Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

How does AI-powered computing keep a ball balanced? #canonical #intel #embeddedworld #shorts

At Embedded World 2025 at Canonical's booth 4-160, lntel is showcasing an amazing balancing ball demo, powered by. It demonstrates the power of Intel’s cutting-edge processors, combined with the flexibility and reliability of Ubuntu, handle complex physics in milliseconds, ensuring smooth, dynamic balance with precision. A perfect example of how real-time control can be applied to, automation, and industrial AI!

Among the waves: Plucky Puffin

Not to be confused with the titular Linux mascot and seabird cousin, the penguin, puffins are another distinctively colorful and whimsical nautical avian. Over the centuries, these beaky birds have been given numerous nicknames and monikers like the “sea parrot” and the harlequinesque appearance of their facial feathers has earned them the distinction of “Clown of the Sea”.

How to deploy Kubeflow on Azure

Kubeflow is a cloud-native, open source machine learning operations (MLOps) platform designed for developing and deploying ML models on Kubernetes. Kubeflow helps data scientists and machine learning engineers run the entire ML lifecycle within one tool. Charmed Kubeflow is Canonical’s official distribution of Kubeflow. The key benefits of Charmed Kubeflow include security maintenance of container images, enterprise support, and further tooling integration with Spark, Feast, MLFlow, and others.

Google Authd broker: authenticate to Ubuntu Desktop/Server with your Google account

Today we are announcing the introduction of Authd support for Google IAM, allowing all Ubuntu users to use their Google account to authenticate to their desktop and servers. The Google broker snap for Authd is available for free on Ubuntu Desktop and Server 24.04 and it works with both personal and Workspace Google accounts.

Install FreePBX and Asterisk on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS for security patches until 2036

Deploying FreePBX and Asterisk on a single Ubuntu virtual machine in a public cloud is an ideal solution for personal users and small to medium-sized businesses with voice over IP (VoIP) and fax over IP (FoIP) needs. This setup costs nothing, is scalable and secure, and has daily recovery points with a recovery time measured in minutes.

How to debug an Android application using Anbox Cloud?

In this video, the Anbox team demonstrates how to debug an Android application with Android studio in Anbox Cloud. What is Anbox Cloud? Anbox Cloud lets you run virtualized Android environments securely, at any scale, to any device letting you focus on your use case. Run Android in system containers, not emulators, on AWS, OCI, Azure, GCP or your private cloud with ultra low streaming latency. Trademark notice Android is a trademark of Google LLC. Anbox Cloud uses assets available through the Android Open Source Project.

How to install Anbox Cloud Appliance?

In this video, the Anbox team shows how to install the appliance on a dedicated machine. What is Anbox Cloud? Anbox Cloud lets you run virtualized Android environments securely, at any scale, to any device letting you focus on your use case. Run Android in system containers, not emulators, on AWS, OCI, Azure, GCP or your private cloud with ultra low streaming latency. Trademark notice Android is a trademark of Google LLC. Anbox Cloud uses assets available through the Android Open Source Project.

How to conduct a vulnerability assessment

The realm of information security is fraught with jargon, as anyone who has come across vulnerability-related terms can tell you. To complicate matters further, some of these terms are used interchangeably or in contexts outside of computing. This can muddy the waters for people looking to learn about vulnerability assessments – so in this blog we’ll begin by demystifying the language, before delving into how you can perform vulnerability assessments on Ubuntu installations.