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Red Hat seeks to be the platform for enterprise AI

Network World

Red Hat went all-in on generative AI at its annual summit last week, offering a wide range of tools for operational and development teams to help them build and deploy generative AI systems. Instead, it partnered with IBM to feature the Granite models as the default option in its tool sets and as the base for its Lightspeed products.

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Technology Short Take #62

Scott Lowe

Cumulus Networks recently shifted their pricing and licensing model toward perpetual licenses; this article has more information and a comparison of the old vs. new models. This is not a knock against OpenFlow; the same could be said for any number of (relatively) low-level tools. Servers/Hardware.

Vmware 60
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Technology Short Take #50

Scott Lowe

If you’re looking for more examples of how to incorporate these sorts of tools into your own network automation workflow, I’d recommend having a look at this article. Kevin Houston’s March 2015 blade server comparisons might be a useful place to start. The workflow incorporates Ansible, git, Jenkins, and Gerrit.

Vmware 60
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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

Our story begins in the 1980s where both the tool used for this discovery and Bash shell were created. Worms, by comparison, are able to replicate on their own so the Morris worm exploited an overflow vulnerability in Finger to spread from system to system. That’s the tool side. How did this happen? What’s a worm?

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The Hacker Mind: Shellshock

ForAllSecure

Our story begins in the 1980s where both the tool used for this discovery and Bash shell were created. Worms, by comparison, are able to replicate on their own so the Morris worm exploited an overflow vulnerability in Finger to spread from system to system. That’s the tool side. How did this happen? What’s a worm?

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

ForAllSecure

CODEN: Basically, the fundamental issue is look at that early Unix and Linux operating systems that were providing these very basic services that are still the the only things we really need from the operating system today. You can go to dbos-project.github.io The operating system has grown because we want to use multicores.

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Microsoft’s Phil Spencer on launching the new Xbox

The Verge

It’s got an ARM processor, and it runs Linux and we’re off to the races. Do you think that’s a fair comparison? Let me make the Netflix comparison just to have done it, just to check the box. They were licensing TV shows from networks that had no streaming capability of their own. Those are general compute platforms.

Hardware 120