On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 6:32 PM John Crisp jcrisp@safeandsoundit.co.uk wrote:
On Mon, 21 Dec 2020 11:29:52 -0600 Mike McGrath mmcgrath@redhat.com wrote:
On Mon, Dec 21, 2020 at 11:06 AM John Crisp jcrisp@safeandsoundit.co.uk wrote:
On Fri, 18 Dec 2020 13:03:47 -0600 Mike McGrath mmcgrath@redhat.com wrote:
Red Hat isn't aiming for total global domination
That is what any company aims for, even if they don't achieve it. It is the simple objective, and outcome, of capitalism. Beat the rest.
So this is about growing/expanding market share, which then equates to profit. Why wouldn't you?
If you argue anything else you really are quite simply gaslighting.
You have grossly oversimplified a complicated situation and completely ignored corporate responsibility which is something Red Hat takes very seriously.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This is called gaslighting.
As a good friend of mine said many moons ago. "Life is simple. It is people that make it complicated."
And for good reason. It is easy to hide amongst corporate complexity and a wall of long arguments over minutiae. Take a simple idea and complicate it.
Business really IS simple. Buy or create something, add value, and sell for more money than it cost you = profit.
How to increase that may be complex. But the base formula is not.
Of course, you can add morals & all that jazz. But none of it gets away from the fact that companies need profit, and shareholders need dividends, and the simplest way to increase profit is to either cut your highest costs - usually jobs - and send them somewhere cheaper, or increase market share, aka 'domination'.
Corporate responsibility? Yeah, I understand that. We like to be huggy too. But with no profit it doesn't mean a thing. You are out of business.
But of course, you know all this.
My point was/is please stop the platitudes and excuses and just say it like it is. Stop trying to pretend it is really complicated, and we couldn't possibly understand your feelings, when in fact it is fundamentally really simple.
It really is quite offensive and you are aren't winning any hearts and minds right now.
I'll admit something about Mark's reply didn't bring out the best in me. However, I'll take every opportunity to dote on the team and on Red Hat, they've done some amazing things that we have all benefited
Indeed. Seeing more and more frustrated RH people desperately try to defend the indefensible. I almost feel sorry for many there who probably feel quite betrayed, and those like you having to do the rounds on lists like this getting their ears bent trying to placate people with businesses that have just been destroyed over night (luckily I'm not one) by telling them what a great company RedHat is. Gaslighting.
There is a lot more to Red Hat than the dollars and cents you're trying to distill us down into.
There may well be, but I'm afraid when you do distil it down, no matter which way you try and cut it, the bottom line is always money.
If it wasn't for money, CentOS as we know it would not be being cut.
No, I don't doubt for a moment that you are all lovely people to meet down the bar (and I have met one or two). But this is a decision based on $$$ presumably trying to convert a cost into revenue and extinguishing the 'free loaders'.
Probably rammed home when the new RedHat owners asked about how you were going to increase revenue. They aren't known for beating about the bush with 'loss making' business. I'd guess a marketing and beancounter assessment of how many CentOS users converted to RH didn't fair well.
So this was a quick way to shave a few million in costs overnight, potentially gain a load of new subscribers, and get more testing by the rest. And your morals went to hell in a handcart.
It is really that simple. Please don't try and pretend it is otherwise.
Have a safe Xmas & New Year.
And herein lies the problem. I'm doing my best to answer questions. You are angry and have directed your anger at me, all of which is completely understandable. I could do without the namecalling but if you can't help yourself, I get it. I'm here doing my best to make sure people understand what is going on. And you're right, one of the many factors that went into this decision was business health and yes, as you point out, revenue is tied to business health. The problem is you've made several uninformed claims about Red Hat's business. For one, infrastructure revenues, as were publicly reported up through last year, have remained basically the same for years at Red Hat. That's public knowledge and is available in our form 10k, feel free to go read it from last year and previous years. I don't know who the anonymous "ex Red Hat exec" was quoted earlier but I don't think the entire paid Linux OS market is worth $10 billion. That just doesn't pass the sniff test though I guess that's for some analyst somewhere to figure out.
If Red Hat's new "owners" as you put it want to increase revenue, they wouldn't be doing that with RHEL, they'd be doing it with one of the emerging technologies that were growing at somewhere around triple the rate of our infrastructure revenue (Like an OpenShift or OpenStack). Again, there's no secret here, this was all available information up until about a year ago and not much has actually changed in the last year in the Linux OS market. Why would you invest a dollar into a bank account that could give 10% return, when another bank account would give you 30 or 40% return?
So, of course, this is where it gets complicated. Many, many factors went into this decision across many people in Red Hat and on the board. I think you honestly believe we had some meeting inside Red Hat and the agenda was "How to make more money by killing CentOS." Instead, we had several discussions both inside Red Hat, outside Red Hat, etc on what to do about CentOS over at least a couple of years that I was involved. It's been clear to us for a while that this model was pretty unhealthy. We all had our own wants out of this and I suspect no one got everything they wanted.
Many people on this list are looking to find a way forward here - to understand what is going on and provide suggestions where they see it might help. It is forgivable that you and others would jump to conclusions that equate to IBM, or greed, or revenue because you don't have all the information we do. But just know that when you again try to boil this all down to just a revenue discussion, you're missing a lot of detail that actually went into this.
-Mike