The Case for Open Source Software at Work

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Open source has entered the limelight at work. Not only is it frequently being used in businesses – but it’s helping people build their professional reputations, according to the recently released 2017 GitHub Open Source Survey. Notably, half of the 5,500 survey GitHub contributors say that their open source work was somewhat or very important in getting their current role. The … Read More

The most important corporate server Linux gets refreshed: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.4

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Red Hat may be planning on being the leading private cloud company, but that doesn’t mean it’s giving up its Linux leadership. On Aug. 1, the Raleigh, N.C.-based company announced the general availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 7.4, the latest version of its flagship enterprise Linux distribution. Here are its latest features: Security Updated audit capabilities to help simplify how administrators … Read More

We don’t make software for free, we make it for freedom

Jonathan MathewsPublic

The debate about whether vendors can thrive and scale if their primary outputs are freely licensed continues to brew nearly two years since I wrote about the topic. Basing a business on an open source strategy is undoubtedly challenging, because no matter how many times you quote Richard Stallman that software freedom means “free speech,” not “free beer,” there is a persistent expectation that … Read More

Open Source AI Solutions Evolve through Community Development

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Tech titans ranging from Google to Facebook have been steadily open sourcing powerful artificial intelligence and deep learning tools, and now Microsoft is out with version 2.0 of theMicrosoft Cognitive Toolkit. It’s an open source software framework previously dubbed CNTK, and it competes with tools such as TensorFlow (created by Google) and Caffe (created by Yahoo!). Cognitive Toolkit works with … Read More

AMD Leverages EPYC And Vega To Cram 1 PetaFLOP Supercomputer Into A Single Server Rack

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Back in the mid-2000s, AMD and IBM collaborated on a supercomputer project for the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, which featured over 64,000 dual-core Opteron processors and numerous custom accelerators to achieve 1 PetaFLOP of computing performance. For a time, the massive system – dubbed Roadrunner — was the fastest supercomputer on the planet. It required 696 racks and covered approximately 6,000 … Read More

Free and Open Source Skype Alternative Ring 1.0 Released!

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Brief: Ring, Open Source alternative to Skype, has reached its first stable release. Have a look at how to install and use Ring. Ring is a free and open source cross platform software featuring instant messaging, free unlimited calling with call recording, media sharing with multiple audio codecs support and audio and video conferencing. Ring 1.0 has been released officially after … Read More

Windows 10’s Subsystem for Linux exits beta ready for Fall Creators Update

Jonathan MathewsPublic

Microsoft’s Windows Subsystem for Linux will be a fully supported feature in the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, but it won’t support end-user scenarios. After over a year in beta, Microsoft’s Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) will move to a fully supported feature in the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, which is due for release around September. There are a few minor bug fixes in … Read More

Microsoft Backs Kubernetes with Cloud Native Membership

Jonathan MathewsPublic

It’s happened again. Microsoft has joined yet another open source group. Whatever happened to Redmond’s long held belief that open source is a cancer? Times change, and evidently Microsoft has learned to change with them. On Wednesday the company announced it’s joined the Cloud Native Computing Foundation as a top tier platinum member. The foundation is a project of the … Read More

Building IPv6 Firewalls: IPv6 Security Myths

Jonathan MathewsPublic

We’ve been trundling along nicely in IPv6, and now it is time to keep my promise to teach some iptables rules for IPv6. In this two-part series, we’ll start by examining some common IPv6 security myths. Every time I teach firewalls I have to start with debunking myths because there are a lot of persistent weird ideas about the so-called built-in IPv6 … Read More

Canonical Works on Linux 4.13 for Ubuntu 17.10, GCC 7 Transition in Early August

Jonathan MathewsPublic

They promised, and they will deliver! Canonical recently announced that they started working on rebasing the upcoming Ubuntu 17.10 (Artful Aardvark) operating system on the Linux 4.13 kernel. One of the highlights of Ubuntu Kernel Team’s latest newsletter is the fact that work started on the building and testing Linux kernel 4.13 for Ubuntu 17.10, and it looks like users … Read More

How to Integrate Containers in OpenStack

Jonathan MathewsPublic

One of the key features of the OpenStack platform is the ability to run applications, and quickly scale them, using containers. Containers are ready-to-run applications because they come packed with the entire stack of services required to run them. OpenStack is an ideal platform for containers because it provides all of the resources and services for containers to run in … Read More

How to improve your networking monitoring with chat alerts

Jonathan MathewsPublic

The point of a network monitoring solution is, of course, to tell you when something malfunctions on your network, but the effectiveness of a solution is directly related to how noticeable and timely its alerts are. For my work, system-malfunction emails can be overwhelming, so I thought a chatbot service would be more useful. After doing some research, it seemed like I … Read More

Bridging the Divide Between Open Source and Enterprise Users

Jonathan MathewsPublic

What if a critical portion of your business strategy were based on a mistaken notion? Of course you’d want to know, right? If you’ve made the assumption that proprietary enterprise software is superior to open source enterprise software, you’re not alone. And you’re not alone in being mistaken. The conceptual divide today between open source software and enterprise users can … Read More

openSUSE Leap 42.3 Officially Released, Based on SUSE Linux Enterprise 12 SP3

Jonathan MathewsPublic

openSUSE today announced the official and immediate availability for download of the latest and greatest update to the openSUSE Leap operating system series, version 42.3. Based on the SUSE Linux Enterprise (SLE) 12 Service Pack (SP) 3 enterprise-ready operating system, openSUSE Leap 42.3 is at best a hardware enablement release that includes hundreds of updated packages compared to the previous update, in … Read More

When the hacker ethic meets old ideas about brand

Jonathan MathewsPublic

The hacker ethic says we should value solving problems more than preserving institutions. But what happens to organizational identity when we do that? Open organizations apply principles from open source software development more broadly. Existing organizations find the open approach appealing because it promises gains in productivity and efficiency—but openness may have farther-reaching consequences than we anticipate or intend. One … Read More