
Red Hat Unveils Cloud-Optimized Red Hat Enterprise Linux
In collaboration with AWS, Google Cloud and Microsoft, Red Hat offers a ready-to-use approach for Red Hat Enterprise Linux deployments, facilitating smoother workload migrations, enhancing management and visibility for cloud deployments and delivering built-in security functions. The result is an out-of-the-box Red Hat Enterprise Linux experience that enables organizations to build faster with an optimized Linux platform in the public cloud of their choosing.
These cloud-centric offerings for Red Hat Enterprise Linux provide:
Optimized performance in the cloud: Pre-configured, specifically-tuned profiles enable organizations to maintain consistency between reboots and modify settings for various subsystems without disrupting workflows.
Contained drift and accelerated delivery: Image mode for Red Hat Enterprise Linux uses container-native tooling to allow organizations to deploy Red Hat Enterprise Linux as a bootc container image in the cloud, helping to streamline cloud-native application development and IT operations into a single pipeline.
Enhanced observability and reporting: Built-in telemetry options offer a comprehensive view of organizations Red Hat Enterprise Linux estate alongside other cloud services for unified visibility within the cloud provider dashboard.
Improved security from boot to runtime: Image attestation and top-down memory encryption through Secure Boot, Confidential Computing and Confidential Hypervisor provide a streamlined approach to cloud deployments with a stronger security footprint.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux delivers a consistent foundation upon which organizations can standardize and scale, reducing complexity and providing a unified experience across hybrid and multi-cloud environments. By tuning Red Hat Enterprise Linux to meet unique cloud specifications, organizations can speed up application development, simplify management and increase efficiency to scale applications more dynamically while maintaining reliability.
Availability
Cloud-optimized Red Hat Enterprise Linux offerings are now available on AWS, Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure. Organizations can use their existing Red Hat Enterprise Linux subscriptions to migrate to the cloud or purchase pay-as-you-go options from their cloud marketplace of choice. Red Hat Enterprise Linux qualifies for committed spend programs with AWS, Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure, and organizations can also participate in Red Hat's hybrid committed spend program for further procurement flexibility.
Red Hat Summit
Join the Red Hat Summit keynotes to hear the latest from Red Hat executives, customers and partners:
Modernized infrastructure meets enterprise-ready AI – Tuesday, May 20, 8-10 a.m. EDT (YouTube)
Hybrid cloud evolves to deliver enterprise innovation – Wednesday, May 21, 8-9:30 a.m. EDT (YouTube)
Supporting Quotes
Gunnar Hellekson, Vice President and General Manager, Red Hat Enterprise Linux Business Unit, Red Hat, 'Red Hats collaboration with AWS, Google Cloud and Microsoft mark a significant leap forward in delivering cloud-ready, purpose-built offerings of the world's leading enterprise Linux platform directly into the hands of our customers. By engineering tailored experiences for Red Hat Enterprise Linux in the cloud, we are empowering organizations to accelerate their cloud transformations and deployments, enabling them to more rapidly achieve their business objectives and scale to embrace the next wave of IT innovation.'
Manu Parbhakar, Director, Worldwide Business Application Partners, AWS, 'AWS customers gain immediate differentiated value from this Red Hat collaboration through performance-optimized Red Hat Enterprise Linux profiles that work harmoniously with our world-class cloud services ecosystem. By combining Red Hats container-native tooling with AWSs comprehensive security features and observability dashboard, organizations achieve a level of operational efficiency and global scale that simply isnt available elsewhere in the market.'
Mark Lohmeyer, Vice President and General Manager, AI & Computing Infrastructure, Google Cloud, 'Google Cloud is committed to providing our customers with the flexibility and tools they need to innovate and scale their operations. Red Hat Enterprise Linux for Google Cloud offers our customers a streamlined path to migrate, deploy and scale their workloads faster across the hybrid cloud, all while benefiting from integrated security capabilities and a simplified management experience. This collaboration further empowers organizations to achieve their business goals and accelerate their digital transformation on Google Cloud.'
Brendan Burns, Corporate Vice President, Azure Compute at Microsoft, 'Microsoft and Red Hat share a commitment to enabling organizations with a more seamless and comprehensive hybrid cloud experience. Red Hat Enterprise Linux for Microsoft Azure offers a powerful solution for organizations to achieve enhanced consistency across environments and more effectively manage usage and costs, helping them unlock greater business value in the cloud.'
