Tag
WebAssembly
WebAssembly is a compact binary format and runtime target for browsers, edge services, and local plugins, often paired with Rust, WASI, and SIMD. It matters because it brings near-native performance, portable deployment, and sandboxed execution to modern web and systems workflows.
6 articles

Why Triton VM’s WebAssembly move matters more than the announcement s…
Triton VM becoming WebAssembly-compatible is a real step toward browser-native web wallets, not just a portability win.

Why WebAssembly Should Stay a Living Standard
WebAssembly is right to remain a living standard instead of chasing Recommendation status.

Why WebAssembly Is Killing Server-Side Browser Tools
WebAssembly now makes many browser tools faster, safer, and account-free by running work locally.

GCC Gets a New WebAssembly Back-End Proposal
A new RFC patch series proposes a GCC back-end for WebAssembly, reviving a long-dormant effort in the GNU compiler world.

Copilot Studio gets faster with .NET 10 WASM
Microsoft Copilot Studio moved its WebAssembly engine to .NET 10, cutting deployment work and improving runtime speed.

WebAssembly in 2026: Faster Web Apps, Less JavaScript
WebAssembly in 2026 powers faster apps, edge compute, and safer plugins, with SIMD benchmarks and Rust tooling leading the way.