Tux Machines

Red Hat Leftovers

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Sep 13, 2023

=> Slowroll: openSUSE’s New Take on the Rolling Release Model (UPDATED) | Software Leftovers

A Node.js success story at the electrical training ALLIANCE

=> ↺ A Node.js success story at the electrical training ALLIANCE

Red Hat and customers often work together as partners to help get an application across the finish line. In this article, Stephen (electrical training ALLIANCE) and Michael (Red Hat) share the story of one such collaboration that led to success with Node.js in production.
The electrical training ALLIANCE (ETA) has the mission to develop educational materials for electrical workers. They do this by developing national standards for the education and training of electrical workers, creating standardized training curricula, and assisting in establishing local educational programs. A key part of this work is to develop and provide an application for the 275 training programs that will assist in the day-to-day operations supporting apprentices within the program from application through to graduation.

=> ↺ electrical training ALLIANCE

=> ↺ electrical training ALLIANCE

How to automate AWS network using Ansible Automation

=> ↺ How to automate AWS network using Ansible Automation

In today's rapidly evolving technology landscape, Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform offers a powerful solution for managing network configurations in Amazon Web Services (AWS). In this article, we will explore how you can leverage the capabilities of Ansible Automation Platform to simplify and automate your network configuration tasks in AWS.
We will guide you through the process of setting up the necessary credentials for your AWS account within the Ansible Automation Platform. We will then dive into playbook execution, demonstrating how you can execute playbooks to define and automate your network configurations in AWS. By the end of this article, you will have the knowledge and confidence to use Ansible Automation Platform to manage your network configurations in AWS effectively.

Blog: User Namespaces: Now Supports Running Stateful Pods in Alpha! [Ed: Red Hat is working with Microsoft. Not good. They also use Microsoft proprietary prisonware, GitHub. Red Hat values your freedom to pay Microsoft and IBM for malicious software.]

=> ↺ Blog: User Namespaces: Now Supports Running Stateful Pods in Alpha!

Kubernetes v1.25 introduced support for user namespaces for only stateless pods. Kubernetes 1.28 lifted that restriction, after some design changes were done in 1.27.

How Red Hat enhances the developer experience

=> ↺ How Red Hat enhances the developer experience

Hybrid and multicloud approaches offer developers more access to powerful computing resources than ever. However, this increasing complexity can make it challenging to manage all your development tasks, hindering productivity.
Red Hat's cloud-first approach simplifies modern cloud environments. Our versatile toolbox maintains flexibility and limits cloud vendor lock-in by letting you work with a wide range of cloud tools and vendors. Let's explore how Red Hat reduces friction by designing tools with developers in mind.
Red Hat's primary goal is to make it easier for you to create and deploy cloud-first applications. Our hybrid cloud approach builds on an open source foundation, enabling you to design software once and deploy it to any (or every) cloud platform.

=> ↺ hybrid cloud approach | ↺ open source

=> ↺ hybrid cloud approach | ↺ open source

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