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+4 +1
A new White House report embraces open-source AI
The National Telecommunications and Information Administration supports open-data models - but acknowledges the risks. Here's how it plans to navigate the technology's pros and cons.
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+21 +5
New OpenTofu Release Challenges Terraform's Dominance
OpenTofu 1.8 introduces early variables/locals evaluation, which was the most highly anticipated feature of the release, among other requested features.
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+34 +11
Microsoft 365 goes down - again
UPDATED: It's not just you (or Crowdstrike) - Microsoft 365 really is going through an outage. Here's what we know.
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+22 +5
CrowdStrike meets Murphy's Law: If it can go wrong, it will
And boy, did last Friday's Windows fiasco ever prove that yet again
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+4 +1
I've tried a zillion desktop distros - it doesn't get any better than Linux Mint 22
Linux Mint's latest release continues its tradition of excellence. It's easy to learn and use, faster than Windows, and runs on a thrift-store PC. What more can you ask for?
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+38 +9
Switzerland now requires all government software to be open source
The United States remains reluctant to work with open source, but European countries are bolder.
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+3 +1
Meta inches toward open source AI with new LLaMA 3.1
Is Meta's 405 billion parameter model really open source? Depends on who you ask. Here's how to try out the new engine for yourself.
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+1 +1
OpenELA Liberates Red Hat Enterprise Linux Source Code
OpenELA has automated its process so that new enterprise Linux sources are available just days after each release of new versions of RHEL.
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+50 +14
The workers have spoken: They're staying home.
And companies can't make them come into the office. Really.
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+5 +2
Put not your trust in Windows — or CrowdStrike
Who in the world would trust Windows for any mission-critical work?
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+1 +1
Nvidia finally open sources some of its GPU drivers. How to tell what's under your hood
A welcome step toward a more open ecosystem for Linux users and developers, the upcoming R560 driver release also puts Nvidia in a better position to compete with AMD. It's about time.
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+2 +1
Bringing Open Source Standards to Electric Vehicle Charging
Standardization is essential for electric vehicles to become affordable and accessible to everyone. Once more, open source is helping.
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+2 +1
Apache Software Foundation is Retiring its Feather Logo
The Apache Software Foundation feather logo is well known and loved, but it comes with some baggage so the group will change its branding.
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+44 +4
What's New With the Just-Released Linux 6.10 Kernel
This mid-year 2024 kernel upgrade brings a host of exciting features and improvements that enhance performance, security, and hardware support across various platforms.
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+42 +8
Cloudflare reports almost 7% of internet traffic is malicious
Fortunately, there are things you can do to help protect yourself and your websites.
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+26 +2
How open source attracts some of the world's top innovators
Some of the best and brightest work in open source. Who are these people? How did they get there? Where do they see open source going next?
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+34 +6
NASA is investing in a rocket that could get humans to Mars and back in 2 months — and travel at 100,000 mph
The Pulsed Plasma Rocket could significantly shorten a round-trip to Mars, reduce risks to astronauts' health, and be ready to launch in 20 years.
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+1 +1
Open Source AI: What About Data Transparency?
AI uses both code and data, and this combination continues to be a challenge for open source, said experts at the United Nations OSPOs for Good Conference.
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+2 +1
Boeing and the perils of outsourcing mission-critical work
Never let MBAs driven by the bottom line take over an engineering company building airplanes and spaceships.
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+5 +1
Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks
Japan's government has finally eliminated the use of floppy disks in all its systems, two decades since their heyday, reaching a long-awaited milestone in a campaign to modernize the bureaucracy. …
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