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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15415 · Jan 15

#go#bpf#cncf#cni#containers#ebpf#k8s#kernel#kubernetes#kubernetes_networking#loadbalancing#monitoring#networking#observability#security#troubleshooting#xdp Cilium is an eBPF-based tool for Kubernetes that delivers fast networking, deep visibility, and strong security. It creates simple Layer 3 networks across clusters, handles load balancing to replace kube-proxy, enforces identity-based policies from L3 to L7 (like HTTP or DNS rules), supports service mesh with encryption, and offers Hubble for real-time traffic monitoring. Stable versions like v1.18.6 run on AMD64/AArch64. You gain scalable performance, easier policy management without IP hassles, better troubleshooting, and higher efficiency for large cloud-native apps, cutting costs and boosting reliability. https://github.com/cilium/cilium

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@fluencyinenglish · Post #7908 · 02/17/2026, 07:57 PM

Difference Between “drop out” and “be dropped out” Many people make this mistake: ❌ I was dropped out This sentence is grammatically incorrect. The correct structure is: ✅ I dropped out. Meaning: I voluntarily left or withdrew from school/university. Why “was dropped out” is wrong “Drop out” is an intransitive verb. It does not take an object, so it cannot be used in the passive voice. ❌ You cannot say: I was dropped out of university. Because dropping out is something you do yourself. Correct Usage If it was your decision: I dropped out of university. If it wasn’t your decision: Use other verbs to express that: I was expelled from university. I was forced to leave university. @fluencyinenglish #EnglishGrammar#GrammarTips#DropOut#PassiveVoice#IntransitiveVerbs#IELTSGrammar#CommonMistakes#LearnEnglish#TEFL