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 ...
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 ...
The news coincides with this week's LinuxWorld trade show in San Francisco. The event is a showcase of the latest developments in the open-source space, which is showing signs of coming into its own ...
The announcements, made at the LinuxWorld show in San Francisco, also included plans to sell pre-configured Linux "appliances" for SMBs and a new package of Linux-based software for supercomputers.
IBM's effort to bring in-kernel Rust to its mainframe platform has taken a step forward, although anyone hoping to use it on ...
IBM last week announced a plan to create “virtual servers” for corporate users connected to mainframes running in its data centers, provided that the users are willing to run applications on a Linux ...
More than a year after IBM’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Sam Palmisano challenged his company to move to the Linux desktop by the end of 2005, IBM has significantly toned down its rhetoric on ...
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 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, ...