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  • Roberto Galoppini 5:20 pm on December 28, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Strategies, Open Source Personalities, Ubuntu Documentation, SugarCRM CEO interview: links 28-12-200 

    Giving and Taking – Digium’s strategy on licensing unleashed.
    A community approach to commercial training materials – Mark Shuttleworth on Ubuntu’s approach to create training materials.

    Why do projects fail in large enterprises? -James McGovern says open source projects work better than outsourcing because they have better acceptance criteria. I definitely agree.

    Interviewing Brian McCallister on Ning, OpenSocial, and Apache ShindigBrian McCallister proposed Apache Shindig as an open source OpenSocial incubator, the interview.

    SugarCRM CEO John Roberts: On-Demand Dynamics Are Changing – John Robert’s interview, it is worth reading.

    On JBoss, IBM Linux, FUD and the “Real Roy Russo”more James Governor’s thoughts on the importance of open source hackers, and more.

    The risks of open source focus – Alex Fletcher on what it means to be an open source/proprietary company.

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 6:10 pm on December 25, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Xmas Gift: OpenOffice.org! 

    Give a gift that really counts, the Italian OpenOffice.org Association suggests you a fantastic gift idea: OpenOffice!

    SeagullsSeagulls or penguins? I remember that normally penguins don’t fly.. by dsevilla

    Need some original CD’s covers? Choose among the community’s ones.

    Let’s fly with OpenOffice.org’s seagulls: use it, copy it and make it a present, it is legal!

    Technorati Tags: openoffice, PLIO, Christmas gift

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 10:38 am on December 23, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Licensing: “GPLv3 + Attribution” listed within the top ten FLOSS legal issues 

    Mark Radcliffe, General Counsel of the Open Source Initiative and personally involved with the reviewing the GPLv3 draft, recently wrote a post about 2007 Top Ten Free and Open Source Legal Issues.

    TruthDoes it take two to speak the truth? by TW Collins

    Radcliffe, probably one of the most influential attorney of the open source scene, in his list of the top ten FOSS legal developments in 2007 wrote:

    9. New License Options. Two of the most controversial issues in FOSS licensing, network use and attribution, were addressed in new licenses adopted this year. A “network use” provision imposes a requirement that when a program makes functions available through a computer network, the user may obtain the source code of the program. Essentially, it extends the trigger requiring providing a copy of the source code from “distribution” of the object code (as required under the GPLv2) to include making the functions available over a computer network. An “attribution” provision requires that certain phrases or images referring to the developing company be included in the program. This provision was very controversial on the License Discuss email list for OSI. The Free Software Foundation published the Affero General Public License in the fall which expanded the scope of the GPLv3 to include a “network use” provision. A limited form of attribution was included in the GPLv3. And OSI approved the Common Public Attribution License which included both the “network use” and “attribution” provisions.

    I am not alone thinking that the debate on attribution is over now, and I guess Radcliffe is probably the (open source) attorney behind what I called SugarCRM’s original way to abide the GPL.

    Want to learn more about open Source legal issues?

    Matt Asay just made public Radcliffe’s abstract for the upcoming Open Source Business Conference, entitled “Implementing your Open Source Business Strategy through Your Legal Strategy“, definitely a must attend session.

    , , , , , , ,

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 6:09 pm on December 21, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Books: “Finalmente LIBERO!” is Out! 

    I am proud and happy to announce that the book I coauthored “Finalmente LIBERO Software libero e standard aperti per le pubbliche amministrazioni” (Finally FREE: free software and open standards for public administrations) is out.

    The book is aimed at public authority leaders, providing them with information to make informed decisions on open source acquisition and usage. The book starts off by describing open source and free software characteristics, and then goes on reporting Public Administrations’ experiences with open source adoption, generally recognized mature solutions and also addressing interoperability issues.

    I wrote the Open Source Business Model chapter, starting off by making clear commercial is definitely not an antonym of FLOSS, and then highlighting the most important differences among proprietary, corporate open source and community open source paradigms (plus some experiences, like what is going on at Codeplex). Idealtypes  are not the ultimate answer, but they can help to understand open source vendors’ approaches and eventually choose the most appropriate to accomplish our ICT needs.

