In an attempt to make CentOS users happy, Red Hat has expanded its free RHEL offering to 16 servers while allowing production workloads.
It is one of two CentOS clones being built to fill the void left by Red Hat's unpopular decision to end CentOS's role as a downstream version of RHEL.
The mature open-source cloud infrastructure platform project gets a major update, boasting a new user interface and improved storage subsystem features.
The lead commercial sponsor behind the open-source Cloud Custodian project is moving forward in 2021 with new funding to provide a complete view of cloud governance.
The startup has container security capabilities that are missing in Red Hat's OpenShift Kubernetes platform.
Red Hat didn't make any friends when it decided to stop supporting the popular free replacement for RHEL, but new alternatives are already in the works.
Early next year, Red Hat OpenShift users will be able to deploy Windows containers alongside Linux containers.
Service meshes debuted in 2017, but it really broke big in 2020 due to the increased complexity of the cloud-native world.
After years of struggling to catch up, the German open source software firm buys what might be the ticket to finally turning around.
According to Red Hat, CentOS is being ditched for CentOS Stream because it "was not actually providing that much usefulness to Red Hat."