Updates from April, 2007 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Roberto Galoppini 9:31 am on April 20, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    OpenOffice.org Users: Michael Dell enjoys OpenOffice.org 2.2! 

    Michael Dell, Chief Executive Officer of Dell, at home uses the last release of Ubuntu 7.04 (7.04, aka Feisty Fawn) on a Precision M90 laptop loaded with Openoffice.org 2.2 (download), as results from his biography.

    dell&dr evilDell and Dr.Evil by edans

    While Dell actually didn’t address the demand for Linux pre-installed PCs, the company opened a linux community forum and later a survey to assess users’ linux demand.

    Shuttleworth during a conference call with the press said that Michael Dell’s use of Ubuntu it is not an indication that Canonical is or not in discussions with Dell. He also added:

    The only time I ever met Michael Dell was at a Microsoft Summit at their headquarters and I didn’t think it appropriate to bring up Linux there.

    Technorati Tags: OpenOffice, Dell, Ubuntu, Shuttleworth

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 9:29 pm on April 19, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Evangelism: Whurley first TalkBMC post 

    William Hurley, who recently joined BMC as Chief Architect of Open Source Strategy, yesterday wrote his first TalkBMC post, explaining clearly what open source is to him.

    cureAn odd cure by Mr Jaded

    Nestled between Proprietary and Freedomberg, Opensville is a utopia. Everyone who lives in the adjacent cities spends their free time in Opensville. The parks are beautiful, the shopping is amazing, and the nights are pure Vegas. Sounds like a great place, huh? One problem: no one actually wants to live there. No one wants to pay the taxes or put in the effort it takes to keep the city running. Welcome to Opensville, population zero. [..]

    Nagios is one of the most popular monitoring projects in open source, and one of the most abused. There are countless projects, products, and services predicated on the Nagios code base—some symbiotic, others non-contributing parasites. What separates legitimate use from outright exploitation? Where would you draw the line? Should violators be black-listed by the community?

    To me, open means that everyone can participate on a level playing field. As a community we have to take the good with the bad, but I cringe when I see a project taking more than its fair share of punishment. How will the community address this problem? Should there be a rating system? A sort of mooch-o-meter to rank companies and projects that use open source? Would that subjective hierarchy help or hurt the community? How would it be regulated?

    The community has to answer some of these questions if open source is to continue to flourish. Everyone who leads, participates in, or utilizes an open source project should realize they have a personal interest in protecting it from abuse. Keeping the pirates honest will take effort, but the repercussions of apathy will affect us all in the future. Besides, tales of the pirate hunters are often more exciting than the tales of the pirates themselves.

    As Matt Asay William seems to think that the best policing mechanism to answer the question is the community, but auto-referentiality might also be dangerous.

    Could the cure be worse than the ill, eventually?

    Technorati Tags: Commercial Open Source, whurley, asay, bmc

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 11:51 am on April 18, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Business Models: Collaborative Software Initiative just launched 

    Stuart Cohen, formerly known as the OSDL CEO, launched the Collaborative Software Initiative, a new company dedicated to building communities of IT firms to co-develop software. CSI is apparently going to explore the potentialities of club good theory, that suggests that a group of firms can derive mutual benefit from sharing the cost of production of an (impure) public good.

    Members onlyMembers only by Through 4 eyes

    CSI will form the project community and provides the central project management function for developing Collaborative Software, including development, testing and support for the code. The CSI will also offer the software to a broader base of customers under the open source licensing or Software as a Service (Saas) models.

    The idea to offer a “technological clubs aggregator makes a lot of sense to me, being open source software a non-rivalrous – may be not non-excludable – good. Notably among previous experiences I would mention at least the following:

    Considering that firms are willing to cooperate in technological endeavours only if the benefits of cooperation outweigh the costs, network effects can be a pretty good reason to join the “club”.

    Stuart Cohen commented:

    With the successful adoption of Linux and open source software, we are really on the cusp of a new wave in software development where business managers are looking to cooperatively develop software to meet their industry application needs. CSI provides an experienced partner to form communities where today none exist and together build Collaborative Software that can be maintained and updated.

    I believe that both experience and trust are key enabling factors for the success of the initiative. As matter of fact they got some financial support from OVP Venture Partners, they are already working with HP, IBM and Novell.

    While I am not skeptical, I guess CSI’s communities won’t be similar to other open source communities, the whole idea seems different to me. Thinking of OpenAdaptor, that was somehow missing a strong foundation and therefore a promise for the future, I see CSI able to identify roadmaps and to grant maintenance.

