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In Your Face, Critics! Red Hat Passes $1 Billion In Revenue

head_dunce writes "Now that Red Hat has officially posted more than a billion dollars in revenue, ($1.13 billion to be exact), the company's PR department sent this funny list of quotes predicting doom. For instance, 'We think of Linux as a competitor in the student and hobbyist market but I really don't think in the commercial market we'll see it in any significant way.' Bill Gates, 2001."

9 of 227 comments (clear)

  1. Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Redhat contributes a TON to open source projects, and a lot of the time I find their online documentation to be the best available. I am very glad they're doing well.

  2. Perhaps... by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perhaps there is a billion dollars worth of revenue from the hobbyist and Student Market?

    What Red Hat did which was shift away from trying to compete on the Desktop Market (Microsoft bread and butter) and focus more on the Server Market where Microsoft while a major player has more of an equal footing. Where they had a lot of legacy Unix shops that wanted to get off Unix Platforms but still keep the Unixy goodness.

    In general most Novel Shops went to Windows, most Unix Shops went to Linux. By "most" meaning there are exceptions, and plenty of anecdotal stories. As moving to the other platform was much easier for the company.

    For new companies. They would split across Microsoft and Linux (With Red Hat offering enterprise level support) Some would go with Microsoft and Other with Linux...

    So in a competive market I am not supprised that Red Hat made money. They played smart business and they made money.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  3. Re:And now, for the rest of the story... by tomhath · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did you post that from a tablet computer by chance?

  4. Re:Let's hear it for the 1%ers! by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do they need to "win the war"? We don't need software monoculture. We need interoperability. Redhat is successful and doing well in a market where others are also doing well.

  5. Re:Let's hear it for the 1%ers! by Red+Storm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I love Linux (lowercase l), and RedHat does good things - worthy of being a going-growing concern. "Winning the war", they are not.

    Red Hat has a poster in almost every office quoting Ghandi:
    First they ignore You
    Then they laugh at you
    They they fight you
    Then you win.

    That quote permeates most of Red Hat Culture.

    --
    ---- Fight to protect your right to keep and arm bears! ummmm... ya I think that's right....
  6. Re:Awesome.. but some perspective by rgbrenner · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And I assume by posting that, you didn't know that IBM is 47% larger (by revenue) than Microsoft?

    http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=IBM+Key+Statistics
    http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=msft

  7. Re:Not a Gates "prediction", still only 1% size of by pscottdv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If anything, Microsoft is probably thrilled to have a relatively tiny, but still growing competitor in the market to keep the anti-trust folks at bay. (Remember those guys from about 10 years ago?)

    No. They are not. Because that $1 Billion revenue of RedHat's represents Hundreds of Billions of dollars of lost revenue to Microsoft. Every server running Linux is a server that MIGHT have a Windows license if free offerings such as Linux weren't so capable.

    Without RedHat and other tiddling (compared to Microsoft) companies improving Linux every day, Microsoft would be the highest revenue company in the world and their stock would still be increasing in value.

    --

    this signature has been removed due to a DMCA takedown notice

  8. Strategic Quote by JSBiff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That quote sounds more like Strategic FUD. It doesn't take a genius to realize that when students and enthusiasts are, in large numbers, rallying to a competing operating system, you've got some future trouble heading your way.

    As the CEO of a large company, you're not going to say anything to try to *encourage* people to look at the competition, so you demean and minimize it.

  9. Re:Red Hat? by ilguido · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And that's back when it was a different world, there were no (very few) hard drives, no (very few) "laptops", no smartphones, no (well, almost no) internet, and very few people owned a PC. Reaching a billion considering all those factors against them is amazing.

    Do you mean "back when it was easy to start a monopoly"?