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Meet Mistral 7B, Mistral’s first LLM that beats Llama 2

Dataconomy

In this article, we’ll delve into the world of Mistral 7B, exploring its features, achievements, and potential applications. This versatility opens doors to a wide range of enterprise-centric applications. One notable aspect of Mistral 7B is its open-source nature, released under the Apache 2.0

Meeting 41
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Technology Short Take 114

Scott Lowe

Speaking of Pulumi, Kyle Galbraith wrote up a comparison of Pulumi and Terraform for infrastructure as code. The CNCF blog has a great article written by an Alibaba software engineer (Xingyu Chen) on some performance optimizations for etcd that have been contributed back to the open source community.

Linux 60
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Red Hat seeks to be the platform for enterprise AI

Network World

That includes tools for creating and managing a model garden, training and fine-tuning models, building applications, and deploying generative AI at scale in a hybrid architecture. Red Hat also made improvements to OpenShift AI, a platform released last year for deploying gen AI applications at scale. AI-powered assistants?

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ePUB.js vs Readium.js – A Detailed Comparison of 2 ePUB Readers

Kitaboo

is an open-source Javascript library that allows any web page to easily render ePUB documents on any device with a modern browser. It contains a flexible rendering engine and offers a simple interface for common eBook functions such as pagination, styling, and persistence without developing a dedicated plugin or application.

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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

How could open source software be vulnerable for so long? In a moment I’ll tell you about a flaw discovered only through fuzz testing in a very old open source product. Only large enterprises, such as AT&T, had the computing power and the developers to create their own applications. What’s a worm?

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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

How could open source software be vulnerable for so long? In a moment I’ll tell you about a flaw discovered only through fuzz testing in a very old open source product. Only large enterprises, such as AT&T, had the computing power and the developers to create their own applications. What’s a worm?

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: EP 69 Self-Healing Operating Systems

ForAllSecure

That’s your applications, your web browser, you streaming media. VAMOSI: So on a laptop or even a phone, there’s an operating system that allows you to laid applications and run them. And now, what has happened is we've got much more massive hardware, much more massive memory, much more massive applications.