Red Hat / IBM Leftovers
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5 strategies to boost IT team productivity
For many, the five-day in-office work week is dead. McKinsey reports that most people working in computing and mathematical jobs have remote work options, and 77 percent say they’re willing to work fully remotely.
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Red Hat Shares ― Edge computing: Security
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2.5 billion and counting: Red Hat OpenStack Platform continues to deliver for service providers [Ed: What a bizarre thing to count to make it look a lot bigger than it actually is]
Red Hat is excited to announce the general availability of Red Hat OpenStack Platform 17 at MWC Las Vegas this year. Red Hat OpenStack Platform 17 is designed to help service providers as they build out massive, modern networks with an open hybrid cloud vision in mind. With this latest version, service providers can benefit from the delivery of new services and applications to meet changing demand, advanced networking and improved operational security features for their 4G and 5G networks.
It’s been over a decade since the creation of the OpenStack project. Since then, Red Hat OpenStack Platform has become a leading technology for service provider cloud environments that propels innovation and is one of the top NFV infrastructure for service providers with over 30% of the paid production LTE deployments. Today, Red Hat service provider customers running Red Hat OpenStack Platform are estimated to have more than 2.5 billion mobile subscribers.
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Awards roll call: March to August 2022 [Ed: Maybe give an award to Raytheon again?]
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Build a Kogito Serverless Workflow using Serverless Framework | Red Hat Developer
Serverless Workflow is a standard from the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). Kogito implements the Serverless Workflow specifications to define workflows for event-driven, serverless applications using a DSL-based model.
Serverless Framework is an open source framework that builds, compiles, and packages code for serverless deployment. The framework provides implementations for different cloud providers, including Knative.
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Software developer: A day in the life | The Enterprisers Project
Growing up in Pelotas, Brazil, I did not have access to a computer until I was 9 years old. Nobody in my family worked with technology, so it did not occur to me to consider a career in this field until high school, when a friend encouraged me to try a course in electronics.
The course introduced me to programming logic with C and C++, and it was exciting to see logic, math, and technology come together. That inspired me to pursue a bachelor’s degree in Analysis and Development Systems at the university level.
I am very proud of my Brazilian heritage. However, there are relatively few females in this profession, especially in Latin America. Women are still forced to overcome obstacles and stereotypes. Despite my superior grades, for example, it took me longer to land my first job than my male colleagues.