Roberto Galoppini's
Commercial Open Source Software

Where Free Software meets Business
equally critical of proprietary and open source myths,
advocating software choice beyond
marketing and romanticism

Upcoming European Open Source Conferences: links 30-09-2008

Filed under: Italians do it, My Meetings — by Roberto Galoppini at 3:00 pm on Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Open Source Conference in CopenhagenOpen Source Days is the largest open source conference in the nordic area, Copenhagen 3-4 October.

National Day of Open Source - Adullact, the French organisation for civil servants using and developing Open Source, is organizing its sixth annual ‘National Day of Open Source’ in Montpellier, France, on 7 October.

Openmind 2008 - COSS, the Finnish Centre for Open Source Solutions, organizes the 5th Openmind conference on Tuesday October 7th, in Tampere, Finland.

FR: Open World Forum – Paris 2008 -  The Open World Forum aims to bring together the best of Free, Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) at an international level. The Open World Forum is supported by OW2 and QualiPSo, several European and French associations, public organizations and competitiveness clusters (Adullact, AFUL, April, Silicon Sentier, Cap Digital and System@tic Paris Region).

Linux Day 2008ILS,  the Italian Linux Association, is organizing its eighth annual Linux Day all over Italy, on 25 October. Add yours LinuxDay!

Peer-to-Peer Demonization: A Class Action in favor of Multi-Use Technologies

Filed under: Open knowledge, Social Networks — by Roberto Galoppini at 10:42 am on Monday, September 29, 2008

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Center for Democracy and Technology and many other associations and organizations told a federal court that the law requires caution in assessing whether to impose copyright liability on the makers of multi-use technologies.

There is a trade-off between artistic protection and technological innovation here, and many different facets of the US innovation economy are united to both punish bad actors and protect legitimate innovators.

In a legal brief filed in a lawsuit against the peer-to-peer file sharing service LimeWire, CDT and its allies did not take sides but rather urged the court to decide the case within the careful framework established by previous Supreme Court cases in this area.  Those cases make clear that distributing a technology with “substantial noninfringing uses” should not raise rise copyright liability concerns, as long as the distributor does not actively promote the technology’s use for infringement.  Reinterpreting or expanding secondary copyright liability in ways that undermine this crucial limitation, the brief warned, it could significantly chill technological innovation.

William Shakespeare was right, There is nothing good or bad, but thinking makes it so.

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About Mapping Open Source into Your Business Model

Filed under: Commercial OSS, Italians do it, My Meetings, Open Business Models — by Roberto Galoppini at 2:11 pm on Friday, September 26, 2008

The Building an Effective Commercial Open Source Strategy workshop was a great opportunity to share ideas and talk about business case examples with industry leaders and experts from all around the (mobile) world.

The Open Source in Mobile Conference doubled participation this year, counting about 600 attendees, 32 of which subscribed to the workshop given by me and Sandro Groganz last Friday.

After a very short presentation of InitMarketing, Olliance Group and myself, I started to talk of how to map open source into existing business models, covering the following items:

Open Source Economics.

Since open source software is just software, numbers like the average number of lines of code written by a programmer in a day, either the average number of bugs per 1000 lines of code, don’t change. In a slogan: Write less, reuse more. But in order to reuse open source projects, you need to spend time and effort to select them - what I call “the cost of free” - and also to support them. In fact, considering the general lack of enterprise support and the “open source mediation conundrum” - i.e. any given customer has a component distribution that falls everywhere on the open source long tail - internal open source support and development is a must.

Collaborative open source development maybe an option, an option many actors in the mobile open source world are looking into at the moment, maybe even to many as discussed over lunch with representatives of the mobile industry. A lot of food for thoughts here, many one-to-one conversations were just about how to start and foster an open source sponsored community around your own project. Sandro during his speech on successful open source marketing strategies, said that adopting the communicate early, communicate often approach pays, and can help to make your community ready-to-go as soon as possible. Talking about open source communities I mentioned group forming networks and why they matter, also quoting David Reed saying that gateway partnerships among communities of value may be the most efficient ways to create value (read inter-projects collaboration and super-communities).

