It is with some sadness
that I am writing my last
editorial for Enterprise
Open Source Magazine. As
the founding
editor-in-chief of this
magazine and a past
contributor to its
predecessor, I am going
to miss it. However, all
things must end and this
chapter of my writing
career, I am happy to
say, ends on a high note.
During my career I have
had the privilege and the
misfortune to be involved
with quite a few nascent
businesses. Some have
been small, with no more
than five or ten
employees. To this day
they still have that many
or less. Others grew from
50 employees to over
10,000 in a very short
time. In every case there
was a technology
component involved in my
job.
Open source owes its
success to a large group
of people who have a
shared set of values
about which they feel
strongly. Mainstream
society probably lacks
any real understanding of
the things that matter to
them in the world of open
source. It's ironic that
the term came from a
fictitious Martian
language. Most people not
in the know look at
devoted open source
developers as if they
hailed from the red
planet.
There was a time when you
couldn't shut me up about
the Linux desktop. I was
a fanatic. In 2000, I
made the switch to a
full-time virus-free
Linux desktop and weeks
of crash-free computing.
I was a zealot. However,
I did suffer from a few
of the alternative
operating systems
shortcomings. My
preferred desktop vendor
deemed my Linux laptop1
unsupported, so if I ever
had a problem, I had to
boot into Windows to
receive assistance. When
someone sent me a
macro-laden spreadsheet,
I was forced to run Excel
within a virtualized
Windows instance2 to read
the document as intended.
Finally, when it came to
wireless, I suffered a
multitude of connection
problems. While I loved
the speed, the stability,
and the security, it
lacked convenience.
These days, executives
realize that there are
'new school' ways of
acquiring a company with
a software asset. For all
of the immeasurable
benefits it has brought
to the development
community, open source
technology has added a
complex variable to
relevant parties
calculating the M&A
equation. Open source
code, the general reuse
of open source and
proprietary software
components in software
development, have further
complicated the process
of acquiring a software
asset.
I had originally written
an editorial for this
month's issue titled, 'Is
Commercialization Killing
Open Source?' Then I read
William Hurley's blog (ht
tp://talk.bmc.com/blogs/b
log-whurley/whurley/opens
ville). William or as his
friends call him,
'whurley,' is the chief
architect of open source
strategy at BMC. He gets
to the heart of an issue
that is being brought to
light as a greater number
of businesses adopt open
source business models:
'As a greater commercial
influence exerts itself
in the open source
community, will these
companies run roughshod
on those early pioneers
who have demonstrated the
effectiveness of the open
source model?'
Of late there has been a
lot of buzz around what
constitutes open source
software. Industry
leaders and pundits alike
have weighed in on the
'openness' of certain
software and companies'
business models. The
generally recognized test
for open source software
is the Open Source
Definition drafted by
Bruce Perens and endorsed
by the Open Source
Initiative, the
non-profit organization
that shepherds open
source licenses and gives
an industry-recognized
stamp of approval for
these licenses.
Blogs are a great
platform for people to
espouse their passions
(not unlike editorials).
They are different than
traditional news outlets
because they may be
objective, opinionated,
and even wrong.
Interestingly enough,
each of these behaviors
is frequently rewarded
equally.
The other day I was
driving down the highway
when I passed an American
classic, a 1965 Ford
Mustang. As I waxed
nostalgic, I realized
that there will never be
another era in history
where we will appreciate
automobiles like those
produced in the 1950s and
1960s. No matter what
their merits, I don't
foresee automobile
aficionados 50 years from
now tooling around in a
Toyota Prius, Honda
minivan, or any of
today's plastic-covered
modes of transit.
This has been an exciting
month for proponents of
the Linux server. Two of
the world's largest
software companies have
started to provide Linux
support and services. As
you probably already
know, on October 25,
Oracle announced that
they would be selling
their own derivative of
Red Hat Enterprise Linux
called Unbreakable Linux.
This was huge news. Then,
in an even more shocking
announcement, Microsoft
stated on November 2 that
they would be
collaborating with Novell
for better Windows and
Linux interoperability
and would even be giving
away coupons for SuSE
Linux Enterprise
collaboration and
support. And deeper into
the rabbit hole we go...
Let me preface this
discussion with the
disclaimer that I am not
the typical desktop user.
I am technical; I am
mobile and travel
frequently; I support and
use software that runs on
multiple operating
systems; and I am an
incessant tinkerer. Now
that we got that out of
the way, let me share the
benefits of the
day-to-day travels from
Linux to Windows and
sometimes Mac OS. For
years I lived in a world
dominated by a single
operating system, only
occasionally challenged
by Apple. Now a new
chapter is being written.
First, Internet access
will be the core telecom
service of the future.
Not only will essentially
everyone in the developed
world be connected to the
Internet, but more and
more applications will
migrate to the Internet.
In our homes we will use
a variety of devices
which communicate via the
Internet. We will use
telephone-like devices to
have voice conversations
over the Internet. We
will use one-way and
two-way video devices
that communicate through
the Internet. We will use
many different
web-capable and
email-capable devices.
And certainly we will use
important new Internet
applications that we
cannot yet imagine.
In the 1964 Bob Dylan
song The Time's They are
A-Changin' it says, 'Come
gather 'round people,
wherever you roam and
admit that the waters
around you have grown,
And accept it that soon
you'll be drenched to the
bone. If your time to you
is worth savin' then you
better start swimmin' Or
you'll sink like a stone.
For the times they are
a-changin.'
Jul. 6, 2006 01:00 PM Reads: 12,491
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