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Is Open Source Different In Europe Than In the US?

An anonymous reader writes "The first Europe Open Source Think Tank just concluded and Larry Augustin posted some interesting observations on open source in Europe versus the US. Essentially, he says that users in Europe care more about the open source nature of a product than do US users. US users are just trying to save a buck while European users actually care about access to the source code. Do Slashdot readers observe the same thing? Are the reasons for using open source software different in other parts of the world as well?"

4 of 399 comments (clear)

  1. Re:For shame by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Informative
    Yes. From TFA:

    Primary reason for adopting Open Source:
    -(Europe) Avoid vendor lock-in.
    -(US) Cost.

    Key driver of commercial Open source business creation:
    -(Europe) Creation of a local software industry.
    -(US) Venture capital/entrepreneur-driven to create big business and make money for investors.

    Dual licensing business models.:
    -(Europe) Not true open source. Proprietary business models using Open Source for PR and marketing.
    -(US) Widely accepted as the most common Open Source business mode

    Software sales model.:
    -(Europe) Channel oriented: VARs and SIs.
    -(US) Direct.

    Open Source business models.:
    -(Europe) Service and support subscription focused; 100% open source software.
    -(US) Don't want to be in services business. The focus is on products, typically proprietary add-ons or an Enterprise Edition paired with an Open Source product edition.

    Expectations around "Open Source" products:
    -(Europe) All code is available under Open Source. There is often a community governance of community participation model.
    -(US) Same, but not necessarily all products are available under an Open Source license. Commercially licensed versions of the products are commonly available. Projects are managed by a commercial vendor.

    ...and the best reason for using open source anywhere: Not having to worry about those pesky BSA raids!

  2. Re:For shame by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Also from TFA:

    This isn't a scientific survey, but reflects opinions I heard consistently from multiple people over the two days of the conference:

    I have a salt shaker if you'd like a grain with that.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  3. Re:Get real by Chrisje · · Score: 5, Informative

    Are you sure about that? Can you substantiate that claim with some numbers and quote a source?

    In the 80's you saw a lot of creative programming come out of the Eastern Block, from what then still were Soviet satellite states. They had to squeeze all the functionality they could get out of bad/cheap/old hardware and therefore made software on a shoestring budget that really did interesting things. To this day you have very decent software development shops in unlikely places like Slovenia, Bulgaria and whatnot.

    Then there are the "celebs". Linus Torvalds, as you might recall, is Finnish, "DVD" Jon Johansen is Norwegian and Matthias Ettrich of KDE Fame is German. I know a fair amount of Germans that did/do open source stuff, and Suse is originally German. Furthermore, Israel boasts a very high quality R&D community in both commercial and Open Software while Computer gaming was invented by a British professor with an overgrown oscilloscope and time to kill.

    All in all I have to be a little bit skeptical about that post of yours. After all, Americans surely didn't invent cars and motorcycles, and to this day they can't build 'm properly either. I very much doubt they invented the Linux kernel. :-D

  4. Re:For shame by sickboy1969c · · Score: 5, Informative

    Medicare - gotta be over 65! Medicaid - heaven help me if I earn over USD 15,907 and live in NY State with wife and three kids - too much income! SCHIP - be careful, you might earn too much (greater than ca. 3.5 x the poverty level) and then your access would be severely cut. They all look good on paper. Sorry, I guess I meant that communist ideology of universal healthcare, but whatever you call it, there seems to be, anecdotally at least, a lot of people without easy access to care. At least that's what Michael Moore told us ;-P