Talking about delivering a “whole product solution” - Geoffrey Moore docet - helped to highlight the importance of distinguishing the core of a product from all its complements. Stephen Walli wrote few thoughtful slides (from 7 to 9) on how “Whole solution” business tools can greatly help a software business. Complements like add-ons, certification programs and consulting services should be carefully considered as a source of revenues and a medium to foster your ecosystem. Last but not least open source components can be used to rapidly develop products to fulfill over-served markets (e.g. Alfresco and the ECM space). I eventually talked about core competencies - defined by Moore as any process that contributes directly to the sustainable differentiation leading to competitive advantage in target markets - and how different they are from core value propositions, by definition customer facing. Understanding the difference between what people will pay for and which competencies can help you to get paid, is key to define and deploy your business model.

Open source business models are based on open source projects, either sponsored by your organization, third parties or “organic“. Your core competencies not only define your core value proposition, but they determine also your cost structure. Creating your own project or building it up using building blocks is one of the many business decisions having an impact on your business model. Adopting existing open source components could speed up your time-to-market, while requiring to participate or to sponsor those projects.

Time is also really important. Customers are willing to pay as long as they recognize a value in what they buy, and tipically they value things different over time.The classical software vendor strategy, keep adding new and new features, brings the vendor to over deliver sooner or later. Open source challengers then can enter in the market with low-end disruption strategiesas it happens with OpenOffice.org, even if still poorly delivered in the enterprise segment. Timing was also important for MySQL, at least twice. MySQL was indeed the first over move in the open source DBMS space. Later MySQL took great advantage of the dual licensing, a business strategy less relevant today - likely because a better general understanding of open source licenses’ obligations is shrinking the demand for the commercial license. Nevertheless MySQL happily shifted to sell subscriptions instead.

Customers’ and vendors’ perspectives towards the future of open source are different, I tried to summarize some of the most significant differences in the following table.

Customer Perspective
Make a wish.. ..granted?
Savings on licensing Now. And than?
Avoid vendors’ lock-in Multiple providers?
Enterprise support Open source ecosystems?
Indemnification IP protection
Hw/Sw integration “Stacks” assurance
Vendor Perspective
All they want is.. it demands for:
Joining technological clubs Participation
Shared R&D Community building
Strong Brand Alliances/M&A
Quality assurance Tracking
Broad expertise Mediation

All customers want to save money, but they have to weight cost reduction initiatives against long run viability of software choices. Methods and metrics ranging from the GRAM/GRAS lists and the Qualification and Selection of Open Source software methodology here can be of help. Costs of exits might be lower with open source packages compared with their proprietary counterparts, still customers show little inclination to change unless effectively supported by open source vendors.

Avoiding lock-in is still an hot topic, but in order to mitigate those risks customers need to choose from a variety of different vendors, an option not always available, though.

Considering the general lack of enterprise support, even if big companies want to buy only from big solution providers, itis true that most of open source packages are backed by small vendors, with no or little ecosystem and poorly connected with bigger players.

Indemnification and intellectual property and compliance issues seem interesting to some customers, even if this year might be not the year of software risk management, IP is not a laughing matter.

Vendors enjoy open source innovation, think of the linux-embedded case, or the many initiatives in the mobile arena. Sequential innovation within technological clubs demands participation, and membership is not for free.

Open source software potentially saves industry over 36% in software R&D, and it is no surprise that vendors like the idea. Influencing or leading an open source project is about adopting a symbiotic approach and this is not for free too.

A strong brand comes with a business, but considering that appropriating returns from commons is not trivial many open source companies tend to to spend little money to build their brand. Protecting open source IP is important, and alliances and acquisitions can play a role here.

Vendors to have full visibility into the code base need to track contributions, trying to balance company’s interests with communities’ ones, not always an easy goal to achieve.

Loosely joined open source components require some effort to be integrated, few open source vendors spend time integrating their products with many other ones, leaving some space for open source stack businesses.

I want to credit and thank Stephen Walli for his great contribution, and all attendees to make the workshop conference such an interesting experience.

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Interoperability gets hot in Europe, Bringing the Computer to the Elderly: links 25-09-2008

Filed under: Europe eGov, Italians do it — by Roberto Galoppini at 7:32 pm on Wednesday, September 24, 2008

IT: ESIIG 2 – 2nd European Summit on Interoperability in the iGovernment - , during ESIIG 2, the second European Summit on Interoperability in the iGovernment, the iG 2.0 Award will be given. Since the award will recognize the most outstanding action or initiative in the field of interoperability, I am eager to read the finalists list.

