How Red Hat Lost Friends And Gained New Enemies

  2006-11-13 16:00:02
Red Hat, once the little company that could, for years could do no wrong. It rode the rising popularity of Linux to become a $280 million-a-year company with a market cap as high as $6 billion, claiming 80% of the market for Linux-based enterprise servers. Other Linux-friendly vendors loved Red Hat, since it gave them and their customers a viable alternative to Windows. Even Microsoft, while openly anti-Linux, didn't treat Red Hat as too much of a threat. 
  PNG Image  PNG Image  PNG Image
  Related tags  


This particular article has been collected via RSS syndication. We apologize if it's too brief.
If You wish to publish articles on LinuxStreet.net please contact us.


  Similar articles found on LinuxStreet  
ImageCould Linux Help Bring Both Koreas Together?
ImageFirefox use nearly doubled in '06; Safari gained, IE and Netscape lost
ImageSysthread Roundup for December Half ... One
ImageOLPC: A Lost Cause
Image2.6.25-rc6,"Starting To Look Better"
ImageLinux: GCC, Useful versus Useless Warnings
ImageNovell, Capgemini, and the rise of corporate Linux
ImageSCO Just Won't Quit
ImageShare files with friends while chatting using Qnext
ImageOpenBSD 4.3 Released

Leave a comment on this article


Captcha

  
Check this if the code you see is not readable and resubmit the form.
(Data you entered will be preserved)



  

Comments (0)