Red Hat Leftovers
-
Red Hat ☛ Why developers should use MicroShift
At times developers find that it is not sufficient to test their applications "naked" on their local operating systems or under a local container engine, such as Podman. They need orchestration among multiple containers, network connectivity, dynamic storage, and other capabilities upon which their applications depend.
Using a lightweight orchestrator such as Docker Compose may not be enough. Maintaining two configuration sets—one for a development/test environment and another for a Kubernetes-based production environment—may be too much work. It also incurs additional risk, as those two configurations drift away from each other. After all, containers are supposed to solve "it runs fine on my machine" issues.
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Event-driven architecture for modern applications
It can be difficult to integrate all of the tools needed to provide these functions, and to ensure that they all seamlessly and efficiently interoperate with each other. The reality is that you often run into problems with integrating different systems: [...]
-
Dark Reading ☛ Director, Cloud and DevSecOps Strategy, Red Hat: Managing software risk in a world of exploding vulnerabilities [Ed: Red Hat planting promotional puff pieces in various sites]
It's a perfect storm: The cost of a data breach is rising, known cyberattacks are becoming more frequent, security expertise is in short supply, and the demand for connectedness — to deliver and act on even the most sensitive of data across all devices, and all the way to the network edge — is unyielding. A recent example that affects anyone who texts between Android and iPhone devices is the Salt Typhoon attack. Meanwhile, industry and government regulations are tightening, demanding stricter proof of security measures and faster reporting of breaches, raising the stakes for "getting it wrong."
-
SDx Central ☛ Red Hat tops T-Mobile’s common cloud, edge extension [Ed: Red Hat is posting in an LLM slop site that it is funding]
-
Red Hat ☛ How RamaLama runs Hey Hi (AI) models in isolation by default
Over the last few weeks, we have seen a spike in both users and GitHub (Microsoft's proprietary prison) stars for RamaLama, an open source project that simplifies Hey Hi (AI) model management by leveraging OCI containers.