FR: Connecting Public Services Communities -  The European Institute of Public Administration (EIPA), on the occasion of the presentation of the exclusive edition of the European Review of Political Technologies, is organizing an half day event dedicated to Cross-Border Interoperability. The event is open, those interested are invited to send an informal email to j.castillo@eipa.eu indicating their interest in participating.

IT/EU: Eldy releases Linux version - Eldy is a java platform enabling seniors to use email, a browser and other everyday applications in a GUI with big labels in a friendly language. Until now Eldy was available only for Microsoft Windows. The just released Eldy Linux (beta) runs on Debian/Ubuntu environments, but unfortunately is not open source. Considered the project size and keeping in mind that is funded by the EC, an open source licensing was highly recommended.

Upcoming GNOME events

Filed under: open source communities — by Roberto Galoppini at 8:03 pm on Saturday, September 20, 2008

The Boston Summit. The Boston Summit is GNOME’s annual event in the United States. This primarily technical event will be held at MIT Sloan over Columbus Day weekend, October 11-13. The Boston Summit has no fixed agenda but focuses on getting developers together to “get things done”; most of the non-coding events will focus on interactive discussion and planning of new features and releases. There will be several hackfests held at the same time around GNOME technologies like the desktop GUI, introspection, etc. For more information see http://live.gnome.org/Boston2008.

GNOME.Asia. This is our first annual GNOME event in Asia and we are very excited to announce that we are expecting 300 people to attend in Beijing China the weekend of September 19-20. This event will serve as an opportunity for our developers in Asia to get together as well as an opportunity to introduce more people, especially students, to the open source world and the GNOME community. For more information see http://www.gnome.asia/.

MEPs petition, IST Event, European Journal of ePractice on Efficiency and Effectiveness: European Open Source links 17-09-2008

Filed under: Europe eGov, Software Patent — by Roberto Galoppini at 7:34 pm on Wednesday, September 17, 2008

FR: ICT 2008 - The European Commission’s Directorate General Information Society and Media is organizing the biennial ICT Event, formerly known as the “IST Event“. The event, the most important forum for discussing research and public policy in information and communication technologies at European level, will take place in Lion on 25-27 November.

European Journal of ePractice nº 4 -  This issue of the European Journal of ePractice is dedicated to efficiency and effectiveness. Is open source covered?

MEPs petition European Parliament switch to Open Source - A petition to make the European Parliament switch its IT systems to Open Source has so far gotten the support of a hundred MEPs.

Open Source Systems Management: Hyperic generates Momentum Europe-wide

Filed under: Commercial OSS, Vertical Markets — by Roberto Galoppini at 3:23 pm on Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Hyperic, the provider of open source web infrastructure management software, is receiving growing attention in Europe, as results from an announcement about over seas expansion earlier this year, involving the European partner France’s Dalet Digital Media Systems.

Jeff Santelices, VP of Business Development, gave me an overview about how Hyperic is building their channel and why partners like Dalet are partnering with them.

How about Hyperic’s Europe expansion?

Hyperic’s open source management solution has solicited tremendous interest globally. What we have found is that close to 50% of our download volume is from outside of the US. The download volumes we started to see in Europe - both for our community offering and our enterprise offering - have been substantial. We recognize that in order to serve this community effectively we need to have a more localized approach.

Hyperic is experiencing download interest in Europe, but as matter of fact the “download obsession” is progressively going out of fashion, being actual users and potential customers two not overlapping subsets.

Jeff, what is Hyperic doing to address the European potential market?

From a Hyperic perspective, we have begun making investments to expand our direct presence in Europe. As an example, we recently hired an experienced technical support executive based in the UK - who will support our customers across Europe. And, as Stacey Schneider may have mentioned to you in the past, we have two community managers in Europe - one in Germany and one in Spain.

Does the technical support executive take care of pre-sales?

Our support manager will also help the direct team with pre-sales efforts until we hire further. She will be based in London and will stay focused on our Enterprise customers primarily, providing support as needed during local European business hours, and traveling as needed to support these customers in-person.