    About open source business models I extensively wrote about opportunities and threads regarding appropriating returns from commons, and how important is for open source firms to symbioticly foster their own communities. I reported also many different open source business model taxonomies, along with some business development considerations.

    Want to know more? Buy the book! 😉

    The book has been published by Mc Graw Hill, and it is in Italian.

    Technorati Tags: Open Source book, oss, open business, open source strategy, business models, mc graw hill, finalmente libero

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 12:46 pm on December 20, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Italian Government: Open Source Funds vanished? 

    Historically the Italian Public Sector has been pretty conservative to move toward open source adoption, but over the last two years many regional laws (PDF, Italian) and even the 2007 Italian Budget law paid special attention to free software.

    Just one year ago the Italian Budget law considered open source as a favorable factor in assigning funds to sustain innovation by local public administrations.

    memeA meme by ::MeMe::

    Beatrice Magnolfi, undersecretary State for Public Administration Reform and Innovation, last year commented the law saying:

    We do support Italian software industry growth, an archipelago of SMEs managed by young people, bringing innovation and creativity into the market.

    She is perfectly right talking of “archipelagos” considering that the Italian ICT is highly fragmented (93,7 percent of ICT firms employ less than 9 employees), and I share her concern and interest toward small firms.

    Speaking with senior public administrators and officers I found out that no one knew anything about those funds, and well informed voices say they have been allocated for different purposes.

    No news good news? I doubt..

    A Meme for Italian politicians: transparency pays, tell us the (open source) truth!

    Technorati Tags: Open Source Government, oss, Public Administrations, SMEs, Italy, Italian politicians

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 10:51 am on December 19, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Government, OpenInterface, Open Source Fat Check, Open Source Business Models, RedMonk screencasting: links 18-12-2007 

    SI: Establishment of the Slovenian Open Source Center – An Open Source Center has been established in Slovenia to provide consulting and support services to end users as well as to design solutions for both the public and private sector. The Centre is managed by a consortium of companies and non-profit organisations and operates through a call center and a helpdesk service. Operations will be partly covered from sales of services on the market and possible European Funds.

    What’s the Use of Free Software? Glyn Moody observes that the hottest are in computer today are dominated by the use of open source software.

    Magnolia 3.5 CE Now Final – Magnolia Community edition is out. Differences between Enterprise and Community Edition are:

    Magnolia’s Site Designer (a WYSIWYG editor for developing display templates), a JSR-168 (portlet spec) connector, the option to use Day’s CRX rather than Apache JackRabbit for a repository, and, of course, the ability to buy support.

    The OpenInterface Program– The OpenInterface platform, an open source project conceived to integrate components developed in different programming languages.

    Moderated screencasting from RedMonk: Check it out – RedMonk’s “moderated screen-casting” rocks!

    About Open Source Fat check How could I possibly miss this new blog analyzing blog postings about open source and doing some basic fact-checking? A must read, thanks to Luis Villa.

    Fleury Gets an office – Savio reporting Fleury making public he became an advisor for Appcelarator, started an interesting conversation on Open Source business models shifting.

    Movable Type Open Source – Finally Movable Type IS open source! Meme for my friend and Free Software Advocate Arturo Di Corinto – who authored many books about free software and free knowledge – maybe he is interested to get back to Movable Type now..

     
  • Carlo Daffara 12:25 pm on December 18, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Innovation: Red ocean, blue ocean and the eternal linux coming 

    Many were surprised by the extraordinary sales of the eeepc, and Asus plans to have 3.8 millions sold next year. One single product seems to be capable of substantially rise the number of linux users worldwide in a single year. How is it possible? Can we do even better?

    At the end of each year since 2000 we are bombarded with opposing views about the next coming of linux on desktops, or the growth or decline of open source software on servers, whether Apache is growing or IIS is regaining share. It reminds me so much about heated debates about football, or politics, or many other clearly undecidable questions; the debate has an entertaining value in itself, so despite the lack of any practical value it remains a common sport. As I would never leave such an entertaining opportunity unfulfilled, I will try to present a few opinions on my own.

