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The AlmaLinux OS Foundation announced availability of AlmaLinux OS 8.4 just one week after the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8.4.

“This is our second stable release, since the project was announced in December,” said Jack Aboutboul, community manager of AlmaLinux.

“Our community, partners and sponsors all worked together, at warp speed no less, to provide the very latest, best and stable community-driven, governed and free open source alternative to the former incarnation of CentOS. The open source world was nervously watching the past few months wondering how feasible this new reality would be, and for us to produce something suitable for real-world, actively-running workloads so quickly and efficiently is truly a testament to our provenance, the power of community and the open source model.”

AlmaLinux can be downloaded from any of the more than 100 locations around the world, or images for use on cloud computing platforms including AWS and Docker are available on GitHub.

Highlights of features in this release include the following:

  • Secure Boot, the #1 most requested feature, is now fully supported.
  • OpenSCAP security profiles support for production workloads.
  • Developer repository with extra packages and build dependencies not included in upstream distribution.
  • New module streams and compiler updates.

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SnapLogic announced the latest release of the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader, making it fast and easy for an IT specialist, data engineer, or business analyst to load data into a cloud data warehouse. New users can get started with Fast Data Loader for free, for as long as they like, with no commitment.

With the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader, users can quickly and easily load data from SaaS applications such as Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Coupa, as well as cloud databases including Oracle and Microsoft SQL Server into a cloud data warehouse such as Amazon Redshift, Snowflake, or SAP Data Warehouse Cloud.

With no coding required, fast parallel loading, full or incremental updating, and historical tracking, the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader helps users get fast, reliable data access to power their customer, product, and sales analytics initiatives.

New and enhanced features in the May 2021 release of the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader include:

  • New UI – A new UI makes it easier to set up and manage new data loads. A simple three-step process walks the user through the stages of identifying and connecting data sources and targets, presenting only the information that is relevant at each stage.
  • New dashboard – A new dashboard provides a centralized, interactive way to monitor and manage existing data loads. Execution details related to data loads such as number of tables and records loaded, and the schedule of all future data loads, can be viewed from the new dashboard.
  • Tight integration – Fast Data Loader is an application that runs on top of the SnapLogic Intelligent Integration Platform. Users authorized for both products can now easily switch between the two.

“Cloud data warehouses are crucial to building a robust and modern analytics stack, however data loading from multiple sources can be slow and challenging and is holding enterprises back,” said Craig Stewart, CTO at SnapLogic. “The latest release of the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader helps users overcome these challenges so they can more quickly access the data to develop the analytics and insights they need to better engage customers, kick-start new product initiatives, and improve sales efficiency.”

Sign-ups to the SnapLogic Fast Data Loader can also be achieved through the Snowflake Partner Portal, the Amazon Redshift Console, and the SAP Store.


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Elastic announces new updates across the Elastic Security solution in its 7.13 release to broaden support for osquery, the open source host instrumentation framework, with a new host management integration for Elastic Agent and unified analysis of osquery host data.

The osquery host management integration, now in beta, enables security teams to use osquery results to address cyber threats without the complexity or cost of a separate management layer. With one click, users can install and orchestrate osquery across their Windows, macOS, and Linux hosts.

Osquery data is ingested in Elasticsearch and shown in Kibana where users can run live queries with one or more agents, and define scheduled queries to capture changes to an organization’s security state.

From a single pane of glass, users can centralize security analytics and contextualize osquery results against other event data, anomalies, and threats, and leverage that context to improve host visibility, analytical power, and monitoring.

Enhanced capabilities also include prebuilt and custom SQL queries, as well as Kibana query guidance to support users with code completion, code hinting, and content assistance.


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Amazon Web Services announced the general availability of Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) Anywhere, a new capability for Amazon ECS that enables customers to run and manage container-based applications on-premises using the same APIs, cluster management, workload scheduling, monitoring, and deployment pipelines they use with Amazon ECS in AWS.

Amazon ECS Anywhere provides a fully managed container orchestration service that allows customers to easily run, scale, and secure Docker container applications on any customer-managed infrastructure in addition to all AWS Regions, AWS Local Zones, and AWS hybrid infrastructure deployments (e.g. AWS Outposts and AWS Wavelength). There are no upfront fees or commitments to use Amazon ECS Anywhere, and customers pay only for the container instances they run.

Containers provide a standard way for developers to package and run applications quickly and reliably while improving resource utilization and reducing cost. Today, over 100,000 customers run their containers in the cloud using Amazon ECS because of its performance at scale, reliability, security, and simplicity.