Hyperic is strongly focusing on the OEM partner program, a win-win situation where companies having a substantial European or global customer base, can bring in interesting deals. This is just the case with Dalet, which customers needed management capabilities very specific to Dalet’s solutions and the Broadcasting vertical. Going Hyperic helped Dalet to deliver that capability with a fast go-to-market deployment and cost effective implementations.

Even not knowing Hyperic price lists, it is easy to figure out that European IT SMEs are not the perfect partner. In fact the pricing model is driven by the number of servers under management, so the ideal reseller partner has customers with thousands of servers under management.

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Open Source Links: 15-09-2008

Filed under: Commercial OSS — by Roberto Galoppini at 1:31 pm on Monday, September 15, 2008

Building Google Chrome: A first look - A look at Chromium, the open source flavor of Chrome.

No crunch with open source - John Powell on Alfresco’s trends and the ECM market at large,

Business Intelligence: Open Source Alternatives - an essay on Open Source BI products.

Open Source Skills: How frequent is Open Source Self-Sufficiency?

Filed under: Commercial OSS, Italians do it, Random thoughts — by Roberto Galoppini at 3:28 pm on Friday, September 12, 2008

Bernard Golden, Navica CEO and known open source expert, in his recent report “Open Source in the Enterprise” dedicates a section to open source skills, returning interesting evidence of actual use of open source within enterprises.

In the last Open Source Census Newsletter, Bernard Golden says (bold emphasis is mine):

We did this to harvest evidence of actual use of open source within enterprises, reasoning that they would not hire for skills absent real use of the products named in the job postings. While not perfect evidence of actual use, we calculated that open source jobs account for approximately 10% of all IT jobs: certainly a reflection of significant open source use within enterprises.

The open source jobs boom reflect enterprises’ needs, but also public tenders tell a lot about open source usage within enterprises and public institutions. Beyond the possible impact of the Dutch study on the acquisition of open source software, the importance of open source skills has been already recognized years ago. After four years, nothing changed, and open source skill development business is still coming from a small in number of companies (LPI, Red Hat, MySQL and few others).

Banca d’Italia - the bank of Italy - recently published a public tender requiring some certified open source skills, basically related to above mentioned strong brands. What matter most here is to highlight the abudance of open source packages they plan to use, ranging from OpenLDAP, Nagios, Cacti, rsyslog, Puppet and Trac.

Open source self-sufficiency is here? May be Gartner is right..

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OpenOffice.org Conferences: Native-Lang Project Members meet at Bolzano, 3 October

Filed under: Italians do it, My Meetings, OpenOffice.org, open source communities — by Davide Dozza at 7:34 pm on Thursday, September 11, 2008

The PLIO Association (Italian OpenOffice.org Native-Lang Project) is pleased to invite everyone involved in the Native-Lang Confederation to join the meeting that will be held in Bolzano/Bozen (Italy) on October 3rd, 2008.

Goal of the meeting is to prepare the discussion topics that will be brought to Beijing: some European Native-Lang project members won’t be able to take the great opportunity offered by OOoCon 2008 and this way they can delegate someone to bring their opinions to Beijing.
Native-Lang issues will also be discussed in greater detail than it is usually possible during OOoCon. Attendance to the meeting will be free.

Specific topics to be discussed during the meeting will be decided on the native-lang mailing list. At the moment, ideas include: localization, QA, documentation, marketing, all from the point of view of Native-Lang projects. Other proposals are welcome.

Bolzano (Bozen in German) is the capital city of South Tyrol, the German speaking region in northern Italy. Thanks to its excellent services and a wonderful landscape, it is constantly ranked among the first cities when it comes to quality of life. Bolzano hosts major free software deployments: more than 2500 computers in local schools were recently upgraded to GNU/Linux and OpenOffice.org, and OpenOffice.org has been installed since 2005 on all computers in the local institutions.

Bolzano is well-connected, being a major hub of the railway system in Central Alps. It also has a small airport (BZO) with scheduled flights provided by Air Alps to Rome and Hannover; other nearby airports are Verona and Venice, and PLIO might organize transfer or pick-up services from those airports to Bolzano. Highway A22 (Autostrada del Brennero,
Brennerautobahn) leads to Bolzano from South and North: Bolzano is about 280 km from Munich, Venice and Milan. The city and its metropolitan area are well developed for tourism and you can find all kinds of accommodation with a price range from 30 to 96 EUR for a single room per night.

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