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April 11th, 2006

Open source still fragmented

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 7:24 pm

Categories: Development, Distributions, General, Linux

Tags:

Evans Data has a new report out saying the open source market remains fragmented.

The whole premise of the study shows just how little most analysts know about open source as a concept.

The whole idea behind open source is to break down hierarchies. If you’re really good, if you gain a key position within a project that is gaining market traction, you can now not only get work, but become a company in your own right.

This is something that is just starting to dawn on many open source developers. A few years ago they were happy to just have jobs. Now they’re looking to get really good jobs. (This was the JBoss business strategy from the start — grab stars by offering big salaries.)

But the next step is not consolidation. I think it’s atomization.

Software development, like anything else, lives by the 80-20 rule. The top people dominate. This means these top people are worth a whole lot more than others on the open market. This is something that is just now starting to dawn on people.

All this is sort of clear after looking at how Evans came to its conclusions, and its specific results. The company surveyed 400 developers and asked who does the best job. This yielded the names Red Hat, IBM, Novell and Sun. Those aren’t really the leaders. They’re the guys who put out the most press releases.

Who are the leaders? I have no idea. The game has just started. Who do you think the leaders are?

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 6 Talkback(s)
correct
That seems to be the main thing with Open Source. Getting stale, a fork can appear.
Getting purchased by a big fish - a fork can appear. Take for example the Oracle talk of takeovers. In my eyes, i... (Read the rest)
Posted by: zdnet reader Posted on: 04/12/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Who did you expect?  Richard Flude | 04/11/06
OPEN and flexible, not CLOSED and stuck.  zdnet reader | 04/11/06
I agree  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 04/12/06
The beauty of Open Source  Roger Ramjet | 04/12/06
correct  zdnet reader | 04/12/06
Cost is not the main driver...  cay_z | 04/12/06

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