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Effectively building AI agents on AWS Serverless

AWS just dropped support for buildingserverless agentic AI systems. You’ll need the Strands Agents SDK, Bedrock AgentCore (preview), plus trusty tools like Lambda and ECS. What’s new? Agentic AI flips the script. Instead of dumb prompt-in, response-out bots, you getgoal-driven loopswith memory, too.. read more  

Effectively building AI agents on AWS Serverless
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How to prepare for the Bitnami Changes coming soon

The Bitnami team has delayed the deletion of the Bitnami public catalog until September 29th. They will conduct a series of brownouts to prepare users for the upcoming changes, with the affected applications list being published on the day of each brownout. Users are advised to switch to Bitnami Sec.. read more  

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Observability in Go: What Real Engineers Are Saying in 2025

Go observability still feels like pulling teeth. Manual instrumentation? Tedious. Span coverage? Spotty. Telemetry volume? Totally out of hand. Even with OpenTelemetry gaining traction, Go lags behind Java and Python when it comes to auto-instrumentation and clean context propagation. Devs are hunt.. read more  

Observability in Go: What Real Engineers Are Saying in 2025
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ECScape: Understanding IAM Privilege Boundaries in Amazon ECS

A new ECS security mess—ECScape—lets low-privileged tasks on EC2 act like the ECS agent. That’s bad. Real bad. Why? Because it opens the door to stealing IAM credentials from other ECS tasks sharing the same host. Here’s the trick: The attacker hits the instance metadata service (IMDS) and fakes a .. read more  

ECScape: Understanding IAM Privilege Boundaries in Amazon ECS
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Availability Models: Because “Highly Available” Isn’t Saying Much

Antithesis and Jepsen want to kill hand-wavy "high availability" talk. Instead, they push for clearavailability models—majority,total,sticky, etc.—that spell out when an operationactuallyworks during failures. It's about precision, not platitudes. Why it matters:This reframes availability from a va.. read more  

Availability Models: Because “Highly Available” Isn’t Saying Much
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Google Develops KFuzzTest For Fuzzing Internal Linux Kernel Functions

Google droppedKFuzzTest, a lean fuzzing tool built to hit Linux kernel internals—way past just syscalls. It brings a clean API, docs, and sample targets to get fuzzing fast. Why it matters:KFuzzTest marks a shift. Kernel fuzzing’s no longer just about hammering syscalls—it’s going deeper into the g.. read more  

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v1.34: User preferences (kuberc) are available for testing in kubectl 1.34

Kubernetes v1.34 pusheskubectlinto the future with a betauser preferencessystem. Drop a.kubercfile in place, and you can bake in default flags, toggle features likeinteractive deleteorServer-Side Apply, and wire up custom aliases—including pre- and post-args... read more  

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v1.34: Of Wind & Will (O' WaW)

Kubernetes v1.34 drops with58 updates, and23 just hit stable. Highlights: Dynamic Resource Allocation (DRA), per-Pod resource limits, and secure image pulls using Pod-specific ServiceAccount tokens. Scalability gets a lift from streaming list responses. Security tightens with finer anonymous auth r.. read more  

v1.34: Of Wind & Will (O' WaW)
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kube-bench Tutorial: Features, Use Cases, How It Works

kube-benchjust leveled up. Aqua Security’s CIS compliance scanner now snaps into CI/CD, runs pre-deploy checks, and helps dig through forensics after incidents. It plays nice with managed K8s—EKS, AKS, GKE—and handles custom YAML test suites if you’re going off the beaten path. Reports land in stru.. read more  

kube-bench Tutorial: Features, Use Cases, How It Works
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An introduction to platform engineering

Platform engineering is stepping in where DevOps didn’t quite land. Think fewer duct-taped pipelines, more thoughtful systems. The fix? Internal Developer Platforms (IDPs), usually riding on Kubernetes, built to tame the sprawl. Gartner says 80% of big engineering orgs will run platform teams by 20.. read more  

An introduction to platform engineering
BigQuery is a cloud-native, serverless analytics platform designed to store, query, and analyze massive volumes of structured and semi-structured data using standard SQL. It separates storage from compute, automatically scales resources, and eliminates the need for infrastructure management, indexing, or capacity planning.

BigQuery is optimized for analytical workloads such as business intelligence, log analysis, data science, and machine learning. It supports real-time data ingestion via streaming, batch loading from cloud storage, and federated queries across external data sources like Cloud Storage, Bigtable, and Google Drive.

Query execution is distributed and highly parallel, enabling interactive performance even on petabyte-scale datasets. The platform integrates deeply with the Google Cloud ecosystem, including Looker for BI, Vertex AI for ML workflows, Dataflow for streaming pipelines, and BigQuery ML, which allows users to train and run machine learning models directly using SQL.

Built-in security features include fine-grained IAM controls, column- and row-level security, encryption by default, and audit logging. BigQuery follows a consumption-based pricing model, charging for storage and queries (on-demand or reserved capacity).