The new normal for IT starts with open source

THE past two years have focused on “what we all had been going through.” But, we should look at it as “what we have and are accomplishing.”

Globally we saw nearly every industry go to 100% remote working overnight. Regardless of industry and size, organisations learned to operate virtually and on-demand.

Companies needed to deliver goods and services to customers without a set brick-and-mortar footprint. We saw new tech hubs emerge in unlikely places because workers are no longer bounded by needing to be based in specific cities.

Newly-remote workers realised that they did not have to be tied to a physical office, and organisations focused on hiring new talent based on skill and not location.

These are not insignificant achievements. While this way of working was unfamiliar to those who were forced to adapt during the pandemic, to the open source world, it was just another day.

Every open source project is worked on remotely and has been since their inception. Just look at the Linux Foundation, which supports more than 2,300 projects.

There were more than 28,000 active contributors to these projects in 2021, adding more than 29 million lines of code each week and with community participants coming from nearly every country around the globe.

Most of these contributors will never meet face to face, but they are still able to drive the next generation of open technologies.

Whether we realised it or not, our accomplishments during the pandemic brought us closer to the open source model, and this is why open source innovation is now driving much of the software world.

Through this new way of working, we saw new revenue streams, found new ways to become more efficient, and discovered new ways to engage with our customers.

Paul Cormier

As we approach what, hopefully, is the tail end of an incredibly difficult few years, it is time to accelerate. It is time to take the lessons that we learned and applied as we transformed to digital-first and use them to improve our businesses, cultures and global communities.

The term “new normal” is now used like it is pre-determined and static, except that it is not.

You get to define your new normal. What do you want your business to look like? How do you want to embrace the next generation of IT? How will you drive your technology strategies closer to innovation?

The only way you get closer to this innovation and the only way you can use this innovation to keep pace with changing demands is by adopting open source developed technology. That is what is going to get you to the new normal.

Open source developed code is the foundation of the innovation that is driving the future of IT, not open core or proprietary software. The only way to create and adapt to these innovations is through open source developed technology.

At its heart, the new normal for IT starts with open source. Open source software provides a channel that does not limit your inspiration or aspirations.

Eight years ago, 90% of companies we talked to were going to a singular cloud provider. Whether because they were trying to get ahead of the curve or due to other pressures, many chief investment officers (CIOs) might have entered the cloud before they had a concrete plan in place.

Now, nearly a decade later, some of the same CIOs are finding out that their choices were not the best, either for their budget, workloads, or overall strategy.

The reality is, these organisations will not get to choose hybrid cloud – it is coming to them whether they’re ready or not.

While the cloud brings much value to some applications, not every application needs, or should, be in a public cloud. Some applications may be better suited in one specific cloud, and some applications may be required to run on-premises while consuming services in the cloud model.

Your applications, workloads and infrastructure should run and live wherever you need them. This could be the datacenter, the public cloud, multiple public clouds or at the edge, where compute resources need to be as close as possible to your data.

The fifth cloud is not a datacenter – it is a connector. It is linking disparate cloud environments, devices and workloads established on common, open industry standards. – June 26, 2022

 

Paul Cormier is the president and CEO of Red Hat.

The views expressed are solely of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Focus Malaysia.

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