My read: The people that work on Red Hat's java tech (JBoss etc.) are being re-orged into IBM and will primarily be working on new IBM products. The existing commercial licenses are still on sale...
My read:
The people that work on Red Hat's java tech (JBoss etc.) are being re-orged into IBM and will primarily be working on new IBM products. The existing commercial licenses are still on sale from Red Hat and the code will still be open source,but presumably will have less development since the developers are working on other things, though they don't want to say that in case it scares off purchasers.
And thus begins the enshittification of RedHat as all promises of independence erode away. As was foretold by anybody who has worked with IBM stuff before.
And thus begins the enshittification of RedHat as all promises of independence erode away. As was foretold by anybody who has worked with IBM stuff before.
RedHat has been doing the slide even before IBM, really kicking into high gear with their acquisition of CentOS 10 years ago, but this is the first instance that I've seen of the broken...
RedHat has been doing the slide even before IBM, really kicking into high gear with their acquisition of CentOS 10 years ago, but this is the first instance that I've seen of the broken 'independent entity' promise from the merger.
Wow, I read all of that, and I still have no idea what they are doing. But I think they like java.
My read:
The people that work on Red Hat's java tech (JBoss etc.) are being re-orged into IBM and will primarily be working on new IBM products. The existing commercial licenses are still on sale from Red Hat and the code will still be open source,but presumably will have less development since the developers are working on other things, though they don't want to say that in case it scares off purchasers.
Thank you!
And thus begins the enshittification of RedHat as all promises of independence erode away. As was foretold by anybody who has worked with IBM stuff before.
"And thus begins"? I feel like people have been talking for quite a while about how shitty red hat has gotten under IBM
RedHat has been doing the slide even before IBM, really kicking into high gear with their acquisition of CentOS 10 years ago, but this is the first instance that I've seen of the broken 'independent entity' promise from the merger.
This title could have easily been for a KRAZAM video