Red Hat and Fedora: Fedora Linux 37, Firefox 107 on POWER, and Red Hat Articles
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Fedora Linux 37 released! - Invidious
Fedora version 37, which had a bit of a late start, is a truly fantastic release. Dare I say one of the best Linux distributions available right now.
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Firefox 107 on POWER
Firefox 107 is out, a modest update, though there are some developer-facing changes. As before linking still requires Dan Horák's patch from bug 1775202 or the browser won't link on 64-bit Power ISA (alternatively put --disable-webrtc in your .mozconfig if you don't need WebRTC). Otherwise the build works with the .mozconfigs from Firefox 105 and the PGO-LTO patch from Firefox 101.
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Little bug in Apostrophe in Fedora 37 (or “oh, I can’t log into bugzilla”)
Installed Fedora 37 today and it was a pretty smooth experience. No surprises there. One of the recommended applications (Apostrophe) looked interesting so I installed that and found it wouldn’t start.
Poking a bit at the terminal I got a Python error that I chased down on google and tracked back to a missing package (webkit2gtk4.0). Once I installed that it ran just fine.
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Filipe Rosset: Fedora rawhide – fixed bugs 2022/10
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IT hiring: Top 5 tech roles for non-techies | The Enterprisers Project
Historically, trying to work in the tech industry without a background in tech was like trying to score a backstage pass when your ticket was in the nosebleeds – not impossible, but not easy, either.
With the growing impact of technology in the day-to-day functions of our lives, however, this has changed. The need for tech workers is growing as all industries and businesses evaluate its implications for innovation and business growth. That means that workers with non-tech backgrounds are becoming increasingly valuable to the overall success of tech companies.
If you’re interested in joining the tech industry but lack a traditional technology background, check out these five roles.
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Modernize at scale with the new migration toolkit for applications
The migration toolkit for applications from Red Hat equips developers with tools to assess, prioritize, and modernize Java applications across the hybrid cloud on Red Hat OpenShift. Version 6 of the toolkit is now generally available—and it's a major step up from the previous version, offering new capabilities to accelerate large-scale application modernization efforts. Read on to explore the new toolkit and see a demo.
Based on the open source Konveyor project, the migration toolkit for applications provides insights and alignment for project leads and migration teams as they move to Red Hat OpenShift for a single application or a portfolio of applications. These insights are a huge boost for developers and organizations looking to modernize and migrate from their legacy platforms to the cloud.