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July 10th, 2007

What is the true value of open source?

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 7:52 am

Categories: Events, General, Infrastructure, Strategy, business models, management, mass market

Tags: Open Source, Dana Blankenhorn

Seurat the Bathers at AsnieresThere are many ways to measure the value of open source. But no one measure gives the true picture.

(A print of this hangs in my living room. Its presence here will be explained.)

Savio Rodrigues recently measured it through venture capital returns. But with open source squeezing costs out of software, especially marketing and distribution costs, those numbers are bound to underestimate reality.

Sourceforge wants you to vote on its Community Choice awards, and that’s another way to measure value. But democracy is bound to favor mass market projects, and some of the most important things happening in open source today involve enterprise development tools like those of Eclipse.

Another way to measure open source is through outreach, the market depths open source can take us to in dealing with the problems of the world’s 6 billion. The growth of new forums like the OSS Summit in Hong Kong and new tools like Canonical’s Storm, a Python mapper, attest to this.

The point is that no one metric values open source correctly. It’s not an apples-to-apples match with proprietary business models. Its impact isn’t just measured by the mass market.

The sharing of code and free distribution aren’t just a business story, or a political one, or a social one. The metrics we use to measure it must probe more deeply, and more widely, to get the full picture.

Current metrics are like the dots in a Seurat painting, such as the one above. We need a wider perspective to understand the whole.

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983. You can follow Dana on Twitter. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 24 Talkback(s)
RE:not a priority...
Care to talk to people in LSB? or those of X server?

or what about those who take part in Libre Graphics Conference.

You're judging Open Source too much.

One cannot create a sta... (Read the rest)
Posted by: nbjayme Posted on: 07/13/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
reworking success.  russell@... | 07/10/07
I never thought of it in terms of taxes  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 07/11/07
compassionate conservatism  PMDubuc | 07/11/07
Open Source and the Enterprise  Jerry M. Gartner | 07/10/07
Thanks  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 07/11/07
True value comes later...  scott1329 | 07/11/07
Compared to what?  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/11/07
Facing Backward  Ole Man | 07/11/07
who's talking about proprietary?  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/11/07
Remind yourself of OASIS?  nbjayme | 07/11/07
Wow, pull your head out man!  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/11/07
I am only showing you the othe side of the coin. happy  nbjayme | 07/13/07
why focus on "source"  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/13/07
Open Source is not about "Source"  nbjayme | 07/13/07
RE:Compared to what?  GreyGeek | 07/11/07
gigantic flaws?  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/11/07
Black box reuse requires  Update victim | 07/12/07
sheesh!  nbjayme | 07/13/07
interoperability is not a priority  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/13/07
RE:not a priority...  nbjayme | 07/13/07
perhaps you can give us an example  Update victim | 07/12/07
example using Spring  Robert Kohlenberger | 07/13/07
How much is the Internet worth?  Resuna | 07/11/07
Valid comparison  The_Quietman | 07/11/07

What do you think?

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