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@goutham-annem started using tool Amazon ECS , 1 week ago.
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@eon01 gave 🐾 to The unwritten laws of software engineering , 1 week ago.
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Build and Deploy a Remote MCP Server to GKE in 30 Minutes

Google walks you through shipping a remoteMCP serveronGKE AutopilotusingFastMCPandstreamable-http, swapping localstdiofor shared HTTP endpoints. The clever bit: theGateway APIhandles managed SSL plusCLIENT_IP session affinity, so one centralized server beats everyone running redundant local copies... read more  

Build and Deploy a Remote MCP Server to GKE in 30 Minutes
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How building an HTML-first site doubled our users overnight

Building HTML-first forms using Astro instead of React dramatically increased completion rates and sustainability, highlighting the effectiveness of lightweight, accessible web components for all users, regardless of browser or connectivity... read more  

How building an HTML-first site doubled our users overnight
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The unwritten laws of software engineering

- Always related - first rollback, then debug. - Backups aren’t real until restored. - You’ll hate yourself for bad logs. - ALWAYS have a rollback plan. - Every external dependency will fail. - If there's risk, use the “4 eyes” rule. - Nothing lasts like a temporary fix... read more  

The unwritten laws of software engineering
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Google hits 50% IPv6

The 50% IPv6 milestone is real, but adoption differs by country. Analysts who report lower figures use population-weighted sampling, while their per-country adoption rates match the higher estimate... read more  

Google hits 50% IPv6
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Building in the Age of Collaborative Coding

The speed of innovation is crucial for teams, and AI tools have enabled faster work. A collaborative coding model where teams build, review, and ship alongside AI agents is key to staying ahead in workflows. Three shifts have reshaped how teams build, leading to the adoption of a new collaborative c.. read more  

Building in the Age of Collaborative Coding
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Tigera introduces unified control plane for Kubernetes-based AI agent security

Tigera launched Lynx for general availability, a Kubernetes-native control plane that operators place in the path of AI agent calls so teams can enforce identity and policy... read more  

Tigera introduces unified control plane for Kubernetes-based AI agent security
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How Netflix Simplified Batch Compute with Kueue

Netflix migratedmillions of batch jobsfrom their custom queuing system toKueue, a cloud-native job queueing system, as part of transitioning to a more Kubernetes-native infrastructure. Kueue offers features such as preemption, fair sharing, and hierarchical tenants that were missing in their homegro.. read more  

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When failover isn’t safe: Building high-availability PostgreSQL on Kubernetes

Datadog made PostgreSQL failover safer by treating replica lag as the promotion gate. A zonal-failure gameday showed that detection and automation could not protect the database if the standby sat behind the primary. The team added lag-aware checks, clearer operator signals, and failure drills so en.. read more  

When failover isn’t safe: Building high-availability PostgreSQL on Kubernetes
AWX is the open source, community supported upstream project for Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform, formerly known as Ansible Tower. It gives teams a web based interface, a full REST API, and a distributed task engine on top of Ansible, turning command line playbook runs into a managed, auditable automation service.

The project began at AnsibleWorks as the commercial Ansible Tower product, and after Red Hat acquired Ansible, it open sourced the codebase as AWX in September 2017, positioning it as the development ground where new features land before they are hardened into the supported Automation Platform controller. With AWX, you organize automation around projects (synced from Git or other source control), inventories (static or dynamically pulled from cloud providers), credentials (stored encrypted and injected at runtime), and job templates that tie a playbook to its inventory and credentials. On top of that, it adds role based access control, a visual dashboard, job scheduling, workflow chaining, webhooks, and real time job output, so multiple teams can run, track, and delegate automation without sharing SSH keys or sitting at a terminal.

Modern AWX runs on Kubernetes or OpenShift through the AWX Operator, which manages installation, upgrades, and scaling declaratively, reflecting its shift from a single host application to a cloud native, container based platform. Because it is the upstream of a paid product, AWX moves fast and ships frequently, which makes it ideal for labs, learning, and self managed deployments, though teams needing formal support and long term stability typically run the downstream Automation Platform instead.