What’s new with Microsoft in open source and Kubernetes at Open Source Summit and KubeCon India
When building with AI on Azure Kubernetes Service, getting a model running is just the beginning.
When building with AI on Azure Kubernetes Service, getting a model running is just the beginning.
GitHub Copilot and VS Code teams are sponsoring open-source MCP projects that push the boundaries of developer experience, agent autonomy, and more.
Drasi turns one with GQL support—giving developers more ways to build change-driven systems.
The next major release of Azure Container Storage delivers higher IOPS and less latency compared to previous versions.
For decades, fragments and unofficial copies of Microsoft’s 6502 BASIC have circulated online, mirrored on retrocomputing sites, and preserved in museum archives. Coders have studied the code, rebuilt it, and even run it in modern systems. Today, for the first time, we're officially releasing it under an open-source license.
We'll create an independent identity for DocumentDB and provide a conduit for database providers to contribute to our mission.
From Linux kernel code to AI at scale, discover Microsoft’s open source evolution and impact.
Wassette empowers AI agents to securely fetch and run Wasm tools, enabling dynamic, permission-controlled capabilities with zero dependencies.
You can now interactively debug Hyperlight guest micro-VMs. Attach the GNU Debugger at runtime to step through the code.
The Cloud Native team at Azure is working to make AI on Kubernetes more cost-effective and approachable for a broader range of users.
Now, with Radius Resource Types, platform engineers can define resource types specific to their organizations.
The Azure Incubations team is proud to share that Drasi has officially been accepted into the Cloud Native Computing Foundation Sandbox.
Microsoft and F5 are collaborating on Phase 2 of the OpenTelemetry with Apache Arrow project.