CEO of Red Hat Steps Down 153
bearer_of_bad_news points us to a C|net article which states that Matthew Szulik is stepping down as the president and chief executive of Red Hat. Szulik is citing family health reasons, and he plans to remain chairman of the board. Red Hat has indicated that his replacement will be former Delta Airlines COO James Whitehurst. Quoting the article:
"On a conference call, Szulik said Whitehurst stood 'head and shoulders' above other candidates interviewed in a recruiting process. He was a programmer earlier in his career and runs four versions of Linux at home."
We discussed Szulik's ascension to CEO back in 1999.
4 versions of Linux (Score:1)
Re:4 versions of Linux (Score:5, Funny)
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No wait, what?!? You're kidding right? The idea that the new CEO might not be a Linux user, or might not run Red Hat software is so plausible that the confirmation that he is a "Linux user" is seen as noteworthy? What the heck? Would they consider putting someone in that position who was "a Mac user" or "a Windows user" or even "sometimes uses L
Re:4 versions of Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
Seeing as you are commenting on my blog post, let me concur with you:
*I* think it would be insane to hire someone to be Red Hat's CEO who isn't a Linux user. But I am just one Red Hat employee. Keep in mind the perspective -- shock that the CEO of your company is stepping down, and sadness because he's a great leader who everyone respects. So hearing "not only is the new guy a Linux user, but he knows and uses Fedora" would make you smile at that moment.
That is all.
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Of course, you can always pick someone from the inside, but you reduce substantially the pool of people who have CEO qualities.
The other problems with promoting from within are:
1) You now have another job vacancy to fill, and presumably are losing someone very good at their job (otherwise, why promote them?)
2) There will probably be resentment from his new subordinates who were his former peers. This can lead to people leaving, and sometimes can cause the new boss to overdo the 'alpha dog' thing as he tri
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Of course, a Redhat CEO who didnt run Linux would most likely be utterly incapable of marketing to that segment, and thus fail to keep the company afloat. Witness the multitude of spectacular failures at various other companies.
"In fact, maybe it would be a good thing to diversify"
Yes, that would be an example of the kinds of errors that lead to spectacular failures. Redhats customers are
Re:4 versions of Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
Many CEOs appear more like lawyers or salesmen/women. They may be very smart, but don't strike me as technical minded.
Running 4 different distributions of Linux implies a fair bit of technical knowledge, more than Windows and Mac usage. I find that I use more console commands in Linux than the other operating systems, and to know those commands requires reading man pages or other documentation, something that the average user may not do.
Each distribution of Linux can have different configuration commands and nuances. You may know how to configure the sound card on one distribution but another distribution can be totally different.
Linux comes pre-installed on only a few PCs, and I am going to assume the four systems didn't come with Linux. Most of the time you have to install and often configure it which is (and lets be honest) can be more difficult than Windows or Mac OS.
The bottom line is I don't know of many CEO type people that use Linux at home. I don't think the CEO of my company could do anything productive with Linux without significant help from technical staff, much less install and configure it at home for personal use.
I think the CEO candidate of a Linux company using Linux at home is noteworthy, relevant, and interesting.
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Michael Dell?
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It also gives you more credibility when dealing with other CEOs:
Potential customer: I don't know. This all seems so complicated.
Linux-using CEO: But it's not! I even use it at home!
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Now if the CTO didn't run Linux we'd have a problem.
But Red Hat's business is tech. If he didn't know anything about Linux or open source he'd be unsuited for the job. Risk of cultural mismatch, for one thing.
I remember (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to mention making a rival in Oracle after buying JBoss, so in retaliation we see Unbreakable Linux.
And despite Novell's best efforts and prostituting themselves out to Microsoft we still see Red Hat in the #1 position.
Red Hat will do great without him (a company after all is bigger than one man) but we have seen a company growing so well under his leadership and that speaks volumes
Delta is perhaps (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Delta is perhaps (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Delta is perhaps (Score:5, Insightful)
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Second, just because cheaping out on service was the strategy at Delta, doesn't mean that's going to be the strategy at Red Hat. I think the guy would have to be a moron not to realize that service is Red Hat's bread
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Yeah, well, the article doesn't indicate who interviewed him, so this "everybody who interviewed him was impressed" statement doesn't necessarily carry much weight.
I'm going to reserve judgment here until we see what this guy actually does, but it's folly to ignore past results, particularly if they're associated with the very thing the guy will be responsible for in his new role.
Since RedHat is apparently rather su
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Yeah, I think at RedHat, candidates for the CEO position are interviewed by a panel of gardener, janitor, and head of cleaning personnel.
