The Adobe Experience Platform is a platform-as-a-service (PaaS) serving as the foundation of the Adobe Experience Cloud, and is provided as a customer experience management platform with real-time customer profiles, continuous intelligence, and an open and extensible architecture that enables delivering personalized experiences at scale.
N/A
Red Hat OpenShift
Score 9.2 out of 10
N/A
OpenShift is Red Hat's Cloud Computing Platform as a Service (PaaS) offering. OpenShift is an application platform in the cloud where application developers and teams can build, test, deploy, and run their applications.
$0.08
per hour
Salesforce Data 360
Score 8.5 out of 10
N/A
Salesforce Data 360 (formerly Salesforce Data Cloud, or Salesforce Genie) is a solution to put data to work for customers. It is deeply embedded in the Einstein 1 Platform, which means any external data lake or warehouse can now drive actions and workflows inside of the Salesforce CRM.
We explore a lot of services to use in. But in todays world everything is cloud and the on premise solutions are not very strong until we discover Red Hat OpenShift which still very committed to maintain on premise solutions, we select Openshift and since first day we are very …
Salesforce Data 360
No answer on this topic
Features
Adobe Experience Platform
Red Hat OpenShift
Salesforce Data 360
Platform-as-a-Service
Comparison of Platform-as-a-Service features of Product A and Product B
Adobe Experience Platform
7.0
2 Ratings
10% below category average
Red Hat OpenShift
8.2
277 Ratings
5% above category average
Salesforce Data 360
-
Ratings
Ease of building user interfaces
8.52 Ratings
8.1239 Ratings
00 Ratings
Scalability
7.52 Ratings
9.0265 Ratings
00 Ratings
Platform management overhead
7.02 Ratings
7.9247 Ratings
00 Ratings
Workflow engine capability
7.02 Ratings
7.9225 Ratings
00 Ratings
Platform access control
6.52 Ratings
8.5249 Ratings
00 Ratings
Services-enabled integration
8.52 Ratings
8.2234 Ratings
00 Ratings
Development environment creation
8.02 Ratings
8.6242 Ratings
00 Ratings
Development environment replication
7.02 Ratings
8.5229 Ratings
00 Ratings
Issue monitoring and notification
6.02 Ratings
7.8242 Ratings
00 Ratings
Issue recovery
6.52 Ratings
7.7240 Ratings
00 Ratings
Upgrades and platform fixes
5.01 Ratings
8.4243 Ratings
00 Ratings
Data Source Connection
Comparison of Data Source Connection features of Product A and Product B
Adobe Experience Platform
-
Ratings
Red Hat OpenShift
-
Ratings
Salesforce Data 360
7.7
9 Ratings
7% below category average
Connect to traditional data sources
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.99 Ratings
Connecto to Big Data and NoSQL
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.66 Ratings
Data Transformations
Comparison of Data Transformations features of Product A and Product B
Adobe Experience Platform
-
Ratings
Red Hat OpenShift
-
Ratings
Salesforce Data 360
7.7
10 Ratings
5% below category average
Simple transformations
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
8.510 Ratings
Complex transformations
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
6.910 Ratings
Data Modeling
Comparison of Data Modeling features of Product A and Product B
Adobe Experience Platform
-
Ratings
Red Hat OpenShift
-
Ratings
Salesforce Data 360
7.8
10 Ratings
0% below category average
Data model creation
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
8.210 Ratings
Metadata management
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.99 Ratings
Business rules and workflow
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.910 Ratings
Collaboration
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.610 Ratings
Testing and debugging
00 Ratings
00 Ratings
7.410 Ratings
Data Governance
Comparison of Data Governance features of Product A and Product B
The Adobe Experience Platform is well suited for companies that are maturing or have matured in their digital offerings and are looking for very sophisticated tools to elevate to the next level. It's also for well resourced teams, both financially and head count to take advantage of the deep functionality and integrations.
Red Hat OpenShift, despite its complexity and overhead, remains the most complete and enterprise-ready Kubernetes platform available. It excels in research projects like ours, where we need robust CI/CD, GPU scheduling, and tight integration with tools like Jupyter, OpenDataHub, and Quiskit. Its security, scalability, and operator ecosystem make it ideal for experimental and production-grade AI workloads. However, for simpler general hosting tasks—such as serving static websites or lightweight backend services—we find traditional VMs, Docker, or LXD more practical and resource-efficient. Red Hat OpenShift shines in complex, container-native workflows, but can be overkill for basic infrastructure needs.
Great tool for client management, sales tracking, cases studies. Using is as the source of truth for all client communication. Allowing more integration options for cc and ACH payments. Right now the options are limited and only integrate with strict processing capabilities that are not always in the businesses best interest.
We had a few microservices that dealt with notifications and alerts. We used OpenShift to deploy these microservices, which handle and deliver notifications using publish-subscribe models.
