Best Presentation on Software Business and OSS 50
stephe writes "Brent Williams presented 'Open Source Business Models: A Wall Street Look at a Wild 2006 and the Prospects for Even More Fun in 2007' at EclipseCon last Tuesday. Brent is (temporarily) an independent equity research analyst, who moved to Wall Street after 20 years in the software trenches. He starts with a tear-down of the Oracle Linux debate and the Microsoft Novell deal. I especially like his taking apart the commoditization myth and his observations around interface standards versus standards of implementation. He graciously allowed me to post the slides on my blog. They're getting a lot of interest from the open source business crowd, and I thought the Slashdot crowd would want to see them as well. Enjoy."
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Weird, you're right that 48 is the last slide, but I see the pic of two car interfaces on page 40....
Re:The Car/Software analogy strikes again! (Score:5, Funny)
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Unlucky you, I have no mod points
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*Disclaimer: This is somewhat of giving them the benefit of the doubt, and I have not looked at Office anything past XP.
First thought from first slide... (Score:4, Insightful)
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I even use hotmail and yahoo acounts for public interaction. This way i can control the spam to my real accounts a little better. Maybe this is his thinking?
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But if he uses Outlook, hand me that pitchfork will ya, you hold the torch...
Re:First thought from first slide... (Score:4, Interesting)
Ya, sorry, I didn't mean to sound snobby. It just frustrates me when people insist on sticking with what is an inferior solution (imho), when much better ones are there for the taking, with basically nothing extra required.
Although I guess the very weakness of hotmail is what could prevent people from changing. No forwarding?? If somebody had a long list of contacts who emailed that account, they might have to stick it out rather than risk losing contacts with a switch over. Or else maintain multiple accounts, which could be even worse.
And yes, haha, may Outlook burn and burn.
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I guess even this is either too complicated or too much of a hassle for th
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It used to be that you had to be black or female to warrant that kind of discrimination.
And that's all I have to say about that.
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Is this just slashdot-snobbery because
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Hotmail has been around a lot longer than most other web-based, free email solutions and is perfectly adequate for day-to-day use, especially when you don't want to give out your private email address to all and sundry. ...if you've been using one for years and it's served you well, why change? Is this just slashdot-snobbery because Hotmail is now owned by Microsoft?
There is a difference between taking into account that a person is using some brand of product and taking into account when someone who is supposedly a professional in a field is using a very poor quality product in a way that is visible to others. It does speak to their probable level of competence. When I see a resume come across my desk and the engineer in question has an AOL e-mail address, that raises a concern. Hotmail may not be quite the same, but it is still a concern. As for public versus privat
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How do you know I'm not already one?
Oh, I see... you're a psychic. Since you obviously can read my mind to know my mindset, I won't bother replying to the rest of your comment. You already know what I thought anyway. And yeah, I am picturing you with one of those on your head.
premium brands ignoring price competition? (Score:5, Interesting)
"What price changes did Red Hat make immediately in the wake of
the Oracle announcement?
- None. Zero, zip, nada.
- We're not hearing of any individual deal discounting.
- Red Hat knows that they have a premium brand, so ignoring people
competing on price is the right strategy.The role of a premium brand
- Lamborghini ignores price competition between Hyundai and Kia.
- Oracle ignores price competition between MySQL and PostgreSQL."
This is not the case at all. In the last few years, MySQL has matured and more people have found out about PostgreSQL (in fact, PostgreSQL is probably the best kept secret OSS has to offer - it has a kick ass feature set and it's completely and utterly free). For a large amount of enterprise stuff, PostgreSQL is more than adequate and as a bonus, does not treat your data as garbage.
Anyone considering building some sort of database application has the option of spending a couple months (with change left over) from the money they would spend on an Oracle license, and invest it in learning PostgreSQL. At the current rate of developement, it will in all likelihood solve any future problem they could have. For free. No worries about licenses. Anyone in a startup where money is tight and time is cheap should be considering PostgreSQL.
This has had direct ramifications on the strategy of all the big database players. At the very least, they all now have a free entry level option to compete with OSS competitors.
Re:premium brands ignoring price competition? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is not the case at all. In the last few years, MySQL has matured and more people have found out about PostgreSQL (in fact, PostgreSQL is probably the best kept secret OSS has to offer - it has a kick ass feature set and it's completely and utterly free).
How are those two statements at odds with each other? Oracle doesn't want to be seen as a price competitor, they want to get customers who think their 10,000 row DB is "enterprise" and those who think "you get what you pay for".