    Blue OceanBlue Ocean 1024 by Aube Insanite’

    First of all, I strongly believe that the overall idea of a “tipping point” that happens in the short term (0-2 years) that shows a sudden switch from Windows users to Linux on the desktop has no factual basis. All the research on ICT and innovation diffusion shows that when the incumbent enjoys strong network effects (like Microsoft with the combination of economic incentives to its channel and latency of user base) and is willing to adapt its pricing strategy to counter external threats, it can significantly delay the adoption process of even technically perfect alternatives. This, combined with the fact that at the moment the channel for linux desktops does not exist (apart from some internal successes like IBM, or some external sales by Novell) means that my models predict a less than 5% adoption within 2 years for enterprise desktops if everything stays the same.

    And what can change? The first important idea is that there are two ways of doing business, the “red ocean” (fighting for the same market and undercutting competition) and the “blue ocean” (searching for new markets and ideas). My belief is that abrupt changes are much more difficult in red ocean environments, as everyone tries to outsmart the others, and those that are capable of surviving for longer (for example, because they have more cash) are increasingly favorite by this competitive model. But “order of magnitude” changes are possible in the blue ocean strategy, because the space for exploring new things is much larger. Andy Grove of Intel once mentioned that:

    in how some element of one’s business is conducted becomes an order of magnitude larger than what that business is accustomed to, then all bets are off. There’s wind and then there’s a typhoon, there are waves and then there’s a tsunami.

    Can we find examples of this “order of magnitude” change? Some examples are the Amazon EC2 (cost of one hour of managed and scalable CPU one order of magnitude lower than alternatives), the Asus eeepc (nearly one order of magnitude lower cost compared to other ultraportables), the XO notebook (one order of magnitude reduction in costs, one order of magnitude or more in planned audience); all were surprisingly successful (even the XO, well before shipping, forced companies like Intel, AMD, Microsoft to react and compromise in order to be able to participate in the same market).

    Still with me? The missing piece is the fact that we should strive to facilitate the choice of open source at the change points; for example, it is easier to suggest an alternative when the current situation is undergoing change (like suggesting a migration to linux when people has to change its PCs). We should make sure that we propose something that has one order of magnitude less costs than alternatives, that can provide sustainable business models, and that satisfies the needs of users. We have to create a software/hardware/services assembly (as the XO was created from scratch) to replace and enhance what desktop PCs are doing now. Technically speaking, we have to create a hardware assembly that costs one order of magnitude less, software that costs one order of magnitude less to maintain, and services that cost one order of magnitude less to maintain.

    How we can do it? The hardware part is easy: design for the purpose. Take the lead from what XO has done, and create a similar platform for the desktop. Flash disk is still too costly, so design a single platter disk, with controller and metal case soldered on the motherboard; think about different chip designs (maybe leveraging Niagara T2) by reducing the number of cores and adding on-chip graphics and memory architectures (when source code is available, more sophisticated manual prefetching architectures are possible). Software needs are in a sense easier: we still need to facilitate management (Sun’s APOC or Gonicus’ GOSa are good examples) and integrate in the system an easy way for receiving external help. Think out of the box: maybe LLVM may be a better compiler for some aspects of the machine than GCC? (think about what Apple has done with it) Leverage external network services (like the WalMart’s gPC and gOS). This means create external backups and storage for moving users; allow for “cloning” of one PCs to another when a replacement is needed, easily synchronize files and data with external services using tools like Conduit. Allow for third parties to target this as a platform, like Google is doing with Android; partner with local companies, to create a channel that will sell services on top of it. As the cost of materials goes down of roughly 10% for every order of magnitude in produced parts, an ambitious company can create a 99$ PC, with reasonable capabilities, packaged by local companies for local needs; the potential market can be estimated at 25% of the actual installed PC base (both new users and users adopting it as second platform or replacement platform), or roughly 200 million PCs.

    The assumption that everything is going to be as today is just our inability to plan for a different future.

