocalSource" AfterTargets="Pack" 
        Condition="'$(PushPackageToLocalSource)' == true And '$(PackagePublishLocalSource)' != '' And '$(IsPackable)' == true And '$(Configuration)' == 'Release'">
        <Exec Command="dotnet nuget push &quot;$(PackageOutputPath)$(PackageId).$(PackageVersion).nupkg&quot; --source &quot;$(PackagePublishLocalSource)&quot; --skip-duplicate"
            WorkingDirectory="$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)"
            StdOutEncoding="utf-8" />
    </Target>

</Project>

The previous file adds a target to MSBuild, which pushes your NuGet package to your local NuGet feed whenever a package is packed.

The two files you just created will be automatically imported by MSBuild on any projects located in any of the subdirectories of the directory these files are located.

Enable automatic publishing for each of your projects

Now, to have your NuGet packages automatically published to your local NuGet feed, you just need to set PushPackageToLocalSource to true on the project file of the projects you want. Like on this example project file:

<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">

    <PropertyGroup>
        <TargetFramework>net8.0</TargetFramework>
        <ImplicitUsings>enable</ImplicitUsings>
        <Nullable>enable</Nullable>
        <Version>1.1.0</Version>
        <PushPackageToLocalSource>true</PushPackageToLocalSource>
    </PropertyGroup>

</Project>

Now, on these projects, you just need to build your project in release mode, or right-click on the project in Solution Explorer and select “Pack “.

Some considerations

Note that, NuGet packages will only be pushed to your local feed if you build or pack your project in release mode, and if the package version differs. If there is already a package with the same ID and version in your local feed, you will see a message in Visual Studio’s output console stating that.

7 wichtige ITSM-Kennzahlen


Freshworks

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7 wichtige ITSM-Kennzahlen

Von Automatisierung bis KI: Wir haben untersucht, was führende IT-Unternehmen richtig machen und wie Sie Ihre Leistung am besten messen können.

*Der Bericht ist in englischer Sprache verfügbar.

7 KPIs of world-class ITSM

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Was braucht ein gutes Servicemanagement?

Im Freshservice Benchmark-Bericht IT-Servicemanagement 2024 werden wichtige Branchentrends vorgestellt, die Sie in Sachen Effizienz und Effektivität kennen sollten. Hier eine Auswahl:

  • Generative KI und ITSM
  • Automatische Abläufe zur operativen Optimierung
  • Die besten Betreuungskanäle

Wie gut schneiden Sie ab?

Was braucht ein gutes Servicemanagement?

NEUE EINBLICKE

Die wichtigsten Ergebnisse von über 9.000 Firmen aus 14 Branchen und über 100 Ländern

26,63 %

kürzere durchschnittliche Bearbeitungsdauer dank Automatisierung

53 %

aller Anfragen werden durch KI und SB beantwortet

45 %

schnellere Bearbeitung dank reibungsloser Zusammenarbeit

45 %

schnellere Bearbeitung dank reibungsloser Zusammenarbeit

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schnellere Antworten dank KI-Assistenten

Der Goldstandard für eine erfolgreiche IT

„Das Mitarbeitererlebnis bleibt einer der wichtigsten Schwerpunkte in der IT. Die Einführung von generativer KI, SB-Angeboten und hilfreichen Assistenten eröffnet ungeahnte Möglichkeiten für die Arbeit mit ITSM-Programmen und ist der neue Standard in Sachen operativer IT-Exzellenz.“

Prasad Ramakrishnan, CIO bei Freshworks

BERICHT ANFORDERN

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The post 7 wichtige ITSM-Kennzahlen appeared first on Tech Research Online.

How Can AI Transform Your Organization?


It’s not a case of much ado about nothing – artificial intelligence (AI), for better or worse, is about to become a central part of business operations. Much like how computers and the internet changed business, AI has the ability to create efficiencies in areas that have long been anything but.

If it’s utilized correctly, that is.

Despite plenty of articles and predictions that AI will replace the need for workers, the reality is that when AI replaces humans, things go amiss quickly. An example: automated customer service lines, while often thought to be efficient ways to route customer calls, oftentimes end up frustrating customers. If customers are hesitant to do business with an organization because of the inability to get an answer, that’s bad for business.

Organizational leaders, do not rely on AI to replace your workers. The insurance industry still needs talented individuals at the helm of the ship. Those individuals give both a face and a voice to your organization. They are the people who help keep your customers satisfied and connected to your business. AI cannot replace the critical need for human interaction.

Instead, we recommend you use AI to make their jobs easier. That means looking into areas of your business where employees are swamped with work or in areas where efficiencies have been sorely needed.

Here are a few ways to make the most of AI in your organization:

Rethink the repetitive. Imagine streamlining your claims processing functions. AI can help speed the response time, the accuracy, and customer satisfaction. When the claim is handled quickly and more accurately, your customers are going to be happier. So are your claims team, who now have time to deal with more customer-facing tasks.

Improve underwriting. AI can gather and analyze customer information and help your underwriting team come to more precise determinations. AI gives underwriters the ability to make decisions quickly.

Streamline predictive modeling. If your data is better, your decisions can improve. AI can help your team see more clearly into customer data and see loss patterns over time. That can help determine a more accurate price.

Offer time- and money-saving suggestions. When used properly, AI can analyze your current processes and make suggestions on improving them. That includes everything from hiring to accounting to training. AI has the potential to improve every aspect of your organization’s operations.

Hire better candidates. Put AI to work on your hiring process and watch the quality of your candidate searches improve. AI can improve your job postings, quickly screen applicants and select the best-fit candidates, give deeper insights into each candidate, and remove any unconscious bias you may have.

As AI begins to infiltrate the insurance industry, smart organizations will analyze now how to best incorporate its use in their organizations. Review your operations. Talk with your workers. Find out what areas of your business are in need of improvement. From there, you can build a smarter, more responsive work model that improves hiring, operational accuracy, and above all, customer satisfaction.