They say that if you make a RFQ and get one offer for $100k, three for $10k and one for $1k, they're likely to drop the $100k (too expensive) and the $1k (must have missed something). MySQL and PostgreSQL score about 10x as high on the WTF scale to most PHBs. If anything is free* in their world, they expect a bait-and-switch like *upgrade now to $foo pro for the good features, that was just the hook.
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I suppose if you are dealing with a PHB you have your work cut out for you, and in all likelihood at this s
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Postgres (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyone considering building some sort of database application has the option of spending a couple months (with change left over) from the money they would spend on an Oracle license, and invest it in learning PostgreSQL. At the current rate of developement, it will in all likelihood solve any future problem they could have. For free. No worries about licenses. Anyone in a startup where money is tight and time is cheap should be considering PostgreSQL.
As always this is my experience, your milage may vary.
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...Having gone through this, I would feel comfortable starting with Postgres with an eye towards eventually migrating to Oracle when/if the situation warranted - it shouldn't be the huge IT migration nightmare some might fear. Although going back might be a little harder, depending on what Oracle features are used.
The biggest part of the project was translating PL/pgSQL to PL/SQL, and I wrote some throwaway scripts to translate the subset that we used...
I'd have to agree, that's pretty much the worst part of it all. Complex DB enabled applications tend to have a lot of PL/pgSQL or PL/SQL code which often makes use of custom features unique to the database. Another thing that often causes problems is when developers of code external to the DB, i.e. webapps, servlets, webservices writen in .NET/Java/Python/etc. fail to abstract the database code from their program code. If a Postgres specific library is hardwired into these applications, migrating is more
A lot of smoke in these slides (Score:2, Insightful)
Specifically, he claims that the open source software marketplace is unlike a generic commodity marketplace and mo
Well he makes a lot of errors (Score:3, Interesting)
For instance claiming that there are a large number of producers and consumers in the commodity market.Eh what? How many commodity producers are there? Flower mills, power generators, oil producers etc etc. Not all that many and they are merging all the time.
He also claims that it is easy to go into that market, yeah right. Isn't it exactly other way around usually, hard to get into a commodity market?
I think we got the wonders of reverse logic in a powerpoint presentation at work here.
The trick is to pu
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For example, it makes sense to stick to Red Hat as opposed to switching to Ora
OSS Business Model Does Not Exist (mostly) (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's compare. Redhat and Google started in the same era of the Internet bubble. Look at both companies today. Google is a gorilla making oodles of money. Redhat, well, they make money, but billions? I think not. And this
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But i do see were the seperation is as you pointed out. Companies usinf feree software tend to do better then companies making and selling free software. But then again, Both if them make more then i did with my failed dumptruck business.
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Though what people need to realize is that these days it is not about building a software business model, but about building an information business model. The Google's, Amazon's, EBay's, Flicker's, etc use open source, but their business is data, not software. People need to get that through their noggen...
A agree with you as far as you take it, but I don't think you're taking your argument far enough. The open source business model is one in which you use open source and contribute to open source in order to facilitate your main value proposition, but where it is not your main value proposition. Google sells organization and a service that allows people to find what they want and businesses to deliver ads to who they want. They utilize a lot of open source software to do that, but not for their core value
It's a service business (Score:1)
Source - EclipseCon (Score:5, Informative)
Tech Session [eclipsecon.org]
PDF slides [eclipsecon.org]
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OSS initial counterstrike against patent suits (Score:2)
Open source community can get very good at defending against patent
litigation very quickly.
Prior art claims, third-party reviews, using Internet to help "patent
busters" coordinate efforts.
Real possibility that 100% of Microsoft patents will be attacked in
initial counterstrike.
I can't wait!
I also love the Hyundai & Lamborghini "interface standard" comparison. Tres drole that one.
Hey Microsoft ! Are You Listening? (Score:1)
However in this analogy Microsoft is like the plantation masters who thought that the industrial revolution was all about leveraging inventions like the cotton gin to expand their plantations for unlimited growth and profit.
Back then they relied on a false property construct, slavery, to impose this vision while stupidly missing out on the entire industrial revolution.
Today Microsoft relies on a f
Oh this is a riot! (Score:2)
He doesn't mention that ACTU is nowhere near it's 2000 bubble price.
he also doesn't tell us which players he's averaging together. The two largest players in BI are Hyperion and Microsoft. Hyperion's stock has gone up at a rate faster than Actuate, but more importantly they're bac
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