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By: Robin Bloor Published: 9th November 2006 Copyright © 2006 |
The two strangely contrasting events of Larry Ellison swatting Red Hat and Steve Ballmer embracing Novell's SuSe Linux should give everyone in the Open Source movement pause for thought. Let's take these one by one.
In one fell swoop, Oracle destroyed Red Hat's business model and unless Red Hat CEO, Matthew Szulik, knows how to pull rabbits out of a hat, Red Hat is on course to disappear. Personally, I don't think there are any rabbits in the hat. The reality is this; Oracle is offering to support Red Hat linux at a lower cost. It won't even lose money doing this because of the economies of scale that its world wide support operation confers. If you're responsible for placing the order, who ya gonna call?
Red Hat (and several other Open Source endeavors) were always vulnerable to this, but everyone has been very gentlemanly about it. The truth is that Red Hat has no significant IP to protect itself with. “Raise the shields Mr Szulik!” “I'm not sure how to tell you this, Captain Kirk, but there are no shields.”
The second event, of Steve Ballmer embracing Linux, should be more disturbing to the Open Source community than a broadside from a Rimulan Warbird, but it isn't. Microsoft has admitted defeat and acknowledged that Linux isn't going away. So it gets all cosy with Novell and indemnifies SuSe Linux from any IP violations that it might be guilty of. From now on, Windows and SuSE Linux will partner. Does this fork the Linux movement a little?
The driving force here is that Microsoft has seen the future and it's full of virtual machines. In a world of virtual machines Windows is at disadvantage because no-one will want to pay for an executable capability—especially when Linux is sitting there all sweet and inexpensive. I'm expecting to see some Microsoft software working on Linux in the future.
So let's get to the point. Open Source made some very important contributions to the IT industry, but it always was a confused movement. It included a handful of idealists who seemed to believe that software should be free. It included altruists (philanthropists if you like) who did not want to be paid highly for their work but also wanted to protect it from carpetbaggers. The GPL is perfect for them. It also included people who simply wanted to break software monopolies. The commercial software market made it possible for companies to maintain high prices for software by de facto monopoly (or oli-gopoly). Open Source undermines all such strangleholds to some degree.
But the Open Source movement also included some entrepreneurs (and VCs) who believed you could run commercially viable operations on the back of Open Source. These are the people who now need to rethink. All such operations are vulnerable to Oracle's simple and completely legal tactics. Some form of commercial protection is required. There are only two ideas that spring to mind:
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9th November 2006: 'tmb_ayebe' said:
I don't believe Red Hat's business model has been smashed. Red Hat has a great relationship with it's customers, whereas Oracle's customer service seems to leave a lot to be desired. Sure, Oracle is cheap but are they GOOD? If it's a case of you get what you pay for, many companies will stick with Red Hat. In fact, Red Hat may actually benefit if it can poach some of Oracles new, but dissatified customers. I'm not saying that this will happen, just that it's too early to say that Red Hat is dead. There is more to compete on than just technology.
11th November 2006: 'Muyiwa Taiwo' said:
The only business that is dead is yours. I don't know how you fund this free online publication, but for the sake of your shareholders, I hope that it's not from income from services which people pay for on the assumption that you know what you're talking about. Your prediction of the death of RedHat or the unworkability of the open source business model based on such shallow, infantile, and puerile analysis as contained in this analysis must surely signal a warning to anybody with a modicum of intelligence to give your opinion no more weight than that garnered during a night at the pub. For as long as the GPL does not go away, Microsoft, and indeed, proprietary software, can not win against open source. Progress as we know it has only been possible because of openness. The personal computer industry wouldn't be anywhere if the original IBM PC wasn't open. "Closed-ness" is an anathema to humankind, and to that extent, proprietary computing only has a limited lifespan. Microsoft has indeed admitted defeat in their silly battle against open source software, and they're now shopping for companies to go down with them. "First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. And then you win" -- Mohandas Ghandi
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