At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon, Red Hat unveiled OpenShift 4.20, a new version of its platform aimed at unifying enterprise IT from legacy virtual machines to AI workloads. The release emphasizes enhanced security, accelerated AI capabilities, and expanded virtualization support. Additional announcements highlight customer efficiencies and open-source advancements.
Red Hat's presence at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon focused on redefining the modern application platform to integrate legacy virtual machines (VMs) with next-generation AI workloads, as stated in their announcement on November 11, 2025.
The centerpiece is the launch of Red Hat OpenShift 4.20, which introduces features to accelerate AI workloads, enhance core platform security, and expand virtualization support across sovereign clouds. This update aims to unite enterprise IT environments more efficiently.
Customer examples underscore the platform's benefits. Ford and Emirates NBD have adopted Red Hat OpenShift to unify virtualization and containers, reducing IT complexity and improving efficiency. As the announcement notes, these organizations are 'running more efficient IT by unifying #virtualization and containers on Red Hat @OpenShift.'
In AI advancements, Red Hat highlighted the open-source vLLM Semantic Router, which intelligently handles task complexity for large language model (LLM) inference, cutting token usage by 48.5% and optimizing compute budgets.
Further, KServe has been accepted as an incubating project by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). This validates its role as 'the foundation for scalable, multi-framework model serving in production environments.'
These developments position Red Hat OpenShift as a versatile platform bridging traditional and emerging technologies, with resources available in their KubeCon newsroom.