However, some customers have data residency, latency, regulatory, or compliance considerations that require them to run applications on their own infrastructure. Other customers want to make use of their investment in unused on-premises compute capacity without adding to their operational overhead. Both scenarios require customers to manually install, operate, and manage on-premises container orchestration software—separate from the infrastructure they operate in the cloud.

Before today, these customers have had to install and manage their own container orchestration software and use disparate tooling across their cloud and on-premises environments. This situation not only leads to operational overhead, but also slows the pace of delivering new business capabilities. What customers want instead is a single, fully managed solution that works anywhere they deploy containers.

Amazon ECS Anywhere gives customers the ability to run Amazon ECS on any infrastructure using the same cloud-based, fully managed, highly scalable container orchestration service and control plane they use in AWS today. Amazon ECS Anywhere provides customers with consistent tooling and APIs for all container-based applications, and the same Amazon ECS experience for cluster management, workload scheduling, and monitoring in the cloud and in their own data centers and edge environments via a common control plane.

With Amazon ECS Anywhere, customers no longer need to run, update, or maintain their own container orchestrators on-premises. Customers simply create an activation key to register their virtual machines or bare metal servers, install the AWS Systems Manager agent and Amazon ECS Anywhere agent on their on-premises servers, and then deploy and manage their applications with Amazon ECS Anywhere. With Amazon ECS Anywhere, customers can use the same control plane and APIs for a seamless managed containers experience across all of their application environments.

“Customers have told us that while they need to run containers on their own infrastructure, they don’t want the hassle of operating their own cluster management software. They love the simplicity of Amazon ECS, the fact that it just works, and want the same reliability, scalability, and security of Amazon ECS wherever they run their applications,” said Deepak Singh, VP, Compute Services, AWS.

“With Amazon ECS Anywhere we are proud to provide our customers exactly what they’ve asked for—a single service and control plane to manage their container deployments across AWS Regions, AWS Outposts, AWS Wavelength, AWS Local Zones, and customer-owned infrastructure, both in their data centers and at edge locations. Nothing else in the industry does that.”

Amazon ECS Anywhere is available today in US East (N. Virginia), US East (Ohio), US West (Oregon), US West (N. California), GovCloud (US-West), GovCloud (US-East), Canada (Central), South America (São Paulo), Europe (Frankfurt), Europe (London), Europe (Paris), Middle East (Bahrain), Europe (Ireland), Europe (Milan), Europe (Stockholm), AWS Africa (Cape Town), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Seoul), Asia Pacific (Osaka), Asia Pacific (Mumbai), and Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), with availability in additional regions coming soon.

Siemens’ DI Software Valor NPI and PCBflow applications are market leaders in the digitalization of the electronics design-through-manufacturing flow and DFM (design-for-manufacturing) analysis in the New Production Introduction (NPI) for Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs).

“At its heart, Siemens is a manufacturing technology company. We run analytics on machine data from hundreds of our factory floors to provide insights to our customers. With Amazon ECS Anywhere, we found a powerfully simple service with a single management plane to consistently manage container applications running at edge locations across multiple factory floors,” said Dan Hoz, General Manager, Siemens Valor. “Our team expects to use Amazon ECS Anywhere by our customers to manage the factory floors in the next 1-2 years, which will allow our end customer to get real-time insights into their factory floors.”

CyberAgent is an internet services company based in Japan that focuses on internet advertising, gaming, and media services. “We are excited about Amazon ECS Anywhere because it has the ability to bring the powerful simplicity of Amazon ECS to our on-premises applications,” said Makoto Hasegawa, Technical Lead Engineer of CIU, CyberAgent. “Amazon ECS Anywhere enables us to use a fully managed control plane in the cloud that will orchestrate our containers and help us run tasks on our own infrastructure. By using the same control plane for both on-premises and cloud-native applications, we can better manage our hybrid footprint.”

Gaggle is a pioneer in helping K-12 districts manage student safety on school-provided technology by proactively identifying potential online threats and risks to students. “We currently use Amazon ECS to run containers in the cloud. We appreciate the cluster management, workload scheduling, and monitoring capabilities of Amazon ECS and wanted to use a similarly powerful container orchestration service for our on-premises workloads,” said Casey Lee, CTO, Gaggle.

“Fortunately, with the introduction of Amazon ECS Anywhere, we can containerize our existing on-premises workloads and benefit from the same fully managed Amazon ECS control plane. The ability to use the same tooling for both on-premises and in region workloads is awesome.”

