Red Hat CEO: Linux Is Now The 'Default Choice' For The Cloud (bizjournals.com) 89
Speaking at the "All Things Open" conference, Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst remembered when Linux "was just a 'bunch of geeks' getting together figuring it all out on an 8286 chip" 25 years ago. An anonymous reader quotes BizJournals:
"It went from being kind of a hacker movement to truly what I'll say [is] a viable alternative to traditional software," Whitehurst says, adding that Red Hat was a part of that push. Over the years, it came out from under the radar, being what Whitehurst calls "the default choice for a next-generation of infrastructure," particularly when it comes to cloud architectures... He points to Google, Microsoft and Facebook, all having open sourced their machine learning systems. "They recognize the company that builds the community around that piece of technology, that technology is going to win."
Re: Anti-systemd posts coming (Score:1)
systemd is no longer a problem for us. We've all moved to FreeBSD and no longer use Linux.
Re: Anti-systemd posts coming (Score:2)
Linux us more secure due to app armor and SELinux. I wish this existed for FreeBSD
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I wish this existed for FreeBSD
HardenedBSD isn't that analogous?
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All 5 of you?
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(Prince's 1999) - I was dreaming of an updated system when I realized I was running BSD.... We were stupid and we knew it and dreamed of system-d..... All night we were thinking we should make the move....Let's party with System-D like it's 1999....
Two thousand zero zero and we're all happy now....
8286 chip (Score:5, Informative)
First off, that's 80286. Missed a zero there.
Second off, that's wrong. Linux needed an 80386sx as its minimum supported CPU.
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I agree - the 80286 was too weak for Linux - lacking some essential instructions.
I think it was not until recently the kernel got upgraded to no longer support the 80386.
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Specifically, the 80386 was the first 32-bit processor. The 80286 was a 16-bit processor, with a way to actually address up to 16MByte of memory, which went into the IBM PC AT [wikipedia.org].
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The 286 didn't have paging...
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Came here to say this. FROM THE FIRST FREAKING SENTENCE OF ORIGINAL FREAKING ANNOUNCEMENT... [google.com]
Hello everybody out there using minix -
I'm doing a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won't be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones.
And near the end...
It is NOT protable (uses 386 task switching etc)
Things have changed since then, but 386 was a requirement since literally day one.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
"Acceptance [of 286 protected mode] was additionally hampered by the fact that the 286 only allowed memory access in 16 bit segments via each of four segment registers, meaning only 4*216 bytes, equivalent to 256 kilobytes, could be accessed at a time.[11] "
So that's correct: no flat memory model in the 286. 386 protected mode switched the memory bus and segment size to 32 bits, allowing 4gigs to be accessed at once.
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Thanks for catching this so quickly. I wanted to say exactly this. I believe torvalds originally called the kernel a 386 assembly task switcher. So I am surprised someone some redhat claimed Linux on the 286. Tech history is easy to forget but as someone who has been excited about our tech world because of the short collective memory and lack of history and perspective a lot of mistakes get repeated even by very smart folks.
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CEOs are paid handsomely to get things wrong pretty much all of the time whenever they open their fat stupid mouths.
Idiots, all of them.
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If /. didn't outsource so much of its editing to Thirdworldistan, the 80286 mis-transcription would have been caught.
It's one of the reasons I've gone from visiting several times a day to maybe every other week.
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In fairness, the slashdot submitter was exactly quoting Lauren Ohnesorge of the Triangle Business Journal who listened to a speech where the speaker said, "eighty two eighty-six" and thought he said "eighty-two eighty-six." Could have stood the addition of a "[sic]" if the editors were sharper.
Why Red Hat's Jim Whitehurst thought Linux ever ran on an 80286 is more a mystery.
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A good editor would have added [sic] to alert readers of the problem. A great editor would have dropped the quote and rearranged other text around it.
Only an incompetent editor would have corrected the quote. It's not the editor's job to put words in someone else's mouth or to try to guess what the other person really meant.
But will the real question ever be answered? (Score:1)
Will this be the year of Linux on the desktop?
Re: Only when... (Score:1)
Hey! Ubuntu has made its way into Windows. Get on board! ðY
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Ubuntu on Windows is not Windows running Linux by any stretch of the imagination. It's Windows running a Linux app.
It's not Linux people. It's just not.
Re: Only when... (Score:2)
You don't have to deal with poor application support
I thought we were talking about Windows...
