
Three steps to standardizing your infrastructure on Red Hat Enterprise Linux

The latest Red Hat Enterprise Linux container features and developer offerings

As application development paradigms evolve, Linux has emerged as a preferred environment for developers, particularly in enterprise and production contexts. For years, Windows-based developers have relied on virtual machines (VMs) to emulate Linux. And although dependence on full VMs has diminished with the rise of container technology, there is still a need for VM layers on non-Linux operating systems. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 10 offers developers an alternative to a container-based or layered VM setup. In this session, we’ll share how this robust development environment with modern tools and packages positions Linux as a no-overhead platform for development—particularly on physical Linux hardware. We’ll provide an overview of the latest developer-oriented RHEL features that help improve workflows for efficient application development, making Linux the default platform for serious developers.
Natale Vinto is a software engineer and solutions architect with more than 10 years of expertise with IT and internet and communication technologies (ICT) and a consolidated background in telecommunications, DevOps, and Linux operating systems. Today, Natale is a Evangelism Director at Red Hat and author of the Modernizing Enterprise Java, GitOps Cookbook, and Applied AI for Enterprise Java Development for O'Reilly, helping customers and people within communities have success with their Kubernetes and cloud-native artificial intelligence (AI) strategy.
Scott McCarty is a Global Senior Principal Product Manager for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, arguably the largest open source software business in the world. Focus areas include cloud, containers, workload expansion, and automation. Scott works closely with customers, partners, engineering teams, sales, marketing, other product teams, and even in the community. He combines personal experience with customer and partner feedback to enhance and tailor strategic capabilities in Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Scott is a social media start-up veteran, an e-commerce old timer, and a weathered government research technologist, with experience across a variety of organizations, from 7-person startups to 25,000-employee technology companies. This has culminated in a unique perspective on open source software development, delivery, and maintenance.