OpenShift
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AWS open source newsletter #177
Oct 30, 2023 | 19 minute read
October 30th, 2023 - Instalment #177 Welcome to #177 of the AWS open source newsletter, the Halloween special. You will find no tricks in this edition, only treats, with more new projects for you to check out and content that are a feast for your eyes. This weeks new projects include a tool to help you easily deploy vector databases on Kubernetes, an observability toolkit, a tool to help you benchmark network latency, as well as lots of new demos on generative AI.
- oss-newsletter
- aws open source
- Bottlerocket
- KubeArmor
- NGINX
- Wordpress
- Milvus
- Falcon-40B
- JupyterHub
- Dask
- Flux GitOps
- Crossplane
- Kubernetes
- Amazon EKS
- Babelfish for Aurora PostgreSQL
- PostgreSQL
- Linux
- Apache Hive
- Apache Spark
- Apache Kafka
- Apache Hudi
- Delta Lake
- Apache Iceberg
- OpenSearch
- Dremio
- OpenShift
- OpenCLIP
- Apache Airflow
- MWAA
- Amazon Corretto
- OpenJDK
- AWS CDK
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AWS open source newsletter #171
Aug 29, 2023 | 18 minute read
August 29th, 2023 - Instalment #171 Welcome to #171 of the AWS open source newsletter, the newsletter created for developers passionate about open source. Thanks to the wonderful August bank holiday here in the UK, we are publishing a day later than usual. If you have not read this newsletter before, we feature new projects, content from across the open source and AWS community, and share events and videos that you should check out.
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AWS open source newsletter #143
Jan 30, 2023 | 14 minute read
January 30th, 2023 - Instalment #143 Welcome to edition #143 of the AWS open source newsletter, and another week of great new open source projects for you to try out. This week we feature projects including “aws-cdk-in-electron”, a project that lets you put AWS CDK in a graphical user interface, “lightsail-k8s-installer” that helps you deploy Kubernetes into Amazon Lightsail, “porting-advisor-for-graviton” a great project to help you migrate to Arm based AWS Graviton instance types, “aws-ebook-downloader” a browser tool to help you easily download pdf’s on AWS topics, “lake-formation-permissions-sync” a useful tool to help you keep on top of your Lake Formation setups, and many more.
- oss-newsletter
- aws open source
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- MariaDB
- OpenSearch
- RabbitMQ
- Apache Flink
- Apache Velocity Template Language
- AWS ParallelCluster
- Kubernetes
- EKS Anywhere
- Apache Kafka
- AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry
- Prometheus
- OpenShift
- ROSA
- AWS SAM
- Terraform
- OpenJDK
- DataHub
- AWS CDK
- Pulumi
- SST
- Serverless Framework
- Apache Iceberg
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AWS open source newsletter #140
Jan 9, 2023 | 19 minute read
January 9th, 2023 - Instalment #140 Welcome Happy New Year and welcome to the first AWS open source newsletter of 2023, edition #140. If you have not already checked it out, I put together a short retrospective summary of 2022 in the post, AWS open source newsletter - 2022 in review. There are some interesting facts and figures in there. I am also taking time to collect feedback from readers to help shape where this newsletter goes in 2023.
- oss-newsletter
- aws open source
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- Next.js
- AWS SDK for Java
- AWS ParallelCluster
- Docker
- MariaDB
- Amazon EKS
- Kubernetes
- MQTT
- ArgoCD
- AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry
- Prometheus
- DAMON
- Crossplane
- Log4Shell
- .NET
- Apache Spark
- Apache Kafka
- Apache Flink
- Apache Pinot
- Apache Superset
- Apache NiFi
- Delta Lake
- OpenShift
- Redis
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
- Ubuntu Pro
- AWS Copilot
- RabbitMQ
- Apache Airflow
- Rust
- Terraform
- Amazon EMR
- Apache ShardingSphere-Proxy
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AWS open source news and updates #123
Aug 5, 2022 | 16 minute read
August, 5th, 2022 - Instalment #123 Welcome Welcome to the AWS open source newsletter episode #123. I sometimes speak with builders who are experienced developers but perhaps new to open source. A common question I get asked is what the impact of them working on open source might be on their careers. Whilst it is never a guarantee, open source can be a great career accelerator. I was reminded of that last week when reading the excellent post from Ran Isenberg, who shared his experience in his post How One Open-Source Code Donation Got Me Promoted.