Amber has been evolving furiously since the presentation at ESUG 2011 in Edinburgh less than 3 weeks ago. This is a summary: Language, compiler and runtime - New 100x faster parser built using PEGjs instead of the old parser built using PetitParser. - New much faster ChunkParser implementation in handwritten Amber instead of using PetitParser. - Improved parsing error report with quoted source code plus marker pinpointing parsing error. - Removed PetitParser since it is no longer needed by Amber itself. - Added compiler optimizations in the form of speculative inlining of specific messages and control structures. - Added support for dynamic Arrays, just like in Squeak/Pharo. - Added support for similar dynamic Dictionaries, not seen in other Smalltalks. - Added & and | as allowed binary selectors and implemented them in Boolean. - Added a Set implementation. - Added first basic support for real Packages with dependency information. ...and various extensions, enhancements and bug fixes to the library classes. Development environment - A working Debugger with integrated inspector, proceed etc. - A new structure with - A working amberc command line compiler including a Makefile for recompiling the whole Amber. - Enabled TestRunner in the IDE for running unit tests based on SUnit. - Added "File in" button in Workspace to easily paste and filein source code in chunk format in the IDE. Example code and ports - Ported ProfStef interactive tutorial, available on Amber homepage but also in examples directory. - Included the ESUG presentation as an example also in the examples directory. - Several new examples running on Node.js and webOS included, all with Makefiles. Various other things - Issue tracker on github now used as primary source, closed a bunch of reported issues. - Wiki pages on github with information on how to port code from other Smalltalks, lists of articles, tutorials, roadmap and more.