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Out of that list of people you really don't want to hire, a certain number can probably bluff their way through the interview process. Every company of any decent size has hired at least a few staff who they've wished they didn't.
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Maybe not, but Carly Fiorina recently proved that one woman can turn the ship into a colossal mess that it may never recover from.
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I don't think they're worse than any other US-based airline. From what I've heard, Northwest is by far the worst, but the rest of them rank pretty close (I've only flown Delta, AA, US Airways). Airlines in Europe and Asia are orders of magnitude better.
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Even then, the whiners don't ammount to even
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Release the haters (Score:2)
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Re:Release the haters (Score:4, Funny)
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no! if you plant ice you get Popsicles...
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Airline? (Score:4, Funny)
Oh... wait...
Re:Airline? (Score:5, Funny)
-uso.
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Not sure what you meant by the "oh wait". That was John Sculley, not Steve Jobs, and by the time he left in 1993 he had brought the company to its knees.
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If only they had hired the guy from Coke.
Re:Airline? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Airline? (Score:5, Funny)
-It would be awesome if Fedora gets renamed to Redhat Linux Economy Edition.
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1)Allow more packets to be sent than you can possibly handle
2)Delay said packets citing bad network conditions
3)????
4)Profit!
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This is where most of the airline industry separates itself from the pack. What you really meant was:
4) Lose money, declare bankruptcy, and beg government for free money, tax breaks, and subsidies!
Not just any airline, the corp parent of Comair (Score:2, Interesting)
5 posts and no reigns-REINS correction yet? (Score:2)
Seriously, though, can someone translate Szulik's last little bit of CEO-speak for me?
"When there is zero expectation of financial remuneration, everything is Hollywood."
Old Discussion (Score:2, Funny)
"More Alpha support!" "YellowDog is good enough for PPC!" "Alpha users need to band together!"
Heh.
Too late to do any good for Red Hat (Score:2, Interesting)
Red Hat passed up a lot of opportunities, all to satisfy the MBAs and their cronies who took over during Szulik's reign and eased out the founding generation. The problem was that the company became obsessed by meeting financial goals in the short term instead of using their good will and
a good man (Score:5, Interesting)
It was great to work for a company where everyone felt they were on a mission-- good times, good times.
Good Luck, Mr Szulik.
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I was in Korea, having just hired a new country manager for there, and having finished my assignments for helping to shepherd the deals with the Asian hardware manufacturers. There wasn't that much work, and the company was downsizing its consulting group-- so we separated. It was amicable.
The next version of Red Hat ... (Score:4, Funny)
- No longer come with any entertaiment software.
- Have nice icons and background that cost extra, and
- Be delayed from original release date because...
- there will be a major restructuring, while
- all the programmers go on strike.
Think of the money they could save... (Score:2)
Might be a good thing... (Score:2)
Lest you forget what IBM did in 1993, by bringing in a former CEO of AMEX and RJR Nabisco.. http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/biography/10153.wss [ibm.com] I wouldn't mind seeing RedHat duplicating IBM's turnaround, and becoming a $150B company.
Crook (Score:1)
Here's hoping (Score:2)
Some of the greats (Score:2)
How long has he run Linux at home ? (Score:2)
What about at work? How much Linux or other Open Source software has he worked with in his corporate life? That makes a big impact on seeing things from the customer's point of view.
The one thing I'm really hoping is that he will bring fresh eyes to Red Hat and more focus on their core products instead of implementing $BUZZWOR
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Delta? (Score:1)
Ah, great (Score:3, Funny)
his replacement will be former Delta Airlines COO James Whitehurst.
Now that means all your cron jobs will run late and RedHat will stop giving out those little packages of peanuts.
we want an I.T. person at the helm (Score:2)
Whoring oneself out for Linux (Score:2, Funny)
Oh yeah ? Well I run four versions of Windows and two Macs on top of my Linux!
Seriously, web development is the worst job evar.
Delta's fired blogger (Score:2)
Do we talk about the same Delta Air Lines that once employed Ellen Simonetti [wikipedia.org], who was fired for material on her blog that the company found inappropriate? Of course this does not mean anything bad about their COO, but I would be interested to hear his opinion on the blogger's incident, if he has an opinion (however, it probably was an issue outside his area of work). Anyway. Good to know the new CEO is a GNU/Linux user, and I wish them well.
Next RH headline: (Score:2)
Anyone want to guess at the odds of that?
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Re: Euphemisms (Score:5, Funny)
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Or maybe it means family health reasons... it's always hard to tell.
