LIVE NEWS
  • How the Pentagon is working to wriggle out of China’s rare-earths grip
  • Time to buy the most rubbish stocks you can find
  • Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in KC-135 crash in Iraq
  • A newfound blood biomarker may one day predict longevity
  • Fact check: What do we know about the airstrike on a school in Iran?
  • Bitcoin And Ethereum Prices Are Struggling Again, And Here’s What’s Behind It
  • Fake PoCs, Misunderstood Risks Cause Cisco SD-WAN Chaos
  • How AI is changing open source
Prime Reports
  • Home
  • Popular Now
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Politics
  • See More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Climate Risks
    • Defense
    • Healthcare Innovation
    • Science
    • Technology
    • World
Prime Reports
  • Home
  • Popular Now
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Politics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Climate Risks
  • Defense
  • Healthcare Innovation
  • Science
  • Technology
  • World
Home»Artificial Intelligence»How AI is changing open source
Artificial Intelligence

How AI is changing open source

primereportsBy primereportsMarch 16, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
How AI is changing open source
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Then there’s Cilium, which is what happens when boring infrastructure stops being boring, as I recently noted. Cilium’s journey report says the number of contributing companies rose 90% after it joined CNCF, from 533 to 1,011, while individual contributors jumped from 1,269 to 4,464. Google, Datadog, and Cloudflare all expanded their contributions as the project matured. That’s not random. Cilium sits at the intersection of networking, observability, and security, which are precisely the categories that become mission-critical once workloads become distributed, latency-sensitive, and expensive. AI may be driving headlines, but a lot of the real strategic work is happening in projects like Cilium, where the infrastructure determines whether those AI workloads are governable, visible, and efficient.

And how about Nvidia, a company with so much cash it could buy a few countries and set all their developers to work building for Nvidia. But this isn’t how Nvidia has chosen to spend its riches: It ranked 14th in Kubernetes contributions in the past two years, with 5,892 contributions. It has also open sourced KAI Scheduler, a Kubernetes-native GPU scheduler that came out of Run:ai, and Nvidia has described itself as a key contributor to Kubeflow. In other words, Nvidia isn’t just selling chips; it’s investing in the scheduling, orchestration, and workflow layers that determine how effectively those chips get used in real-world AI systems. And it’s doing so through developer communities, rather than lump sum cash payouts.

The Nvidia work is a tell for where open source is going in AI. CNCF says 66% of organizations hosting generative AI models now use Kubernetes for some or all inference workloads, and it explicitly calls Kubernetes the de facto operating system for AI. Of course it would say that, given the foundation’s dependence on Kubernetes as a tentpole project, but that doesn’t diminish the reality that Kubernetes and Kubeflow are increasingly central to training and inference systems. In sum, AI is making open infrastructure more important because few organizations really want to build their future on opaque, inescapable infrastructure they can’t inspect or influence.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleScientists just discovered a tiny signal that volcanoes send before they erupt
Next Article Fake PoCs, Misunderstood Risks Cause Cisco SD-WAN Chaos
primereports
  • Website

Related Posts

Artificial Intelligence

Eridu Cuts To The AI Networking Chase With High Radix Switch System

March 16, 2026
Artificial Intelligence

Digital Asset Treasury Companies Shift From Accumulation To Active Management

March 16, 2026
Artificial Intelligence

MCP’s biggest growing pains for production use will soon be solved

March 15, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Global Resources Outlook 2024 | UNEP

December 6, 20255 Views

The D Brief: DHS shutdown likely; US troops leave al-Tanf; CNO’s plea to industry; Crowded robot-boat market; And a bit more.

February 14, 20264 Views

German Chancellor Merz faces difficult mission to Israel – DW – 12/06/2025

December 6, 20254 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Latest Reviews

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

PrimeReports.org
Independent global news, analysis & insights.

PrimeReports.org brings you in-depth coverage of geopolitics, markets, technology and risk – with context that helps you understand what really matters.

Editorially independent · Opinions are those of the authors and not investment advice.
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Key Sections
  • World
  • Geopolitics
  • Popular Now
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cybersecurity
  • Crypto
All Categories
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Climate Risks
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Defense
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Healthcare Innovation
  • Politics
  • Popular Now
  • Science
  • Technology
  • World
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Policy
  • DMCA / Copyright Notice
  • Editorial Policy

Sign up for Prime Reports Briefing – essential stories and analysis in your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy. You can opt out anytime.
Latest Stories
  • How the Pentagon is working to wriggle out of China’s rare-earths grip
  • Time to buy the most rubbish stocks you can find
  • Pentagon identifies six airmen killed in KC-135 crash in Iraq
© 2026 PrimeReports.org. All rights reserved.
Privacy Terms Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.