Business Considers Open Source on Par with Commercial Software 121
quad4b writes "At the International Conference on COTS-based Software Systems in Spain last week, representatives from organizations such at the Software Engineering Institute (remember the CMM), National Research Council of Canada and the European Software Institute discussed the inclusion of Open Source Software for the first time on the conference agenda. COTS software includes stuff like commercial operating systems, desktop software, and ERP systems among others. The conference examined best practices for integrating these pre-built components in systems development efforts. They conceded that open source software is essentially no different from commercially built software and that both types have their risks in terms of supportability and security. (what opponents of OSS say is its weakness) Interestingly enough, a senior representative of IBM was present and discussed with some of us, over lunch, how IBM is determined to move to an open desktop based on Linux and OpenOffice within about a year."
Re:Repetition (Score:1)
Re:Repetition (Score:2)
Re:Repetition (Score:2)
Same risks? (Score:2, Interesting)
High Security Computing & China (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Same risks? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Same risks? (Score:1)
Re:Same risks? (Score:2)
Oh, he's already got messages besides that one. The fact that most of them are untrue, misleading and/or misdirection won't stop him from using those cliches. Nor will it stop him from using this piece of FUD.
That's funny... (Score:5, Interesting)
At any rate, it's always been my opinion that OSS programs can only get better when people are forced to USE them. When we see IBM forcing their employees to go down that road, I have no doubt that we will see some positive improvements in the way these programs operate.
Years ago, Atari sold a line of personal computers and tried to promote them for business use by porting programs like Visicalc. Later it leaked out that all of Atari's corporate machines were PC's. No doubt this was true. There is a saying for this, it's called, 'Eating your own dog food'.
Who's dog food is it really? (Score:2)
Perhaps, but being the huge promoter of open source software that they are, OOo might as well be IBM's if they mandate and deploy it in their company.
After all, any changes they need to make to the code are strictly their own deal.
Re:Who's dog food is it really? (Score:2)
"OpenOffice is Sun's dog food, not IBM's."
So when IBM pushes way too hard for full, open and standardized Java then it's eating Sun's lunch?
Re:That's funny... (Score:1)
That would impress me (well that and a native linux Notes client). Me and a quite a few businesses.
Re:That's funny... (Score:1)
My company is trying to get everyone to switch from saying 'Eating your own dog food.' to 'Drinking your own champange.'
Those yellow bellies in marketing probably spent sleepless nights thinking about how customers would find out we internally compare our software to dog food. Pussies.
Re:That's funny... (Score:2)
Re:That's funny... (Score:2)
Very unlikly. Visicalc was before the ST line so you would be talking about the Atari 400/800 line. Not really business machines. By the time the STs came out Lotus 123 was the big deal. Frankly the STs Apple Mac, and the Commodore Amiga where much better machines than the PCs of the time. Just goes to show the sad truth. Better does not always win.
Re:That's funny... (Score:2)
Do accounting firms recognize Compierre? (Score:5, Interesting)
IBM Open desktop still alive? (Score:2, Informative)
The lines are blurrier, now (Score:5, Insightful)
With IBM-backed Linux, OpenSolaris on the way, decent open source J2EE along side commercial J2EE, etc. the lines between suitable commercial software and open source software are somewhat blurry. The bar where someone has to start paying for their software is much higher, now, than it ever used to be, that much is certain.
What are these institutes? (Score:5, Interesting)
Uh... so, at least for us who are not in the software business but are interested in OSS anyway, it would be nice to know how much influence these institutes actually wield. Are they really "the business" as the subject let's us to believe or something else?
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:3, Informative)
At least for the Software Engineering Institute, they are clearly "the business." IIRC, even the government has CMM requirements for some contracts. Management salivates over the SEI daily in many companies, at least until they finally understand the CMM provides no process at all but only recommendations.
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:2, Informative)
In most cases, management is forced to be "SEI CMM Level II/III/... compliant" by some customer who wants that.
CMM -- as it should be -- doesn't dictate process. It does say that there is a documented process and how it should behave. This allows each project or group to choose how to be compliant. That takes work.
As management often is loo
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:2)
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:3, Interesting)
Can't tell you anything about the others.
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:3, Interesting)
NRC is composed of over 20 institutes and national programs, spanning a wide variety of disciplines and offering a broad array of services. We are located in every province in Canada and play a major role in stimulating community-based innovation.
NRC institutes and programs are organized into three (3) key areas:
* Physical Sciences and Engineering
* Life Sciences and Information Technology
* Technology and Industry Support
Re:What are these institutes? (Score:2)
What I would like to see is OSS specific tax breaks for companies.
What is this? (Score:4, Interesting)
Two things, though:
1) This is hardly a declaration that "Business Considers..."
2) There is a complete confusion of licensing ("open-source") with development practice ("commercially built").
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
COTS: commercial off-the-shelf?
