Industry News
The Open Solutions Alliance Enters Its Second Year
Making the World Safe for Commercial Open Source
Apr. 1, 2008 02:30 AM
There’s no question that $1 billion valuations are good for
the open source industry, but I would argue that MySQL’s valuation had little
to do with the company being an open source play and everything to do with a
successful, well-executed business plan. It can be detrimental for the
open-source industry to get distracted by big valuations and exit strategies at
the expense of focusing on how to advance the industry to the next level. Being
acquired by a software industry giant may make any individual company’s
investors happy, but isn’t necessarily the best path to overall industry
success. Large-scale consolidation may
not be the best path for the kind of accelerated innovation the open source
community, with its diversity and grassroots style, has championed from the
start.
Meanwhile, open source is balkanizing. There are hundreds of
thousands of projects on Sourceforge from a variety of developer communities
and organizations. Of these, perhaps several hundreds are backed by viable
commercial open source companies, but most serve small market segments and only
a handful are large enough and mature enough to compete effectively with their
larger proprietary brethren all over the world.
Many will partner to provide broader solutions to enterprise customers,
but those partnering efforts are limited by the sheer time and effort of
building and maintaining business relationships. Given this, how many projects are
viable and can meet enterprise requirements? Of those that can, how well do
they work together and with proprietary technologies, so that larger
enterprises can readily make use of them? These numbers are much smaller than
they could — and should — be.
To remedy this, there is clearly a need for more
multilateral behavior among open source projects. Solidarity is much more important
for these smaller players than it is for the
already-consolidated proprietary vendor community For open source, a
multilateral approach is vital for its success.
But instead, open source seems to be splitting off into
specific ecosystems such as Eclipse, Apache, and others, with developers
choosing to be part of a given "club" over others. Similarly, many
leading companies choose to "go it alone", choosing to focus more on
their own point products and niche markets, and neglect working with other
companies to improve the overall breadth, fit and finish of their solution
offerings. The former may win a deal
every now and then, but only the latter will make commercial open source
solutions truly mainstream. The
go-it-alone approach isn’t sustainable in a world where the CIOs I mentioned
earlier require a fully interoperable solutions, with a “fit and finish” that
they need to run their businesses and they have come to expect from the
traditional vendors. If we're not careful, current trends can further limit our
success.
Consequently, it makes sense that the open source software
industry should create a new way for businesses to collaborate but remain
independent, to give enterprise customers what they need while preserving
everything that makes open source strong, unique and effective.
The OSA is a steward of this path, creating a place where
member companies can come together to work on shared problems, to collaborate
on making their solutions work better and work better together and to jointly go
after customers. As we enter our second
year, we are pursuing this goal with renewed focus and vigor. Now is a great time for those who haven’t yet
joined us to do so, and be part of the ongoing evolution of our industry.
About Dominic SartorioDominic Sartorio is president of the Open Solutions Alliance and senior director of product management at SpikeSource.