Rocky Linux Rooted in Support: Top Experts Back Core Infrastructure Integration
Rocky Linux Rooted in Support: Top Experts Back Core Infrastructure Integration
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CIQ is a relatively new company. Its leadership, however, has deep roots in open-source software and Linux. Besides Gregory M. Kurtzer, CIQ’s co-founder and CEO, who was a creator of CentOS , the popular Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) clone, its new executive team -- announced Wednesday – boasts two of the founders of Linuxcare , the first company to make supporting Linux a priority.
CIQ and Rocky Linux founder Gregory M. Kurtzer.
Rocky Linux
Today, the first business model that comes to mind for Linux or open-source software is to offer paid business support. It wasn’t always that way. In Linux’s early days, companies such as Caldera , Red Hat , and SUSE still thought you could make money by selling Linux in a box to ordinary users.
Before Red Hat figured this out, when it retired Red Hat Linux in favor of the commercial RHEL in 2003 , Linuxcare had already emerged as the first important Linux support company in 1998. Unfortunately, business problems and the dot-com crash didn’t allow Linuxcare to become a top company. As the saying goes, first movers lose, second movers win .
But, that water is well over the dam now. Today, former Linuxcare founders Art Tyde, CIQ’s VP of business development, and David LaDuke, VP of marketing, bring decades of hard-won experience to the table. Other well-known veteran technology leaders such as Robert Adolph, co-founder and chief product officer; Rob Dufalo, SVP of engineering; John Frey, CTO; Stephen Moody, SVP support and technology; Marlin Prager, CFO; and Brock Taylor, VP of High-Performance Computing (HPC) and strategic partners, have joined them.
Also: Rocky Linux arrived with everything you need to replicate the distro
Many tech businesses are under the delusion that only the young can make a difference. Indeed, many believe that if you’re over 40, you’re too old for tech .
Wrong! CIQ values maturity and experience over youth and exuberance. And since CIQ recently secured $26 million in Series A funding led by Two Bear Capital , it’s not the only one that thinks it’s on the right track.
See also
- How to replace Windows with Linux Mint on your PC
- 5 best Linux commands for troubleshooting problems (and how I use them)
- 5 reasons why Pop!_OS is this Linux pro’s favorite distro
- 5 best open-source email clients for Linux (and why Geary is my go-to)
Rocky Linux , CIQ and the Rocky Enterprise Software Foundation ‘s free CentOS Linux clone, is proving to be massively successful. It’s reached Linux distro image downloads of up to 750,000 a month. But CIQ isn’t betting its future on being a Linux distro provider.
True, CIQ offers Rocky Linux support. But it also has several HPC offerings. These include Warewulf , cluster management and operating system provisioning for HPC; Apptainer , a Linux Foundation -supported HPC container open-source project; Traditional HPC , a Rocky Linux and Warewulf-based HPC approach for in-house servers; and Fuzzball: HPC-2.0, an HPC designed to work on the cloud.
It’s going to be interesting to see how well this all works. Personally, I’m expecting this bet on experience and hard-won wisdom to be successful.
Related stories:
- Rocky Linux 9 arrives with everything you need to replicate the distro on your own
- Rocky Linux optimized for Google Cloud arrives
- CentOS clone Rocky Linux gets technical support
Open Source
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- Title: Rocky Linux Rooted in Support: Top Experts Back Core Infrastructure Integration
- Author: Donald
- Created at : 2024-09-17 10:14:26
- Updated at : 2024-09-20 10:50:39
- Link: https://some-tips.techidaily.com/rocky-linux-rooted-in-support-top-experts-back-core-infrastructure-integration/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.