Last month, Oracle ACEs worldwide wrote more than 350 blog posts and articles, sharing tips and tricks, insights, and knowledge on various platforms. We have highlighted some of them for you to read and enjoy, focusing on OCI.
Simo Vilmunen : New Console Experience for OCI
Just saw that OCI has enabled preview for new OCI Console experience. To enable it, scroll down on your dashboard after login and click on the enable preview. Let’s take a look on it!
Osama Mustafa : Setting up a High-Availability (HA) Architecture with OCI Load Balancer and Compute Instances
Ensuring high availability (HA) for your applications is critical in today’s cloud-first environment. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) provides robust tools such as Load Balancers and Compute Instances to help you create a resilient, highly available architecture for your applications. In this post, we’ll walk through the steps to set up an HA architecture using OCI Load Balancer with multiple compute instances across availability domains for fault tolerance.
Brendan Tierney : Calling Custom OCI Gen AI Agent using Python
In a previous post, I demonstrated how to create a custom Generative AI Agent on OCI. This GenAI Agent was built using some of Shakespeare’s works. Using the OCI GenAI Agent interface is an easy way to test the Agent and to see how it behaves. Beyond that, it doesn’t have any use as you’ll need to call it using some other language or tool. The most common of these is using Python.
Chris Pasternak : Integrating the OCI RAG Agent
Oracle continues to make AI accessible to the masses. With the Generative AI Agent service, I was able to stand up a functional AI Chatbot based on the data of my choice in under 30 minutes. What’s more, using the OCI Python SDK, I was able to develop my own chatbot and ultimately integrate it with a website. I was pleasantly surprised with how easy it really was to get started.
Samuel Campos Herros : Multi-Cloud Shared Filesystem with OCI Object Storage
Nowadays, having just one flavour of a Cloud tenancy is getting more and more rare amongside big-sized clients or clients that are true to the Multi-Cloud approach for their projects and applications.
Sometimes, this Multi-Cloud environments need to talk to each other and share information between systems, compartments, applications and even cloud tenancies. This information sharing can mean the need to have a shared file systems between two virtual machines that are located on differen Cloud Systems.
You can find all the ACEs above and many more in the Oracle ACE Directory. Bookmark the Oracle ACE Program blog and come back next month for more updates!