    Post Scrittum: I think that the initiative is aimed at offering consumer-firms a better alternative to outsourcing, and CSI has to guarantee results respecting on time on budget constraints. If this is the case, CSI’s communities have to adopt a Corporate Production approach. In other words there is no space for self-selected volunteers.

    About CSI.

    CSI introduces a market-changing process that applies open source methodologies to building Collaborative Software that lowers investments associated with non-competitive yet essential IT activities.

    Technorati Tags: Commercial Open Source, Collaborative Software Initiative, Stuart Cohen

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 8:42 am on April 17, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Advocacy: Wheeler revised his paper “Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS, FLOSS, or FOSS)? Look at the Numbers!” 

    David Wheeler, who I always mention talking about Commercial open source, just released a revised version of his most famous paper, Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS, FLOSS, or FOSS)? Look at the Numbers!“. The study contains quantitative data showing that considering FLOSS makes a lot of sense.

    Linux plate/dev/porsche by Xenedis

    This paper provides quantitative data that, in many cases, using open source software / free software (abbreviated as OSS/FS, FLOSS, or FOSS) is a reasonable or even superior approach to using their proprietary competition according to various measures. This paper’s goal is to show that you should consider using OSS/FS when acquiring software. This paper examines market share, reliability, performance, scalability, security, and total cost of ownership. It also has sections on non-quantitative issues, unnecessary fears, OSS/FS on the desktop, usage reports, governments and OSS/FS, other sites providing related information, and ends with some conclusions. An appendix gives more background information about OSS/FS. You can view this paper at http://www.dwheeler.com/oss_fs_why.html.

    Technorati Tags: Open Source Advocacy, Wheeler

     
    • Andrea Trasatti 4:19 pm on April 30, 2007 Permalink

      It took me a couple of weeks to find the time to read this article… Not yours, Roberto, but the original by Wheeler. It is interesting in the beginning, but honestly it just becomes boring after you realize that it’s about 70 pages of raw numbers.

      Anyway, I am sure it’s been a LONG work to collect these.

      I think the update should have also removed totally outdated resources, such the statistic that said that linux handhelds have about the same installbase as microsoft windows-based. Unfortunately, this is not true by far, today.

    • Roberto Galoppini 8:45 pm on May 6, 2007 Permalink

      Andrea I suggest you to write David, he is always open to others’ suggestions.

  • Roberto Galoppini 9:38 pm on April 16, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Barcamp: Opencamp, a barcamp on Open Source and Open Minds 

    Last saturday Rome guested the Opencamp, an ad-hoc gathering to share and learn in an open environment about Open Source and Open Minds (i.e. Digital Freedom, Trusted Computing, Net Neutrality, Collaborative Web, Creative Commons, Politics and Tecnology, Web and Technology Standards, and more).

    opencamp logoOpencamp logo, designed by Stefano Federici Simone Onofri

    Opencamp, organized by “LSLUG”, a local Linux User group, is the second BarCamp held in Rome, and was quite different the first. Among attendees – not many to be honest – there were either industry professionals or IT students, with practical work experience on FLOSS (Adriano Gasparri, Matteo Brunati, Nicola Larosa, Andrea Martinez, Alberto Mucignat, Luca Sartoni, Giacomo Tufano and Italo Vignoli just to name a few), along with some stars of the Italian Blogosphere (Stefano Epifani, Alessio Jacona, Nicola Mattina, Antonio Pavolini, Tommaso Tessarolo, Leo Sorge, etc).

    I took the chance to give a speech completely different from “Free as in Business: lucrative coopetition“, and instead of being informative on open source business model taxonomies, I chose to share some reflections to open the debate.

    Considering that Italian VCs are not open to invest in open source firms because of the “weak” intellectual property asset, I suggested hackers to keep into consideration the following arguments:

    Software, Free Software is a digital good, whether SourceForge’s marketplace will work or not, the Web can help to agglomerate geographically dispersed market segments–the proverbial ‘Long Tail’.

    Hackers have a chance to become contributors, may be even committers, and eventually open up their shops. They can also simply get hired by software firms or, more likely in my opinion, IT customers willing to get the “open source promise” – be independent – granted.

    If you can catch Italian have a look at RobinGood posts (OpenCamp Part 1 and OpenCamp Part 2), a very good example of how online video might be used to deliver live contentusing ustream.tv.

    Last but not least, special thanks to SanLorenzo for its free – as in good vine – food!

