Comments on: 'Free lunch' and open-source support
Some system integrators seem to think open source offers them a free lunch.
Some system integrators seem to think open source offers them a free lunch.
Don't buy these one-trick ponies--unless you like gizmos that gather dust.
The Net giant, ever eager for a faster Internet, debuts its Google Public DNS service. With it, Google could become even more central to the Net.
Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
Add this feed to your online news reader
One of the most attractive characteristics of open source software is precisely that you are not tied to a single vendor for support, and thus not at the mercy of the likes of Oracle and their capricious price increases. If the only way to get Alfresco to work is to to buy support from Alfresco or an officially blessed partner, you are just as bad as Oracle or Microsoft. I would go as far as to say if I were currently considering Alfresco and happened to read this column, I would probably kill the project.
This does not excuse the integrator - they misled their customer by claiming a level of expertise they did not in fact possess, but any system that requires users of software to get approval from the vendor cannot reasonably be called open source software smell test, and illustrate why Stallman makes some goof points when he harps about Free software as opposed to Open Source.
- by mikalg October 14, 2008 11:52 PM PDT
- You are surprised by the choice not to purchase support on Open Source projects such as this? Really? This to me shows little understanding of what actually drives inclusion of a vast number of open source software in a large number of markets/positions.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(6 Comments)Simply put; you cannot "advertise" open source as FREE (a word you use in your blogs constantly, and consistently) and then expect people to not understand that you don't really mean FREE.
Open Source has long been supported by knowledge bases, and free support forums/groups. Community is another word/method of support listed on every single Open Source project I have ever seen (including your examples).
Still puzzled by the choice not to purchase a support "package"?
I am not opposed to Open Source, in fact i find it a great source of free software. I must admit I have never/would never purchase a support contract for any open software i have ever used.
Why? If the software works well enough for my purposes... I use it. I never run any open source software as a production solution unless I have tested it thoroughly, and it meets all of my needs. Admittedly, there are few that I do use on a day to day basis.
Open Source has, for me and many others, allowed MINOR additions of functionality to existing enterprise software. The FREE nature of these additions is the reasoning behind deploying it. Consider it icing on the cake. Coupled with the fact that for any given additional function, I have literally dozens of choices of FREE software I can try before I buy (Oh wait, I never have to buy) I can pick and choose the best for my needs.
Considering the additional software I speak of, is generally not all that important to my day to day operation, I have no problem waiting for the occasional knowledge base answer to my issue. Again; FREE.
FREE is what drives the Open Source market. It isn't better software, better support, the fact I can do whatever I want with the software. Lets be real, and state the actual fact:
Open Source is synonymous with FREE software. is this "politically correct"? Likely not, and I will have denizens of the Open Source movement crawling all over this statement.
Sorry, but I call it as I see it. I, and every single person/group/business I have EVER worked with agree with my statement. FREE! So, I am NOT SHOCKED that you find large numbers of instances where people choose not to purchase support on Open Source projects/software.
I know what you WANT Open Source to mean to me and countless others. It's just not the case with us. With all of the language used in "advertising" Open Source...is it really any wonder?
I don't know if the ship is too large to steer in the direction you want it to go, but it would require a great deal of convincing (or an OUTSTANDING product with some convincing) to change my mind on this.
Look at it this way: Is an Apple desktop better than a Windows desktop when considering longevity? Which desktop would last longer/built better. Fact is the hardware is darn near identical. Yet, a large number of people would SWEAR that the Apple product is better made, has better components, and lasts longer. All of this based upon PERCEPTION fostered by word of mouth and clever advertising.
It's open Sources own fault in general. You have fostered the notion of FREE...because it is SO appealing. Its LESS EXPENSIVE is another quote. If I don't HAVE to pay... I likely won't. Many others will not also. That is all.