Getir is a pioneer in ultrafast delivery that revolutionized last-mile delivery in 2015 with its 10-minute grocery delivery proposition. Getir, which launched operations in London in 2021, has the sub-brands GetirFood, GetirMore, GetirWater and GetirLocals. “With Amazon ECS Anywhere, we expect to easily run containers in on-premises data centers. Running on-premises is a key step towards compliance,” said Doğan Dalyan, Technical Co-founder, Getir.

“The added benefit is that we can use the exact same tooling and workflows to run our container-based applications in both the cloud and our on-premises data center. This consistent tooling has the potential to make maintaining and managing our container applications a seamless experience.”

Infosys is a global leader in next-generation digital services and consulting “Our clients are increasingly looking for the same experience of cloud managed services on their private infrastructure. Using Amazon ECS Anywhere, enterprises can take advantage of container elasticity, security and reliability on their on-prem environment with the ease of cluster management from a single pane of glass,” said Shaji Mathew, EVP, Infosys. “AWS’s software-based approach for managing hybrid environments along with highly automated end-to-end workflows supported by Infosys Modernization Suite, part of Infosys Cobalt, will help our clients accelerate their modernization journey.”

HCL Technologies’ CloudSmart approach helps tomorrow’s digital enterprises to make intelligent choices that extract the true value out of Cloud investments and maximize business value in alignment with organizational goals. “We believe Amazon ECS Anywhere can help our enterprises deliver growth, with agility and an exceptional experience,” said Kalyan Kumar, CTO and Head of Ecosystems, HCL Technologies. “Amazon ECS Anywhere’s ability to deploy containerized workloads anywhere supports our focus on a customer-friendly hybrid approach.”

SUSE is a global leader in true open source innovation, specializing in enterprise Linux, Kubernetes management, and edge solutions. “We are excited to announce the integration of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server with Amazon ECS Anywhere, which will enable our customers to innovate everywhere and unleash the power of digital transformation in the mode that’s best suited for their unique needs,” said Kelly Collins, Head of Global Cloud, SUSE.

“Amazon ECS Anywhere offers a standardized container orchestrator, which combined with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, will allow customers to leverage the same skillsets and tooling, and have the ability to migrate to the cloud when ready. We are pleased to be able to help customers capitalize on their existing on-premises data center investments while also enabling them to take advantage of the scalability and flexibility of the cloud.”

Canonical is the publisher of Ubuntu, the operating system (OS) for most public cloud workloads as well as data centers, IoT, smart devices, self-driving cars, and advanced robots. “At Canonical, we publish Linux and open source images so that engineering teams can easily access container images for their container workloads, including those running on Amazon ECS and Amazon EKS,” said Alex Gallagher, VP of Cloud Go to Market, Canonical.

“With the introduction of Amazon ECS Anywhere, customers now have a way to easily run container workloads outside of the cloud. We’re excited to be offering Ubuntu for container workloads using Amazon ECS Anywhere so that customers can capitalize on the benefits of Ubuntu’s world-leading hardware support, professional services, and vast ecosystem.”

Aqua Security helps organizations minimize their security risk exposure and enforce compliance across their cloud native application lifecycle and infrastructure. “We’re pleased to announce support for Amazon ECS Anywhere with our Aqua Enterprise Platform so that customers can gain full visibility into their container activity and reduce risks for container-based applications running on their own infrastructure,” says Amir Jerbi, CTO and Co-founder, Aqua Security.

“With Amazon ECS Anywhere, customers can now meet compliance and regulatory requirements by running their container workloads on-premises while leveraging the Amazon ECS tooling and APIs that they’ve grown accustomed to. We’re excited to help customers securely build and run cloud native applications in the environments that make the most sense for them.”


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Bishop Fox announced the appointment of accomplished industry executive, Patty Wright, as senior vice president and general manager of consulting.

Wright brings a wealth of experience and a proven track record for successfully building and leading services teams at industry giants like Cisco and Symantec, as well as security pioneers including Rapid7, @Stake, and Neohapsis. Wright reports to Bill Carroll, Bishop Fox’s chief operations officer (COO).

“Patty’s accomplishments in the security market speak for themselves, and her decision to choose Bishop Fox as the next step in her career is an absolute win for us,” said Carroll. “Patty is the consummate professional to lead, innovate, and scale our team across a robust, growing services portfolio, including our Continuous Attack Surface Testing (CAST) solution, which combines cutting-edge technology with deep security expertise and human innovation. She brings significant industry expertise to a consulting organization that is unmatched in talent, and her contributions will be invaluable as we accelerate our growth and continue to raise the bar on service excellence.”