Re:What is this? (Score:1)
Re:What is this? (Score:5, Informative)
COTS = Commercial Off-The-Shelf
I think CMM = Capability Maturity Model, but I still have no idea what it means.
ERP = (probably) Enterprise Resource Planning
OSS = Open Source Software (but you probably knew that...)
Re:What is this? (Score:4, Informative)
Here's more info [cmu.edu].
There are 5 levels. It's damn near impossible to get a level 5. IBM Federal Systems (later Loral) was certified Level 5. They did shuttle avionics. When I worked for a major defense contractor, it was a huge success when we were certified Level 3.
Re:What is this? (Score:2, Interesting)
Notably, I wrote a lot of code on that project, maybe 25% overall, including much of the hard stuff, and my stuff was pointedly hidden from the reviewers, because I was bypassing paperwork in order to meet our strict deadline. But I eventually backfilled the most important stuff, and I would say that the certification was accurate.
I have to say that
Re:What is this? (Score:1)
Re:What is this? (Score:5, Funny)
COTS is the term people use when they say they are saving money by spending millions of dollars on commercial software and spending more millions customizing it for their business.
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
Re:What is this? (Score:1)
eg COTS Software = Commercial Off The Shelf Software
Re:What is this? (Score:1)
COTS is software that is general purpose, packaged by a third party and generally offered for sale. Windows XP is COTS, SAP is COTS, Siebel is COTS, MS Word is COTS. What's there not to understand?
Perhaps you are confusing this with a system that can be made up of COTS, OSS and custom software.
In terms of "Business Considers" I know a bank that uses OSS (not just Linux but Perl, JUnit and other Java stuff) for building production systems. There are many other examples.Re:What is this? (Score:1)
Yes, but every time RMS says that we should talk about proprietary versus free software rather than open source versus commercial, he gets laughed off the stage as a communist hippy zealot...
IBM switching exclusivly to Linux and open office? (Score:4, Informative)
Ouch (Score:5, Interesting)
Ouch
If there's one thing everyone at SEI is tired of if the CMM thing.
If you've ever met someone from SEI you've probably blurted out "Oh, the CMM people", and got a response "We do more than CMM!". I know I've done it, and got the impression that they're sick and tired of it
Just something to keep in mind if you meet one of them. Of course, I still don't know what else they've done
Re:Ouch (Score:1)
That, or you get the 'Carnegie What?' response (Score:1)
Haleluja ... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's about time IBM took another whack at you know who
Now let's hope this gets upgraded from the lowly status of a mere rumor to the lofty status of a fact and results in a flood of out-of-the-box fully Linux capable of Laptops.
Re:Haleluja ... (Score:2)
With Sun, IBM, Novell, Linspire, Xandros, and others catering from ol' granny to Fortune 100, Linux + OpenOffice.org is a good thing. Microsoft is probably in a delusional fantasy about MS Office, right now. Poor guys...not!
Re:Haleluja ... (Score:2)
how IBM is determined to move to an open desktop based on Linux and OpenOffice within about a year.
IIRC, initiatives like this are occurring at other businesses, like Sun and Novell.
I'd be curious to know how things are going. While things are constantly getting better and better, my memory was that interoperability for Microsoft indoctrinated office workers was enough of hurdle that roll-outs tended to be mostly voluntary, mostly within the ranks of technical staff like programmers, or for dedicated ap
Re:Haleluja ... (Score:1)
Not surprising at all (Score:4, Informative)
It isnt very surprising that a lot of companies are switching from expensive propietary software to freely distributable OS software.
A good example why, are companies that use photoshop for some basic image editing. They are paying huge license fees for software that isn't even used for its full potental.
For them it doesnt matter that GIMP has "less" features, since most of them aren't needed.
Re:Not surprising at all (Score:1)
Makes sense with ERP (Score:3, Interesting)
IBM? (Score:5, Funny)
Obviously they're just angling for a discount from Microsoft ;)
Re:IBM? (Score:2)
No, from Sun - for the new Star Office 8!
"Open Sores".. (Score:1)
I think it's meant to spell "Open Sores"-software, which is Microsoft..
.
EDMS. (Score:1, Interesting)
Business Considers Open Source on Par... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Business Considers Open Source on Par... (Score:2)
And it costs too much! X-P
IBM is a good barometer (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
The fact that hardly anyone seeing the ads knew what IBM was selling was beside the point. What mattered was that viewers vaguely knew that if you bought Warp nuns could surf the internet and businessmen would have more time for actual water surfing. I strongly commend IBM for brining such pressing concerns into our nation's consciousness.
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple is a far better company to watch for change. They were the first to manufacture a useful PC (the Apple II). They were the first to manufacture a PC with a GUI (the Mac). They were the first to make PCs with a network connection by default (the Mac). They were the first PC company to move to RISC CPUs (the PowerPC). They were the first to remove the floppy. They were the first PC company to ship and OSS-based OS on all their machines.
While IBM may have more clout in the business world, it's Apple that
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:1)
How long untill Apple's 2% market share trend catches on?
