Fedora / Red Hat / IBM Leftovers
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Scaling up with AI and out to the edge with Red Hat and Dynatrace
Self-service provisioning reduces administrative effort and delivers resources to developers faster. Where provisioning a new cluster could have taken several months without automation, self-service through Red Hat OpenShift reduces setup time to weeks or days. When the Dynatrace solution detects potential issues, operations teams can use the self-healing capabilities of OpenShift to proactively resolve them before customers are impacted.
-
OpenShift Commons Gathering Co-located Alongside KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America
Where users, partners, customers, contributors and upstream project leads come together to collaborate and work together across the OpenShift Cloud Native ecosystem.
-
Will AI lead to the promised land of resilient modernisation in financial services? [Ed: Red Hat publishes junk pieces about buzzwords, then Red Hat Official ☛ promotes these]
The financial services industry has been an extensive consumer of advanced analytics, or predictive AI, for decades. We are now seeing the first inroads in generative AI-powered solutions that will lead to significant improvements in customer service, operational efficiency and resilience. Consistency and standardization in frameworks and platforms is key.
-
Embracing the shift to software-defined vehicles: Q&A with Red Hat [Ed: Red Hat admits adopting a "new buzz phrase in the car industry"]
The software-defined vehicle (SDV) is a new buzz phrase in the car industry. It refers to vehicles that can enhance their capabilities through software updates, eliminating the need for physical part replacements. SDVs use software to govern operations, incorporate new features, and facilitate the integration of novel functionalities. This concept marks an advancement in the automotive industry, laying the foundation for autonomous driving and vehicle connectivity technologies.
-
InfoWorld ☛ What generative AI can do for sysadmins [Ed: Red Hat is all about the buzzwords, and people who aren't technical write its articles about these]
At Red Hat, Scott McCarty is senior principal product manager for RHEL Server, arguably the largest open source software business in the world. Scott is a social media startup veteran, an e-commerce old timer, and a weathered government research technologist, with experience across a variety of companies and organizations, from seven person startups to 12,000 employee technology companies. This has culminated in a unique perspective on open source software development, delivery, and maintenance.