February 16, 2007 (IDG News Service) -- Red Hat Inc. has scheduled a March release for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (RHEL5), the latest version of its open-source operating system, while it tries to fend off new competitive threats from Oracle Corp. and the Microsoft Corp.-Novell Inc. partnership.
Red Hat Chief Technology Officer Brian Stevens discussed RHEL5, the competition, the Fedora Project and other topics with the IDG News Service, a Computerworld sister organization.
Following is an edited transcript of the interview, conducted this week at the InfoWorld Virtualization Executive Forum in San Francisco.
RHEL5 comes out in March. What are some of the features that will move virtualization forward and keep Red Hat competitive?
RHEL5 is a scalable, full native 64-bit platform. In the second quarter of 2005, there was a crossover point where more 64-bit x86 systems were sold than 32-bit systems. So there is this untapped [64-bit] capability within the IT shops, as many systems are still running 32-bit applications on 64-bit systems. With RHEL5, we aim to help allow IT and independent software vendors to realize the power of 64-bit computing on these multicore architectures. There is a lot of untapped capability in performance there, so we aim to help that.
As to virtualization, it comes as an integrated feature set for RHEL5.
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