Modern DevOps practices have completely transformed how we handle compute and orchestration. Tools like Kubernetes enable engineering teams to spin up ephemeral containers in seconds and scale workloads dynamically to meet global demand. Yet the underlying network infrastructure has remained stubbornly rigid. Traditional cloud networking relies heavily on static IP addresses, rigid firewall rules, and slow DNS propagation. This creates a severe architectural mismatch where highly dynamic compute layers are trapped inside static network topologies. This friction becomes a critical failure point when deploying modern distributed workloads. Artificial intelligence applications and autonomous multi-agent systems are inherently transient. They migrate across cloud providers to optimize for GPU availability or drop down to local edge devices for data collection. Every time a container restarts or shifts to a new environment, its physical IP address changes. This IP churn breaks stateful con...
The agentic coding space is getting more crowded. xAI has made Grok Build 0.1, its fastest coding model, available via the xAI API in public beta. That means developers can now build directly on top of the same model that powers xAI’s Grok Build CLI — without needing a SuperGrok or X Premium+ subscription. This is a meaningful step. Until now, access to Grok Build has been limited to paying subscribers using the CLI. Opening it up through the API puts it in front of a much wider developer audience and positions it as a tool for building AI-powered applications, not just using one. What the Model Does Grok Build 0.1 is a coding model specifically trained for agentic coding tasks, including web development, debugging, and MCP support. It’s designed for multi-step workflows where an AI agent needs to plan, reason, and act — not just generate a block of code in response to a single prompt. The model accepts text and image inputs and produces text output, with a 256,000-token...