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Red Hat opens new offices in India's Bangalore, New Delhi

Open source solutions firm Red Hat has announced the opening of two new offices in Bangalore and New Delhi.

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Sanjeeb Kumar Sahoo
New Update
Open source solutions firm Red Hat

NEW DELHI: Open source solutions firm Red Hat has announced the opening of two new offices in Bangalore and New Delhi.

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These offices mark the company’s continued commitment to enabling customer success with open hybrid cloud solutions in India.

With the opening of the new offices, Red Hat is expanding its footprint in India with a goal of supporting interest for open source solutions and services from customers and partners and further promoting the benefits open source solutions can offer enterprises in India. Red Hat now has six offices in India, including additional facilities in Bangalore and New Delhi, and offices in Mumbai and Pune.

Red Hat’s new Bangalore office is a 14,000 sq. ft. facility at Lavelle Road. It is designed to act as a training and enablement center for customers and partners. Through the new facility, which features a cafeteria, and space for networking, meetings, training and certification exams, and an indoor game zone, Red Hat aims to bring its open, collaborative culture to life. The additional New Delhi office is a 12,405 sq.ft facility located close to the international airport at Aerocity, designed with an eye toward enabling collaboration with customers throughout the region.

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“There’s a strong commitment towards open source technologies in a fast-growing market like India, and we are looking forward to working with these organizations to help them meet their goals with open source," said Dirk-Peter van Leeuwen, senior vice president and general manager, Asia Pacific, Red Hat.

“The new offices will support our efforts to add to our stellar customer base and collaborate with organizations that see open source technology as a de facto solution to not only run their mission critical software, but as a source for technology innovation as well," said Rajesh Rege, managing, director, Red Hat India.

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