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Think Tank Report On the State of Open Source

AlexGr writes to recommend an account of a meeting a couple of months back of representatives from more than 100 software companies discussing the state of open source software. The outcome is outlined in a 16-page report, 2007 Open Source Think Tank: The Future of Commercial Open Source (PDF). Among the surprising conclusions: participants noted a growing similarity in methods between open source and proprietary software development. They predicted some kind of convergence, where the best of both approaches gets adopted in each camp.

7 of 110 comments (clear)

  1. Some interesting points about Novell/MS by Franso6 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Or the 'official' reasons for the deal (FTFA):

    "(...)
    Microsoft was represented by Sam Ramji, Director of Open Source Technical Strategy, while Novell was represented by Justin Steinman, Director of Marketing Linux and Open Platforms.(...)

    (...)
    From Microsoft's perspective, the deal it struck with Novell was driven mainly by customer demand. Sam described how its Interoperability Executive Council, which includes 30 top CIOs demanded interoperability between Windows and Linux, as both must coexist in the enterprise and neither will completely displace the other."(...)

    (...)
    From Novell's perspective, its motivation for the deal was primarily the need to differentiate itself in a meaningful way to gain share versus Red Hat. As number two in the market, Novell recognized that it simply could not gain significant share without a "game-changing" event. (...)"

    1. Re:Some interesting points about Novell/MS by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 4, Informative

      Interesting! Mod parent up!

      What people have to realize is that Microsoft is not a company with one cohesive strategy anymore. They fight battles on a number of different fronts ... it's spreading the company thin and people are scratching their heads wondering why Vista was late or why it didn't deliver on promises.

      The bottom-line as to why the deal with Novell is simple: Microsoft may have a monopoly on the desktop, but in the server space it has nothing even close. There are very few Microsoft-only shops these days; most enterprise customers don't want to put all their eggs in one basket and very wisely so. So they adopt a mixed-platform strategy and CIOs rightly realize that the only thing causing any problems in interop between Linux and Windows is Microsoft, so they make demands. Novell wants a piece of the action because it believes that doing so will differentiate SuSE from Red Hat and put/keep them on top of the enterprise Linux market.

      And unless you have a monopoly in a particular space -- the customer is king.

  2. Sponsored by... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This year's "platinum sponsors" were Microsoft and Novell.

    Source: http://thinktank.olliancegroup.com/ostt2007report. pdf

    Nuff said.

  3. Re:This article is nonsense... by b1ufox · · Score: 3, Informative
    Indeed it is nonsense.

    But...hey what is this MS was a platinum sponsor?

    May be tomorrow they will sponsor Suse for Enterprise ...huh

    --
    -- "Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration" - TAE --
  4. Re:This article is nonsense... by Zonk+(troll) · · Score: 4, Informative

    For instance, at last year's Open Source Think Tank meeting, participants were expecting open-source software to achieve greater predominance. However, licensing and support issues have slowed the adoption of open-source solutions at the enterprise level.

    Licensing and Support issues with 'Closed Source' software is precisely what drove enterprises to Open Source! Enterprise care a hoot about GPL v2 and GPL v3 wars.. they aren't interested in redistribution.. just that the Damn Thing Works (TM) ! Seriously, how can anyone read this and find it more acceptable than this?

    --
    "The Federal Reserve is a fraudulent system."--Lew Rockwell
    End The FED. -
  5. Also... by b1ufox · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. The cost of starting an Internet company plummeted by over 80% from 1996 to 2004. This trend was largely enabled by open source software and powerful, cheap hardware.

    2. IM is the preferred method of communication (with friends) for those under 25 by a wide margin and email is the preferred communication method for those over 25 by a significant percentage. This represents a major generation gap in communication modes.

    3. User generated content is vastly increasing in both supply and demand, driven by such popular online properties as MySpace, FaceBook, YouTube, blogs

    o Written content: 55M blogs today, up 800% in past year

    o Visual content: homemade videos, mashups

    4. Traditional media is losing authority with the younger generation, who are increasingly turning to "open" media for advice about music, products and services.

    5. Companies are following these trends

    o Adopting corporate blogs, especially by CEOs

    o "Always-connected" management

    o Rise of SaaS

    o Virtualization of workforce

    o Outsourcing

    o Mobility solutions

    How is this all related to Open source and its effects? I don't seem to get the point here.Is it just me or ridiculously off agenda?

    What a waste of time ?... my time offcourse :-)

    --
    -- "Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration" - TAE --
  6. Re:Wrong by Knuckles · · Score: 2, Informative

    GPL does not make clear what constitutes distribution.

    FAQ does.

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns