Red Hat in full spin mode after restrictions on Enterprise Linux sources
Published in News


Open source rebellion

Red Hat is finding itself with a rebellion on its hands after it announced it would limit access to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux sources by putting them behind the Red Hat Customer Portal and limited to the CentOS Stream sources.

Red Hat orphans LibreOffice
Published in News


Gnome alone

The Red Hat Package Managers for LibreOffice have been orphaned, according to a post by Red Hat manager Matthias Clasen on the "LibreOffice packages" mailing list.

Open saucers have job security
Published in News


No one wants to fire them

While tech companies are laying off staff claiming that they are cutting costs because of “economic headwinds” they do not seem that keen to let their open saucers go.

Red Hat cuts hundreds jobs
Published in News


Shutting the open sauce bottle 

Red Hat is cutting "hundreds of jobs" and has begun telling employees if they have to clean out their desks.

Lennart Poettering quits Red Hat
Published in News


Surprise move by systemd developer

In a shock move for the systemd community, the systemd lead developer, Lennart Poettering, who also created PulseAudio, Avahi, has left Red Hat.

Red Hat gives up on Russia and Belarus
Published in News


Follows IBM

Open Saucy Red Hat is halting all sales and services to companies in Russia and Belarus -- a response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine that has put Red Hat employees in harm's way.

Red Hat will hire less senior engineers
Published in News


Need to save a bit of cash

IBM's Red Hat plans to cut back on hiring senior engineers in an effort aimed largely at controlling costs.

Red Hat releases Enterprise Linux 8.3
Published in Cloud


Available soon

Red Hat has announced its Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.3 which will be out soon.

IBM and Red Hat show off 5G edge plans
Published in Mobiles


Full to the brim

Big Blue and Red Hat have been sharing their ideas to integrate 5G into the edge.

Red Hat and IBM take on Oracle
Published in News


Tells the supremes that APIs cannot be copyrighted

Red Hat and IBM jointly filed their own amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in the "Google vs. Oracle" case, arguing that APIs cannot be copyrighted.