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2, Informative)
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
What year?
Apple shipped the Lisa in January 1983. I am not aware of what year the Amiga was first shipped. I thought it wasn't until at least 1984 (or later?). I would be interested to know if the Amiga truly beat Apple to the GUI.
The Lisa was the predecessor to the Mac. A sophisticated GUI. Actually superior to the original Mac in many ways.
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
You're dead on. The first Amiga shipped in July 1985.
This is well after Apple shipped the Lisa (arguably not a PC but a workstation), the Lisa 2 (January, 1984), the original 128K Macintosh (January, 1984), the 512K (Fat) Mac (September, 1984), and even the Macintosh XL (January, 1985).
Re:IBM is a good barometer (Score:2)
AmigaOS was always technically superior to MacOS, and had a much larger market share... The problem was, commodore marketted them towards gamers and didn't keep the lead they had.
IBM is not a barometer... (Score:2)
Re:IBM is not a barometer... (Score:2)
For OSS, COTS = Complete-Off-The-Server (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux Desktops @ IBM ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Moreover you could guess that taking machines out of service before end of lease, to replace the entire suite of software on them, then send them back, train people and staff a help desk for it is not really a rational goal.
I don't think anyone thinks that migrating everyone or a large chunk of everyone from Win to Linux is going to be any easier than the migration from OS/2 to Win several years ago. And that was quite hard.
Another thing to keep in mind is that your most difficult desktop users, the ones with the most complicated and inflexible requirements are the executives and if they have an app on Windows that absolutely must run the way they want it to run then that is what will happen. Period.
Plus you'd be wasting all the monies you invested in desktop tools for AV and spyware if you suddenly didn't need or couldn't use them anymore.
I think it's bravado to claim that there will be nothing but Linux desktops inside of one year.
Re:Linux Desktops @ IBM ? (Score:2)
Corps pay for AV, often by the month. Why would they want to keep paying for it if they didn't need it anymore?
Re:Linux Desktops @ IBM ? (Score:2)
Transition costs are enormous, you use your head.
Re:Linux Desktops @ IBM ? (Score:2)
In IBM's case, maybe it wouldn't even save them any money (their transition costs would be enormous as you say, and they have a lot of in-house Windows expertise built up over the years). But if IBM wants to get serious about moving their customers to Linu
it depends on your needs (Score:3, Insightful)
and sometimes non-open software is better...i.e. macromedia's flash.
and until someone creates a non-open or open equivilent.
gimp is a bad example... (Score:1)
Same goes with open office.
Apache though, won't get a complaint from me.
Commercial versus open source? (Score:1, Insightful)
Get it right next time please.
And on that note, free software is (or can be) commercial software. If you don't believe me ask Redhat, Novell and Sun. They have been selling free software for years.
Re:Commercial versus open source? (Score:1)
Proprietary means it is owned. OSS is still owned. The license is different.
I prefer the distinction as free licensed vs pay licensed.
Good Open Source Dev Software (Score:1)
Re:Good Open Source Dev Software (Score:1)
I for one, don't believe that an enterprise (that typically want profit) has a strategy to buy/build/blend FOSS. They want stability, performance and even security(!) in their systems, not FOSS for FOSS sake.
If a certain FOSS application/system fits the picture, fine, but it appears that it still doesn't apply for an entire enterprise su
and why not consider open source == cots? (Score:2)
Re:and why not consider open source == cots? (Score:3, Interesting)
COTS = Community off the Shelf. (Score:2)
IBM Has A Lot of Work to Do (Score:2, Informative)
I'm running a Linux desktop at work (I'm allowed some freedom - nobody else is doing this) and it's mostly IBM tools that force me to include VMWare in the setup.
Particularly annoying examples in our ERP's iSeries (AS/400) environment are the iSeries Navigator tool, and Websphere Dev Studio for iSeries. More and more OS/400 functions are only managable through Nav, and the CODE/400 components of WDSCi make source patching for the ERP a breeze. But the only discussions I've seen of integrating RPG editing
Uhhh, thanks? (Score:2)
Equality (Score:2)
LK
Thought IBM was hush hush ashamed of Linux Rollout (Score:1)
Re:Thought IBM was hush hush ashamed of Linux Roll (Score:2)
Much of their in house stuff was written for Windows, and some of it for IE only. I think IBM is ashamed of this, but wouldn't it be intersting if they instead used their own bad experience to sell Linux. Something along the lines of "You see, this is what happens when you lock yourselves to o
Re:Thought IBM was hush hush ashamed of Linux Roll (Score:1)
Re:Summary (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think there will, as such be a "year of Linux on the desktop". It will slowly crawl its way in. Firstly, to corporate desktops running nothing other than a word processor and spreadsheet, and then it'll make its way to the 'average' home user who uses it at work.
That's how Microsoft took over, anyway. Would be nice if they got screwed in exactly the same way. However, hopefully it doesn't totally take over, so we're all left with a choice of OS.