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And of course there's Canonical, who is trying really hard to compete in the same market as Red Hat and SuSE.

But neither is even close to matching Red Hat's sheer size, profitability, and reputation.




That's quite interesting. As a nearly pure desktop user Canonical is everywhere, even making painful decisions in the community that others can't fight due to size differences, and only once or twice a year I'm reading Red Hat. Never thought of it as the big guy in the room.


To your anecdote, I hardly see Ubuntu mentioned in the enterprise space. Ubuntu is a little desktop player like Apple.


What does enterprise space mean exactly?

I ask because I know Google uses their own version of Ubuntu and while I was at Amazon we also used Ubuntu. Do these companies not count as enterprise? Most companies I've interviewed at also used Ubuntu. I guess I'm just wondering if this is unique to the software industry and whether or not that's included in "enterprise".


That's the best part about these words, they can mean whatever anyone wants them to mean.

Also, what I said really shouldn't be counted as any interesting data point. I was simply responding to someone who thought, based on what they heard, that Red Hat was not a big player.


Ubuntu's focus isn't really the traditional enterprise space, it's the cloud space, where it is doing very well.




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