Open Source at Microsoft: my stance on Microsoft Open Source Strategy
I want to take the opportunity here to clarify my stance and how I managed to form my analysis of Microsoft Open Source Strategy.
What has ignited this desire of mine to clarify these issues was the publication on my blog of the post entitled “Microsoft and OSS: another battle brewing”, unfortunately published without my editorial approval, and without my ability to review the contents before publication. After reading the article and having personally talked with the contributing editor, Carlo Daffara, I realized he was expressing some concerns about the clarity of my position relative to Microsoft and open source. Let me try to make it clearer.
A little background.
I have been consulting with Microsoft on different subjects over the last two years.
The first time I happened to work with Microsoft was back in June 2006. I took part to the Microsoft’s Linux&Open Source Briefing partner program as open source expert. Techstream, a training firm engaged by Microsoft to deliver worldwide such program, found me over the internet, and eventually hired me after a couple of job interviews.
Comments
LinuxIsFun
2008-04-20 09:04:19
"Could eventually Microsoft take the lead of the Free Software development in many fields"
LOL.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-04-20 09:18:58
"Those Heady Days of Sex, Drugs & Linux Are Over
FOSS is Now Costing Software Vendors $60 Billion a Year in Annual Revenues, and It's Still Only 6% of the Global Spend
Well, it looks like Richard Stallman, the father of FOSS, is going to have to cut his hair and get a suit because the warmed-over hippie movement he’s been leading is no longer the radical anti-software establishment counter-culture his rag-tag army fancies it is.
Nope, it IS the software establishment."
That's journalism? No, it's Microsoft. No link, on purpose.
Some things never change. Know thy predatory enemy. From Microsoft's own mouth:
LinuxIsFun
2008-04-20 09:25:51
you never know who is who.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-04-20 10:15:37
Roberto Galoppini
2008-04-20 17:43:52
I believe that partnering with Microsoft could greatly help OS firms to increase open source market penetration, giving them access to a larger market and, last but not least, with the support of Microsoft marketing force.
Then global service providers could take advantage of such penetration, reserving the possibility to dilute Microsoft position eventually. Before that they have to fix the "last mile" problem, helping customers to manage open source governance, and providing easy access to software selection tools and procedures. In my opinion Sun could do that, that's why I wrote the open source franchising business model (more on my blog, with Matt Asay's, Matthew Aslett's, Frank Hecker's, Simon Phipps's comments and feedback).
Carlo Piana
2008-05-01 15:48:27
I don't understand if you have read all of my blog post or you just stopped at the title, which is intentionally misleading.
Just to make it clear: I am still one of the most convinced advocates of Free Software and on the bandwagon who had been most disruptive on Microsoft's anti-Free Software strategy. And I think I still am.
But I am also seeing some developments in the relationships between part of Microsoft and Samba, and it is going better than I expected. I expected NOTHING, so this is not much, but it is something. I am very interested in any changes, and I think that there is a very small, maybe insubstantial, possibility that they reach a tipping point when they could never come back. We are still very far, and I want to see more beef before popping champagne.
The track record of Microsoft is very bad, but this means that they can only improve. Perhaps with some change of management first. They *must* change: the anti-Free Software, anti-competition, all proprietary strategy has been very successful, but unsustainable on the long run. They must change or they will be made irrelevant, collapsing on themselves, just like the USSR empire. It will take time and many dead bodies will float down the river in the process, but something will be changing. In which direction, I can't still tell. I hope in the good direction.
Ciao
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-01 15:54:35
I am very supportive of your work. I think that reader "LinuxIsFun" just isn't familiar with the background.