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Cisco Live'26 - Amsterdam: Aligning with the AI-Driven Future

The energy at Cisco Live EMEA in Amsterdam (February 9-13, 2026) was primarily driven by groundbreaking AI announcements, & the event provided Fabrix.ai an opportunity to strengthen our strategic position alongside Cisco and Splunk ecosystems. The event’s focus on AI, highlighted by the recent Cisco AI Summit, emphasizes a clear market direction in which Fabrix.ai is perfectly poised to accelerate innovation.

Database Partitioning: Types, Strategies, and When to Use Each

How database partitioning works in PostgreSQL and MySQL. Range, list, and hash partitioning with SQL examples and guidance on when to partition vs shard. Prathamesh works as an evangelist at Last9, runs SRE stories - where SRE and DevOps folks share their stories, and maintains o11y.wiki - a glossary of all terms related to observability.

AI SRE in Practice: Accelerating Engineer Onboarding with Contextual Expertise

Onboarding new engineers to complex Kubernetes environments is expensive. Junior engineers need to learn cluster architecture, understand organizational conventions, navigate internal documentation, and build relationships with senior team members who can answer questions. The process takes weeks or months, and during that time, senior engineers spend significant time mentoring instead of working on complex problems.

White-Label Loyalty Platform Features Checklist

White-label loyalty platforms sound great on paper. You launch your own branded rewards program without building everything from scratch. No heavy dev work is required. Just plug it in and go. In reality, though, choosing the wrong platform can lock you into limited features, poor customization, and endless workarounds. If you are evaluating vendors right now, this checklist will help you focus on what actually matters. So, what features should a solid white label loyalty platform have?

Database Sharding: How It Works and When You Actually Need It

How database sharding works, common strategies (hash, range, directory), shard key selection, and the operational cost of running a sharded database in production. Prathamesh works as an evangelist at Last9, runs SRE stories - where SRE and DevOps folks share their stories, and maintains o11y.wiki - a glossary of all terms related to observability.

AWS vs Google Cloud vs Azure for Cloud-Native and Kubernetes

Cloud adoption is no longer about “moving to the cloud.” It’s about building cloud-native platforms that are scalable, observable, automated, and Kubernetes-driven. This guide provides a deep comparison of with a focus on Kubernetes, platform engineering, DevOps, and modern workloads, aligned with standards pioneered by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation.

When Technology Failures Become Securities Litigation Risks

When a company's systems crash or a breach hits, it often looks like lawsuits appear out of nowhere. The real issue is that even a single tech failure can shake customers, stall revenue, and erode investor confidence. Many businesses downplay risks they already know about, leaving shareholders feeling misled when problems explode publicly. That gap between internal awareness and external disclosure is exactly what opens the door to securities litigation, turning tech troubles into legal and financial fallout almost instantly.

Trello outage on February 19, 2026

On February 19, 2026, Trello users around the world began experiencing issues loading boards and accessing their workspaces. StatusGator received the first outage reports at 14:24 UTC and triggered an Early Warning Signal at 14:28 UTC. Trello did not officially acknowledge the incident until 15:08 UTC, after user reports had already subsided. This incident highlights how real time user reports and Early Warning Signals can identify widespread service degradation before providers confirm a problem.

Expert Insight: Why Local Internet Traffic Matters More Than You Think

Imagine sending a letter to your neighbour across the street, only for it to be routed through London or even Amsterdam before landing in their letterbox. This is effectively what happens to much of Scotland's internet traffic. Despite physical proximity between users, businesses and services, digital data is frequently sent on needlessly long journeys, often leaving the country before reaching its destination. This approach is inefficient, costly and poses questions about privacy, resilience and digital sovereignty.