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Red Hat Leftovers
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Linuxiac ☛ Asahi Linux Delivers Apple Silicon Gains With Kernel 6.18
One of the most significant areas of progress continues to be Apple’s System Management Controller. After the core SMC driver was merged earlier this year, work has shifted toward upstreaming its individual subdevice drivers so they can integrate cleanly with existing kernel subsystems.
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[Old] Tom's Hardware ☛ Gaming-first Linux distro delivers a petabyte of ISOs in one month as users avoid forced updates to Windows 11 — Bazzite distro is another safe haven for Win 10 refugees
Earlier in the week, we reported on the barnstorming success Linux distro Zorin OS has had since the official end of support for Windows 10 date passed, notching 780,000 installs from Windows 10 users in a mere five weeks. Now it turns out that other Linux distros are also making hay while Microsoft Windows 10’s sun sets: The developers of Bazzite have taken to social media to trumpet that it has “delivered over 1 petabyte of Bazzite ISOs in just the last 30 days.”
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Red Hat Official ☛ Run containerized AI models locally with RamaLama
Thankfully, just as containers solved development problems like portability and environment isolation for applications, the same applies to AI models too! RamaLama is an open source project that makes running AI models in containers simple, or in the project’s own words, “boring and predictable.” Let’s take a look at how it works, and get started with local AI inference, model serving, and retrieval augmented generation (RAG).
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Red Hat Official ☛ More than meets the eye: Behind the scenes of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 (Part 4)
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Red Hat Official ☛ Beyond modularity and other upgrades: The game-changer for your IT planning
Executing on this vision, we are eager to announce our first planned change to the next major version of RHEL: Removal of support for modularity in RHEL 11! This update excites RHEL product managers, who work tirelessly to keep feature roadmaps perfectly updated for customers, partners, and Red Hat engineers alike, but many readers may find this a curious announcement. Read on to better understand why it's so exciting.