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ContentUpdates and recent posts about SERP Clapper for Medium..
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

Introducing AWS Cloud Control API MCP Server: Natural Language Infrastructure Management on AWS

AWS dropped theCloud Control API MCP Server, a mouthful of a name for a tool that makes 1,200+ AWS resources manageable through a standard CRUDL API—using natural language. Think: describe what you want, and tools like Amazon Q Developer turn it into actual infra code. It doesn’t stop there. It val..

Introducing AWS Cloud Control API MCP Server: Natural Language Infrastructure Management on AWS
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

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 ..

ECScape: Understanding IAM Privilege Boundaries in Amazon ECS
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

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..

Availability Models: Because “Highly Available” Isn’t Saying Much
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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..

Observability in Go: What Real Engineers Are Saying in 2025
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

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..

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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

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..

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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

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...

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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

Evolving Kubernetes for generative AI inference

Google Cloud, ByteDance, and Red Hat are wiring AI smarts straight intoKubernetes. Think: faster inference benchmarks, smarter LLM-aware routing, and on-the-fly resource juggling—all built to handle GenAI heat. Their new push,llm-d, bakesvLLMdeep into Kubernetes. That unlocks disaggregated serving ..

Evolving Kubernetes for generative AI inference
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

Kubernetes in an AI-Native World: Can It Stay Relevant?

At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Hyderabad 2025, CNCF leads made it clear:cloud-native infraisn’t just supporting AI—it’s becoming its backbone. The conversation’s moved on from“Can Kubernetes run AI?”to“How does it evolve for AI-first everything?”..

Kubernetes in an AI-Native World: Can It Stay Relevant?
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@faun shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago

CNCF Incubates OpenYurt for Kubernetes at the Edge

OpenYurt just leveled up—now officially an incubating project under the CNCF. It pushes Kubernetes out past the data center, into the messy edges of the network, without breaking upstream compatibility. No forks, no duct tape. The maintainer roster’s growing too. Folks fromVMware,Microsoft, andInte..

CNCF Incubates OpenYurt for Kubernetes at the Edge
Did you know you can clap for someone’s content up to 50 times on Medium?

Well, you can.

And to protect you from carpal tunnel syndrome, I packaged that behavior into a little extension for Chrome.

It works like this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oN3soEz-5Z4

Open up your developer tools (right-click & choose inspect)

Then, navigate to the “console”:

And if you have a bunch of caca (that’s Spanish for đŸ’©) in your Console you can click the little đŸš« icon to clear it:

Then:

copy the JavaScript code below
paste it into the Console area
press the Return key

and spread the clap!

(Scroll up to the top of this article before you press enter if you want to see it in action)

let clapButton = document.querySelector('button[data-testid="headerClapButton"]');
if (clapButton) {
const events = ['mousedown', 'mouseup', 'click'];

async function performClap() {
for (let i = 0; i < 50; i++) {
events.forEach(eventType => {
let event = new MouseEvent(eventType, {
'view': window,
'bubbles': true,
'cancelable': true
});
clapButton.dispatchEvent(event);
});
await new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, 10)); // Introducing a 10ms delay between claps
}
console.log("+50 Claps! Now, go join the SERP community!");
}

performClap();
} else {
console.log("Clap button not found!");
}

Want the extension?

I submitted the extension to the Chrome app store and it’s pending approval as of this writing


But if you’re too excited to sit around when you could be clappin’ it up — you’re welcome to grab the bootleg here:

👉 https://serp.ly/@serp/serp-clapper-medium