Red Hat’s Friday Five — February 24, 2017

Friday-high-five IN THE NEWS:

HPE and Red Hat Join Forces to Give Customers Greater Choice for NFV Deployments

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and Red Hat announced they are working together to accelerate the deployment of network functions virtualisation (NFV) solutions based on fully open, production-ready, standards-based infrastructures. Consistent with HPE’s multi-cloud, multi-stack strategy and broader open source software commitment, HPE is collaborating with Red Hat to accelerate OpenStack adoption by CSPs worldwide, offering customers increased choice through multiple commercial distributions, including both HPE Helion OpenStack Carrier Grade and Red Hat OpenStack Platform. With these new offerings, HPE and Red Hat are building upon an existing alliance, focused on helping customers overcome the inflexibility and high costs created by data centre, application and IT sprawl by shifting resources to business innovation.


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Red Hat Blog – Red Hat Joins the OpenPOWER Foundation, adds open source leadership and expertise to community-driven hardware innovation

As part of Red Hat’s commitment to delivering open technologies across many computing architectures,
Red Hat has joined the OpenPOWER Foundation, an open development community based on the POWER microprocessor architecture, at the Platinum level. While we (Red Hat) already do build and support open technologies for the POWER architecture, the OpenPOWER Foundation is committed to an open, community-driven technology-creation process – something that we feel is critical to the continued growth of open collaboration around POWER. As a participant in the OpenPOWER community and a member of the Board of Directors, we plan to focus on helping to create open source software for POWER-based architectures, offering more choice, control and flexibility to developers working on hyperscale and cloud-based data centres. We feel that open standards, like those being utilised by OpenPOWER, are critical to enterprise IT innovation, offering a common set of guidelines for the integration, implementation and security of new technologies.


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GOOD READ:

ComputerWorld – RightScale and the state of the cloud

RightScale’s 2017 edition of its annual State of the Cloud Report is a nice chance to look back and see how far [the cloud has] come. RightScale produces the reports every year, and this year the company surveyed over 1,000 technology professionals about a wide range of factors, all relating to their adoption of cloud computing. So what does this year’s report tell us about cloud adoption? Hybrid cloud is the preferred enterprise strategy, but private cloud adoption fell. While this fall of private cloud adoption could be taken to suggest that organisations are settling on a single public cloud vendor, that does not seem to be the case—85% of enterprises have a multi-cloud strategy, up from 82% in 2016. Cloud seems to have moved beyond the tipping point and is now the default—95% of organisations surveyed are running applications or experimenting with infrastructure as a service.


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GOOD READ:

Red Hat Blog – Enterprise IoT in 2017: Steady as she goes

In 2015, Red Hat conducted a survey around the Internet-of-Things (IoT) at the enterprise level and found that the best way to describe enterprise IoT was “deliberate.” Fast-forward to today, and the results from a January 2017 Red Hat survey around enterprise IoT indicate that the deliberate descriptor is still quite accurate. Conducted by TechValidate on behalf of Red Hat, and polling more than 200 IT decision makers and professionals from a wide variety of large organisations, the survey shows that while interest in IoT is picking up, actual roll-outs are being approached with the common enterprise IT theme of “steady deliberation.” In terms of the technology mix, survey respondents are overwhelmingly (89 percent) turning to open source for their IoT projects. Respondents also called out middleware (22 percent) as the most important part of the software mix in their implementations, showing just how critical these technologies are to integrating IoT with the broader business.


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Red Hat Blog – Red Hat enhances containerised integration services on OpenShift

The Red Hat JBoss Middleware team is pleased to announce the latest update to the Red Hat JBoss Fuse-based integration service on Red Hat OpenShift. With the growth of the Internet of Things (IoT), cloud-based SaaS systems, and new data streams, organisations can face increasing pressure to more quickly deliver innovative new services. Rather, integration should be part of an organisation’s overall application strategy where it can be ingrained in the business process flows for greater agility. Such an agile integration approach requires three foundational capabilities: distributed integration, containers, and an API-based architecture. The release of Red Hat JBoss Fuse 6.3 integration services for Red Hat OpenShift is aimed at enhancing these capabilities and simplifying the transition for customers looking to adopt containerised infrastructure for existing applications and workloads.

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