Here is he bleak future ahead of us. IBM + RHT is not the #1 hybrid solution leading chapter 2. It is IBM + RHT + $20B bond with a hybrid solution that is same wine in different bottle. With such ball and
chain the only sure thing in our future is more RAs.
There are still some of us around who would remember PureSystems, PureData, PureApplication - IBM's first foray into private cloud-in-a-can. Flop #1. Then came the IBM Cloud and overhyped Watson. Flop #2. Then the smart people fixed up some containers and Kubernetes, rebundled the cloud as ICP, which is reminiscent of PureSystems. Flop #3. Spend $34B to dress up ICP, mix in some OpenShift pixie dust this time, call it Cloud Paks - the hybrid solution everyone needs. Same wine different bottle again. Who in corporate amnesia would notice the difference? Soon to be Flop #4.
Cloud Pak runs on one Hyperconvergent Infrastructure (ICP), which runs on another Hyperconvergent Infrastructure (AWS/Azure/GCP). So that is how IBM+RHT going to take the hybrid world by storm? So users didn't go for ICP, but they will go for ICP over someone else's cloud? Where is the price advantage of paying for ICP+AWS/Azure/GCP? What about Performance? Stability? Supportability?
Who wants to sign up for IBM Object Storage powered by GPFS powered by S3 running on AWS VPC? Only techmedia pundits and trade rags would tout such monstrosity as disruptive technology. Oh yeah, Ginni too.
RHEL deployment on AWS is far less than Windows deployment. RHEL on AWS is only better than last place SLES. Ubuntu deployment is more than all other distros combined. Ginny was right, the cloud runs on Linux, but she bought the wrong Linux distro.
It was imperative for RHT to shop itself around, they could see in the cloud they barely have a foothold.
That is what is ahead of us. Pass the Prozac.