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Wednesday, May 7, 2008
6 PM — Networking Reception; 7 PM — Presentation
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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Manifesto for Open Source Business - The Silverado Rules

With the success of companies like MySQL, JBoss, Cygnus and SleepyCat, open source software has introduced major changes to the way corporate IT adopts new technology. Yet open source business practices have a long way to go before the industry as a whole is fully embraced by CIOs.

In particular, I believe that the patchwork quilt of licenses and business practices among open-source vendors is a major barrier to enterprise adoption of open source. Vendor standardization on a simple and commercially attractive business model will help drive broad corporate acceptance of open source software.

After attending the Open Source Think Tank held in February, 2008 at the Silverado resort, I am convinced that a best-practices model is emerging for enterprise open-source software vendors. In honor of the think tank event, I am dubbing these practices the Silverado Rules for Open Source Success:

The Silverado Rules for Open Source Success

Open-source vendors should adopt the following best practices to optimize community participation while developing a viable commercial business:
1. Fix the last mile problem
2. Optimize for community and commercial growth
3. Play by the community rules
4. Implement role-based pricing
5. Enable on-site and on-demand deployment
6. Adopt a dual license strategy based on AGPL (GPLv3 + affero)

Following these rules may not lead to guaranteed business success, but ignoring them may well lead to failure! For the complete write-up on the Silverado Rules for open Source Success, go to my KeeneView blog.

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Sun Gobbles Up Open Source Star MySQL

The open source feeding frenzy continues. Last year it was Redhat acquiring JBoss. This year it's Sun acquiring MySQL. This is a strong validation for the open source business model, and gives Sun a new software platform for leadership in the enterprise.

MySQL has been strong in the web database market and is just now poking its nose into the enterprise. To do this, they have teamed up with WaveMaker for companies looking to replace their client/server tools like Oracle Forms, Lotus Notes, MS Access and PowerBuilder.

I wrote more about this in the Keeneview blog under MySQL and Marten Mickos: When Nice Guys Finish First.

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Disclaimer: The opinions expressed on the WebGuild Blog including posts, comments, and external links, are those of the individual authors and not WebGuild's.





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