    Technorati Tags: barcamp, commercial open source, marketplace, opencamp, robingood, sourceforge

     
    • Fabio Masetti 2:34 pm on April 19, 2007 Permalink

      Ciao Roberto, sono fabio, organizzatore del RomeCamp e del prossimo VentureCamp a giugno dedicato al Venture Capital. Purtroppo non sono potuto venire all’OpenCamp ma ho letto il tuo post e quello del Senatore Cortiana. Ho visto che hai partlato di Venture e spero di incontrarti al prossimo barcamp. ciao ciao

    • Simone Onofri 11:55 pm on April 20, 2007 Permalink

      Il numero dei partecipanti non influisce direttamente sul successo o no di un BarCamp, lo stesso Fabio (oramai un esperto in questo) ha detto in un recente post che i BarCamp esteri hanno un numero limitatissimo di partecipanti.. consideriamo poi che il tema è specifico il target stesso è più ristretto… insomma… pochi ma buoni!

      PS. il logo dell’OpenCamp l’ho disegnato io 🙂

  • Roberto Galoppini 8:32 am on April 14, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    GPL: OpenLogic experts say yes, Moglen thanks giving a speech 

    OpenLogic yesterday announced the results of a survey regarding the draft of the GPL v3, showing that OpenLogic Expert Community members are positive about the most recent draft of the GPLv3.

    Forty-five Expert Community members corresponded, many of whom participate in more than one open source project.
    — 50% of the respondents said that they believe GPLv3 is good for open source. — 29.5% are not sure — 15.9% said they do not believe GPL v3 is good for open source However, respondents also have concerns about provisions of Draft 3. — 57% were concerned about provisions around patent issues — 57% were concerned about provisions around digital rights management — 43% were concerned about provisions around the use of GPL-covered programs in consumer devices Of respondents that are working on GPLv2 projects — 71% would be in favor of some or all of these projects moving to GPLv3 — 77% thought that it would take a year or less for their projects to move to GPLv3 once the final version of GPLv3 was released.

    Eben Moglen, co-author of GPL v3, will participate in an OpenLogic webinar on May 17 to talk more about the GPL v3 and what it means to enterprises.

    Technorati Tags: GPL, GPLv3, OpenLogic, Moglen

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 5:17 am on April 13, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Migration: diary of a migration 

    A living diary gives Senokian Solutions, an open source consulting firm based in UK, a powerful and risky voice to let the IT decision makers know about how do they cope with migrations to Open Source.

    diaryDiary by Kathrin Jebsen-Marwedel

    Mercian Labels, a UK security label printer, has told to have commenced its migration, supported by Senokian Solutions, because of reliability and upgrade cost concerns, and they are keeping a blog to tell us daily about their journey.

    Mercian Labels has commenced its migration away from Microsoft to Open Source software because of reliability and upgrade cost concerns. Supported by Senokian Solutions, the company is blogging its experiences of moving a whole small business IT infrastructure to open source, offering a vital case study resource for SMEs considering a similar move.

    Googling around I sorted out that Mercian Labels is not new to represent a case study, and considering that last time they managed the following results, I am looking forward to see what will happen now with this migration.

    Results

    Lead-time improved from 70% of orders being dispatched in 5 days to 80+% orders being dispatched in less than 3 days, with no extra staff or infrastructure. This also led to a 50% increase in goods delivered within target time.

    Technorati Tags: commercial open source, migration, senokian solutions, mercian labels

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 3:17 pm on April 12, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Marketplace: ideas in action, the SugarCRM case 

    SugarCRM has announced that over 233 applications, extensions and modules are currently available on SugarExchange, and more than 7,000 transactions have occurred since October 2006, when the software marketplace was launched.

    marketplaceMarketplace by Troy B Thompson

    The SugarExchange products listed in the press release are almost all proprietary, with the exception of Insideview and Scalix. As a matter of fact many SugarExchange’s Providers are imitating SugarCRM’s approach, keeping proprietary their extensions and plug-in. It is worth to notice that Sugar Portal for Mambo and Asterisk VoiceRD Integration, just to name two of the most popular this week, are not following this path, being both released open source. Upselling from the open source version to a more feature-rich version might be not easy.

    First movers can take advantage of positive externalities – SugarCRM Announces 1,000 Customers and 1,000,000 Open Source Downloads – but this is not an option for all.

    Talking about participation John Roberts, SugarCRM CEO, said:

    The strong provider participation rates on SugarExchange validate the appeal of SugarCRM to both commercial as well as open source developers. Independent Software Vendors can leverage SugarCRM’s strong customer growth rate and offer complete, integrated solutions to commercial and open source users of SugarCRM.

    Considering how well is going SugarExhcange I believe that SourceForge Marketplace has very good chance. By the way SourceForge has recently announced that has embedded Krugle’s search engine, a code search engine for developers similar to the famous koder.

