Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Is on-prem the top choice to run AI?

‎‎Subscribe. Fuel your curiosity. In this episode, we break down what we’ve learned from teams running AI at scale, and why on-premises infrastructure is making a strong comeback. We’re seeing a shift: performance, cost control, data sovereignty, and platform flexibility are driving conversations about on-prem strategies for AI. No one-size-fits-all answers, but if you’re building or scaling AI, this might help you think a few steps ahead.

Are you running AI the smart way?

Data locality: AI models often rely on large datasets. Locating compute close to the data reduces transfer times and improves training performance. Latency sensitivity: Real-time AI applications, like recommendation systems or edge analytics, depend on low-latency environments. This can be more easily tuned in private or hybrid setups. Hardware specialization: Some AI workloads benefit from custom hardware like GPUs or TPUs. Private cloud allows more control over this, while public cloud offers broader access but less customization.

The Tech Behind Europe's Space Missions | Canonical x ESA

‎‎Subscribe. Fuel your curiosity. “Open source software is… the glue for everything that everyone does, from sending an email through to managing critical operations, not just space operations.” The European Space Agency (ESA) runs missions ranging from investigating Earth’s forests, to exploring Jupiter’s moons, to deflecting incoming asteroids.

What is Linux Support?

In the world of enterprise IT, “support” can mean many things. For some, it’s a safety net – insurance for the day something breaks. For others, it’s the difference between a minor hiccup and a full-scale outage. At Canonical, it means a simple, comprehensive subscription that takes care of everything, so that everything you build works the way you want it to, for all the people who love to use it.

Deploying secure AI: Canonical + SpectroCloud for federal missions

As mission requirements evolve, federal agencies and defense teams need infrastructure supporting AI/ML workloads anywhere, from secure cloud environments to disconnected edge locations. In this fireside chat, Mark Lewis (VP, Application Services at Canonical) and William Crum (Senior Defense Success Engineer at SpectroCloud) discuss how their organizations are helping federal customers deploy secure, scalable, and consistent Kubernetes and AI infrastructure across hybrid and edge environments.

Canonical announces Charmed Feast: A production-grade feature store for your open source MLOps stack

July 10, 2025: Today, Canonical announced the release of Charmed Feast, an enterprise solution for feature management with seamless integration with Charmed Kubeflow, Canonical’s distribution of the popular open source MLOps platform. Charmed Feast provides the full breadth of the upstream Feast capabilities, adding multi-cloud capabilities, and comprehensive support.

Raising the bar for automotive cybersecurity in open source - Canonical's ISO/SAE 21434 certification

Cybersecurity in the automotive world isn’t just a best practice anymore – it’s a regulatory imperative. With vehicles becoming software-defined platforms, connected to everything from mobile phones to cloud services, the attack surface has expanded dramatically. The cybersecurity risk is serious, and concrete. And with regulations like UNECE R155 making cybersecurity compliance mandatory, the automotive industry needs suppliers it can trust.

What our users make with Ubuntu Pro - Episode 1

Ubuntu Pro isn’t just for enterprises – it’s for the passionate community that powers and supports open source every day. From secure remote access to homelab hardening, Ubuntu Pro helps users get more from their systems, whether at work or at home. In this series, we talk to real users about how they use Ubuntu Pro in their personal and professional lives. We begin with Marc Grondin, a longtime Linux user and Ubuntu Pro subscriber based in Quebec, Canada.

Live Linux kernel patching with progressive timestamped rollouts

The apt package manager is responsible for installing.deb packages on Ubuntu LTS (long-term support) and interim releases, including the.deb package for the Linux kernel. Updating the kernel package requires a system restart, leaving systems vulnerable between the moment the Linux kernel package is installed and when the machine is rebooted.

Chiseled Ubuntu containers for OpenJRE 8, 17 and 21

Today we are announcing chiseled containers for OpenJRE 8, 17 and 21 (Open Java Runtime Environment), coming from the OpenJDK project. These images are highly optimized for size and security, containing only the dependencies that are strictly necessary. They are available for both AMD64 and ARM64 architectures and benefit from 12 years of security support.