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> Ubuntu on Windows is not Windows running Linux by any stretch of the imagination. It's Windows running a Linux app.
Read his post again. I think that's what he's really looking for. "I can do Linux and do it still running Windows!" ;)
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"I can do Linux apps and do it still running Windows!"
FTFY but yea, pretty sure the problem with this conversation is me. :)
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Please just feel free to stick with Windows, then.
Seriously--choice being a thing and all...
I bet... (Score:2)
You've never known the touch of a woman other than your mother...
...that one time when she forgot the rubber gloves.
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Bring it on, tough guy [timeincuk.net].
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I think we pretty much got that with Android Tablets(*). Android (while creating some new issues) did solve a lot that plagued Linux Desktop. Take a flavor of Android, from different manufacturers, across a wide range of versions, download an APK and it works. Play Store providing a better environment to do that.
No end user is expected to have to type in "Sudo apt-get make and make-install" and manually solve dependency issues.
No end user is expected to solve driver issues.
For the majority of tasks people d
Oh please (Score:5, Insightful)
Company head says my company is the leader in current buzzword-hype-technology.
Is there really nothing going on right now that we use that as "news"?
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"Company head says my company is the leader in current buzzword-hype-technology."
indeed.
If RH is so great for "the cloud" why does Google use a modified version of Ubuntu in-house on their servers?
RH management seems to be getting more psychopathic over the years.
--
BMO
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You can't exactly wait for a kernel patch or a fix for a breaking change if you're working with over a million servers.
Also to get bang for your buck You need your programs with a lot of patches to make them fit for your specific requirements and stripped of any code that goes unused or is deemed a security risk which means a whole lot of packages that are compiled in-hou
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If RH is so great for "the cloud" why does Google use a modified version of Ubuntu in-house on their servers?
RH's CEO says that Linux is the "default choice" for "The Cloud". Google uses Linux for their servers. It seems that you don't realise it, but you are agreeing with Red Hat's CEO.
Red Hat CEO: "Open is the default choice" (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot headline: "Linux is the default choice".
There's... sort of a significant gap between the two.
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What do you mean? Unless you thought that it was so much easier to administer AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Sco, and Solaris (depending on your viewpoint). Or maybe you thought that AS/400 was easier to use?
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The AS/400 has a complete menu based system administration mode. Its actually quite easy to figure many things out without really having to know any programming/scripting languages. Similarly with AIX (smitty) and HP-UX (sam/smh). Both of which are conceptually comparable to what a window's control panel/administrator menu is capable of. Particularly now that MS has stopped putting any effort into assuring that the GUI can actually configure everything in the machine.
I'm not sure about IRIX, but sco, solari
Of course it is. (Score:1)
Of course it is. Because only a complete moron would use Windoze on a server, and unfortunately Apple got out of the server game.
So Linux isn't just the default choice, it's the only choice.
Linux, yes - but not RedHat Linux. (Score:1)
I mean they offer cloud installs of RHEL, but few will be clicking that button.
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2016 Red Hat Innovation Awards winners [redhat.com]
Cloud works ok, but PCS with UEFI bios are behind (Score:1)
Well (Score:1)
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I wouldn't really consider anything else. (Score:2)
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You don't use it at all, do you? If you did you wouldn't be making such stupid statements.
I maintain around 2000 Linux machines with thousands of users. None of them are having any of the problems your talking about. Some of them are even normally *Gasp* Windows users. Even they can use something like even - SAS without a problem.
As for RHCE, whenever I hire one, they're always top notch. I never have to show them system stuff. Just how to use our ticketing system and they're off. Even if I ask them to fix
This only makes sense (Score:2)
If you are going to expand and contract instances based on demand you aren't going to spring for a bunch of proprietary server licensing.
Rather than have to predict your maximum load ahead of time or have licenses sitting on the shelf you just run Linux and don't worry about it at all.
Would not be too surprised. (Score:1)
Regardless of what I hope are typos in the summary, I recently attended a 'cloud debate'. Of course, one of the groups there was for Azure of Microsoft fame and they had I believe the Open Source director as one of the two representing Azure.
One of the things that stuck out during the debate was that he openly admit that initially, Windows instances easily made up over 70% of all instances launched in Azure BUT in the last 2 odd years, this number has flipped and Linux now represents 70% of the new instance