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  • Roberto Galoppini 5:48 pm on April 11, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Second Life: the practical developers’ guide to Second Life Client 

    With the new year Linden went (partially) Open Source releasing its Second Life client with a GPLv2 license with a FLOSS exception. In the meanwhile later was created the first “open source” Second Life server. Few days ago Peter Seebach wrote an insightful post on hacking Second Life client that I warmly recommend to anyone interested in the subject.

    started!10, 9, .. ignition! by bryan campen

    NASA within the CoLab initiative is taking second life seriously, with a classroom-course facilitated virtual build of the International Space Station in Second Life. The project is aimed at catalyzing the volunteer community, and teach them about the ISS, space sciences, and technical skills.

    If you are interested just in knowing more about on line virtual worlds read this mini-guide.

    Technorati Tags: virtual world, second life, open source, NASA, floss exception

     
  • 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.

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 10:36 pm on April 10, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Community-based production: do they need a roadmap? The Debian case 

    The Debian Project yesterday announced the release of “etch”, the last version of Debian.
    The press release reported that it took 21 months of development to create this release. Whether you consider contributing to Debian a work or a joy, it would be interesting to know how much would have cost to develop “etch” from scratch.

    roadmapRoadmap by Pinocure

    Being based exclusively on volunteer contributions, Debian can’t grant the availability of all packages included in the previous version, as results from “Evolution of Volunteer Participation in Libre Software Projects: Evidence from Debian“. Packages maintained by volunteers who left the project become unmaintained (“orphaned”) and the probability that an orphaned package gets adopted by other maintainers is not 1.

    [..] maintainers who left Debian between July 1996 and December 2004 were responsible for 33.5% of the packages in 2.0, 67.5% of these packages can still be found in 3.0.

    The Constitution itself can’t help much when a volunteer decide to exit and no one is willing to take care of his or her tasks. It is worth to notice that within an hybrid production model paid employees are often responsible for less attractive tasks, as results from “GNOME, a case of open source global software development“:

    Paid employees are usually responsible for the following tasks: project de- sign and coordination, testing, documentation, and bug fix- ing. These tasks are usually less attractive to volunteers. By taking care of them, the paid employees make sure that the development of GNOME continues at a steady pace.

    Corporate production has to be on Time on Budget. The firm solves the problem of finding the efficient management of human resources through time not allowing the free entry and exit, and delegating production control to a manager.

    Community-based production on the contrary allows volunteers to enter and choose their tasks. Volunteers choosing what to do apply for tasks they like, and that they are likely to accomplish effectively. They can also freely exit from a project though, or not to end their tasks on time.

    How open source firms will approach the hybrid production model? Whatever is your guess, read the following (old) excerpt from the Debian Weekly News – December 2nd, 2003:

    Debian Roadmap? The project was asked if there was a roadmap for the Debian distribution, so that certification can be organised accordingly. Ben Collins pointed out that Debian hardly has release goals and Jonathan Dowland added that a smaller group of loose-knit volunteers has managed to agree on a roadmap.

    Technorati Tags: Debian, Coordination costs, Hierarchy, hybrid production model

     
    • Martin Michlmayr 2:42 pm on May 10, 2007 Permalink

      I believe roadmaps are gaining importance in free software development too. IMHO this is related to increased complexity found in many successful projects (both in terms of the size of the development community and the code base itself), which requires a higher degree of planning than in the past. For example, shortly after Debian 4.0 was released, the release managers contacted the maintainers of every large software package in Debian (e.g. the Linux kernel, KDE and GNOME) to obtain more information about the release plans of these projects. This information will be used to create a release plan for Debian. Furthermore, during the development cycle of Debian 4.0, release goals were defined in a much better way than this was done in the past. There was also a split into release blockers and release goals to make it clearer which work is absolutely needed before a release can be made.

      In summary, I don’t believe the absence of plans is something inherent with free software development. I believe there will be more planning as more projects gain considerable complexity and size, and to some extent we can see that already.

    • Roberto Galoppini 5:06 pm on May 13, 2007 Permalink

      Martin thank you to join the conversation. I agree with you, the absence of plans is not inherent with free software development.