    Technorati Tags: marketplace, commercial open source, sugarcrm, krugle, sourceforge, koder

     
    • greatswami 1:58 am on April 15, 2007 Permalink

      I purchased the full VoiceRD integrated appliance from the company. GUI full of bugs and poorly designed interface. LDAP database makes it difficult to operate and gain help from the very active asterisk/trixbox community. There are hardly any active discussions on the company’s wiki and they take for ever to respond to questions. No documentation coupled with no support whatsoever from the company even though I spent thousands on the system. Additionally, they promised 24/7 monitoring/support agreement from Novell but after 4 months of waiting they were unable to provide. If you decide to purchase a complete system from them make sure you test out first, but I would recommend staying away.

    • Roberto Galoppini 6:17 pm on April 17, 2007 Permalink

      Thanks for your comments, I would like to hear a feedback from Asterisk VoiceRD Integration’s authors also.

  • Roberto Galoppini 8:33 am on April 11, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Jobs: open positions at ENST, a French Institute located in Paris 

    At ENST, a French engineering school and research institute located in Paris, France, we currently have two internship proposals to work on XWiki, a Free Software wiki. European candidates may apply. Interns will receive 800€/month. Contact me if you need more information.

    We also have fixed-term positions available (up to 18 months) on similar subjects (working on XWiki). Net income will be around 2000€/month. Do not hesitate to contact me if you are an European citizen and want to apply.

    Read the full post.

     
  • Carlo Daffara 2:03 pm on April 6, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Business Models: a Taxonomy of Open Source Firms’ business models 

    Within the context of the FLOSSMETRICS project we are performing a study on the business models adopted by companies that are leveraging FLOSS source code, and how the model changes with respect of licenses and commercialization approaches.In this post I present a draft of the result of 80 FLOSS-based companies and business models, conducted using only publicly available data. Feedbacks and suggestions are welcome!

    taxonomyPractical taxonomy by ellen’s attic

    Methodology

    An initial list of 120 companies was prepared during the first two month of 2007 using some popular open source news websites as source like FreshMeat, Slashdot.org, OSNews, LinuxToday, NewsForge and some blog sites devoted to FLOSS business models like those of Matt Asay, Fabrizio Capobianco, Roberto Galoppini. Additional information was retrieved from Google searches. this list was further refined by eliminating companies that were not really adopting FLOSS, even using a very relaxed definition. In the specific, any company that allowed source code access only to non-commercial users, or that did not allowed for redistribution was dropped from the list; also, companies for which no information was available, or for which no clear product or service was identifiable was equally eliminated. One of the companies included (Sourceforge, from the OSTG group) is not open source in itself, but represents an example of an “ancillary” model, as the site itself hosts more than 100000 open source projects and provides supporting services like mailing lists, source code versioning systems and file distribution. Also, companies that have a significant OSS contribution, but for which FLOSS is not the core business model were not included (this for example includes IBM, HP and Sun; all of which are important FLOSS contributors, but for which open source software is just one of the overall revenue streams).

    Results

    The final result is summarized in a table (pdf), the 6 main clusters identified are:

    Twin licensing: the same software code distributed under the GPL and a commercial license. This model is mainly used by producers of developer-oriented tools and software, and works thanks to the strong coupling clause of the GPL, that requires derivative works or software directly linked to be covered under the same license. Companies not willing to release their own software under the GPL can buy a commercial license that is in a sense an exception to the binding clause; by those that value the “free as in speech” idea of free/libre software this is seen as a good compromise between helping those that abide to the GPL and receive the software for free (and make their software available as FLOSS) and benefiting through the commercial license for those that want to maintain the code proprietary. The downside of twin licensing is that external contributors must accept the same licensing regime, and this has been shown to reduce the volume of external contributions (that becomes mainly limited to bug fixes and small additions).

    Split OSS/commercial products: this model distinguish between a basic FLOSS software and a commercial version, based on the libre one but with the addition of proprietary plugins. Most companies adopt as license the Mozilla Public License, as it allows explicitly this form of intermixing, and allows for much greater participation from external contributions, as no acceptance of double licensing is required. The model has the intrinsic downside that the FLOSS product must be valuable to be attractive for the users, but must also be not complete enough to prevent competition with the commercial one. This balance is difficult to achieve and maintain over time; also, if the software is of large interest, developers may try to complete the missing functionality in a purely open source way, thus reducing the attractiveness of the commercial version.

    Badgeware: a recent reinvention/extension of a previous license constraint, that is usually based on the Mozilla Public License with the addition of a “visibility constraint”, the non-removability of visible trademarks or elements from a user interface. This allows the company to leverage trademark protection, and allows the original developers to receive recognition even if the software is resold through independent resellers.

