Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

On the other hand, Red Hat's revenue is steadily growing[1] and there are very few RHEL desktop users. Fedora is probably also less popular than Ubuntu and its derivatives.

[1] https://investors.redhat.com/financial-information/financial...



I'd be very surprised if Ubuntu's revenue wasn't increasing at a much higher rate than Red Hat's.


Interesting question. Some data points that I could find.

Canonical: 2009: ~30M, 2013: 65.7M, 2016: 103.3M

Red Hat: 2013: ~1.4B, 2015: ~1.8B, 2016: ~2.1B, 2017: 2.4B

Consequently: Canonical 2013-2016: ~1.57x, Red Hat 2013-2016: 1.71x.

So, their revenue seems to be increasing at a slower rate and Red Hat's revenue is almost twentyfold that of Canonical. Moreover, Red Hat is operating on a quite large profit, while Canonical is on a loss.


Thanks, the last Canonical revenue figures I could find were the 2013 ones.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: