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+41 +7OpenSSF Siren: Security for One, Security for All - DevOps.com
The OpenSSF Siren is a fresh, new take on ye old security mailing list.
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+40 +5Cable déjà vu? Looks who's bundling streaming services (and what it's going to cost you)
Comcast's 'Xfinity StreamSaver' package includes Peacock Premium, Netflix, and Apple TV+ at a discount. Many more bundled services are on the way. But will they save you money over the long haul?
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+40 +3More than money, open-source pros want these 2 things from their next jobs
Admins and developers have similar career goals, but their top priorities are different, according to a new report.
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+42 +6What happens when genAI vendors kill off their best sources?
You don’t really think you can depend on answers pulled from the likes of self-appointed Reddit experts, do you?
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+40 +6Winamp is not going open source. Here's what it is doing - and why
To refresh its once iconic Windows media player, Winamp is kind of, sort of opening up the source code. See what that means for users and developers.
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+32 +6Microsoft stoops to new low with ads in Windows 11, as PC Manager tool suggests your system needs ‘repairing’ if you don’t use Bing
PC Manager app is only available in some regions, but could come to the US eventually
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+31 +2Are all Linux vendor kernels insecure? A new study says yes, but there's a fix
All vendor kernels are plagued with security vulnerabilities, according to a CIQ whitepaper. Will the Linux community ever accept upstream stable kernels?
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+30 +5Where are floppy disks today? Planes, trains, and all these other places
No, really! Floppy drives still live on in many surprising places, and not just the homes of die-hard techies.
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+39 +5Everything you wanted to know about SELinux but were afraid to run
When you need to run Linux in an especially secure environment, SELinux is the answer. But getting SELinux up-and-running takes a lot of know how.
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+31 +3Three Reasons DevOps Should Consider Rocky Linux 9.4
The new version of Rocky Linux includes security improvements, better cloud images, and the latest developer tools.
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+41 +4How Red Hat is embracing AI to make sysadmin lives easier
The open-source giant's AI work is all about integrating the entire Red Hat software family into a smart, easy-to-manage stack. Here's what each one does and how they fit together.
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+37 +3Does More Money Improve Open Source Security?
It sounds simple: If you pay developers more money they'll improve the quality and security of their code. The evidence isn't so clear.
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+38 +4IBM open-sources its Granite AI models - and they mean business
Many companies claim to have open-sourced their LLMs, but IBM actually did it. Here's how.
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+37 +9That time when Microsoft bought and killed Nokia phone unit
When bad management meets bad software, even great hardware is useless
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+39 +5Update your Chrome browser ASAP. Google has confirmed a zero-day exploited in the wild
A new Chrome JavaScript security hole is nasty, so don't waste any time patching your systems.
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+43 +5Did IBM make a $6.4 billion blunder by buying HashiCorp?
HashiCorp's programs are ideal fit for IBM/Red Hat's software lines, but why buy the company when the software's free and open?
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+31 +4Apple's worst ad ever?
For a marketing company that doubles as a tech company, Apple's latest iPad Pro is incredibly tone-deaf.
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+29 +5BASIC turns 60: Why simplicity was this programming language's blessing and its curse
Since the 1960s, BASIC has introduced countless beginners to computer programming. Here's how the language got started, the paths it cleared for Windows and Apple, and where you can still find it today.
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+40 +4What OpenTofu 1.7 Means for DevSecOps - DevOps.com
With built-in end-to-end encryption, OpenTofu is a natural DevSecOps fit.
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+38 +4Can AI tools help reduce Zoom fatigue?
When it comes to meetings, whether in person or on video, can anything make them better? Yes, but it’s not the technology.
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