• On MovieTome: See the villain of IRON MAN 2!
July 29, 2009 9:46 AM PDT

The Gap moves from Windows to Red Hat Linux

by Dave Rosenberg
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments
(Credit: Red Hat)

Red Hat recently posted an interesting case study on how retail giant The Gap moved from a Unix and Windows based e-commerce infrastructure to one based on Red Hat Linux with support for Microsoft's Active Directory via LikeWise, a product that improves the management and interoperability of Windows and Linux systems.

According to the case study, "Gap Inc. Direct needed to revamp its entire end-to-end business technology platform--from the customer-facing front-end system, to the back-end order management application, to the business tools that supported the company's long-term growth strategy."

Platform growth and adding new features were key to the underlying infrastructure and the ability to integrate a heterogeneous environment was the other major hurdle that needed to be addressed. Positive ROI was an added bonus.

"The ROI (return on investment) of the Red Hat-Likewise solution is hundreds of thousands of dollars annually once you add the hardware and software savings to the reduced costs of manually auditing our systems. Likewise Enterprise's compliance enhancements allowed us to expand our use of Red Hat Enterprise Linux," said Jeff Arcuri, senior manager, IT for Gap Inc. Direct.

I'm sure there are many Red Hat Linux wins to be touted, just as Microsoft would happily tell you about their customer successes. What's interesting here is that Red Hat is actively telling a story that includes a diverse environment and not pushing a myopic, single vendor view of the enterprise.

Follow me on Twitter @daveofdoom.

Dave Rosenberg dishes up "Software, Interrupted" with nearly 15 years of technology and marketing experience that spans from Bell Labs to multiple start-up IPOs to open-source enterprise software companies. He is co-founder of MuleSource and currently serves as the general manager of Hardy Way. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. You can contact Dave via e-mail at softwareinterrupted@gmail.com or follow him on Twitter @daveofdoom.
Recent posts from Software, Interrupted
Nintendo launches paid video content for Wii
Analyst: Money transfer soon to be No. 1 phone app
Apple's App Store review irking developers
Moving to the virtual layer (and taking advantage of the cloud)
Why Windows Mobile and Palm will continue to fail
Is Ohai the next big thing in social games?
Managing your mobile data sync
Security considerations for virtual environments
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by brentrbrian July 30, 2009 3:02 AM PDT
Most of the infrastructure being used is based on open standards (web, TCP/IP) ... difficult to be myopic in an open environment.
Reply to this comment
by Mr. Dee July 31, 2009 3:38 PM PDT
Tommy Hilfiger went to Redhat Linux and back to Windows. I wouldn't be surprised if the same thing happens in 6 months time. The main loser in this story though is UNIX, not Windows.
Reply to this comment

Let the battle for holiday gadget shoppers begin

Retailers try different strategies for competing with behemoths like Amazon and Wal-Mart in the cutthroat competition to lure those giving electronics as gifts.

Firefox hopes to one-up IE with fast graphics

Windows 7 features called Direct2D and DirectWrite will speed up Internet Explorer 9 performance. But Firefox hopes it might retool for the same benefit first.

advertisement

About Software, Interrupted

In "Software, Interrupted," Dave Rosenberg discusses disruption in the software market, as well as the products and services that keep business technology norms in perpetual flux.

With nearly 15 years of technology and marketing experience spanning from Bell Labs to multiple start-up IPOs, Dave co-founded open-source software company MuleSource and now serves as general manager of Hardy Way. He also happens to be a U.S. patent holder and a workaholic. Technology is his best friend and mortal enemy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Software, Interrupted topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right