It makes perfect sense for enterprises as well as enthusiasts. Just ask GitLab . I've been preaching the gospel of the Linux desktop for more years than some of you have been alive. However, unless you argue that the Linux desktop includes Android smartphones and ChromeOS laptops, there will be no year of the Linux desktop. But there should be. For example, as GitLab recently revealed in its onboarding document for employees, staffers can run macOS, and they can run Linux on their desktops. But Windows? Forget about it! Why? GitLab explained: "Due to Microsoft Windows' dominance in desktop operating systems , Windows is the platform most targeted by spyware, viruses, and ransomware." . Transitioning from macOS to Linux can enhance your organization's safety and productivity. Discover the reasons it’s the optimal choice for enterprises.. Linux Desktop, Business Security, GitLab Policy, Open Source Benefits. . Brittany Day
The newest RHEL moves beyond servers and the datacenter to the edge and multicloud. . Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) has been the Linux for business for a generation now. Today, RHEL touches more than $13 trillion of the global economy. Remember when people used to think Linux couldn't handle big business? Ha! With the release of RHEL 9 at the Red Hat Summit in Boston, Red Hat improved its offerings from the open hybrid cloud to bare metal servers to cloud providers and the farthest edge of enterprise networks. RHEL 9 Customers want better security, and Red Hat will deliver it. Beyond the usual RHEL hardening, testing, and vulnerability scanning, RHEL 9 incorporates features that help address hardware-level security vulnerabilities like Spectre and Meltdown . This includes capabilities to help user-space processes create memory areas that are inaccessible to potentially malicious code. The platform provides readiness for customer security requirements as well, supporting PCI-DSS, HIPAA, and more. . CentOS Stream provides robust stability and compliance with contemporary frameworks and guidelines.. Red Hat Enterprise Linux,RHEL Security,Compliance Capabilities,Cloud Security,Hardware Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Red Hat is pleased to announce the availability of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (version 4) Beta 1 milestone. This is a public beta. Please feel free to forward this announcement to anyone who may be interested in testing this beta release. . . .. Red Hat is pleased to announce the availability of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (version 4) Beta 1 milestone. This is a public beta. Please feel free to forward this announcement to anyone who may be interested in testing this beta release. Red Hat Enterprise Linux v. 4 Beta is a preview of the next generation of Red Hat's comprehensive suite of enterprise operating systems -- designed for mission-critical enterprise computing and certified by top enterprise software vendors. More information on the current Red Hat Enterprise Linux version 3 and version 2.1 products is available at: https://www.redhat.com/en/technologies/linux-platforms/enterprise-linux The link for this article located at ByteEnable is no longer available. . Canonical has introduced the Preview Release of Ubuntu 22.04, encouraging users to dive in and evaluate its capabilities.. Red Hat Enterprise Linux,Beta Testing,Nahant Release,Operating System Features,Upcoming Linux Version. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Sixty-four-bit computing systems are poised to remake the enterprise network, offering dramatic increases in performance and scalability by virtue of faster computing speeds and increased memory. And it's none too soon, as the deployment . . .. Sixty-four-bit computing systems are poised to remake the enterprise network, offering dramatic increases in performance and scalability by virtue of faster computing speeds and increased memory. And it's none too soon, as the deployment of web-based, processor-intensive enterprise applications drives the need for improved performance across all parts of enterprise LAN and WAN boundaries. Though now in the minority of the installed base of systems, 64-bit servers with x86-64 capability are showing strong market growth, according to an IDC study. Some units, including AMD's Opteron processor, showed an 81 percent growth over the first quarter of 2004. John Humphreys, research manager of IDC's Global Enterprise Server Solutions unit, believes that the recent introduction of Intel's x86-64-based chips will result in robust 64-bit server sales for next year. Unisys recently reported that 52 percent of its business-intelligence customers who purchased high-end Windows servers last year chose Intel Itanium-2-based Unisys ES7000 servers. "Big data volumes, access to more data sources, and the need for real-time information are creating growing demand for the processing power of 64-bit based servers," said Michael Thomas, vice president of global solutions partners at the firm. The link for this article located at Lane Cooper, TechWeb.com is no longer available. . The rise of 64-bit computing has revolutionized enterprise networks, delivering enhanced performance and scalability while enabling efficient data handling and multitasking.. 64-Bit Architecture, Enterprise Computing, Server Performance, Scalable Solutions. . Anthony Pell
Until recently, many enterprises stood back and watched rather than investing in Grid computing technology. While few managers argued that tapping idle computing power can be beneficial, and that important applications can be built over a grid infrastructure, to many the . . . . Until recently, many enterprises stood back and watched rather than investing in Grid computing technology. While few managers argued that tapping idle computing power can be beneficial, and that important applications can be built over a grid infrastructure, to many the potential for harm seemed greater still. In recent times, however, this has begun to change. As researchers and corporate administrators get their hands dirty with large-scale grid implementations, they're developing a new generation of grid computing security approaches that stand to meet enterprise needs. "So far, in general, most grid standards that have evolved have not done an extensive job of addressing security at all," says Chris Crafford, vice president of engineering for Austin, TX-based commercial grid computing firm United Devices. "But I think as we go forward they will start doing so, because it's a critical requirement for business." The link for this article located at IBM is no longer available. . Until recently, many enterprises stood back and watched rather than investing in Grid computing tech. until, recently, enterprises, stood, watched, rather, investing, computing. . Anthony Pell
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