The US Department of Justice is looking at two big IT companies, potentially making waves in the enterprise IT space. They are asking a federal judge to force Google to sell or spin off its Chrome browser, arguing that integration with Google’s other products, particularly Android, Search, and the Play store, is anti-competitive. At the same time, the DOJ is also looking at the proposed acquisition of Juniper Networks by Hewlett Packard Enterprise.
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Overcast | Amazon Music | Audio | YouTube
2:09 – NIST Can Hear When Your Battery is Going to Catch Fire
Researchers at NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, have trained an AI to detect the sound of a Lithium battery that is about to catch fire. The characteristic sound of the safety valve releasing excess gas pressure is a precursor to an unstoppable fire erupting.
Read More: AI Can ‘Hear’ When a Lithium Battery Is About to Catch Fire
4:48 – StarTree Cloud Powers Real-Time Data
StarTree Cloud, built on Apache Pinot, now includes more real-time data warehouse features including pauseless ingestion, ML-driven query optimization, schema evolution for dynamic data, and role-based access control. StarTree’s massive-scale real-time data warehouse is finding big corporate customers, and these new features ought to attract even more.
Read More: Real-Time Analytics Summit 2025
9:44 – Itential Debuts Automation Service at Networking Field Day
Itential has launched its Automation Service to streamline and standardize network automation, allowing NetDevOps teams to securely create, share, and execute automations at scale. The service features a dynamic Automation Gateway that integrates tools like Python, Ansible, and OpenTofu, enabling developers to build automations while empowering teams to use them without coding expertise. With capabilities like role-based access control, Git synchronization, and reusable service frameworks, Itential aims to simplify automation management, reduce script proliferation, and foster agility across hybrid cloud infrastructures. Let’s kick it over to The Futurum Group’s Ron Westfall for more.
Read More: NFD36: Itential Ups Network Automation Intentions with Automation Service Debut
Read More: Itential Presents at Networking Field Day 36
Read More: Intential’s Automation-as-a-Service Solution for Operationalizing and Standardizing Infrastructure Automation
17:11 – SentinelOne reports on The State of Cloud Ransomware in 2024
SentinelOne has reported that cloud services are not immune to ransomware and are specifically targeted by ransomware groups. Poorly secured cloud accounts can allow attackers to use cloud-native encryption services to encrypt cloud data. Alternatively, cloud storage can be the destination for data exfiltration, copying stolen data from the victim network.
Read More: The State of Cloud Ransomware in 2024
21:38 – Cyber Defense Agencies reveal Most Exploited Vulnerabilities in 2023
Cybersecurity agencies from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand jointly released an advisory highlighting the most exploited vulnerabilities of 2023, emphasizing a rise in zero-day attacks targeting high-priority systems. The report incluudes recommendations for dealing with this new world, but it’s very hard to prepare for zero-day exploits.
Read More: 2023 Top Routinely Exploited VulnerabilitiesThe State of Cloud Ransomware in 2024
25:34 – Lightbend Launches Akka 3
Lightbend has rebranded as Akka with the launch of Akka 3, a platform for building elastic, agile, and resilient apps with a simple SDK and support for Serverless and Bring-Your-Own-Cloud environments. Akka introduces industry-firsts like cross-cloud app migration, multi-master replication for failover-free operations, and guarantees against app reliability issues. Already powering major enterprises, Akka 3 redefines app development by focusing on responsiveness and SLAs, independent of infrastructure.
29:40 – US Antitrust Actions Challenge Tech Deals
The US Department of Justice is looking at two big IT companies, potentially making waves in the enterprise IT space. They are asking a federal judge to force Google to sell or spin off its Chrome browser, arguing that integration with Google’s other products, particularly Android, Search, and the Play store, is anti-competitive. At the same time, the DOJ is also looking at the proposed acquisition of Juniper Networks by Hewlett Packard Enterprise.
DOJ will attempt to Break Up Google
The Department of Justice plans to ask a federal judge to require Google to sell its Chrome browser, arguing that its integration with Google’s other products sustains an illegal search monopoly and limits competition. Additional proposals include separating Android from Search and Google Play, enhancing advertiser control, limiting AI content use, and banning exclusive contracts central to the antitrust case.
Read More: US lawyers will reportedly try to force Google to sell Chrome and unbundle Android
Juniper Networks Sees Drops as DOJ Reviews HPE Deal
Juniper Networks shares fell 5% amid reports that the DOJ may soon decide whether to approve or block its $14 billion acquisition by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE). While HPE expects the deal to close by early 2025, recent DOJ scrutiny and trader speculation have raised concerns about potential regulatory hurdles.
Read More: Juniper Networks falls amid reports on DOJ review of HPE deal (update)
38:44 – The Weeks Ahead
Mobility Field Day 12 – November 20 – 21
AI Field Day 6 – January 29 – 30
Gestalt IT and Tech Field Day are now part of The Futurum Group.
The Gestalt IT Rundown is your look at the IT news of the week. Be sure to subscribe to Gestalt IT on YouTube for even more weekly video content.