Corporations Getting Into The Open Source Spirit
Anonymous writes "Some bastions of capitalism are getting into the open-source spirit -- not only using the software, but contributing code fixes and other mods, according to an article in today's Computerworld."
...has spawned a whole magazine already. That does certainly suggest Linux is ready for prime time.
Tim O'Reilly had an interesting discussion with Adam Turoff on why Open Source communities do work so well.
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/3017
Thanks,
Gerard
I recently posted a short article on this subject on SYS-CON's SYS-CON's Linux Business and Technology (the publishers of Java Developer's Journal). I think an even better article on Corporate open source adoption is the one in the March 15th issue of CIO magazine.
Anyone who has used the code licensed under
'viral' (read GPL) open-source licenses cannot
close their source code.
This is blatantly false. The GPL only requires
you to GPL your code if you distribute it. This
means that company X is allowed to take GPL'd
code, modify it for their own use and use it
internally for as long as they like without
ever releasing their changes to their competitors.
While it's true that they can't sell their
software without GPLing it, 99.9% of software
written isn't written to be sold as a product,
it's written to meet internal needs of an
organization. That's what "in-house" development
is.
*sigh* back to work...
Carefully consider this, it could make or break your business if you do not proceed carefully.
Take some time out to read:
The Magic CauldronOpen Source: A Case for Business
Zope: How we reached the decision
Open Source as a Business Strategy
There is a lot more information on the topic, feel free to email me if you need a hand with anything