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Open Source SuSE Businesses IBM Red Hat Software Linux

SUSE Will Soon Be the Largest Independent Linux Company (qz.com) 57

At SUSECon in Nashville, Tennessee, European Linux power SUSE CEO Nils Brauckmann said his company would soon be the largest independent Linux company. "That's because, of course, IBM is acquiring Red Hat," reports ZDNet. "But, simultaneously, SUSE has continued to grow for seven-straight years." From the report: Brauckmann said, "We believe that makes our status as a truly independent open source company more important than ever. Our genuinely open-source solutions, flexible business practices, lack of enforced vendor lock-in, and exceptional service are more critical to customer and partner organizations, and our independence coincides with our single-minded focus on delivering what is best for them." Practically speaking, SUSE has been growing by focusing on delivering high-quality Linux and open-source programs and services to enterprise customers. Looking ahead Brauckmann said, "SUSE is better positioned to bring more innovation to customers and partners faster through both organic growth and acquisitions, keeping us on track to provide them with the open solutions that keep them ahead with their own customers in their own markets. We continue to adapt so our customers and partners can succeed."

Last year SUSE's revenue grew by 15 percent in fiscal year 2018, and the business is about to surpass the $400 million revenue mark for the first time. SUSE, which sees not quite half of its business in Europe, is also seeing revenue growth around the world. North America, for example, now accounts for almost 40 percent of SUSE's revenues. The company is also expanding. SUSE added more than 300 employees in the last 12 months. For the most part this has been in engineering followed by sales and services. SUSE staff is now approaching 1,750 globally and its plans on continuing to hire aggressively.

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SUSE Will Soon Be the Largest Independent Linux Company

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  • IBM's competence in software development has been going down every year for the last 20 years.

    IBM acquiring RedHat is a disaster (for RedHat). Companies would be wise to start their plans to transition to another Linux distribution now.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      lol what a joke. IBM has been a open source supporter since the very beginning and they have many pionner and brilliant software engineers (many of them leaders in their comunities). That has nothing to do with their other parts of the business they have. Red Hat and IBM will continue the tradition of leading the open source ecosystem. Management or self-ineterest can not do anything on a strong software community leaded by open/technical discussions.

  • I'd be happy to be wrong about this, but there's no free (as in beer) version of their enterprise offerings. IOW no equivalent of Dead Rat's CentOS.

    • OpenSUSE?

      • This is the correct answer - but there are two flavors to OpenSuSE - Tumbleweed and Leap.

        Tumbleweed is the rolling version of OpenSuSE, where it gets the latest (not necessarily best or best tested) packages,

        Leap is a more stable version of Tumbleweed, where it's more extensively tested but there are some things needing to be polished.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Since version 15, openSUSE can be upgraded to SUSE Enterprise 15

  • by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2019 @02:15AM (#58369854)

    Is Suse larger than Canonical? Surprised if so.

    • Significantly larger.

    • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
      Yes, I used to use Ubuntu occasionally because packages weren't as available on OpenSUSE. However, that's really changed over the last decade. With OBS (open build services), you can find most packages in a repo.

      Three reasons I really prefer OpenSUSE:
      1 - Hardware support is unsurpassed, better then any other linux distro I've tried.
      2 - OBS ecosystem [opensuse.org]
      3 - Community help appears to be higher caliber then Ubuntu and professional pages are more open then RH (no paywall). If I look up a howto, at least half the
  • I've been using Suse/OpenSUSE since 7.2 and it's been great, except for the switch to systemd which was annoying (I now use FreeBSD for web services because of that). It's a really good distribution with a lot of support and packages available and I am glad they are doing well. Once my Win7 support expires I'm switching to them probably for full-time desktop use.
  • SUSE was distro that introduced me to linux. Though I no longer use it, I will always remember it as my first. I am still using linux about around 15 years later. Might have to give it a try again to see how well it aged :-)

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