We’re moving beyond simple prompts. The next frontier is agentic AI: autonomous systems that don’t just talk, but act across your enterprise. But as we move into this era, I’m hearing a consistent concern from our customers: How do we adopt these agents without losing control of our infrastructure or our data?
In the Forrester report, “Understand your agentic AI platform options,” there is a vital takeaway: agentic AI is a portfolio problem. Many organizations are falling into the trap of trying to centralize their AI under a single, proprietary vendor. At Red Hat, we believe that path limits your speed and locks away your potential.
Our AI strategy is built on a different foundation:
- Your data: Keep your proprietary data where it belongs–protected and under your control.
- Your model: Use the best-fit models for your specific use cases, not just what’s “standard” for a vendor.
- Your choice: Build and deploy across the hybrid cloud, from the datacenter to the edge.
Agentic AI requires coherence, not centralization. By using an open source foundation, you can assemble, govern, and scale a diverse portfolio of agents that actually solve real-world problems.
Red Hat is committed to being that stable, flexible foundation for the agentic era. The choice should always be yours.
Check out the full Forrester report to see how to navigate your own AI portfolio today.
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About the author
Chris Wright is senior vice president and chief technology officer (CTO) at Red Hat. Wright leads the Office of the CTO, which is responsible for incubating emerging technologies and developing forward-looking perspectives on innovations such as artificial intelligence, cloud computing, distributed storage, software defined networking and network functions virtualization, containers, automation and continuous delivery, and distributed ledger.
During his more than 20 years as a software engineer, Wright has worked in the telecommunications industry on high availability and distributed systems, and in the Linux industry on security, virtualization, and networking. He has been a Linux developer for more than 15 years, most of that time spent working deep in the Linux kernel. He is passionate about open source software serving as the foundation for next generation IT systems.
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