At the Red Hat Summit in Boston, IBM announced new initiatives to further support
and speed up the adoption of the Linux operating system across the enterprise.
These include two new Power Systems Linux Centers and plans to extend support
for Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) technology to its Power Systems portfolio
of server products.
New
Power Systems Linux Centers in Austin and New York
In July, IBM will open its first North American IBM Power
Systems Linux Centers -- one in Austin, Texas and the other in New York, NY. The
centers will make it simpler for software developers to build and deploy new
applications for big
data, cloud, mobile and social
business computing on open
technology building blocks using Linux and the latest IBM POWER 7+ processor
technology.
The new centers
come on the heels of the opening of the world's first
IBM's Power Systems Linux Center in May in Beijing where there is increasing demand from
businesses for optimized and pre-integrated computing systems running enterprise
applications on Linux. Like the Beijing center, the new center will open to
clients, business partners, academics, and students. Resources include:
- Linux
training workshops that show developers how to program, port and optimize
their applications using Red Hat Enterprise Linux and SUSE Linux Enterprise
Server technologies on Power Systems.
- Hands-on assistance from dedicated Linux and IBM
systems experts to show developers how to take advantage of IBM's unique POWER7+
parallel processing and advanced virtualization capabilities.
- Access to IBM's business consulting experts and
business partner resources to develop joint go to market strategies for Power
System and Linux based solutions.
The centers come at a time when innovative businesses are
aggressively taking advantage of big data, cloud, mobile and social computing
projects to capture continued growth in industries such as financial markets,
banking, communications, retail and transportation. IBM plans more centers in
both growth and established markets over the next several months.
KVM Support Planned for
Power Systems PortfolioIBM
intends to make KVM available across its Linux-only Power servers. The KVM
hypervisor is an integral part of the Linux kernel, offering an optimized
virtualization technology for Linux workloads. IBM has long supported KVM on
its x86-based products and plans to make it available on IBM's Linux-only Power
Systems product line-up next year. As a result, clients will have greater
choice when they adopt Linux-based systems to drive new workloads such as big
data, cloud, mobile and social computing.
IBM has participated in a wide range of
open source projects since 1999, and today this includes
Open
Stack,
Open
Daylight, Apache and Eclipse
in addition to
Linux. Hundreds of IBM programmers and engineers are
contributing to open source as part of the collection of global open source
communities, and this includes several dozen experts in China working on
projects such as KVM. In November 2012, IBM opened its first
KVM Center of
Excellence in Beijing. The
Center, also located at the IBM China System Center, promotes KVM-based
solutions from IBM and its partners, and to help customers and business partners
explore and adopt open virtualization and open cloud strategies. The Center was
established as the first KVM Center worldwide because of the rapid adoption of
virtualization and cloud computing in China. A second
KVM Center of
Excellence for Wall Street clients was opened in New York earlier this
year.
To learn more about IBM
Power Systems, go to
www.ibm.com/power