Last week, AlanCox, a famous kernel developer, announced that he would leave RedHat, which has been working for 10 years in middle January. After Joining Intel, he will still focus on underlying development and will not leave Linuxkernel or open source. Some speculate that his departure may indicate a change in RedHat, and red hat is moving from the bottom layer to the application layer. In its prestigious "bottom layer" and "core" Development and Support Tools, RedHat integrates a large number of application-related, user-centric tools. If RedHa
Last week, the famous kernel developer Alan Cox announced that he would leave Red Hat, which has been working for 10 years in middle January. After Joining Intel, he will still focus on underlying development, it will not be separated from Linux kernel or open source.
Some speculate that his departure may indicate a change in Red Hat, which is moving from the bottom layer to the application layer. In its prestigious "bottom layer" and "core" Development and Support Tools, Red Hat integrates a large number of application-related, user-centric tools. If Red Hat ignores innovation at the bottom layer, the results may be even more worrying.