Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Two-thirds of data practitioners publicly share their data analysis or machine learning applications, according to The New Stack’s analysis of Kaggle’s latest annual survey of machine learning and data science. Of those collaborating publicly, 76% said they do so using GitHub.
The Palo Alto Networks (PANW) Unit 42 threat research team was quietly going about their business when they spotted yet another malware file in VirusTotal, the community site for suspicious files, domains, IPs and URLs. This one had gotten a benign verdict from all 56 vendors that evaluated it.
In France, we know summer has started when you see the Tour de France bike race on TV or in a city nearby. This year, the tour stopped in the city where I live, and I was blocked on my way back home from a customer conference to let the race pass through.
ScyllaDB sponsored this post. There are many reasons to be excited about generics in Go. In this article, I’m going to show how, using Go generics, ScyllaDB achieved a 40% performance gain in an already well-optimized package, the Google B-Tree implementation.
A majority of organizations have concerns about using open source software, with the largest organizations expressing the least confidence in their open source management practices, according to a survey that queried 700 technologists, including engineers, software developers, DevOps workers and exe
The wheel was invented in the 4th millennium BC. Now, in the 4th millennium, I am sure the wheel was the hottest thing on the block, and only the most popular Neolithic cool cats had wheels. Fast forward to the present day, and we can all agree that the wheel is nothing really to write home about.
Octopus Deploy sponsored this post. You probably use software tools to help automate your development processes, from git to build servers to continuous testing suites. These tools let you streamline your development flow to focus on more critical tasks.
The promises of this popular presentation are obvious: To a new developer, what are the bits of programming that you really need to know? And do you really need a four-year computer science degree to sling code?
The mythical Perpetual motion machine — or device that run continuously on their own without the need for a source of external power — have been studied and speculated about for centuries, and are a frequent fixture of science fiction works.
Companies have an open source problem — and the opportunity to do better. Upstream, a virtual conference held last week, looked at how companies can become better open source citizens, particularly in supporting projects across their lifespan.
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