Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Red Hat plays the cloud alliance game

By | July 21, 2010, 6:27am PDT

Summary: While we’re big fans of Red Hat the enterprise cloud space is The Show, and right now BTC Logic has Red Hat listed behind IBM and Amazon.com.

Red Hat has a big portfolio of cloud computing tools, as our Dan Kusnetzky is quick to note, but it lacks the enterprise credibility of an IBM or Microsoft.

Maybe alliances will help.

HP is a good name to throw out there, alongside IBM, and if things like the  x64 migration center, which is aimed squarely at Oracle’s Solaris, mainly benefit HP it’s no big deal. Just as an alliance with AMD may sell some chip sets — it also sells Red Hat as a big player.

While we’re big fans of Red Hat here at ZDNet Open Source, the enterprise cloud space is The Show, and right now BTC Logic has Red Hat listed as “just” a heavyweight, behind IBM and (surprising to casual observers) Amazon.

That’s the same level as Google and Microsoft, but it’s not enough to impress the stock pickers at Capstone, who have put a “sell” on the stock and expect it to shed 25% of its financial skin. (Commenters disagree.)

What’s most interesting is that, in the cloud, Red Hat is going head-to-head against Microsoft, not a fair fight financially, but a virtualized world is lining up in pro-and-anti Microsoft camps, so if Red Hat is heading the anti-Microsoft camp it has a pretty good position.

So can the open source leader win the Big Game? We report, you decide. If they fail, maybe they can get by selling these nifty Amish pot holders. At just $8 each, and with proprietary advantages galore!

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Topics

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983.

Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years.

At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog.

DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air.

My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

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