crog is a command-line file transfer utility.
Release 21.1 of OPNsense brings improved firewall rules and NAT categories, traffic graphs supporting IPv6, advanced intrusion detection management, and aliases for MAC addresses.
»The OSI (Open Source Initiative) has approved version 2 of CERN’s Open Hardware License (OHL), meaning it conforms to its Open Source Definition and respects the ideals and ethos of the movement.«
The article explains how the optimization of the ext4 journaling leads to increased performance.
This report shows, what is needed, to automatically generate tagged PDFs from Latex in the future.
This blog post is the third of a three-part series that describes how Wikimedia’s own CDN evolved. The previous posts are linked there.
A short reminder that you should always own your platform.
The author shows what impressive IO performance a single workstation can deliver today.
Backblaze, the storage and data backup company, released their new hard drive reliability stats.
The European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) analyzed the incident that nearly led to a blackout in Europe.
This blog post gives insight into the recent deployment improvements of GitHub.
Three well-known open-source software companies join forces to provide a software suite specifically designed for the German public sector.
Snort 3 was rewritten from scratch and is available now after seven years of development.
»Raspberry Pi Pico is a tiny, fast, and versatile board built using RP2040, a brand new microcontroller chip designed by Raspberry Pi in the UK.«
AWS is going to create and maintain an ALv2-licensed fork of open source Elasticsearch and Kibana.
Version 21.0 of pip drops support for Python 2.
The first public working draft of the W3C Accessibility Guidelines 3.0 was released.
Everybody is talking about CI/CD, although nearly nobody is practicing the CD part of CI/CD.