Updates from November, 2006 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Roberto Galoppini 3:52 pm on November 24, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Java&OpenOffice.org – Simon Phipps (part I) 

    On tuesday Mr Phipps was in Milano to join the Open Source Business Accademy. In the morning I attended his speech about Sun approach to free software and I posed him a question about Sun’s strategy for appropriating returns from the commons.

    “As a matter of fact Sun is the firm with the best knowledge about all the projects disclosed to the Open Source community. Is the double-licensing scheme seen for OpenOffice.org the strategy or you have different plans?”

    Simon answered that

    the double licensing StarOffice/OpenOffice.org didn’t work. The next year Sun will be delivering value added services based on open source products, making software profitable for the very first time.

    (to be continued)

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 11:32 am on November 17, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Licensing: GPL v3 ad personam? 

    Eben Moglen, general counsel of the Free Software Foundation, interviewed by Roger Parkoff yesterday said: “GPL version 3 will be adjusted so the effect of the current deal is that Microsoft will by giving away access to the very patents Microsoft is trying to assert.”

    The GNU General Public License, is in the process of revision from about one year now: the initial GPLv3 discussion draft was released this year in January, and since than many have submitted suggestions for improvement through a partecipatory website, making public and transparent the review process.

    Read the full story (long) on Groaklaw.

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 4:08 pm on November 14, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Embedded Linux: why I have to buy a new mobile phone.. 

    Prologue. When I moved back to TIM, the most important Italian mobile operator, I got a 3G handset by Motorola, the sleek and stylish E1070 (software version R25221LD_U_85.83.E2P, DSP version 407B0000).
    I have never been fond of the Motorola style user interface, and I didn’t appreciate that I need to buy a special USB cable to connect the E1070 to my laptop, but I could manage to live with that.

    I understand that in spite of its 64 MB of internal memory the E1070 might asks the user to erase short-messages even if it’s not running out of memory, but what I can really stand it’s that its rubric simply doesn’t work.

    Bugs. I can add new contacts, at random but quite often I can’t take any advantage of it, because when I access my rubric and I try to call it crashes. I did find a workaround, I keep short messages received from such contacts and I call them through them, it’s crazy but works. What I couldn’t fix it’s another bug that doesn’t allow me to see either last calls, even if I switch it off and on over and over. After hours or days the E1070 starts working properly again for a while.
    It’s an harmful bug, I do loose business contact because of it.

    Shared Standards. Do you rembember the Symbian promise?
    It was established in UK as a private independent company in June 1998, the original shareholders were Ericsson, Motorola and Nokia.In October 2003 Motorola withdrew from Symbian as a shareholder by selling is stake to Nokia and Psion, becoming a simple licensee.

    I had already some doubts about the Symbian technological club in the beginning of 2003 (Italian), the idea was good but the implementation was poor, since even the most important shareholders were using their own dialect of Symbian. As a matter of fact, at the end of the day different symbian-based mobile phones turn to be not compatible.

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 6:16 pm on November 13, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Licensing: While the Sun rise up on a free Java, an Apple today took the freedom away 

    Java is getting free, Sun announced its free and open source java project just while we’re reading a new chapter of the long and well known Apple Public Source License story.
    I wrote an article about APSL almost four years ago now (in Italian) and at that stage it was OSI approved but didn’t qualify as a free software license. From the release 2.0 APSL license get approved also by the Free Software Foundation, and since than everything seemed to be just fine.

    Silently Apple changed it, not changing the revision number, read the full story and wonder what we might get from these seeds, just while the last Sun move brings the Santa Clara firm closer and closer to the open source community.

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 5:41 pm on November 6, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Business Models:Shuttleworth, Ellison and Ballmer and the philosopher’s stone 

    Mark Shuttleworth nowadays is well known for his philanthropically approach to free software business, where others remember him because of Thawte Consulting, sold in 2000 to Verisign for $575 million or just because he was the very first hitchhiker of the universe, taking a ride with a Soyuz spacecraft.

    In 2004 he got back in the software industry launching Canonical, a South-Africa based firm specialized in Linux distributions derived by the utmost no commercial distro, namely Debian.

    Canonical plans to become profitable by 2008, by the way getting out the most from the server arena, i.e. subtracting revenues from the same server market where market leaders Red Hat and Novell are specialize in.

    In the meantime, just two weeks ago, Larry Ellison, Oracle CEO, launched the Unbreakable Linux initiative, offering to the market a relabelled Red Hat Linux distribution for about half price.

    It’s to early to judge, and Oracle’s move threatens (only) the subscription business model, where Red Hat has a strong role in the “stack” support area, as shown the JBoss acquisition, and possess also a strong brand recognition, helpful to substain its franchising role.

    On the other hand, Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO, on the 2nd of November announced the collaboration between Microsoft and Novell, suggesting an hybrid approach where proprietary software mix up with open source, in a frame where the two IT firms agreed to invest in technologies, share standards to improve interoperability, co-marketing and, last but not least, capitalizing on intellectual assets.

    Appropriating returns from Open Source software is known to be critical, since boundaries between public goods and private investments are blurred in the OSS industry. A number of studies published over the last few years have tried to address the issue from a theoretical and an analytical point of view, but none have succeeded in providing a key for overcoming problems caused by a tactical approach.

    Canonical is struggling to get out of the “free” (as in speech) business, delivering free software for free to build up its brand, in a market where “clonating” a distribution might cause severe profit losses even to the market leader Red Hat, as seen over the last few days.

    Microsoft and Novell, on the other hand, are trying to do business setting up a classical “technological club”, sharing (partially) the knowledge generated through their innovative activities, keeping to compete through a limited cooperation.

    Is co-opetition the new philosopher’s stone in the OSS arena?

    Technorati Tags: Microsoft, Novell, commercial open source, shuttleworth, Oracle

     
  • Roberto Galoppini on Permalink | Reply  

    Second Life: going toward an open source virtual world? 

    Things are moving really fast three weeks after Linden went (partially) open source.
    Reverse-engineering client code users in the libsecondlife community have created the first (basic) open source Second Life server.

    The libsecondlife project is an effort directed at understanding how Second Life works from a technical perspective, and extending and integrating the metaverse with the rest of the web. This includes understanding how the official Second Life client operates and how it communicates with the Second Life simulator servers, as well as development of independent third party clients and tools. With all the media buzz on Second Life I am sure the project will attract more and more talented software engineers who will quickly (perhaps in only a few months) produce a fully operational open source version of the Second Life server code.

    The availability of the Second Life server code might allow service providers to deliver  independent Second Life services,  while current virtual land owners have expressed fears. It’s interesting how opening Second Life is fastly raising up questions about business models, not differently from what happen with open source business.

    Read the full article.

     
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