Red Hat Doubles JBoss Funding
News Speaking at a briefing to announce the launch of the latest version of Red Hat's Linux platform RHEL 5, the company's vice president of enterprise solutions, Tim Yeaton, said that from the beginning of the fiscal year research investment in JBoss...
[March 15, 2007, 12:34]
Red Hat Releases Enterprise Linux 5
News Despite the advances made around virtualisation in RHEL 5, Yeaton could not provide specific guidance on the support and pricing around users who choose to run virtual instances of other operating systems such as Windows.
[March 14, 2007, 15:00]
Red Hat And Sybase Launch Virtual Appliance
News Rather than spend time on knitting together their own instances of the Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise (ASE) running on Red Hat's Linux operating system, customers can now buy a pre-integrated appliance which should vastly reduce the complexity...
[May 11, 2007, 12:44]
Breaking News: Red Hat And Sybase Launch Virtual Appliance
Blog Rather than spend time on knitting together their own instances of the Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise (ASE) running on Red Hat's Linux operating system, customers can now buy a pre-integrated "appliance" which vastly reduces the complexity of...
[May 10, 2007, 22:14]
Red Hat Releases Second Enterprise Beta
News Senior vice president Tim Yeaton said: "We continue to drive down costs by optimising performance, manageability and availability. Red Hat has released the second beta of its upcoming enterprise Linux offering.
[November 20, 2006, 12:32]
Red Hat Moves Xen Closer To The Mainstream
News The next step will take place this summer, when the company releases the RHEL 5 beta, said Tim Yeaton, executive vice-president for enterprise solutions at Red Hat. Red Hat announced several moves on Tuesday to bring virtualisation to the...
[March 15, 2006, 8:10]
Bright Future For Linux In Business Intelligence
News Over the past 3 years, Linux has established itself as a standard platform for enterprise computing," said Tim Yeaton, vice-president of marketing at Red Hat. Linux has developed to an extent where it can be relied on in high-profile, business...
[November 29, 2005, 17:20]
