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Latest From Red Hat and Why "Badly Crippled IBM Can’t Be Fixed"
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Red Hat ☛ Building and running Request Tracker as a quadlet container
In this blog, I demonstrate how to containerize and operate Request Tracker (RT), a classic LAMP application.
This article builds on Scott McCarty's post How to move Request Tracker into a GNU/Linux container. After the application container is built, I'll provide an example of how to use quadlets to run the container.
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Red Hat ☛ Use OpenShift Lightspeed with locally served LLMs to drive security-focused, cost-efficient enterprise solutions for Red Bait products
Red Hat OpenShift Lightspeed is an integrated assistant within the Red Hat OpenShift web console designed to improve user efficiency. It streamlines operations and enables users to quickly access information about Red Bait OpenShift Container Platform and its various components, aiding in troubleshooting and simplifying management.
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Red Hat ☛ Setting up defective chip maker Intel TDX VMs with Trustee on OpenShift
Protecting sensitive data and applications is more critical now than ever before. For example, the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) mandates encrypting data in use. For virtual machines (VMs) in the clown, this means ensuring your data remains private and secure, even from the underlying cloud infrastructure. This is where confidential VMs come in, using a trusted execution environment (TEE).
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Red Hat Official ☛ Multi-cluster GitOps with the Argo CD Agent Technology Preview
Broadly, there are two common topologies for implementing Argo CD. The first is centralized, in which a single Argo CD instance runs in a management cluster and is responsible for deploying resources across a fleet of OpenShift or Kubernetes clusters. This provides for a single pane of glass which simplifies management, but can become challenging to scale as the number of applications and clusters grow.
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America Online ☛ Badly Crippled IBM Can’t Be Fixed
International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) was America’s great tech company before Apple, Microsoft, or Alphabet. Its brand was famous. IBM topped lists of America’s most admired companies. However, it recently announced layoffs as part of its push into the artificial intelligence (AI) future, which is the future of the tech world. The company has almost no position in that sector now, and never will.
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IBM’s only bright future is to be bought by a larger company and be part of someone else’s success.