Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Today marks an exciting milestone for Eclipse developers everywhere: we’re thrilled to announce the public preview of Amazon Q Developer in the Eclipse IDE. This integration brings the power of AI-driven development directly into one of the most popular development environments.
When you think of software development, you probably assume all types of applications and services must be used to get the job done. You’ll need a powerful IDE, a GUI for version control, and a host of other tools. What if I told you that wasn’t the case?
Evaluating the performance of applications built with large language models (LLMs) is essential to ensure they meet required accuracy and usability standards.
As generative AI advancements continue transforming operations and processes at breakneck speed, organizations are at a pivotal moment. Yet, while some companies are reaping early rewards, others are wrestling with implementation complexity where the rules are still being written.
In today’s fast-paced digital landscape, operations leaders face two concurrent challenges: how to efficiently manage the ever-increasing complexity of their systems and stack and still deliver excellent customer experiences to protect and grow revenue.
You probably know about SUSE, which is one of the unsung heroes for enterprise-grade Linux. SUSE Linux Enterprise has been around since its early days of being owned by Novell when it was released as Novell Linux Desktop in 2004.
Getting C-suite executives to give the green light for your company’s nascent platform engineering initiative may not happen the way you think it will.
SALT LAKE CITY — At KubeCon+CloudNativeCon North America earlier this month, the eBPF Foundation announced it was releasing two third-party reports about the in-kernel Linux eBPF programming paradigm security: Control Plane‘s eBPF Security Threat Model and NCC Group‘s eBPF Verifier
In our previous discussions, we explored how AI agents can be enhanced with personas, instructions, tasks, conversation memory, and reasoning. To make it simple for you to follow this series, below are the links to previous articles: You can download the source for all the steps from GitHub.
You can now specify a desired completion duration (15 minutes to 48 hours) when you copy an Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) snapshot within or between AWS Regions and/or accounts. This will help you to meet time-based compliance and business requirements for critical workloads.
Have valuable insights to share with the DevOps community? Submit your article for publication.
Get the latest DevOps news, tools, and insights delivered to your inbox.
Made with pure grit © 2025 Jetpack Labs Inc. All rights reserved. www.jetpacklabs.com