A new group called LF Edge is pushing for an open unified framework that will promote plug-and-play interoperability, cloud provisioning, other streamlining to improve edge networks.
Read more at Computerworld.
A new group called LF Edge is pushing for an open unified framework that will promote plug-and-play interoperability, cloud provisioning, other streamlining to improve edge networks.
Read more at Computerworld.
LF Edge is pushing for an open, unified framework to promote plug-and-play interoperability, cloud provisioning, other streamlining to improve edge networks.
Read more in Techcentral.
With LF Edge, the Linux Foundation is working on an open framework for edge computing that is independent of the hardware, chipset, cloud or operating system being used.
Read more at Techzine.
With LF Edge, the foundation wants to establish an open edge computing framework that’s agnostic of hardware, silicon, cloud, or operating system.
Read more at Data Center Knowledge.
The Linux Foundation (LF) this week took a large step with the launch of LF Edge; an ambitious umbrella project dedicated to creating an interoperable open framework for edge computing. LF Edge – to be compatible with any hardware, silicon, cloud, or Operating System (OS) – has attracted more big-name sponsors than you could shake a stick at; from Arm to AT&T, via Dell, Ericsson, HPE, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Juniper Networks; Qualcomm, Red Hat, Samsung, and many more.
Read more at CBR Online.
In a move that is strikingly like the combination of projects in the open telecom space Arpit Joshipura lead in 2017 and 2018, harmonizing all the Linux Foundation’s open source groups working on aspects of network virtualization, this week the Foundation announced a similar initiative with the launch of LF Edge.
Read more at IoT Evolution World.
The greatest unanswerable question in telecoms is undoubtably “where exactly is the edge?” It is becoming rather like the astro physics question “where is the edge of the universe and does it even exist?” Thankfully, telecoms networks are not (yet) infinite and there are edges aplenty – and more emerging every day. The serious questions focus on why this definition even matters and how CSPs can make best use of them for their own (and you would hope their customers) advantage.
Read more at TelecomTV.
Edge Computing is becoming increasingly important with the rise of 5G and the Internet of Things (IoT). Unfortunately, there’s no standardization to Edge Computing. So far. The Linux Foundation, has launched LF Edge, to establish an open, interoperable framework for edge computing independent of hardware, silicon, cloud, or operating system.
Read more at ZDNet.
The Linux Foundation bundles its edge computing skills. It summarizes several projects under the new umbrella project LF Edge. With Akraino Edge Stack, Edge X Foundry, and Open Glossary of Edge Computing, the organization’s former stand-alone projects are being shelved. Samsung also adds the Home Edge Project. That wants to gather real-time data from smarthome devices. Zededa Complements a Cross-Platform Standard Edge Architecture with Project Eve (Edge Virtualization Engine).
Read more at Linux Magazin.
A new group called LF Edge is pushing for an open unified framework that will promote plug-and-play interoperability, cloud provisioning, other streamlining to improve edge networks.
The Linux Foundation announced the foundation of a new umbrella group called LF Edge designed to help unify a fragmented edge-computing marketplace and offer a common framework for future edge projects.
Read more at CIO Australia.