Links
AddTigera, a startup that offers security and compliance solutions for Kubernetes container deployments, today announced that it has raised a $30 million
Palo Alto Networks warned customers today to patch security vulnerabilities (with public exploit code) that can be chained to let attackers hijack PAN-OS firewalls.
Contribute to ayang64/doomfire development by creating an account on GitHub.
I use xrandr to configure a dual monitor setup with a high DPI and low DPI monitor on Linux. I also use it to switch back and forth between a dual monitor and a single monitor setup.
ADAM GOLASKI is the author of Color Plates. His work has appeared in 1913: A Journal of Forms, Best Horror of the Year, The Lifted Brow, and LVNG no. 11.
Invidious is an open source alternative front-end to YouTube.
The official website for the Proxmox VE Helper-Scripts (Community) Repository. Featuring over 300+ scripts to help you manage your Proxmox VE environment.
Version 0.2.0 of the Chawan TUI browser has been released.
Enterprise software giant Red Hat is now being extorted by the ShinyHunters gang, with samples of stolen customer engagement reports (CERs) leaked on their data leak site.
Note: If this topic has peaked your interest, you can join me for a Webinar on August 15 where I’ll dive deep into Cloud Native Operations with Kubernetes and CI/CD Pipelines. Introduction Welcome to a three part blog series on Creating a Helm Chart Repository. In part 1 I will demonstrate creating a Helm chart repository using GitHub and GitHub Pages. In part 2 I will add Automation to automatically update the repository, and in part 3 I will add testing for changes to the charts themselves.
Generate high-quality images from text prompts using Flux Dev, a 12B parameter rectified flow transformer. Ideal for research, creative projects, and fine-tuning.
Dmitry.GR: Slowly booting full Linux on the intel 4004 for fun, art, and absolutely no profit
That's certainly one of the stranger headlines we've written
It’s Friday at 4pm. I’ve just closed my 12th bug of the week. My brain is completely fried. And I’m staring at the bug leaderboard, genuinely sad that Monday means going back to regular work. Which is weird because I love regular work. But fixit weeks have a special place in my heart. What’s a fixit, you ask? Once a quarter, my org with ~45 software engineers stops all regular work for a week. That means no roadmap work, no design work, no meetings or standups. Instead, we fix the small things that have been annoying us and our users:
an error message that’s been unclear for two years a weird glitch when the user scrolls and zooms at the same time a test which runs slower than it should, slowing down CI for everyone
The rules are simple: 1) no bug should take over 2 days and 2) all work should focus on either small end-user bugs/features or developer productivity.
Cybercriminals connected to a recent string of ransomware attacks on major British retailers said on Friday they had stolen almost 1 billion records from cloud technology giant Salesforce, opens new tab by focusing on companies that use its software