Red Hat and Fedora Leftovers
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Red Hat Official ☛ Red Hat announces latest updates to global partner engagement experience [Ed: Red Hat talks like IBM now.]
Today, we are excited to announce the next wave of updates to the Red Hat global partner engagement experience: [...]
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Red Hat Official ☛ Learn why Red Hat customer MAPFRE chose Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
Automation is no longer a luxury; it’s a necessity for innovation. With the increasing complexity of IT environments, manual processes are prone to errors and inefficiencies. Ansible Automation Platform enables organizations to automate repetitive tasks, streamline workflows and provide consistency across their IT infrastructure. These benefits not only boost productivity, but also enable IT teams to focus on strategic initiatives that increase innovation and business growth. As AI solutions become part of everyday business processes, it's more important than ever for IT infrastructure to maintain high resiliency and reliability. For example, if AI assistant bots are part of the support lifecycle, and are managing tier 1 and tier 2 support cases, what would happen if there was an IT outage? Can an enterprise afford not to have automated solutions to help improve mean time to resolution and quickly apply solutions?
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Red Hat Official ☛ Building trust: Foundations of security, safety and transparency in AI
As publicly available artificial intelligence (AI) models rapidly evolve, so do the potential security and safety implications, which calls for a greater understanding of their risks and vulnerabilities. To develop a foundation for standardized security, safety and transparency in the development and operation of AI models–as well as their open ecosystems and communities–we must change how we’re approaching current challenges, such as consistent information about models, lack of distinction between security and safety issues and deficient and non-standardized safety evaluations available and in use by model makers.
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Behold, My First RPM
Behold, My First RPM
I've written tons and tons of software, but was never much for packaging it. If I did any packaging, it was typically sticking a server into a container.
Yesterday morning I realized it has been something like 25 or 30 years since I wrote any functional C code, so I decided to do a refreshing, with the help of some AI. After reviewing the syntax and pointers, I wrote a CLI version of a Python app that I wrote a while back.