Analyst: Enterprises Trust Red Hat Because It 'Makes Open Source Boring' (redmonk.com)
Tech analyst James Governor reports on what he learned from Red Hat's "Analyst Day":
So it turns out Red Hat is pretty good at being Red Hat. By that I mean Red Hat sticks to the knitting, carries water and chops wood, and generally just does a good job of packaging open source technology for enterprise adoption. It's fashionable these days to decry open source -- "it's not a business". Maybe not for you, but for Red Hat it sure is. Enterprises trust Red Hat precisely because it makes open source boring. Exciting and cool, on the other hand, often means getting paged in the middle of the night. Enterprise people generally don't like that kind of thing...
Red Hat remains an anomaly -- it makes money in open source. It has new revenue streams opening up. It is well positioned to keep doing the basics, but also now have a conversation with the C-suite about transformation.
The article notes the popularity of OpenShift, Red Hat's Kubernetes distribution for managing container-based applications. (OpenShift Container Platform, Red Hat's on-premises private PaaS product, now has 400 paying enterprise customers). And it also applauds Red Hat's 2016 launch of Open Innovation Labs -- a enterprise consulting service "to jumpstart innovation and software development initiatives using open source technology and DevOps methods."
Red Hat remains an anomaly -- it makes money in open source. It has new revenue streams opening up. It is well positioned to keep doing the basics, but also now have a conversation with the C-suite about transformation.
The article notes the popularity of OpenShift, Red Hat's Kubernetes distribution for managing container-based applications. (OpenShift Container Platform, Red Hat's on-premises private PaaS product, now has 400 paying enterprise customers). And it also applauds Red Hat's 2016 launch of Open Innovation Labs -- a enterprise consulting service "to jumpstart innovation and software development initiatives using open source technology and DevOps methods."
Are you still pissed that you lost a VI vs Emacs debate?
For a normal Red Hat implementations the system is going to be mostly headless so Gnome isn’t a big deal if even used at all. And if you are administering a system and you are constantly tinkering with its systems init setting. You are doing it wrong for the 21st century.
On an enterprise system the system is loaded into a VM and the OS is configured to run one process and do it well. It isn’t like the 1990s where you had one system that was your database, web server, email server, login authentication, file server and print server. Where we more or less configured a PC to work like a mainframe. And if one part needed a new library then you needed to check all the systems because it was all integrated one one server. If someone got in they hit the mother load of data.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
Actually, relatively speaking they pay more open source developers than other 'open source' companies.
Now there are companies that pay for more open source developers, but of the ones seeking to use Open Source as the basis of their business model rather than incidental to their mission, RHAT is ahead.
This is one of the reasons why when RHAT declares a move, the other business oriented distributions have little choice but to follow, as they lack the resources to do much.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.