Additional Resources
Read more about Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10
Explore the benefits of Red Hat Enterprise Linux in the cloud
Learn more about Red Hat Summit
See all of Red Hat's announcements this week in the Red Hat Summit newsroom
Follow @RedHatSummit or #RHSummit on X for event-specific updates
Connect with Red Hat
Learn more about Red Hat
Get more news in the Red Hat newsroom
Read the Red Hat blog
Follow Red Hat on X
Follow Red Hat on Instagram
Follow Red Hat on LinkedIn
Watch Red Hat videos on YouTube
About Red Hat
Red Hat is the open hybrid cloud technology leader, delivering a trusted, consistent, and comprehensive foundation for transformative IT innovation and AI applications. Its portfolio of cloud, developer, AI, Linux, automation, and application platform technologies enables any application, anywhere-from the datacenter to the edge. As the worlds leading provider of enterprise open source software solutions, Red Hat invests in open ecosystems and communities to solve tomorrows IT challenges. Collaborating with partners and customers, Red Hat helps them build, connect, automate, secure, and manage their IT environments, supported by consulting services and award-winning training and certification offerings.
Forward-Looking Statements
Except for the historical information and discussions contained herein, statements contained in this press release may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are based on the company's current assumptions regarding future business and financial performance. These statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Any forward-looking statement in this press release speaks only as of the date on which it is made. Except as required by law, the company assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
a day ago
- First Post
Alphabet sees increase in net profit, says recently launched AI Mode on Google 'going well' in India
The company's revenue grew 14 per cent year-over-year to $96.4 billion, largely fueled by strong Google Cloud sales. The cloud division proved to be a major driver of growth, with revenue increasing 32 per cent from the previous year to $13.62 billion read more Google's parent company, Alphabet, recorded a 19 per cent year-on-year growth in its net profit in the April-June quarter, worth $28.2 billion. The increase in the tech giant's profit is attributable to the launch of Alphabet's AI model, which has been 'going well'. Alphabet's performance in the previous quarter was driven by the expansion of its cloud computing division and the positive impact of its AI products. 'We had a standout quarter, with robust growth across the company. We are leading at the frontier of AI and shipping at an incredible pace. AI is positively impacting every part of the business, driving strong momentum,' CEO Sundar Pichai said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The company's revenue grew 14 per cent year-over-year to $96.4 billion, largely fueled by strong Google Cloud sales. The cloud division proved to be a major driver of growth, with revenue increasing 32 per cent from the previous year to $13.62 billion. Cloud platform and AI emerge as stars of the show Alphabet has been witnessing a boom, and the credit goes to the high demand for Google Cloud Platform (GCP) and an expansion of its core products like AI infrastructure and generative AI solutions. To keep up with rising demand for its cloud products and AI-driven services, Alphabet has raised its capital expenditure forecast for 2025. The company now plans to invest around $85 billion this year, up from its earlier estimate of $75 billion. Anat Ashkenazi, chief financial officer (CFO) of Alphabet, said, 'Our updated outlook reflects additional investment in servers, the timing of delivery of servers, and an acceleration in the pace of data centre construction, primarily to meet cloud customer demand.' The company's end-to-end AI search experience on Google, AI Mode, has been launched in the US and India, and 'has received positive feedback'. AI Overview on Google now has over 2 billion monthly users in more than 200 countries. Still, some analysts warned that the higher spending may draw fresh scrutiny from investors, who have largely stayed on the sidelines this year. Alphabet shares are up just 0.5 per cent in 2025, trailing Microsoft's 20 per cent increase and a 22 per cent rise in Meta stock, also held back by regulatory battles that are looking to break its illegal monopoly in the search and ad-tech markets. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD With inputs from agencies


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
CEO Sundar Pichai on Google Cloud's OpenAI partnership: 'With respect to OpenAI, look...'