    Technorati Tags: Open Source Innovation, oss, open business, open source strategy, eeepc, ec2, niagara, XO

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 8:22 pm on December 16, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Free Software Foundation Fundraising: Mako’s appeal 

    Benjamin Mako Hill, who recently joined the FSF board put an appeal on line, as earlier did Peter Brown,  FSF Executive Director.

    Now is the time to join and give to Free Software Foundation. 2008 is going to be extraordinarily important year for free software.

    Eben Moglen likes to quote Gandhi’s “first they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win” progression when describing the free software movement. As I pointed out when I joined the FSF board, we’re beginning to see powerful interests fighting free software. It’s going to increase in the next few years. Things will probably get a lot uglier for free software before they get better. We can win but things are far from settled. The FSF is the front-line organization in this fight and we need a robust and proactive foundation, and an active and involved membership, if we’re going to win.

    Here are the issues that I’m going to pushing the FSF to pursue in the next year.

    Expanding activism outside our traditional technologist communities:

    In part through the work of projects like Defective By Design, we’ve seen the tide turn for DRM on music in what what may be the FSF’s greatest success last year. I’m going to push the FSF to continue the campaign to attack DRM for video, eBooks, and the other places it is cropping up.

    The most remarkable thing to me about Defective By Design is that its participants and supporters are not, for the most part, people who develop or use GNU/Linux or even know what GNU is! If advocacy for software freedom involves a conversation we can only have with people who understand what POSIX is and how one uses it, we’ve already lost. Through DbD, BadVista, and other projects, the FSF has made major strides in the last year. It need to do much more and needs your support to do so.

    Get proactive about software patents:

    As a community, we’ve had our head in the sand about software patents for far too long. There are companies and patent trolls sitting on massive, growing piles of software patents. They are not our friends and they do not mean us well.

    One cannot write non-trivial software today without running a serious risk of infringing patents. The software patents minefield we’ve found ourselves in is a very fundamental threat to the success of free software and we’ve already begun to see the first casualties and costs. We must eliminate software patents. Now.

    The US is very important in this fight (much patent law is “exported” from the US) and almost no organization is working on software patent elimination there. Not enough people are thinking and acting strategically on this issue. The FSF is planning to make major steps in this fight in the coming year and we need your support to do so.

    Web services and the changing face of software:

    This last year, I worked to help launch the new version the AGPLv3. The license addresses the role of copyleft for software like web-services which, due to the legal particulars of the GPL, did not extend to the purveyors of web services. Of course, access to source code does not make the users of all web-services free (e.g., the GMails and the Facebooks).

    Nobody seems to know what freedom for webserver entails. There might not even be good answers. In the next year, I’m going to push the FSF to help start several conversation and to begin to follow up on what I think was an important first step with the AGPLv3. While this is not a major organizational priority yet, it’s a major action item that I will be pursuing through the FSF. If you feel strongly about this issue, whatever your position, become a member, stay involved as these projects develop, and have your voice be heard. We don’t know the answers yet and we need your input as much as we need your action.

    I am glad Mako  is willing to push AGPL, even if I doubt AGPL will really help to solve the GPL loophole. Loophole or not, I really wish to help FSF to raise funds, and I hope this post helps.

    Technorati Tags: free software foundation, FSF, AGPL, MakoHill,

     
  • Carlo Daffara 10:13 am on December 15, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Economics: Money, metrics, and those that work 

    It is always interesting to read discussion about what economic impact OSS has, or will have. It goes from the wild enthusiasm of Matt Asay to the more moderate view of Savio Rodriguez. As readers of this blog know, I enjoy writing about this kind of things, and would like to provide a few comments on what is measured, and what really would be important to do.

    frameworksBeyond Measure by Ian Boys

    Savio cites IDC, and calculates that OSS software will reach in 2011 sales of 5.8B$, or 1.8% of the market. On the other hand, Gartner says that in 2008 25% of the software market will be OSS based, either through internal development or through external OSS providers.

