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From Claude Code to Qwen: Why One Sysadmin Ditched Proprietary AI for an Open-Source Alternative — and What It Means for the Industry

For years, system administrators have relied on a well-worn toolkit: Bash scripts, man pages, Stack Overflow threads, and hard-earned muscle memory. But a quiet revolution is underway in server rooms and terminal windows around the world. AI-powered command-line tools are rapidly becoming indispensable for the professionals who keep the internet’s infrastructure humming — and the debate over which AI assistant deserves a place in the sysadmin’s workflow is heating up.

Cleared to Trust No One: How the FAA’s Cold War-Era Air Traffic Control System Became the Blueprint for Modern Zero Trust Cybersecurity

Decades before the term “zero trust” entered the cybersecurity lexicon — before firewalls, intrusion detection systems, or even the commercial internet — the Federal Aviation Administration was quietly operating what may be the most consequential zero trust network ever built. The system that keeps American skies safe has, since its inception, embodied the very principles that today’s federal agencies and Fortune 500 companies are scrambling to implement under executive mandate.

Inside the NSA’s Zero Trust Blueprint: A Phased Roadmap That Could Reshape Federal Cybersecurity for a Decade

The National Security Agency has taken its most concrete step yet toward operationalizing zero trust across the federal government, releasing two comprehensive phases of its Zero Trust Implementation Guidelines — a move that cybersecurity professionals and defense contractors say could fundamentally alter how agencies architect their networks, authenticate users, and protect sensitive data well into the next decade.

AuthX Bets Big on Device Trust: Why One Identity Firm Sees Hardware-Level Verification as the Future of Zero Trust

In an era where stolen credentials remain the primary vector for enterprise breaches, a growing number of cybersecurity firms are shifting their focus from authenticating users to authenticating the devices they use. AuthX, a Houston-based identity and access management company, is among the most vocal proponents of this approach, recently doubling down on its strategic commitment to device trust as a cornerstone of modern zero trust architecture.

ThreatLocker Bets Big on Zero Trust World 2026: Why a Cybersecurity Firm Is Bringing Adam Savage and Tech YouTubers to Orlando

In a move that signals the growing convergence of cybersecurity education and mainstream tech culture, ThreatLocker has unveiled an ambitious speaker lineup for its third annual Zero Trust World conference, scheduled for March 23–25, 2026, at the Signia by Hilton Orlando Bonnet Creek. The event, which has rapidly grown into one of the premier gatherings for IT security professionals, will feature an eclectic mix of celebrity technologists, hands-on training sessions, and deep-dive workshops designed to equip attendees with practical zero trust implementation skills.

Deutsche Telekom’s Multi-Orbit Gambit: How One Carrier Is Stitching Together Four Satellite Networks to Blanket the Earth in IoT Coverage

In what may prove to be a watershed moment for the nascent satellite-enabled Internet of Things market, Deutsche Telekom has unveiled a first-of-its-kind multi-orbit satellite IoT strategy that brings together four distinct satellite partners — spanning geostationary, low-Earth orbit, and mobile satellite constellations — under a single managed connectivity umbrella. The move positions Europe’s largest telecommunications company at the vanguard of an industry racing to connect billions of devices in locations where terrestrial networks simply cannot reach.

From Dead Zones to Data Streams: How Direct-to-Device Satellite Connectivity Is Reshaping Industrial IoT

For decades, industrial operations in remote locations — offshore oil platforms, sprawling agricultural fields, far-flung mining sites — have struggled with a fundamental problem: reliable connectivity. Traditional cellular networks don’t reach them, and legacy satellite solutions have been prohibitively expensive or technically cumbersome.

Anthropic’s Super Bowl Counterpunch: How a Meta-Ad Mocking ChatGPT Delivered an 11% User Surge for Claude

In the high-stakes arena of artificial intelligence marketing, Anthropic pulled off one of the more audacious moves in recent tech advertising history during Super Bowl LIX. Rather than spending the estimated $8 million for a 30-second spot during the big game, the San Francisco-based AI company ran a cleverly timed digital campaign that directly mocked OpenAI’s splashy Super Bowl commercial — and it worked.

The Telnet Traffic Mystery: Why a Sudden Drop in Port Scanning Has the Cybersecurity World on Edge

In the quiet corridors of internet infrastructure monitoring, something unusual happened in early February 2025 — and it has security researchers, telecom engineers, and network administrators scrambling for answers. A dramatic and sudden decline in Telnet traffic, specifically on ports 23 and 2323, was detected by multiple monitoring organizations, raising a provocative question: Are telecommunications companies silently filtering traffic to block exploitation of a critical vulnerability, or is something far more complex at play?

Inside xAI’s Pressure Cooker: Former Staffers Describe a Culture of Burnout, Recklessness, and Relentless Speed

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence venture, xAI, has positioned itself as a fierce competitor to OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic in the race to build the most powerful AI systems on the planet. But behind the ambitious product launches and record-setting supercomputer deployments, former employees paint a starkly different picture — one of chronic exhaustion, cavalier attitudes toward safety, and a workplace culture that prizes speed above nearly everything else, including the well-being of its own workforce.