We had to expose an API to consumers via MTLS, which was implemented using Server secret integration in OpenShift. We were then able to deploy the APIs on OpenShift with API security.
We integrated Splunk with OpenShift to view the logs of our applications and gain real-time insights into usage, as well as provide high availability.
I wouldn't necessarily say there is look everyday technology transform. I can see a trend wherein Red Hat OpenShift is adopting all the new technology trends and helping their customers align with their priorities and the emerging technology trends. I wouldn't call out various scope for development every day. There is scope for development. It is all how the organizations adopt it and how they deliver it to their customers. I don't want to call out there is scope for development. It's happening. It is a never ending process.
At the moment, I don't have anything to call out. We are experiencing Red Hat OpenShift and we can see every day they're coming up with new features as and when they come up with new features, we want to experience it more and more. We are looking for opportunities wherein this can be leveraged to help our users and partners.
OpenShift is really easy of use through its management console. OpenShift gives a very large flexibility through many inbuilt functionalities, all gathered in the same place (it's a very convenient tool to learn DevOps technics hands on) OpenShift is an ideal integrated development / deployment platform for containers
Overall I really like the Adobe Experience Cloud after a couple years of figuring out various tools. They are extremely powerful. The time commitment to learn them is high since it's not a tool you can easily begin using without much training.
The virtualization part takes some getting used to it you are coming from a more traditional hypervisor. Customization options are not intuitive to these users. The process should be more clear. Perhaps a guide to Openshift Virtualization for users of RHV, VMware, etc. would ease this transition into the new platform
Most of the daily use features, are very usr friendly, intuitive, every end user can learn how to manage and operate basic activities such as enter information, send an email, send a campaign, create an email marketing template, run a report on the renewals for the month, open and close a support case, create new account or a new contact, etc
Redhat openshift is generally reliable and available platform, it ensures high availability for most the situations. in fact the product where we put openshift in a box, we ensure that the availability is also happening at node and network level and also at storage level, so some of the factors that are outside of Openshift realm are also working in HA manner.
Overall, this platform is beneficial. The only downsides we have encountered have been with pods that occasionally hang. This results in resources being dedicated to dead or zombie pods. Over time, these wasted resources occasionally cause us issues, and we have had difficulty monitoring these pods. However, this issue does not overshadow the benefits we get from Openshift.
Adobe has support at all levels and for each product but beyond tool questions you'll often be told they can help but it requires some paid consulting hours. So you either hire Adobe consultants or find 3rd part consultants who know their products well.
Every time we need to get support all the Red Hat team move forward looking to solve the problem. Sometimes this was not easy and requires the scalation to product team, and we always get a response. Most of the minor issues were solved with the information from access.redhat.com
I was not involved in the in person training, so i can not answer this question, but the team in my org worked directly with Openshift and able to get the in person training done easily, i did not hear problem or complain in this space, so i hope things happen seamlessly without any issue.
We went thru the training material on RH webesite, i think its very descriptive and the handson lab sesssions are very useful. It would be good to create more short duration videos covering one single aspect of openshift, this wll keep the interest and also it breaks down the complexity to reasonable chunks.
The Tanzu Platform seemed overly complicated, and the frequent changes to the portfolio as well as the messaging made us uneasy. We also decided it would not be wise to tie our application platform to a specific infrastructure provider, as Tanzu cannot be deployed on anything other than vSphere. SUSE Rancher seemed good overall, but ultimately felt closer to a DIY approach versus the comprehensive package that Red Hat OpenShift provides.
we have evaluated Snowflake, adobe rt-cdp as well. They also offer a very strong capabilities but the Data 360 is more suitable for us because of the same Salesforce ecosystem. The main key factor is without any custom code we were able to include it into our automations. And ofcourse with agentforce already in plans, we had to pick Data 360
It's easy to understand what are being billed and what's included in each type of subscription. Same with the support (Std or Premium) you know exactly what to expect when you need to use it. The "core" unit approach on the subscription made really simple to scale and carry the workloads from one site to another.
This is a great platform to deployment container applications designed for multiple use cases. Its reasonably scalable platform, that can host multiple instances of applications, which can seamlessly handle the node and pod failure, if they are configured properly. There should be some scalability best practices guide would be very useful
All of the above. Red Hat OpenShift going into a developer-type setting can be stood up very quickly. There's a very short period to have developers onboard to it and they're able to become productive much faster than a grow your own type solution.
Salesforce Data Cloud has a positive impact on me as a realtor because it is easy to generate reports on customer data and see what is needed to be bumped to the next level. We have to earn a certain commission by the end of the year and it makes it easy to see how close you are
It has a positive impact on keeping track of customers because it is nice to have it all in one place which is a nice time saver
I like that you can even see customer info from other agents making it nice to compare and try and pass others
Makes the customers journey smooth sailing because everything is in one place