Red Hat executive Francis Chow outlines the company's strategy for using Red Hat Linux for flexible manufacturing. Credit: Getty Red Hat Linux is taking another plunge forward – one few of us likely imagined. The company is ready to start breaking down the barrier between IT and OT (the operational technology that drives manufacturing), according to a blog from Francis Chow, vice president and general manager, edge computing and in-vehicle operating system at Red Hat. The intent is to make manufacturing plants more efficient and more competitive in the global marketplace. Like Linux’s domination of supercomputing, this focus marks another very significant move forward for Red Hat Linux and maybe, in time, for other Linux distributions as well. This news was delivered by Red Hat at the 28th Annual ARC Industry Leadership Forum, where the topic of accelerating manufacturing was a major focus. The trends covered by Chow include: Autonomous operations on the shop floor through a consistent platform approach, where software-defined “smart factories” will be able to turn single-function integrated systems into multiple-function systems and operate these systems from the cloud to the edge. This could involve automating quality control and more. Building modern distributed control systems. Process control systems can operate with even greater precision and efficiency by integrating with an edge computing platform and provide continuous manufacturing processes. A convergence of AI and edge technologies. AI is clearly making huge advances – especially in manufacturing – and will be running on a modernized, secure, scalable and manageable edge infrastructure. Because of Red Hat’s moves, this will also involve increased worker safety and sustainable product design. Getting the most out of your data with intelligent data services, with the potential for efficient and sustainable data-driven operations. A shift to private networks for advanced connectivity, with the expectation that many manufacturers will be turning to 5G networks for cost reduction, preventative maintenance and reduced time to market. Greater security and standardization – more standardization with a common platform. This will ensure consistent and reliable security capabilities that can help manufacturers manage security at scale. It will also involve a smaller “attack surface” and greater interoperability. You can read the entirety of Francis Chow’s message at this URL: Red Hat announces manufacturing role planned for Red Hat Linux This flexible manufacturing role promises a new and very relevant job for Linux, and Red Hat is surging ahead with it. Related content how-to How to examine files on Linux Linux provides very useful options for viewing file attributes, such as owners and permissions, as well as file content. By Sandra Henry Stocker Oct 24, 2024 6 mins Linux how-to 8 easy ways to reuse commands on Linux Typing the same command again and again can become tiresome. Here are a number of ways you can make repeating commands – or repeating commands but with some changes – a lot easier than you might expect. By Sandra Henry-Stocker Oct 15, 2024 5 mins Linux news SUSE Edge upgrade targets Kubernetes and Linux at the edge SUSE Edge 3.1 includes a new stack validation framework and an image builder tool that are aimed at improving the scalability and manageability of complex Kubernetes and Linux edge-computing deployments. By Sean Michael Kerner Oct 15, 2024 6 mins Edge Computing Linux Network Management Software how-to Lesser-known xargs command is a versatile time saver Boost your Linux command line options and simplify your work with xargs, a handy tool for a number of data manipulation tasks. By Sandra Henry Stocker Oct 11, 2024 6 mins Linux PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe