Harvard Adds Open Source to its MBA Curriculum 39
mjasay writes to tell us that Harvard has started teaching open source to its aspiring MBA candidates. In the latest issue of Harvard Business Review, Harvard presents business managers with a tough decision: To open source a successful (but increasingly vulnerable) product or guard its intellectual property zealously? As the case study's open source proponent suggests, "Open source is like a rising tide. You either float with it or drown."
Grey area (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe I'm just bitter because then it seems like a game of "monkey in the middle" and they're tossing the code around and won't let me have it. Jerks.
Re:Grey area (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Grey area (Score:5, Insightful)
What about Zimbra? (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to say I disagree. If you look at how Zimbra (open-source Microsoft® Exchange slaughterer) works, it really is a miracle that you get a first-grade email server with CalDav, Jabber, Wiki, self-updating and indexing search, with a MySQL-based message store connected by an OpenLDAP implementation (with capabilities of integrating with other directories) in an interface of commercial quality and usability, you will find that this is open-source wedded with commercial enterprise done right.
And I don't disagree with their business model. I think it is perfectly acceptable for them to ensure that commercial releases are tested thoroughly for QA, and that connectors integrating with commercial technologies such as Outlook or iSync stay commercial. I have no qualms about paying for an Outlook connector or an iSync connector. If you don't pay for the commercial edition, you're on your own like any open-source software. But at the very least, you get to run a mail server that is not crippled and probably a very formidable competitor to Exchange (which sadly can't run in Opera, Safari, or Firefox).
I don't see why you guys don't think this can work. These companies deserve to be rewarded for their hard work, and they are making money by adding value to a product, not crippling it. If you're an all open-source user any way, why would you need an iSync or an Outlook connector? Perhaps the only thing they could do better is change their license to GPL instead of MPL.
Oh, and I hope Microsoft doesn't buy Yahoo. Because your next upgrade path is Exchange, if Zimbra isn't released from a Microsoft merger or forked to a new project.
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Re:What about Zimbra? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What about Zimbra? (Score:4, Informative)
The Zimbra Public License requires that the code displays the Zimbra logo. Yahoo's acquisition would mean that the trademark was owned by MS - allowing MS to exercise complete proprietary control over Zimbra code - and effectively nullify any user freedoms granted by the license.
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THANK YOU. You just made my day.
Grey area-Hypocrisy. (Score:1, Insightful)
So everyone who downloads gives back to OSS? Glad to see no one's talking out both sides of their mouth.
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Makes me wish everybody had just stuck with "Free Software".
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P.S. I'm Hungarian, and I'm after my 10th beer, so be gentle.
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Harvard has determined the OSS ecosystem is now large enough to sustain a population of MBA monkeys. I suggest the OSS community remove the monkey sustenance from their ecosystem immediately if not sooner.
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This happens as someone needs to pay for R & D for much of the stuff. But this is starting to fall as open alternatives encroach on the product. A custom Point Of Sale system may be produced this way. The number of clients for the software fall off as Open Source alternatives fill the market. The end result is nicely summarized in the last sentence.
"Open
this is just a case study (Score:5, Informative)
These case studies are used in lots of MBA courses, and they are just little stories used to describe a business situation. They often have interesting business problems but they're also often filled with fluff ("Jane showed up at the factory with her DK shoes and her Gucci handbag... can't figure out why the client doesn't take her seriously") and tons of information that is irrelevant to the "problem". I'm sure part of the "training" from these case studies is learning to weed out useless information.
For example, we had one about Eli Lilly and whether they should build a line dedicated to a particular product or use a general purpose/configurable line. The dedicated line had a higher throughput and lower cost but the configurable line could be used for something else if the market didn't develop for the drug. But it would be quite a stretch to say that because we read and discussed a 10 page case study that "Pharmaceuticals" had been added to our curriculum.
The type of course that would have this case study on the syllabus would also have cases on motorcycle parts manufacturing, consultancy woes, and HR problems where people don't work well together. But this is hardly a serious curriculum about Open Source.
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Another nitpick - there are exactly zero "aspiring MBA candidates" in business school. If you've been admitted to business school, you already *are* an MBA candidate. It's like trying to charge someone with attempted conspiracy.
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You can't charge someone with attempted conspiracy because conspiracy itself is an attempt (at complicity). You can't charge attempted attempts. You have to take actual, concrete steps
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From what I hear, the Chinese government can.
it forgets about *using* software (Score:2, Insightful)
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So understanding open source software, being able to deploy it effectively and establishing service and support systems for it, is very important to ensure major savings are achieved in this overhead cost.
The ch
Floating (Score:5, Insightful)
That's a great sound bite, but in reality, the big money-making technology is closed. Google, while being a great OSS advocate, will never open source what truly makes them money - their search algorithm. Apple, Adobe, SAP, Symantech, MS, etc, are not going to open their cash cows any time soon and are floating just fine.
OSS is not going away, but to say you have to open or drown is hyperbole. There is room, and reason, for both.
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Harvard misses the point (Score:1)
Back to school? (Score:1)
Better Trained Weasels (Score:3, Interesting)
I've had occasional dealings with Harvard MBAs. Their arrogance and sense of entitlement, coupled with the hypercompetitive shallowness that characterizes a certain kind of A student, is typical of an especially odious segment of the American ruling elite. I would rather they knew nothing about open source, so that they would be on the losing side and find themselves marginalized and irrelevant, rather than letting them force themselves into leadership positions through their highly refined self-promotion and ass-kissing skills.
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It seems that most of what I read online on sites like Slashdot, people are complaining that business school students and ma
Amusing line from TFA (Score:2)
It's about time that United States elite academic institutions finally got around to not only using open-source software, but also teaching it.
United States elite academic institutions have been teaching open source for quite some time: computer science departments at good schools teach their students to compile their programs using GCC, statistics departments at good schools teach their students to program in R, etc. If business schools are finally starting to hear about this mira