IBM has tried multiple ways to stay relevant in the technology world. But it has often been outgunned by rivals like Amazon and Microsoft.
On Tuesday, IBM outlined its latest strategy: using its $34 billion purchase of Red Hat, the largest ever acquisition of a business software company, to get a big piece of the lucrative cloud computing market.
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(In China, Alibaba is the clear leader.) They have the internet skills and the deep pockets to spend many billions a year building the vast data centers that power the cloud, helping to protect their lead.
But their grasp has raised concerns from customers about being dependent on a single provider.
IBM arrived late to the business. It has money and data centers, but the company cannot go head to head with the cloud giants.
So with the Red Hat deal, which closed on Tuesday, Ms. Rometty took IBM on a different path. It is presenting itself as an open, impartial player in the cloud — the Switzerland in the face-off between the leading players.
In Red Hat, IBM is getting a leading provider of software tools that are widely used to write cloud computing applications. Red Hat specializes in open-source software, which means the basic code is free. It has partnerships with the major cloud services including Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Alibaba.
Under IBM, Red Hat will maintain and, it insists, expand those alliances.
The IBM-Red Hat proposition is that it will offer a layer of software that sits atop the big clouds, and works with them all.
“Write once, run anywhere,” James Whitehurst, Red Hat’s chief executive, explained in an interview on Tuesday.
His phrasing is telling. It is the exactly the same pitch made in the 1990s for the Java programming language and platform, developed by Sun Microsystems.
Then, the fear was being locked in to the technology of Microsoft, the overbearing giant of the personal computer era.
Today, the fear in business circles is being tied to a powerful cloud provider. And Mr. Whitehurst invoked the lock-in concerns, describing the IBM-Red Hat combination as an alternative to “three incompatible walled gardens.”
That is a real issue. Most large corporations now want to, and increasingly do, use more than one cloud supplier. They are also adopting cloud technology inside their own data centers, for its flexibility and cost savings.
“Hybrid multi-cloud” is the industry term for this a la carte adoption of cloud computing — some computing purchased from the big cloud suppliers and some cloud done in house, and buying from more than one of the cloud giants.
The hybrid market is where IBM sees its future. In an interview, Ms. Rometty, the company’s chief executive, said helping IBM’s corporate customers move to the cloud was a huge opportunity.
©2019 The New York Times News Service
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