    Who is right? The answer is of course in testing the hypothesis that is hidden under every measurement effort: that what is measured is a reasonable proxy for the true variable that we want to know. IDC (I have to guess from Forrester press release and Savio’s post) measures OSS software sales, without hardware and services. So, of course, Savio takes RedHat, MySQL, a bunch of others and struggles to reach even 1B$. Is it realistic? Maybe not; while it is true that selling software is one of the possible business models, it is difficult to ignore the economic impact not only of service-based models, but of all those users that internally are using OSS and maintaining it, thus getting an economic benefit and without appearing on anyone’s radar. It reminds me of those reports of just a few years ago, that found that Linux was used in less than a few percent of all servers sold; the problem was that this sampling ignored servers sold without operating systems, or those with non-commercial version of linux installed.

    Savio’s comments (and Roberto’s too) are however spot-on for the main problem of the OSS market, or the lack of a commercial channel with credible strength. I enjoyed a lot an evening organized by our local industry association, debating pros and cons of OSS for companies. I heard several nice (and some bad) stories of usage of OSS, and found that ALL the companies that are OSS adopters found about the software and the solutions by themselves. While proprietary solutions (like Microsoft ones) are promoted by tons of companies (I can find more or less 50 in a range of 5 kilometers from my office) there are less than 200 OSS companies in all of Italy. If we want to grow the 1.8% market Savio reports, we should create a channel of companies (maybe through service franchising). At the moment, companies interested in OSS (and there is a very high percentage of those) are forced to go alone, and  in many cases spend too much money before giving up. The same companies are quite happy to pay for someone that helps them, but up to now you must be customer of Atos Origin, Engineering, IBM Global Services or Accenture to enjoy such help. Horizontal companies like OpenLogic or SpikeSource are starting to address this problem, but we need smaller entities at the local level, that can provide the necessary handholding and avoid the pitfalls.

    Technorati Tags:   oss, open business, open source economics, commercial open source, SavioRodriguez, RobertoGaloppini, MattAsay

     
  • Roberto Galoppini 8:45 am on December 14, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Open Source Software Selection: the cost of Free 

    Computer Business Review Italy and Next Value organized the conference “IT Governance: aligning and synchronizing IT with the business“, held in Milan on Tuesday. I was originally supposed to give a speech, entitled “Open Source Software Selection: the cost of free“, but I broke my foot and I couldn’t join the event.

    Open source software selection costs are high, as results also from COSPA’s findings: up to 40% of migrations’ support costs, considering both searching for software and searching for documentation costs.

    Finding and Selecting open source software is often an underestimate task. Only SourceForge guests about 150.000 different open source projects, and about 18.000 open source projects are mature and stable: eating fish from the open source sea is safe as long as they are not eaten raw.

    In the “Finding and Selecting software” chapter The Guide for SMEs reports:

    There are three separate steps that should be taken to successfully identify a set of FLOSS packages:

    • identify your requirements
      .
    • search for packages matching your functional requirements
    • select the appropriate package from the list

    The first step is an often overlooked activity, but is crucial for a successful adoption;

    There are several important web sites that provide information on available software, both in an undifferentiated way (like SourceForge, that mainly acts as a project repository) and through detailed reviews and comparisons with proprietary software.

    Forge based sites, like SourceForge, Savannah or gna.

    Software announces sites, like FreshMeat or sourcewell.

    Lists of software equivalents, like Osalt.

    Once a set of potentially useful applications have been found, it is fundamental to evaluate between the various applications. This can be done applying the QSOS methodology [read the guide for a full description of the methodology].

    Other useful tools I would mention to manage software selections are: Ohloh, included its new “Compare” function, to know about code, developers, languages and licenses. And also Google trends, to learn about how much is the know an open source product.

    Firms offering “horizontal” support (SpikeSource, SourceLabs, OpenLogic Optaros), meaning companies that sell services not related only to a specific package but to a wide range of packages, are just addressing the OSS selection issue. And more will come, I believe.

    While Open Source programs are all created equal (from a cost point of view), but some are more equal than others when you need them up and running in your own environment. Buy only fresh fish!

    Technorati Tags: oss, open business, commercial open source, spikesource, sourcelabs, openlogic, software selection, cospa

     
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