CEO has said that he is 'excited' about a new partnership that sees the search giant supplying cloud computing resources to Microsoft-backed , one of its competitors in the artificial intelligence (AI) space. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The comments came during Google's second-quarter earnings call, where Pichai addressed analyst questions about the company's aggressive AI investments after reporting strong results in Alphabet's first quarter 2025. 'With respect to OpenAI, look, we are very excited to be partnering with them on Google Cloud ,' Pichai stated. 'So super excited about our partnership there on the cloud side, and we look forward to investing more in that relationship and growing that,' he added. Pichai emphasised that Google Cloud operates as an 'open platform' with a history of supporting innovative companies, startups, and AI labs. Pichai highlighted Google Cloud's success in securing deals with several prominent AI labs, including Anthropic, Safe Superintelligence – the AI startup by OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, and Fei-Fei Li's World Labs. He attributed this success to Google's robust supply of both Nvidia GPU chips and its proprietary in-house TPU chips, essential for training and serving large AI models. 'Our strong relationship with NVIDIA continues to be a key advantage for us and our customers. We were the first cloud provider to offer NVIDIA's groundbreaking B200 and GB200 Blackwell GPUs, and will be offering their next-generation Vera Rubin GPUs,' he added. OpenAI's partnership with Google Cloud Earlier this month, OpenAI quietly updated its public list of cloud computing suppliers to include Google Cloud, alongside existing partners Microsoft and Oracle. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now This followed a report by news agency Reuters in June, indicating OpenAI was exploring tapping Google Cloud for additional computational power. The partnership arrives as Google intensifies its focus on developing leading AI models and products. Despite ChatGPT posing a competitive threat to Google's core Search business, the deal brings a new customer for Google Cloud which has seen a strong growth in the recent quarters. The division's revenue soared by 28% to $12.3 billion in the first quarter. Google attributes a substantial portion of this growth to the Google Cloud Platform and other products catering to AI companies.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
Google parent Alphabet surprises with capital spending boost after earnings beat
Alphabet on Wednesday cited massive demand for its cloud computing services as it hiked its capital spending plans for the year to about $85 billion and predicted a further increase next year. The search giant strongly beat Wall Street estimates for quarterly revenue and profit on the back of new AI features and a steady digital advertising market. Revenue growth was driven by Google Cloud's sales, which surged nearly 32%, well above estimates for a 26.5% increase. "With this strong and growing demand for our Cloud products and services, we are increasing our investment in capital expenditures." CEO Sundar Pichai said in an earnings release. Shares of the company, which have risen more than 18% since its previous earnings report in April, dipped initially in extended trading after the report before rallying as executives shared details about strong cloud demand on a call with analysts. But investors were surprised by the planned capital spending increase. "I don't think anyone was expecting a change to that 2025 capex guide," said Dave Wagner, portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors. "Google had an amazing quarter. It was an easy beat, and it was just offset by this $10-billion increase in capex." Capital spending is expected to increase further in 2026 due to demand and growth opportunities, Chief Financial Officer Anat Ashkenazi said on the call. Ashkenazi added that while the pace of server deployment has improved, Alphabet continues to face more customer demand for its cloud services than it can supply. Google had earlier pledged about $75 billion in capital spending this year, part of the more than $320 billion that Big Tech is expected to pour into building AI capabilities. CLOUD GAINS The rise of artificial intelligence technologies has propelled demand for cloud computing services. Google Cloud still trails Amazon's AWS and Microsoft's Azure in total sales, but has tried to gain ground by touting AI offerings, including its in-house TPU chips that rival Nvidia's GPUs. The business segment grew its quarter-over-quarter customer count by 28%, Pichai said on the call. "The comprehensiveness of our AI portfolio, the breadth of our offerings, both providing our models on GPUs and TPUs for our customers, all of that has been really driving demand," he said. In a huge win for Alphabet, ChatGPT maker OpenAI recently added Google Cloud to its list of cloud capacity suppliers, as Reuters exclusively reported in June, in a surprising collaboration between two companies that are competing head-to-head in AI. It also marked OpenAI's latest move to diversify beyond its major backer Microsoft. The capex increase nevertheless raises concerns about Alphabet's pace of monetization and its impact on near-term profitability, senior analyst Jesse Cohen said. Alphabet and its peers have defended their aggressive AI spending amid rising competition from Chinese rivals and investor frustration with slower-than-expected payoffs, saying those massive investments are necessary to fuel growth and improve their products. AI RACE Google Search's artificial intelligence features such as AI Overviews and AI Mode are also helping the company boost engagement and tackle rising competition from chatbots such as ChatGPT that have surged in popularity. AI Mode has grown to 100 million monthly active users just two months after Google announced the start of its large-scale rollout during its annual developer conference. Google's own ChatGPT competitor, called Gemini, has more than 450 million monthly users, Pichai said. Google's advertising revenue, which represents about three-quarters of the tech major's overall sales, rose 10.4% to $71.34 billion in the second quarter, beating expectations for $69.47 billion, according to data from LSEG. "Hopefully, this will damper concerns by the investment community that has been worried that products like OpenAI/ChatGPT could be having an impact on Google's Search query growth," said Dan Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust. Alphabet reported total revenue of $96.43 billion for the second quarter ended June 30, compared with analysts' average estimate of about $94 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. The company reported profit of $2.31 per share for the period, beating estimates of $2.18 per share, according to LSEG data.