Red Hat Leftovers: Microsoft Boosting, Buzzwords, and More
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Red Hat CEO Matt Hicks talks about AI, open source and cloud [Ed: All buzzwords and hype, not much of substance]
Today, Hicks is Red Hat’s president and CEO, and in that position, he’s grappling with piloting the ship through narrow straits of technological promise. Which waters is he intending to navigate? Which technological river will be left for others to explore and which ones will Red Hat chart for the industry as a whole? In this video interview with Stu Miniman, Hicks discusses these and other topics around Red Hat and its technology portfolio as a whole.
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Environment-as-a-Service, part 2: Static secrets [Ed: Red Hat keeps making up or adopting more buzzwords to make up for an industry where clueless people make important decisions, based on rhetoric, brotherhood and bribes, not substance]
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Stratis-managed file systems for Microsoft SQL Server on Red Hat Enterprise Linux [Ed: This is proprietary software that does not even (really) run on GNU/Linux. Under IBM, Red Hat will become more like Microsoft reseller.]
Today, Stratis is an even easier way to take advantage of application snapshots on RHEL. In a nutshell, Stratis is a local storage-management solution for Linux. It focuses on simplicity and ease of use, giving you access to advanced storage features.
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OpenShift Secrets Store CSI Driver with Vault
This article uses a Vault server running outside the OpenShift cluster. If you run the Vault server inside an OpenShift cluster, the procedure is slightly different and is not covered in this post.
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Red Hat recognized as a Leader in G2’s Winter 2024 Reports [Ed: Is this a real one or one of the many notorious ones you literally buy or bribe for and then flaunt in some marketing brochure? SUSE bought some for sure.]
G2’s Winter 2024 Reports provide insights and market data based on user reviews and interactions on the platform, specifically highlighting top-performing products. The reports are helpful for both buyers looking to make informed purchasing decisions and for companies, like Red Hat, aiming to understand market positioning and performance.