About the Docker Files Included with a New Vapor Project
In the Vapor talk I gave at visionOS Study Group #7, I mentioned that when you generate a project, docker-compose.yml and Dockerfile come with it. This is a follow-up on that topic.
In the Vapor talk I gave at visionOS Study Group #7, I mentioned that when you generate a project, docker-compose.yml and Dockerfile come with it. This is a follow-up on that topic.

At 7 p.m. on October 23, the seventh visionOS Study Group was held at Apple Japan in Roppongi. In the past, it had been held in a room at a rental space, but since the previous time it had started scaling up by using meeting rooms at large companies, which I thought was impressive. This time the venue was Apple Japan, so the number of participants increased, and the event centered on lightning talks. Incidentally, the image shows me rehearsing with Vision Pro.
I had been installing and playing with Vapor on a ThinkPad, but since I bought a MacBook Air, I tried installing it there as well.
I bought a MacBook Air M3, so I decided to run benchmarks while I was at it. The comparison target is my Mac mini M2, which I bought at the beginning of the year.

I had done Vision Pro development outside several times, and since my only Apple silicon Mac was a Mac mini, I had been carrying it around together with an external monitor. That activity has finally come to an end.