IBM and Red Hat this week revealed that Lightwell Network , a catalog of more than 6,500 application-layer dependencies that drives an automated vulnerability remediation service, is now generally available. At the same time, the Lightwell Clearinghouse Premier service, through which application development teams can both access validated patches and coordinate remediation efforts, is now available to a limited number of organizations. Ben Breard, a senior principal product manager at Red Hat, said collectively these two offerings will make it simpler for organizations to address 30 years of technical debt that is now being exposed by artificial intelligence (AI) models that make it possible to discover vulnerabilities and create exploits in a matter of hours. At the core of the Lightwell service is a remediation engine that software engineers are using to help identify, validate, and remediate vulnerabilities across critical dependencies embedded deep within modern software archit...
When delivery falls apart, the reflex is to blame the team. Missed dates, quality slips, a burned-out squad — leadership tends to reach for a personnel fix and quietly move on. The uncomfortable pattern in most enterprise organizations is that the system itself is the failure mode. Decision latency, priority misalignment, and layers of governance that were designed for a slower era grind against the very people leaders keep asking to grind harder. Talented engineers cannot outrun a delivery pipeline that is structurally set up to stall. Marnus Marx, founder and Delivery Confidence Coach at Elanvia Consulting, joined Alan Shimel to unpack what that structural failure actually looks like from the inside. Marx came up through Unix and Linux systems before moving into DevOps and delivery coaching, which shapes how he diagnoses these breakdowns — as engineering problems in the socio-technical system, not character flaws in the humans stuck inside it. His frame of “delivery confidenc...