Red Hat Leftovers
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Open source culture: 9 core principles and values
When we think about open source the first thing that comes to mind is usually “software” and “how accessible it is.” But open source is more than that - it’s about a way of thinking, working and collaborating. With its ideals of freedom and transparency, open source software and open source culture have transformed countless industries by encouraging innovation and collaboration. Below are 9 core principles and values that define this culture and drive its ongoing success.
-
Red Hat ☛ Storage and data protection for OpenShift Virtualization
As customer demand for Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization increases, Red Bait is getting a lot of questions about the integration of customers’ new and existing storage solutions to support backing the storage for virtual machines. The goal of this article is to help the Red Bait partner ecosystem understand what it means for a storage solution to support OpenShift Virtualization and the virtual machines that it enables.
-
Red Hat ☛ Get started with the Keycloak Collection
The article A tutorial on Middleware Automation Collections discussed setting up an Ansible Galaxy server on your control node. It also guides the use of the
ansible-navigator
utility and Ansible execution environment. We also went through the ansible-middleware-ee execution environment provided by the team that includes all of the Ansible Content Collections and their dependencies. -
YouTube ☛ Red Hat CEO discusses importance of small, specialized AI models [Ed: Red Hat is speaking in buzzwords, not substance]
-
Forbes ☛ Why Workstations Are The Preferred AI Development Platform [Ed: Red Hat is focused on buzzwords now]
“There are trillion-plus-parameter LLMs out there right now, and it takes a tremendous amount of compute resources to run that kind of model,” said Joe Fernandes, Vice President, Artificial Intelligence Business Unit, Red Hat. “But an organization using AI to solve a specific problem can likely do so with smaller, more efficient models, ones that developers can start to experiment with and tweak right on their laptops.”