Wright brings more than 20 years of experience in senior executive roles at well-known high-tech and cybersecurity companies. Most recently, she served as the vice president and general manager of customer experience at Cisco where she managed services delivery and customer success, including a large portfolio of security services for one of Cisco’s largest global regions. Prior to that, Wright acted as senior director, managing the entire portfolio of security services for the Americas at Cisco.

She previously served as the VP of consulting at Neohapsis, a provider of mobile and cloud security services, which was acquired by Cisco in 2015. She also served as the VP of professional services at Rapid7 where she was instrumental in building a highly profitable business unit from the ground up.

She previously held roles as the senior director of consulting at Symantec and regional director at @Stake, which was acquired by Symantec in 2004. Wright earned a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada.

“Bishop Fox has built an impeccable reputation in the industry for providing the highest caliber offensive security services,” said Wright. “I’m excited to lead a consulting team that represents the best talent in the industry and is dedicated to delivering exceptional results to our clients. Throughout my career, I’ve had the opportunity to achieve aggressive year-over-year growth targets while also delivering outstanding customer service. Bishop Fox has all the right ingredients and a strong foundation for me to build on as we accelerate growth and establish our leadership position in the market.”


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The events of the past year or so has made a lot of people rethink how they want to spend the rest of their lives. For a variety of reasons, not everyone has the option of starting over or training for a new career, but one vineyard in California is offering one person the chance to do just that. Here’s what to know about this dream job.

What the job entails

The yearlong position is with the Murphy Goode Winery in Sonoma, California. The first three months involve shadowing winemaker Dave Ready, Jr. to learn about the many aspects of a harvest. After that, you’ll work with the winery to find the aspect of the business you’re most excited to learn more about, and then spend the rest of the year focusing on that.

Other potential responsibilities and duties of the apprentice winemaker include:

  • Assisting in winery operations
  • Learning about e-commerce
  • Helping to build the Murphy-Goode Winery brand
  • Developing strong working relationships across functions of the winery
  • Providing hospitality to trade and consumers by contributing to a positive winery experience
  • Effectively promoting Murphy-Goode wines through various channels and events

In addition to learning about winemaking, the successful applicant will receive:

  • A salary of $120,000 for the year
  • One year of free rent in Sonoma, California
  • 30 cases of wine

How to apply

In order to apply for this position, you must be at least 21 years of age, a legal resident of the United States and/or authorized to work in the U.S., and be able to lift a minimum of 50 lbs. You can access the full job description and requirements here.

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The main part of the application is creating a video explaining why you’re a good fit for the job. You can upload the video and fill out the application form here. Applications must be received by June 30, 2021.


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When you think of gardening tools, items like gloves, spades, and pruning sheers probably come to mind. But it turns out, there’s something else that can be extremely valuable for your garden: a journal. In an article for Food52, Master Gardener Nadia Hassani explains why. Here’s what to know.

How to pick a gardening journal

There’s no “perfect” gardening journal. In fact, it can take several different forms, according to Hassani:

How you keep track of what you grow—with a garden app, notebook, monthly planner, index cards, or on spreadsheets—doesn’t matter, as long as it works for you and you record things while they’re still fresh in your memory. As with anything else, record-keeping takes the guesswork out of gardening so you can focus your efforts on making your plants thrive.

Basic information to record

Whether you’re an experienced gardener, or relatively new to the activity, there are two things Hassani says are essential in a gardening journal:

Maps

Specifically, you’re going to want to draw a map of your garden—to scale—and record what you plant where. Here’s Hassani to explain why:

Figure out how much space each crop will need, mark it on your map, and plant accordingly. You will need the map for your garden next year to practice crop-rotation, a very old farming practice that avoids planting crops of the same families in the same spot for at least two years in a row. For example, peppers, eggplants, potatoes, and tomatoes are all members of the nightshade family, so you should not plant tomatoes in the same spot where you planted peppers the year before.

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Planting and fertilizing dates

This one’s a little easier than making a map. Basically, you want to write down what you planted and when. This is especially the case if you’re starting from seed, Hassani writes, “so you’ll know the time frame in which you can expect to see growth, or whether the seeds have failed to germinate and you should reseed.”

Also keep track of the dates when you fertilize your garden, as well the type of fertilizer you use. Do the same thing for any pest- or disease-control products. “By and large, too little is better than too much, because overdoing fertilizer or chemicals can harm your plants,” Hassani says.

Additional useful information

On top of drawing the map and recording the important dates, there are a few other things Hassani says that more advanced gardeners might want to include in their journal. These include:

  • Harvest dates (to give you an idea of what to expect next year)
  • Which pests are a problem, and when
  • Your favorite plants and where you purchased the seeds/seedlings

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