Tux Machines

Fedora and Red Hat Leftovers

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Aug 12, 2023

=> KDE and GNOME Development Coverage | Linux Devices and Open Hardware

Fedora Infrastructure Status: Fedora Copr outage - updating servers

=> ↺ Fedora Infrastructure Status: Fedora Copr outage - updating servers

This outage impacts the Fedora Copr Frontend.

=> ↺ Fedora Copr Frontend

=> ↺ Fedora Copr Frontend

Libera Chat Is a Toxic Troll Farm. Bonus: Code of Conduct Ticket Filed Regarding Fedora Moderator “Khaytsus”.

=> ↺ Libera Chat Is a Toxic Troll Farm. Bonus: Code of Conduct Ticket Filed Regarding Fedora Moderator “Khaytsus”.

Libera Chat Is a Toxic Troll Farm Full of Corrupt Moderators That Don’t Apply Their Own Code of Conduct to Each Other.

Red Hat describes how open source and infrastructure at scale drive genAI [Ed: Openwashing and HEY HI buzzwords salad. Also failing to disclose that Red Hat has been paying this publisher for all those puff pieces, which it later links to.

=> ↺ Red Hat describes how open source and infrastructure at scale drive genAI | ↺ it later links to

Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is an exciting technology on its own, but the way access to large-scale infrastructure has changed is the real story, according to Red Hat‘s Sherard Griffin, senior director of engineering for AI services.
AI technology has been around for a while, but the infrastructure needed to run complicated AI workloads has finally caught up, Griffin told SDxCentral. “Generative AI is not about AI in its own right, in terms of what it’s doing with generative AI. But it’s thinking about how it’s now so readily accessible,” he said. “To me, that’s the exciting part.”

Find your top tasks on the new Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS learning hub

=> ↺ Find your top tasks on the new Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS learning hub

Interested in Red Hat OpenShift Service on Amazon Web Services (ROSA) but not sure where to start? Our new ROSA learning hub page may be just the thing you need. This hub page speaks to the various stages of adopting and utilizing a managed Red Hat OpenShift service running natively on AWS. From high-level learning, to procedural walkthroughs about deploying workloads, there are several avenues for a user to find what they need.

Kubernetes and the Software Supply Chain

=> ↺ Kubernetes and the Software Supply Chain

The ability of organizations to gain value from Kubernetes — and, more broadly, cloud-native technology — is being hampered by concerns around security. One of the biggest concerns reflects one of the industry's biggest current challenges: securing the software supply chain.
Red Hat's "2023 State of Kubernetes Report" found that Kubernetes security is in question at some companies. Based on a survey of DevOps, engineering, and security professionals from around the globe, the report finds that 67% of respondents have delayed or slowed deployment due to Kubernetes security concerns, 37% have experienced revenue or customer loss due to a container/Kubernetes security incident, and 38% cite security as a top concern with container and Kubernetes strategies.

Chris Wright Talks OpenShift AI

=> ↺ Chris Wright Talks OpenShift AI

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