      You mentioned GNOME and other projects where paid developers are on duty for unsexy tasks. Do you believe that the hybrid production model might be the third way?

      This way we might get the best of both world, but harmonizing contributions is not straightforward, though.

    • Martin Michlmayr 12:47 pm on May 30, 2007 Permalink

      There’s certainly a trend towards hybrid models, even though they are (or may be) associated with certain problems too. There’s a fairly good paper about the issue of control in the Netbeans community. The question there is who is actually in charge of the project – community or a company (Sun in this case).

      Reference:

      Jensen, Chris and Scacchi, Walt: Collaboration, Leadership, Control, and Conflict Negotiation in the Netbeans.org Community

    • Roberto Galoppini 3:07 pm on June 2, 2007 Permalink

      Thank you Martin, I didn’t read that paper before.

      The way a corporate actor open the development process to others can deeply affect results. Looking at Eclipse vs Netbeans popularity I wonder at which extent it is to be related to the way IBM and Sun backed their respective projects.

  • Roberto Galoppini 11:13 am on April 10, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Movie: Open Source Cinema initiative 

    Reading Wayne Porter I happened to know about Open Source Cinema, likely not the very first push for Open Source Film, but for sure now on a stage level.

    b-movieB-movie heroin by ale2000

    As Porter suggests the question how makers make money is still open , since they are still searching for someone to fund their film. I googled around and I found another interesting post on viability, not a definitive answer though.

    Technorati Tags: Open Source Cinema, Porter

     
  • 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.

  • Roberto Galoppini 10:09 am on April 6, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Hackers: Jeremy Irons’ hints for young programmers 

    Jeremy Irons, one of the lead developers of the Samba Team, wrote an article for ZDNet entitled “Working for the Man? Advice to a young programmer“. After his resignation from Novell he talks about the importance of the community.

    The community is more important than your employer
    Are corporations fundamentally amoral? If they can make more money by outsourcing your job to India or China, or recycling employees into fertilizer for the rose garden at corporate headquarters, will they do it? I once had to listen to several high-level executives (for a previous company that shall remain nameless) waiting for the private corporate jet complain how inefficient it was that the country was run by democratically elected politicians as “they just didn’t understand business.”

    Corporations are great places to work when things are going well, and I enjoy the perks as well as the next employee, but I’m very careful even in my optimism to not make the mistake of thinking this is the way things will always stay. In the free software/open source community, the people you’re collaborating with and creating code with are the people you can really depend on. While you might not get on with all of them personally, they share your common goal of making sure that the code is the greatest, most beautiful work of art that all of you can create together. Smart corporations, at least the ones you’d want to work for, hire from that pool of people, and even though individual corporations may stumble and fall, if you’re part of our community you should be able to successfully manage your career between the occasional stormy periods of corporate upheaval.

    Read the full article.

    Technorati Tags: Jeremy Irons, Samba, hacker

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 6:00 pm on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Market: OpenLogic’s CEO unveils new trends 

    Steven L. Grandchamp, OpenLogic’s CEO, has wrote an insightful article entitled “The Evolution of Open Source” (require membership), explaining that there are many sourcing and selection issues and how this market is evolving.

    Support can be particularly vexing, with companies juggling support contracts with dozens of different commercial open source companies or trying to tackle problems internally without the proper expertise, either one a risky and time-consuming proposition.[..]

    The open source service companies can assume many forms: One form is the stack supplier, and others include the support provider, systems integrator, consultant, software developer, and a combination of all of the above. Among the newcomers are Virtuas, BitRock, SpikeSource, and OpenLogic[ the author’s company], but the larger, traditional IT players are also beginning to take notice and build practices in this area.

    Trends Trends by farfalina

    I would also add open source consulting firms like Navica and Optaros, just to name two of.

    While the size and substance of the service companies differ, all share a common philosophy: each eschews the typical model for the commercialization of open source. Rather than latch onto one, particular open source product with a big installed base and monetize it with subscriptions, support contracts, and consulting, each company provides solutions that extend across many open source products. Each supplier traffics in expertise about how to use open source in concert with software downloaded, purchased, or developed internally.[..]

