June 06, 2025
Looking for the top developer news this week? You’ve come to the right place. While the industry holds its breath for Apple’s upcoming developer conference, major updates in AI tooling, critical security alerts, and a flood of significant platform releases made for a busy week.
Here’s our comprehensive breakdown of the essential news you need to know.
The biggest story of the week is what’s happening next week. Anticipation is at a fever pitch for Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), which kicks off on Monday, June 9th. Developers are bracing for major operating system updates, including the first look at iOS 19/26 and macOS 16. The central theme is expected to be a massive push into AI, which Apple is reportedly branding “Apple Intelligence.”
One of the most concrete rumours to emerge is a significant update for watchOS 26. For the first time, Apple is expected to allow third-party developers to create and ship their own widgets for a fully customisable Control Centre. This would be a huge shift, opening up the Apple Watch UI to a new level of developer creativity and user personalisation.
Adding context to the WWDC hype, Apple released a report stating its App Store ecosystem facilitated $1.3 trillion in developer billings and sales in 2024, emphasizing the scale of the platform. On the legal front, a US court rejected Apple’s appeal to delay implementing App Store changes mandated by its case with Epic Games, meaning rules around linking to external payment options remain in effect.
It was a sobering week for open-source security, with two alarming incidents on the npm registry. Security researchers uncovered a coordinated attack involving at least 60 malicious packages that were designed to map the internal networks of developers who installed them.
In a separate discovery, a package was found to have been dormant for six years, containing a “time bomb” of malicious code that could wipe a user’s project files upon receiving a remote command. These events are a stark reminder of the persistent threats within public package registries and underscore the critical need for developers to scrutinize dependencies and use security auditing tools. You can read the full report here.
The evolution of AI in development took another leap forward, moving beyond passive assistance towards more active, agent-based workflows.
Postman was a prime example, introducing “Agent Mode“ to its popular API platform, designed to let AI agents take on more complex tasks like automated testing. Similarly, GitLab announced that its v18.0 release for self-hosted instances now includes built-in AI Code Assistance.
This trend extends to more specialized tools, with companies like Factory promoting AI “Droids” for full-lifecycle development and new frameworks like Embabel emerging for advanced AI agent development in Java.
It was a packed week for new versions and platform updates across cloud, gaming, web, and enterprise.
That’s a wrap for the developer news this week! From AI agents becoming a reality to critical security warnings and a packed slate of platform updates, it’s clear that staying informed has never been more important. What news will impact your work the most? Let us know in the comments below!
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