IBM is making a new call for customers in the telecommunications arena. The company on Tuesday announced a new eServer based on the Linux operating system for the telecommunications industry. At the ...
At the LinuxWorld Expo in Boston last month, IBM unveiled a program dubbed "Chiphopper" that gives ISVs tools and support for migrating their Linux applications from Intel x86 platforms to Big Blue's ...
Newest IBM LinuxONE system is engineered to deliver cybersecurity, resiliency, scalability and AI inferencing for hybrid cloud environments. Moving Linux workloads from a compared x86 system to an IBM ...
If you’ve got a bunch of underutilized x86 systems running Linux, you’re probably thinking virtualization as a way to rid your data center of unnecessary – and power hungry – hardware. Last week, IBM ...
Red Hat has announced the general availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux AI (RHEL AI), a platform that integrates IBM's open-source Granite large language models (LLMs) with its InstructLab tools ...
The computer giant currently offers Linux on its xSeries Intel servers, iSeries Power4 midrange servers and zSeries mainframes. The availability of native Linux on its 64-bit Unix server line fulfills ...
IBM is expanding its “buy-as-you-need” utility approach to Linux on the mainframe. In an announcement today, IBM said it will offer customers capacity as needed by creating virtual Linux servers on ...
Adam Jollans, Linux strategy manager for IBM, discusses in an interview with IDG News Service how he sees Linux adoption evolving across vertical industries and in businesses both small and large, and ...
It may not have the air of established respectability that Unix holds, but the Linux operating system took another step toward maturity today with the announcement of the latest server from IBM. IBM ...
IBM is readying a number of new marketing programs that the computer giant hopes will encourage another 6,000 independent software vendors (ISVs) to port their software to the Linux operating system ...
IBM announced that the Library of Congress will run Linux on its pSeries servers, models that historically have run Unix. The Library of Congress will use the servers for an online catalog of film, ...