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Open-Source Development 'Faster, Better, Cheaper'

David Hart writes "Faster, Better, Cheaper: Open-Source Practices May Help Improve Software Engineering -- Walt Scacchi of the University of California, Irvine, and his colleagues are conducting formal studies of the informal world of open-source software development, in which a distributed community of developers produces software source code that is freely available to share, study, modify and redistribute. They're finding that, in many ways, open-source development can be faster, better and cheaper than the 'textbook' software engineering often used in corporate settings."

5 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. My Experience With Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    I work as a consultant for several fortune 500 companies, and I think
    I can shed a little light on the climate of the open source community
    at the moment. I believe that part of the reason that open source
    based startups are failing left and right is not an issue of marketing
    as it's commonly believed but more of an issue of the underlying
    technology.

    I know that that's a strong statement to make, but I have evidence to
    back it up! At one of the major corps(5000+ employees) that I consult
    for, we wanted to integrate the shareware version of Linux into our
    server pool. The allure of not having to pay any restrictive licensing
    fees was too great to ignore. I reccomended the installation of
    several boxes running the new 2.4.9 kernel, and my hopes were high
    that it would perform up to snuff with the Windows 2k boxes which
    were(and still are!) doing an AMAZING job at their respective tasks of
    serving HTTP requests, DNS, and fileserving.

    I consider myself to be very technically inclined having programmed in
    VB for the last 8 years doing kernel level programming. I don't
    believe in C programming because contrary to popular belief, VB can go
    just as low level as C and the newest VB compiler generates code
    that's every bit as fast. I took it upon myself to configure the
    system from scratch and even used an optimised version of gcc 3.1 to
    increase the execution speed of the binaries. I integrated the 3
    machines I had configured into the server pool, and I'd have to say
    the results were less than impressive... We all know that linux isn't
    even close to being ready for the desktop, but I had heard that it was
    supposed to perform decently as a "server" based operating system. The
    3 machines all went into swap immediately, and it was obvious that
    they weren't going to be able to handle the load in this "enterprise"
    environment. After running for less than 24 hours, 2 of them had
    experienced kernel panics caused by Bind and Apache crashing! Granted,
    Apache is a volunteer based project written by weekend hackers in
    their spare time while Microsft's IIS has an actual professional full
    fledged development team devoted to it. Not to mention the fact that
    the Linux kernel itself lacks any support for any type of journaled
    filesystem, memory protection, SMP support, etc, but I thought that
    since Linux is based on such "old" technology that it would run with
    some level of stability. After several days of this type of behaviour,
    we decided to reinstall windows 2k on the boxes to make sure it wasn't
    a hardware problem that was causing things to go wrong. The machines
    instantly shaped up and were seamlessly reintegrated into the server
    pool with just one Win2K machine doing more work than all 3 of the
    Linux boxes.

    Needless to say, I won't be reccomending Linux/FSF to anymore of my
    clients. I'm dissappointed that they won't be able to leverege the
    free cost of Linux to their advantage, but in this case I suppose the
    old adage stands true that, "you get what you pay for." I would have
    also liked to have access to the source code of the applications that
    we're running on our mission critical systems; however, from the looks
    of it, the Microsoft "shared source" program seems to offer all of the
    same freedoms as the GPL.

    As things stand now, I can understand using Linux in academia to
    compile simple "Hello World" style programs and learn C programming,
    but I'm afraid that for anything more than a hobby OS, Windows
    98/NT/2K are your only choices.

    thank you.

    1. Re:My Experience With Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

      Clearly your post was meant to insight a flamewar

      Incite, MANHAM CANNER.

    2. Re:My Experience With Open Source by tomstdenis · · Score: 0, Troll

      good catch. I bow before the master. You may be a rude arrogant little prick, but you have proper grammer and that I respect.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  2. creators' newclear power compliments gnu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    millennium.

    this stuff is unbreakable, & wwworks on several (more than 3) dimensions. it's a real nightmare for those involved in unprecedented evile.

    creators want compensation for planet abuse/damage? (Score:mynuts won)
    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 28, @06:57AM (#7581317)

    not really? they just want US to stop wrecking it/killing innocents.

    they're not just kidding about that.

    even more to be thankful about? (Score:mynuts won, don't mention the monIE)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 30, @12:01PM (#7592801) /. putting stuff that matters into future storIEs? (Score:-1, Troll)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 30, @11:30AM (#7592655)
    just kidding?

    see also: stuff that really matters/chips ahoya @ a dime # dozen?

    eating it/at all? (Score:-1, Troll)
    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 30, @10:02AM (#7592314)
    ?eating? in 3rd wwworld countries, for example
    score: mynuts won, nothing to buy here?
    Posted by CmdrTaco on Sunday November 30, @09:13AM
    from the tang-makes-me-ill (how annoying that must be for us, & the folks over at tang.com?) dept.

    morons write "What do you think babies aboard the ?other? side of the planet had for Thanksgiving? Roasted turkey? Wrong answer. In "less fortunate" areas, the pateNTdead eyecon0meter tells us, they had little of nothing, and gives details about space in their little bodies, where food ought to be. If the dining view, 200 miles of rough road, is unattractive, preparing 'meals' is even more so. For example, there is no food, so the babies must remain hungry for long periods at +- room temperature. And you need to avoid thinking about this scenario. The real 'stuff that matters' overview contains additional references, and includes directions by the creators, for their/yOUR newclear power, & planet/population rescue initiatives/mandates.

    ( Read More... | that makes sense )

    consult with/trust in yOUR creators... the lights are coming up now in order to assist in the avoidance of overheating the main processor, &, facilitation of the aforementioned ncp/ppr programs/mandates.

    for each of the creators' innocents harmed, there is a badtoll that must/will be repaid by you/US, as the execrabilious corepirate nazi perpetraitors of the life0cide against the creators innocents, will not be available to make reparations.

    lookout bullow. the daze of the corepirate nazi felon payper liesense stock markup fraud execrable, is WANing into coolapps/the abyss, at the speed of right.

    the ?pr? ?firm? scriptdead mindphuking reminds one of last gasper 'bit players', firing blindly into the crowd, & demanding applause/compensation, from any/all survivors.

  3. "Cheaper" is good by 110010001000 · · Score: 0, Troll

    CEO's and CFO's love cheap. They have been looking for a while for ways now to pay their workers less and less and employ less people. Their utimate goal is to find a legal method to make suckers, I mean people, work for free.

    Looks like they found it! I never thought in 2003 that engineers would be working for mega-corporations for free.