Red Hat Summit and News

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Your middleware is beautiful, Atomic
Red Hat hasn't shirked with its latest product release in this vein and has labelled its most recent release the Red Hat Atomic Enterprise Platform.
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Red Hat bares RHEV roadmap, fate of the hypervisor
Red Hat is adding features to its virtualization software to stay competitive, but is also worried about staying relevant as the industry moves to embrace cloud and containers.
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Supermicro Announces Solutions For Red Hat, Ceph, And OpenStack
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Writing good software is hard, selling a way to write better software is harder
This release of OpenShift, traditionally known to techies as a platform-as-a-service or PaaS, hits lots of buzzwords. First, it embraces the popular Docker container technology. That means a developer can, theoretically, build an application, test it, and run it in its own server room or on a variety of clouds. Second, it supports Kubernetes, an orchestration scheme backed by Google GOOG that promises to ease the placement and management of lots and lots of containers across environments.
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Image Gallery: 2015 Red Hat Summit
Attendees went nuts on social media – displayed on the big screen at the Summit – as they awaited a keynote from Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst.
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Enterprise Class Linux Running On AppliedMicro's ARM Processor Stars At Red Hat Summit
At its recent Summit, Red Hat announced that the preview version of its latest enterprise-class operating system (OS) was running on AppliedMicro’s 64-bit ARM server processors. At the event itself, HP had a live demonstration running on 10 X-Gene m400 cartridges in one of its ProLiant “Moonshot” servers. The demo was running Red Hat Development Preview Edition 7.1 and showing enterprise-class real-time data analytics. The key take away from the announcement and the demo is that ARM servers are available today and are fully capable of supporting enterprise-class data analytics workloads. This example system at the Summit showed a full functioning enterprise stack – including 64-bit ARM processors, the server platform, the Red Hat operating system, hypervisor, and Apache Spark applications. There is a “top-to-bottom” solution available for ARM.
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Red Hat makes its case to be THE container company
Looking to establish itself as the leader in the nascent container technology market, Red Hat has enabled one of its flagship products to support containers fully and released a new container management platform, too.
Containers are a hot topic at the Red Hat Summit taking place this week in Boston, the same week the container industry is meeting in San Francisco for Dockercon, a conference dedicated to the operating system-level virtualization.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server for ARM goes beta
Red Hat thinks the 64-bit ARM architecture will be ready for the data center and cloud someday soon. The release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server for ARM (RHELA) to beta may be this year or early 2016.
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Red Hat builds on its open source storage portfolio
Red Hat continues to make inroads into the enterprise storage software market, improving two of its core storage technologies and striking partnerships with key IT system resellers.
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Red Hat announces products featuring Docker
Red Hat have announced two new products at its Red Hat Summit event: OpenShift Enterprise 3 and Red Hat Atomic Enterprise. Both of these will both incorporate the Docker and Kubernetes projects, two hugely successful container projects.
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Supermicro Announces Open Source Solutions for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Ceph and OpenStack at Red Hat Summit
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Pluribus Networks Partners With Super Micro Computer and Red Hat for Converged Infrastructure
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Will Red Hat Acquire Docker?
Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst discusses how he considers potential acquisitions and where he might be looking for new companies.
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Red Hat Updates Storage Portfolio to Deliver Uncompromised Performance at Petabyte Scale
Red Hat Ceph Storage and Red Hat Gluster Storage are open source, scale-out software-defined storage solutions that run on commodity hardware and have durable, programmable architectures. Validated to work with leading partner hardware and software solutions, each Red Hat Storage product is well-suited for different enterprise workloads, bringing compelling benefits to enterprises.
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Red Hat brings PaaS Linux Docker Containers with OpenShift Enterprise 3
RED HAT has announced the release of OpenShift Enterprise (OSE) 3, a new version of its Platform-as-a-Service offering.
Based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)7, Openshift is built on Docker Linux containers with Kubernetes orchestration using technology developed in collaboration with Google.
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Red Hat CEO: Open Source is Eating Software
Forget that software is eating the world. By now, it’s a foregone conclusion.
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Oppenheimer Increases Red Hat Price Target to $88.00 (RHT)
Equities researchers at Oppenheimer upped their target price on shares of Red Hat (NYSE:RHT) to $88.00 in a research report issued on Thursday. Oppenheimer’s price target indicates a potential upside of 12.07% from the stock’s previous close.
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Analysts remain upbeat about Red Hat
Wall Street analysts liked what they heard at Red Hat’s annual Analyst Day, which was held in Boston on Wednesday.
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Red Hat Positioned 'Better Than Ever' In IT World, Cantor Proclaims
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Red Hat Inc (RHT) Positioned Better Than Ever In IT World – Cantor Fitzgerald
Cantor Fitzgerald reiterated its Buy rating and price objective of $90, following the Red Hat Summit and Analyst meeting
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Red Hat: the Internet of (integrated connected usable hybrid) Things
Red Hat has used its 2015 'Summit' event in Boston to take the wraps off of JBoss Fuse 6.2 and Red Hat JBoss A-MQ 6.2 - with both products introducing new capabilities for developers working on enterprise application and messaging initiatives.
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FeedHenry now Red Hat Mobile App Platform, gets OpenShift cloud integration
Red Hat has launched its Mobile Application Platform, at the company's Summit under way in Boston.
The Mobile Application Platform consists of tools and templates for building mobile applications combined with back-end services to handle features including authentication, data, and integration with existing systems. It is based on FeedHenry, which Red Hat acquired in October 2014.
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Red Hat, Samsung Ramp Up Enterprise Mobility
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Extending ARM’s Ecosystem for Server Developers
Developers traveling to Boston for the Red Hat Summit, one of the industry’s premier open source technology events, are in for a treat! They will get a sneak peek at some exciting new 64-bit ARM® development platforms featuring the AMD Opteron™ A1100 Series processor (codenamed “Seattle”).
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Content strategy: the new philosophy of technical documentation
Shortly after I joined Red Hat, we had nothing short of a revolution when organizational changes led to the content services teams being positioned alongside customer-facing roles such as technical support, account managers, and customer experience managers.
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Take it from a former leader, the open organization is hard work
I'm probably one of the last people you want to comment on how to effectively lead and develop an organization. During my career, I twice held team lead positions. Both times I... well, I wasn't a disaster, but I do feel I could have been more effective.
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One of the many great programs at SUSE is the roughly annual program where their developers can focus for one week on any new open-source development they desire. SUSE Hack Week has led to many great innovations and improvements since it began in the mid-2000s and for the Hack Week later this month there is one project attempt we are eager to see tackled.
Proposed ahead of this year's SUSE Hack Week 20 event, which runs the last week of March, is supporting glibc-hwcaps and providing micro-architecture package generation support for openSUSE Tumbleweed and down the line for SLE/Leap.
[...]
SUSE's Antonio Larrosa is planning to experiment with the new capabilities and initially investigate a handful of libraries that would stand to benefit from the HWCAPS functionality. This would be catering to the openSUSE/SUSE buid process and establishing RPM macros and documentation in helping guide packagers around creating micro-architecture packages.
The current plan would be to spin the different micro-architecture packages into separate packages that can be installed by the user to supplement the generic package if they are wanting to pursue the optimized packages in the name of greater performance.
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