The 4 Hottest Red Hat Summit News And Announcements
Red Hat Summit news this week includes updates involving OpenShift, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat Insights and StackRox. By Wade Tyler Millward April 27, 2021, 05:04 PM EDT
IBM subsidiary Red Hat has some big announcements this week from its virtual summit that could spell new opportunities for channel partners.
New OpenShift capabilities to a new version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux are among the updates unveiled at the virtual summit, taking place Tuesday and Wednesday.
Red Hat CEO Paul Cormier told CRN just before the summit that channel partners are key to Red Hat growing its share of the cloud market, especially in the midmarket.
Red Hat s RHEL 8.4 Release Targets Edge Deployments Unveiled at this year s Red Hat Summit, the latest version of Red Hat’s flagship enterprise offering, RHEL 8.4, features edge-focused improvements like enhanced container management, less reboots after an update and more.
This morning at the virtual Red Hat Summit, Red Hat unveiled version 8.4 of its flagship operating system to its online audience. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8.4 offers a slew of features meant to cement Linux on the edge for any enterprises looking to expand their compute footprint.
For a company like parent company IBM, with its renewed focus on cloud computing and the hybrid cloud, subsidiary Red Hat’s focus on Linux on the edge is complementary: edge computing focuses on keeping the computing platform or device near an IoT device that produces data, and the hybrid cloud keeps data on private or public clouds as close to the source of the data being generated.
Er is een nieuwe update voor versie 19.07 van OpenWrt uitgekomen. OpenWrt is alternatieve opensourcefirmware voor een groot aantal verschillende routers en embedded devices.
Er is een nieuwe update voor versie 19.07 van OpenWrt uitgekomen. OpenWrt is alternatieve opensourcefirmware voor een groot aantal verschillende routers en embedded devices.
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Dynamically generate and customize your Azure virtual machines. Thinkstock
Virtual machines have been part of cloud infrastructures since the early days of AWS and Azure. They’re key to bringing familiar workloads to the cloud, allowing existing applications and skill sets to lift and shift from on-premises to a global-scale platform. The resulting virtual infrastructures are now coming back to our data centers, running on hyperconverged hardware where dense compute and virtual storage act as a bridge between traditional architectures and cloud-native environments. Even as cloud platforms move to providing serverless functions and offering more effective PaaS, the familiar IaaS business model remains important.