Red Hat
From Free net encyclopedia
Template:Infobox Company$196.47 million USD (2005) |
industry = Computer software| products = Fedora Core
Red Hat Enterprise Linux | homepage = http://www.redhat.com
}} Template:Otheruses3 Red Hat, Inc. (Template:Nasdaq) is one of the largest and most recognized companies dedicated to open source software. Founded in 1993, the company has nearly 1,300 employees and 27 offices worldwide, with its corporate headquarters in Raleigh, North Carolina in the United States. Red Hat is a market leader in the development, deployment, and management of Linux and open source solutions for Internet infrastructure, ranging from embedded devices to secure web servers.
Red Hat's name came from the manual of the beta version, which contained a request for the return of Marc Ewing's characteristic red and white-striped fedora, should anyone find it. The name is often spelled Redhat or RedHat, perhaps owing to the CamelCase fad of the late-1990s.
The name "Red Hat" is also frequently used to refer to the two variants of Linux the company produces under that name, Red Hat Enterprise Linux and the now-superceded Red Hat Linux.
Contents |
History
Red Hat was founded by entrepreneur Marc Ewing in 1993, and in 1995 Red Hat was bought out by ACC Bookstores, run by Canadian Bob Young. Young then took the role as CEO of the company, until he was succeeded by Matthew Szulik in 1999.
On August 11, 1999, the company completed its initial public offering of six million shares of common stock at a price of $14 per share on the NASDAQ. On November 15, 1999, Red Hat announced its merger with Cygnus Solutions, a leading open source vendor. Consequently, Red Hat now develops Cygwin. Other acquisitions have followed, notably those of ArsDigita, Sistina and Netscape Directory Server.
Red Hat stock was added to the NASDAQ-100 on December 19, 2005.
Cygnus Solutions
Cygnus Solutions, originally Cygnus Support, was founded in 1989 by John Gilmore, Michael Tiemann and David Henkel-Wallace to provide commercial support for free software. Its tagline was: Making free software affordable.
For years, employees of Cygnus Solutions were the maintainers of several key GNU software products, including the GNU Debugger and GNU Binutils (which included the GNU Assembler and Linker). It was also a major contributor to the GCC project. Cygnus developed BFD, and used it to help port GNU to many architectures, in a number of cases working under non-disclosure to produce tools used for initial bringup of software for a new chip design.
Cygnus was also the original developer of Cygwin, a POSIX layer and the GNU toolkit port to the Microsoft Windows operating system family.
On November 15, 1999, Cygnus Solutions announced its merger with Red Hat, and ceased to exist as a separate company in early 2000. As of 2003, a number of Cygnus employees continue to work for Red Hat, including Tiemann who serves as Red Hat's CTO.
Business model
Open source software lies at the foundation of their business model. The code that makes up the software is available to anyone, and developers who use it may freely make improvements. Even competitors like Microsoft admit that the result is rapid innovation (compare the Halloween documents).
Red Hat solutions combine GNU/Linux, developer and embedded technologies, training, management services and technical support. Red Hat optionally delivers this open source innovation to their customers via an Internet platform called Red Hat Network.
Although dedicated to open source, Red Hat, Inc has one US patent for a debugger system (US6,754,891 [1]), one European patent (EP1312195 [2] [3]) and several US patent applications pending (US2004143687 [4], US2004153483 [5], US2004143776 [6], US2004158717 [7], US2005021637 [8], US2005071371 [9]). They also use trademark claims to prevent third parties from redistributing the company's software using the name "Red Hat". ([10]). Not everybody approves of this (see [11], [12] or even [13], for example). In response to the controversy, the company has placed a public pledge on its website never to assert patent claims against software released under any open source license that Red Hat itself uses in its own products (including other works bundled with their products like KDE). Despite these issues, the company is still largely regarded as a leading supporter of free software and a significant contributor to the open source community.
Fedora
Red Hat Linux used to be the company's flagship product for both home and corporate use. With the spinoff of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat began to focus more on the corporate market, and stopped production of the personal version of Red Hat Linux after version 9. The current consumer distribution of Red Hat Linux has been replaced by Fedora Core, a more rapidly updated community supported Linux distribution, sponsored by Red Hat, run by the Fedora Project, and in part derived from the original Red Hat Linux distribution. The bulk of Red Hat's revenue comes from corporations who pay yearly support subscriptions for the enterprise version of the product.
External links
- Red Hat's website
- Red Hat Documentation
- Fedora Project website
- How Red Hat Got Its Name, as told by Bob Young
- Red Hat's plans to drop support for Red Hat Linux, by Jan Stafford
- Most recent Red Hat quarterly conference call transcript
- Future of Cygnus Solutions: An Entrepreneur's Account, by Michael Tiemann (1999)ca:Red Hat
cs:Red Hat da:Red Hat de:Red Hat es:Red Hat fi:Red Hat fr:Red Hat gl:Red Hat hr:Red Hat ja:レッドハット kn:ರೆಡ್ ಹ್ಯಾಟ್ ko:레드햇 lt:RedHat nl:Red Hat no:Red Hat pl:Red Hat pt:Red Hat sk:Red Hat sv:Red Hat th:เรดแฮท