    The real opportunity for growth is in demystifying the use of open source. Those third-party, open source firms that focus on helping enterprises develop policies, pick projects, and manage deployments are the ones most likely to succeed and excel.

    I would rather say that “horizontal” business models are new – compared to the “old” vertical ones – not sure they are more likely to succeed, though.

    Those firms are all taking advantage of the absence of a Corporate actor:

    • Consulting, because (almost) no one is marketing OS products;
      .
    • Selling quality assurance, because (almost) no one is tracking the production process;;
      .
    • Building Stacks and Benchmarking, because (almost) no one develop partnership programs;
      .
    • Mediation, because (most of) open source projects lack of commercial support;
      .
    • Offering indemnification and IP coverage, etc.

    OpenLogic is an open source consulting firm based in Colorado, has just added sixty new open source to its Certified Library, also releasing a new version of its Enterprise 4.4, with added also Open Source Governance functionalities designed to help enterprises.

    Technorati Tags: OpenLogic, Commercial Open Source, Grandchamp, Open Source Service

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 10:24 am on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Licensing: is StillSecure trying to redefine Open Source? 

    I already mentioned StillSecure releasing Cobia, a security platform that they call “Open Source”, redefining the meaning as reported by the license FAQ:

    Is Cobia open source?

    The definition of “open source” is evolving as companies create new licenses or add “riders” to OSI licenses such as the GPL. Some believe that open source means it must be one of the OSI compliant licenses (GPL, Mozilla, Apache, etc.). We’ve found what is most important to a majority of open source software users is that open source software is free of charge and include easy access to source code. Cobia software meets these requirements through our community license structure.

    Shift Shift Freedom by aliceinreality

    Being compliant with OSI or FSF definitions is mandatory if you want to call open source or free software your products, wehther or not you like OSI and FSF licenses’ approval processes.

    Thomas Ptace at matasanochargen blog wrote a post entitled “Questions for StillSecure About Cobia” raising some issues about Cobia’s restrictions about redistribution and asking them to stop calling Cobia an open source product or fully complying with the OSI definition.

    Reading the license I found things like this, not really open source style indeed:

    2. GRANTS OF RIGHTS

    (a)From original developer. Subject restrictions in Section 2 of this License, the Original Developer grants you a non-exclusive, worlwide, royalty-free license:[..]
    (iii) to Distribute Unmodified Code, but only if:[..]

    B. You do not embed, integrate, bundle or incorporate the Unmodified
    Code with any other product or good (whether tangible or intangible)

    Alan Shimel, Chief Strategy Officer of StillSecure, replied:

    1. Is Cobia open source? The not so short answer Thomas, is that if you are a strict constructionist and believe all open source must have an OSI approved license, than I guess you can say it is not open source. Me personally, I don’t like strict constructionists in my Supreme Court judges and I don’t deem software open source or not by a strict construction of whether or not an OSI approved license is in place. Thomas, I don’t say this flippantly either. We thought long and hard about licensing and this issue around Cobia. Here is the story. We believe and our research proves it, most people consider software open source if the product is free to use and it includes the source code. I think only purists will get hung up about the OSI stuff.

    I wouldn’t describe myself as a purist, but I as Thomace I firmly believe that outsiders need incentives, and such license can be an obstacle to firms’ participation.

    Alan added also this:

    Thomas, todays commercial open source business model isn’t the open source model you grew up with. I am glad you brought up both Snort and Nessus. Go ask Ron and Marty if they were starting today if they would do it under GPL from the beginning again. If they are being truthful, they would tell you no way. The idea we are trying to get across here is that if you are using Cobia for your own use in your network and not reselling it or packaging it for profit, it is free and open. If you are going to use it for profit, why should we not share in this? Someone has to pay the bills here.

    Success story like Snort are a typical case of open source community-based product that turns in a proprietary product and I can’t believe they might get there without going that way. As a matter of fact, many open source firms are giving away software “for free” getting advantage of positive externalities and contributions.

    StillSecure can choose its way, I can’t say anything about that, but they can’t pretend it to be the only way.

