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February 15th, 2007

Just how closely is Microsoft studying the open-source play book?

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 8:27 am

Categories: Corporate strategy, Shared Source

Tags:

It's no secret that Microsoft has been analyzing the open-source world for a few years now from a competitive perspective. Microsoft is endeavoring to emulate some open-source best practices with projects like its officelabs incubator effort.

But if you really want to understand the extent to which the Softies are studying open-source methods for clues that might be used in shaping their own business practices, it's worth checking out a couple of recent posts from John D'Addamio, a software design engineer in test in Microsoft's Developer Aftermarket Solutions unit.

("For about 25 years, I worked in the proprietary UNIX, FreeBSD, and Linux world. We were using open source software before it was called open source," D'Addamio said in a recent blog post.)

Four-year Microsoft veteran D'Addamio describes his job at Microsoft as being "part of a team that is producing open source software." The Developer Aftermarket team is "primarily developing open source tools related to Visual Studio," D'Addamio said. And the team "has taken some cues from the Community Based Open Source world" in doing so, he said.

"(P)art of my work is evangelizing open source within Microsoft and exploring how processes need to change for corporate teams to work in the open source world," D'Addamio explained. D'Addamio said he's been focusing a lot lately on the differences between testing closed and open-source software.

"So, what is different about testing open source projects? I came to the conclusion that the answer is 'Not much!'"

D'Addamio made a couple of other observations:

* "The primary difference from the corporate model, so far, is that a corporate designer/developer does not usually manage the project."

* "I think the main thing our corporate team may do differently than the Community Based Open Source world is that we think about testing during the project definition phase."

D'Addamio also offers tips for developers looking to do Community-Based open-source projects, ranging from " Do not get discouraged!" to "After you go open, respond to bug reports quickly."

Meanwhile, Microsoft is continuing to add quietly to its list of developer tools and add-ins that it has released under Shared Source or full-fledged open-source licenses. There are 65 such tools listed on the Shared Source site, including everything from a Web client Software Factory, to the Contacts.Net set of managed programming interfaces introduced to support Vista.

What's your take? Do you see closed- and open-source development and testing models as more similar than different? Or at opposite ends of software-design spectrum?

Mary Jo FoleyMary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years. Don't miss a single post. Subscribe via Email or RSS. You can also follow Mary Jo on Twitter.

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  • Most Recent of 35 Talkback(s)
The love of tragedy
Everyone likes the underdog, but virtually no one bets on them. Why? Because, they are the underdog for a reason. Ever wonder why Vegas has odds that favor the incumbent?

It's the proverbial Da... (Read the rest)
Posted by: THEE WOLF Posted on: 02/20/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Microsoft are commited to stamping out Open Source  whisperycat | 02/15/07
If I loan you a buck, will you please buy a clue?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/15/07
Keep the buck and buy a clue yourself  whisperycat | 02/15/07
What the frack has MS to do with (ugh) Apple?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/15/07
The point is  davidsarmstrong | 02/15/07
Yeah, we seen how well that worked. NOT!!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
Don't just blame the driver writers  alflanagan | 02/18/07
Agreed  davidsarmstrong | 02/15/07
Pardon me?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
What else is new?  B.O.F.H. | 02/16/07
Microsft, like IBM, Sun, HP, etc...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/15/07
Profit  perryroyce@... | 02/15/07
Unless your name is Stallman....  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/15/07
Message has been deleted.  B.O.F.H. | 02/15/07
Profit is okay  davidsarmstrong | 02/15/07
Yes, that is what competition does.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
too much squeeze...  shryko | 02/19/07
Value for the money  skeptic90210 | 02/15/07
Oh please..  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/15/07
And why...  zkiwi | 02/15/07
WHy what?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
SO then Red Hat should get out of business?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
ms appologists  davidsarmstrong | 02/15/07
So why did Solaris just issue a critical patch?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/16/07
That's an odd statement  John Zern | 02/15/07
...tweak or rewrite code to make it work better.  swoopee | 02/16/07
Crippleware?  handydan918 | 02/16/07
They aren't antithetical  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 02/15/07
Closer than an electron microscope  databaseben@... | 02/16/07
"add quietly to its list of developer tools"  Ole Man | 02/16/07
in a perfect world....  trs96813 | 02/16/07
"it is not a perfect world"  Ole Man | 02/17/07
AND MICROSOFT COMPETES  BALTHOR | 02/16/07
Too Late  D-T-Schmitz | 02/18/07
The love of tragedy  THEE WOLF | 02/20/07

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