Re: Euphemisms (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Euphemisms (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed, if 'family health reasons' was a euphemism for something, he wouldn't be left on the board, especially not as chairman. No, it looks like this is exactly what it appears to be: Szulik has a family member with health issues that require Szulik's full attention. This is presumably a very sad and difficult situation, one that we wouldn't wish on anyone.
The only consolation, and a very partial one at that, is that Szulik has the financial means to indeed leave his job and devote himself to doing his best for his family.
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Nope... It means that... (Score:1)
Re:ut oh (Score:4, Funny)
Some insight into Matthew Szulik (Score:1)
I imagine that it really is family reasons. That's too bad. He was really leading the company into global markets and was meeting with some very important people around the world.
Re:Some insight into Matthew Szulik (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Some insight into Matthew Szulik (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the major reasons why Red Hat will soon become $1Bn+ revenue company is the fact that they invested so much into community through Fedora Project. Everybody and their dog bitch about RH product line discontinuation, forgetting that the code base has been split into two superior products, unparalleled in the Linux world. Slowly but steadily Fedora has largely been put back to community care. Community that has learned A LOT from Red Hat and gave back enormous amount of code improvements to various upstream projects. CentOS is there, too - another proof of how much Red Hat Inc. actually care.
They know what they are doing. If they say that James Whitehurst is culturally good fit, I believe them.
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One of the major reasons why Red Hat will soon become $1Bn+ revenue company is the fact that they invested so much into community through Fedora Project. Everybody and their dog bitch about RH product line discontinuation, forgetting that the code base has been split into two superior products, unparalleled in the Linux world. Slowly but steadily Fedora has largely been put back to community care
Oh really? Red Hat appoints five members of the fedora board and only 4 are elected, assuring Red Hat of complete control over the project. Community, bah.
CentOS is there, too - another proof of how much Red Hat Inc. actually care.
Why do you suppose CentOS would exist if Fedora is the be all and end all of community projects? Oh right, CentOS is not controlled by Red Hat.
They know what they are doing. If they say that James Whitehurst is culturally good fit, I believe them.
Highly skeptical that an airline exec can learn the open source business. What Red Hat needs is somebody who can go play with the community. Now there is the claim he runs Linux and was once a programmer, O
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Um, too completely different goals? Fedora is cutting (sometimes bleeding) edge, CentOS/RHEL is conservative with a long support cycle.
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And how the hell is CentOS more a community project than Fedora? The entire goal is to produce an exact replica of Red Hat Enterprise, which has no direct community involvement. Fedora, on the other hand, has more packages maintained by the comm
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how the hell is CentOS more a community project than Fedora? The entire goal is to produce an exact replica of Red Hat Enterprise, which has no direct community involvement. Fedora, on the other hand, has more packages maintained by the community than by Red Hat employees.
One simple reason: Red Hat controls the board of the Fedora project. If Red Hat really believed in community it would let the community control the project. But Red Hat will never do that I assure you, because Red Hat at heart does not trust the community. In the long run, that is just too bad for Red Hat.
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Obviously you have a boulder-sized chip on your shoulder about them, and lots of opinions about their inner workings.
Either (a) you work for them and have an issue. Or (b) you don't work for them and are a FUD spreading dipshit.
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Here, is that better?
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Outside of my concern, he does impress me and depending on who works along side of him, something interesting might come out of this.
Oh, I am impressed by the little scraps of information I have seen about him. I just am highly skeptical that an open source outsider is the right choice for CEO of a company that makes its living peddling support contracts for software developed by the open source community.
Matt himself is an outsider, he was brought in to develop a monetization model and build Red Hat as a sales organization, which he did remarkably well. Red Hat is a fine sales organization, no doubt about it, and the certification mo
It is never wise to make people forget you... (Score:2)
...and this is precisely what RedHat has done by dropping their open products.
I use the closed, licensed server products from RedHat at work, but they are on none of my home systems, none of my friends' small business systems, and they are nowhere to be seen in my life outside of the corporate environment.
Contributions aside, I can see how they could be completely forgotten by most of the Linux community, and this is precisely what they wanted.
Add this to several unwise actions that many in the indust
Re:ut oh (Score:5, Funny)
The answer is almost certainly an unequivocal "Yes."
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Nano rocks! (Score:1)
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The uber-help menu will take you where you need to go.
When befuddled, M-x doctor (Alt-x, then type 'doctor' in the mini-buffer) will call up Eliza, the built-in doctor.
Can't confirm if this is really Dr. Eliza Spaceman (spuh-chay-man), the parent of Dr. Leo Spaceman [wikipedia.org] on 30 Rock [wikipedia.org], but it is fun to speculate.
With service like this, how can these pagan infidels denigrate the Esteemed Mother Amongst Computer Sof
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