    Technorati Tags: Commercial Open Source, StillSecure, Cobia

     
    • Nick G 3:01 am on January 7, 2008 Permalink

      Robert,

      I think a lot of people would agree that open source should be about giving back to the community.
      Most of us use open source software every day, without even thinking about it (yes even windows users). And it sure would be nice to see people contributing back to the community…

    • Roberto Galoppini 8:47 am on January 7, 2008 Permalink

      I definitely agree with you Nick.

      I am volunteering by OpenOffice.org community from more than five years now, and it has been also an interesting professional experience that I would recommend anyone in the field.

  • Roberto Galoppini 4:46 pm on April 3, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    (almost) Open Source Security: StillSecure takes off the wraps and tell us about Cobia 

    Yesterday StillSecure, a firm founded in 2000 specialized in creating secure network infrastructure software, announced Cobia, an (almost) open source modular framework for networking and security.

    Christian Koch, Network Engineer at a technology infrastructure services company, said:

    The convergence of networking and security is increasingly requiring administrators to deploy solutions once and then redistribute them across the network as needs evolve. Cobia is the first real option for those who understand the benefits of using an open, modular, software-based approach to networking and security, and how it enables users to take advantage of advances in general computing hardware to dramatically decrease cost of ownership.

    Currently the Cobia platform is in the beta phase, and apparently its community, currently reaches over 1,000 users involved.

    There are two Cobia licenses, the community one, named after the company StillSecure Community License 1.0, is not approved by OSI and I believe it doesn’t qualify, since it requires you to sign a Contribution Agreement if you distribute modified version of the software.

    Mitchell Ashley, StillSecure CTO, summarized Cobia characteristics as follows:

    1. Cobia is a software platform for networking and security.

    Cobia can operate on a variety of hardware platforms (Intel/AMD) including off-the-shelf servers and computers, hardware appliances, blades such as blade servers and blades within network infrastructure gear.
    2. Cobia is plug-n-play network and security modules.

    [..] Cobia is all about modularity, right down to its software architecture. Cobia Modules for networking and security are available today on the Cobia site. Additional modules are under development and as the Cobia community grows, I anticipate there will be a variety of people creating modules for Cobia.[..]

    7. Virtualizing the network.

    [..] Cobia ushers in virtualization for networking and security right now. Today, you can run Cobia as a VMware instance on Windows or Linux. Download Cobia from the site ready to run in VMware.

    Technorati Tags: commercial open source, security, cobia, stillsecure

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 8:12 am on April 3, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Free Software Award: Sahana won the annual award for Projects of Social Benefit 

    Sahana , an Open Source Disaster Management system that addresses the common coordination problems during a disaster from finding missing people, has won the 2006 Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit awarded by the Free Software Foundation.

    The Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit is presented to a free software project that intentionally and significantly benefits society through collaboration to accomplish an important social task.

    Sahana was created, in the wake of the tsunami that devastated Southeast Asia in 2004, to compensate for the devastating consequences of a government attempt to manually manage the process of locating victims, distributing aid and coordinating volunteers.

    Four members from the Sahana team (Chamindra, Pradeeper, Mifan and Ravindra) were present at the meeting to receive the Free Software award for Project of Social Benefit!! This is a truly great achievement, kudos to you all!

    As reported by Anuradha Weeraman besides the four members from the Sahana team (Chamindra, Pradeeper, Mifan and Ravindra) other notable attendees were present, like Bruce Perens and Ted Ts’o.

    The presentation by Mako Hill on “Defining Free Culture” was quite informative on some of the good work he’s been upto lately. Eben Moglen’s oratory was impressive as always and Gerald Sussman confounded the audience with some deep mathematics. RMS spoke on software patents.

    The Sahana project leader Chamindra de Silva said:

    We are deeply honored to receive this award and were so excited we traveled half way around the world from Sri Lanka to attend the ceremony today. The Sahana project is all about a cohesive disaster response between multiple agencies and bringing them together to help victims. None of this would have been possible without the work of the wider free software community, and we would not have been able to bring benefit to the victims and the people who help the victims without that. It is a credit to the whole community.

    Technorati Tags: sahana, FSF, FreeSoftware Award

     
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