Julien Richard-Foy (Scala Center)
We are happy to announce that the Scala home page has been overhauled to highlight better the use cases of Scala and to clarify what makes the language unique.
Additionally, this website and all the other *.scala-lang.org
websites should now be reachable from VPNs.
Home Page Overhaul
In the last few months, Jamie Thompson, engineer at the Scala Center, has been making several improvements to the Scala home page to put more emphasis on the use cases of Scala. The most notable changes compared to one year ago are:
- less content: we focus on answering the questions “why Scala?” and “what is Scala?”.
- simpler tagline: instead of going through a list of language features we give a more general description: “a programming language that scales with you: from small scripts to large multiplatform applications”.
- executable code examples: because developers like playing with concrete examples, we showcase some strengths of Scala in a carousel of code examples that can be edited and run on Scastie.
- use-case oriented: just after describing the unique combination of features that make the language expressive, scalable, and safe, we provide concrete, proven, use-cases for Scala with plenty of links to go further: server-side, data processing, command-line, and frontend web.
Websites Reachability
All the *.scala-lang.org
websites (such as this website, as well as https://docs3.scala-lang.org or https://users.scala-lang.org) are hosted on EPFL servers. In late 2022, EPFL decided to block the requests coming from some networks because they got too many attacks from them. An unfortunate consequence was that the Scala websites were unreachable from some VPNs. This led the company Lightbend to submit a Scala Center Proposal to ensure the reachability of the Scala websites in June this year.
We are happy to announce that our system administrator has set up a reverse proxy in front of the EPFL server. The reverse proxy now handles the traffic to all the Scala websites, which should solve the reachability issue. In case you are still rejected, please let us know in the corresponding issue.
Support the Scala Center
The improvements described in this blog post were funded by the members of the Scala Center advisory board and by individual donors. We encourage Scala users to help Scala grow by donating or encouraging their employers to join the board.