| By John Graham | Article Rating: |
|
| January 14, 2008 01:30 PM EST | Reads: |
8,623 |
There’s a great deal of interest in open source software
development these days. While the concept of open source (if not the name
itself) is hardly new – people have been freely sharing source code since the
beginning of the computer industry – the convergence of commercial interest in
open source participation along with the maturation of open source development
processes and governance models have greatly raised the visibility of open
source development during the past several years.
Linux, at one time a hardcore developer’s toy box, has
gathered support from major corporations. For example, IBM and independent
Linux vendors such as Red Hat are growing at a healthy rate. The donation of
the Eclipse code line to open source by IBM in late 2001 started a new chapter
in commercial open source. These high-profile cases, along with the increasing
awareness of core open source components that are widely deployed such as the
Apache Web server, BIND, Sendmail, and Perl, have captured the attention of
many, the media and venture firms included.
Is Open Source a Fad?
But isn’t “open source” just a fad – the latest hype in an
industry that has shown a singular propensity for falling head over heels for
the newest thing? After all, if you read the comments of the most zealous open
source supporters, it’s easy to find claims and discussions that bear a
striking resemblance to those made during the heyday of other fads. Maybe open
source won’t last – software is hard to make, and great software is extremely
demanding. Where are the incentives to produce high-quality software and
innovate when it will just be given away for free? Maybe open source will
collapse on itself, a victim of too much uncontrolled energy and false hope
pumped into a small balloon.
An old saying warns us that making predictions, especially about the future, is tricky. Ultimately, no one knows what the fate of open source will be, but there are reasons to believe that it’s more than a hollow fad. Along with the hype and fantastic promises, open source has also attracted the attention of strident critics and careful scholars. These people have little interest in making outrageous claims about the future success of open source. In many cases, they represent perplexed economists, business theorists, technologists, and developers who are seeing open source succeed and grow, despite the fact that their intuition tells them that it shouldn’t.
Published January 14, 2008 Reads 8,623
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More Stories By John Graham
John Graham has been developing enterprise software for 12 years, and has been with Sybase for the past seven. His academic background includes a Masters degree from the University of Hawaii concentrating on computational properties of formal and natural languages, and post-graduate training in business. He has worked on enterprise application integration technologies, Web services tooling, distributed systems, machine learning, and service-oriented platforms. A developer on Eclipse since version 1, John served on the Eclipse Consortium Executive Committee.
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