Behance Featured Projects

The latest projects featured on the Behance

Year of the Horse


Sea Spray

Stueyman has added a photo to the pool:

Sea Spray

Point Peron, looking down to Mushroom Rock

Flow

Stueyman has added a photo to the pool:

Flow

Collie River, WA

14456 20251209_111125 An elf hazard in Armidale

iain.davidson100 has added a photo to the pool:

14456 20251209_111125 An elf hazard in Armidale

14455 20251209_050533 Mural on the end of Edmonstone Rd Brisbane

iain.davidson100 has added a photo to the pool:

14455 20251209_050533 Mural on the end of Edmonstone Rd Brisbane

14454 20251208_122813 Pelicans at QAG

iain.davidson100 has added a photo to the pool:

14454 20251208_122813 Pelicans at QAG

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Oracle raises AI spending estimate, spooks investors

But if you assume cloud IOUs will be fulfilled, business is booming

Oracle expects its FY 2026 capital expenditures will be $15 billion higher that previously predicted, as the cloudy database biz invests to accommodate AI workloads.…

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Ubuntu Will Have Native AMD ROCm AI/ML and HPC Libraries In Next LTS Release

Longtime Slashdot reader MadCow42 writes: Canonical just announced that they're packaging AMD's ROCm libraries (for AIML and HPC with both data-center GPUs as well as desktop/laptop GPUs), directly into the Ubuntu Universe archive. You can run ROCm on Ubuntu today but you have to install it via a script from AMD and manually remove and reinstall for any upgrades or bug fixes. Having it in Ubuntu as a normal Debian package will make it much easier to install and also to maintain in the long run via normal apt tooling ('apt upgrade'). This also means that ROCm can be an automatically-installed dependency for other packages, which doesn't happen today.

And, interestingly, Canonical has committed to providing long-term-support for ROCm in Ubuntu -- which is particularly exciting for edge and IoT devices that may have a long life in the field and need regular security patches and updates.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Qualcomm Acquires RISC-V Chip Designer Ventana Micro Systems

Qualcomm has acquired RISC-V startup Ventana to strengthen its CPU ambitions beyond mobile, "reinforcing its commitment and leadership in the development of the RISC-V standard and ecosystem," the company said in a press release. CRN Magazine reports: The San Diego-based company said Ventana's expertise in RISC-V, a free and open alternative to the Arm and x86 instruction set architectures, will enhance its CPU engineering capabilities and complement "existing efforts to develop custom Oryon CPU technology." Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Qualcomm, which has already been using RISC-V for some products outside the PC and server markets, said Ventana's contributions will boost its "technology leadership in the AI era across all businesses," indicating the broad impact expected by this acquisition. "We believe the RISC-V instruction set architecture has the potential to advance the frontier on CPU technology, enabling innovation across products," Durga Malladi, executive vice president and general manager of technology planning, edge solutions and data center for Qualcomm, said in a statement. "The acquisition of Ventana Micro Systems marks a pivotal step in our journey to deliver industry-leading RISC-V-based CPU technology across products."

Further reading: Qualcomm Is Buying Arduino, Releases New Raspberry Pi-Esque Arduino Board

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Thank You For Showing Up

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Thank You For Showing Up