    Product specialists: companies that created, or maintain a specific software project, and use a pure FLOSS license to distribute it. The main revenues are provided from services like training and consulting (the “ITSC” class) and follow the original “best code here” and “best knowledge here” of the original EUWG classification. It leverages the assumption, commonly held, that the most knowledgeable experts on a software are those that have developed it, and this way can provide services with a limited marketing effort, by leveraging the free redistribution of the code. The downside of the model is that there is a limited barrier of entry for potential competitors, as the only investment that is needed is in the acquisition of specific skills and expertise on the software itself.

    Platform providers: companies that provide selection, support, integration and services on a set of projects, collectively forming a tested and verified platform. In this sense, even linux distributions were classified as platforms; the interesting observation is that those distributions are licensed for a significant part under pure FLOSS licenses to maximize external contributions, and leverage copyright protection to prevent outright copying but not “cloning” (the removal of copyrighted material like logos and trademark to create a new product). The main value proposition comes in the form of guaranteed quality, stability and reliability, and the certainty of support for business critical applications.

    Selection/consulting companies: companies in this class are not strictly developers, but provide consulting and selection/evaluation services on a wide range of project, in a way that is close to the analyst role. These companies tend to have very limited impact on the FLOSS communities, as the evaluation results and the evaluation process are usually a proprietary asset.

    The remaining companies are in too limited number to allow for any extrapolation, but do show that non-trivial business model may be found on ancillary markets. For example, the Mozilla foundation obtains a non trivial amount of money from a search engine partnership with Google (an estimated 72M$ in 2006), while SourceForge/OSTG receives the majority of revenues from ecommerce sales of the affiliate ThinkGeek site.

    Technorati Tags: , ,

     
    • Seth Grimes 6:53 pm on May 18, 2007 Permalink

      Roberto,

      Looking at http://www.robertogaloppini.net/documents/businessmodels.pdf

      – I believe that EnterpriseDB does not provide ANY OSS. They sell only closed-source extensions to PostgreSQL.

      – Given that you have SugarCRM, why not also list CentricCRM, which provides a good contrast?

      – And given Pentaho & JasperSoft, how about SpagoBI or all of Spago?

      – If your going to list Red Hat, then you should list Novell rather than SuSE Linux.

      – I’d suggest that “dual licensing” is a better term than “twin licensing.”

      Ciao,

      Seth

    • Carlo Daffara 2:15 pm on May 21, 2007 Permalink

      Seth: many thanks for your comments. On EnterpriseDB, the reason for inclusion is related to how we evaluate “open source” companies; that is, if the company sponsors in a direct or indirect way an open source project that is the basis of his work, then we consider the company to be a “marginal” open source one. The inclusion of EnterpriseDB is related to the direct funding of most of postgresql developers, through employing. In this sense, while not directly “selling” an open source version of postgresql, they are creating a market model that is similar to the split oss/commercial ones.
      On Novell/Suse you are right; the longer title was “novell Suse linux” to distinguish from the other novell activities, and simply got cropped.
      CentricCRM is simply not open source at all; the license explicitly states that “You may not redistribute the code, and you may not sublicense copies or
      derivatives of the code, either as software or as a service.” and as such it clearly is not meeting the definition of open source software.
      As for SpagoBI, Engineering seems at the moment mainly touching the waters with his OSS offer; I will wait a little bit to see if I can obtain balance sheet data on how much is obtained through OSS offers.

    • James Dixon 4:21 am on May 22, 2007 Permalink

      That is a lot of research.

      If you are interested I have developed a model to describe the open source model used by companies that write the majority of the code (JBoss, MySQL, Alfresco, Pentaho, SugarCRM etc).

      http://www.pentaho.com/beekeeper

      James Dixon
      Chief Geek / CTO Pentaho

    • Martin 6:19 pm on May 31, 2007 Permalink

      James… I love the beekeeper analogy. The paper has helped to crystalise my own thoughts on successful software projects.

    • Roberto Galoppini 6:53 pm on May 31, 2007 Permalink

      Hi Martin,

      I also enjoyed the metaphor, really amusing.
      Quoting your comment about your attention:

      But one observation really got my attention. In POSS projects (or even FLOSS projects), the end user (/customer) is engaged at a much earlier stage in the process, thereby ensuring that design defects and unexpected use cases are brought to surface before it is too late.

      I don’t believe that is typical of FLOSS listening to users, Microsoft and many other proprietary vendors do listen too, sometimes even more than some OS firms (just have a look at many OS products’ forums, you’ll sort it out by yourself!).

      OS applications’ ecosystems? May be, but they can be effective only under certain circumstances, definitely not an easy game to play, though.

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