"We do not set specific deadlines for the release and we envisage that the preview (closed and then public) will run for the bigger part of 2022." Remote development with IntelliJ Invitation-only preview starts today, though anyone can apply, and "we will be inviting more and more early adopters gradually based on the feedback we receive and our ability to process it," we were told. JetBrains has also introduced remote development, not only for Fleet, but for IntelliJ-based IDEs as well. "You can host your source code, toolchain, and IDE backend on a remote server, and use a local thin client based on the IntelliJ Platform to write, navigate, refactor, run, debug, and test your project. The experience is like working with a locally hosted project and a locally installed JetBrains IDE," said the post today. There are several components, including a back-end service, a local thin client, and a connecting application or plug-in called Gateway. There are also links to Space, the JetBrains collaboration tool. "Space now provides the ability to create a dev environment for any repository in a project," the company said. The Register spoke to Kirill Skrygan, programming lead for remote development as well as Code With Me, which enables multi-user programming. Why is the company introducing this feature? "It's been on the table quite a while. We were constantly thinking about how to make a so-called 'Cloud IDE'," he said. file system interaction is far faster than Windows or Mac OS, two to three times faster It seems obvious that the IDE should be also running in the cloud and accessible as an internet service." "Currently everybody uses AWS services, Azure services, infrastructure as a service, everything is in Docker, everything is in Kubernetes clusters. "The industry is moving towards it in lots of aspects," said Skrygan. "First is security, enterprise organisations don't want their developers to have the source code on laptops. Second is performance, so we are not limited to the local performance of a laptop. What is also quite important is that Linux, in terms of file system interaction is far faster than Windows or Mac OS, two to three times faster. The third thing is accessibility and sharing. Before, we have Git and another person has to pull all the sources, check out the branch. Then it will turn out people lack some dependencies on their laptop. Here there is no such problem." He also noted that for those working sometimes in the office, and sometimes remotely, having one development server simplifies resuming work.
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