While HPE is getting $2.5bn in cash, the whole deal value is more like $8.8bn, the non-cash being stock. More details:
The Numbers “Under the deal, HP Enterprise shareholders are expected to end up with Micro Focus shares currently valued at about $6.3 billion. Micro Focus will pay HP Enterprise $2.5 billion in cash.” (WSJ) There’s about 12,000 people in HPE Software. (WSJ) HPE Software revenue: “HPE’s software unit generated $3.
Back at Dell, Docker Forking, Healthcare IT, & DevOps - Coté Memo #15
With summer over, there’s a new round of conferences, and my kids are back at school. My 6-year-old, Cormac, is starting 1st grade. We looked around at lot of schools for him and settled on the Lake Travis STEM Academy. I went to public school all my life - and a state college (I mean, a not too fucking shabby one) - so I’ve been really curious to see how private schools pan out.
Unbreakable Docker, or, elephants, er, like other elephants - Software Defined Talk #71
We discuss the fun, changing land of the software stack…
Also see full show notes.
Unbreakable Docker, or, elephants, er, like other elephants - Software Defined Talk #71
We discuss the fun, changing land of the software stack…
Also see full show notes.
Deciding where the Docker ecosystem will make money
The Docker forking hoopla is providing an interesting example, in realtime, of how open communities figure out monetization.
#RealTalk: Open communities are not immune to C.R.E.A.M. One of the most important decisions an open source community makes is where and how it will make money. I always liked Eclipse’s take because they’re mega clear on this topic; the ASF plays this goofy game where they try really hard to pretend they don’t need to answer the question, which itself is an answer, resulting in only the occasional quagmire; Linux has a weird situation where RedHat figured out This One Cool Trick to circumvent the anti-commercial leanings of the GPL; MySQL has a weird dual licensing model that I still don’t fully grasp the strategic implications of; RIP Sun.
“No one wants to eat a finger-pie.” - Software Defined Talk #70
This week we discuss Rackspace going private and the OpenStack cloud scenarios that could have been. We also cover Matt Ray’s first trip to New Zealand where, sadly, he finds no Power Ranger monuments. Also, a little bi-modal flavor for ya.
Also see full show notes.
“No one wants to eat a finger-pie.” - Software Defined Talk #70
This week we discuss Rackspace going private and the OpenStack cloud scenarios that could have been. We also cover Matt Ray’s first trip to New Zealand where, sadly, he finds no Power Ranger monuments. Also, a little bi-modal flavor for ya.
Also see full show notes.
The two types of sales dudes you meet in heaven, the IaaS MQ, and layoffs - Software Defined Talk #69
There’s always good food in the enterprise sales meeting racket: gourmet pimento cheese, sushi and sake, and booze. Also, the Gartner magic quadrant for IaaS in out, which we discuss. With layoffs at Cisco we look at the broader numbers around layoffs in the tech sector. Before recommendations we briefly talk about Walmart buying Jet.
Also see full show notes.
The two types of sales dudes you meet in heaven, the IaaS MQ, and layoffs - Software Defined Talk #69
There’s always good food in the enterprise sales meeting racket: gourmet pimento cheese, sushi and sake, and booze. Also, the Gartner magic quadrant for IaaS in out, which we discuss. With layoffs at Cisco we look at the broader numbers around layoffs in the tech sector. Before recommendations we briefly talk about Walmart buying Jet.
Also see full show notes.
Coté Memo #14 - Wet Phones, Podcasts, and #S1P
Since last time, I was at SpringOne Platform and took a week off for beach-time. Both were fun. I have very little travel over the next few, well, months. I’ll be speaking up at DevOpsDays Dallas, Sep 15th and 16th. With this “downtime” - we’ll see if I actually do it - but I’m hoping to work on a second edition/sequel to my “Cloud Native Journey” book from last year. Over the past year I’ve collected a sort of FAQ that large companies us about DevOps, microservices, PaaS, continuous delivery, and agile (you know, “cloud native”).