Comments on: Why Microsoft fears open source more than other proprietary vendors do
Microsoft is running scared, and for good reason. Open source beats Microsoft on its own terms, on its own turf.
Microsoft is running scared, and for good reason. Open source beats Microsoft on its own terms, on its own turf.
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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.
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It is an economic truism that monopolies are inherently
unstable. The business plan of a monopolist is inevitably
destroyed by what it must do to retain its monopoly.
And retain its monopoly it must, because without the
monopoly its sales and margins would soon drop and costs
rise to those of any other technology company. In
computers that is the lesson IBM learned with some
difficulty.
The culture at Microsoft would have to perform a
turnaround, as AT&T learned when it lost its state
sponsored monopoly. Whether it would successfully
accomplish such a change in direction is subject to
speculation.
Others must compete with each other and try to
differentiate their products from one another. Only
Microsoft can compete only with the last versions of its
own products. Other companies, their real innovations
increasingly stifled by the need to cater to Microsoft's
business plan, are already creating pressure for change.
Sooner or later Microsoft will lose its monopoly. It can
only stave off the now stifled forces of the open
marketplace for a limited time. Already much of the
company's resources are expended on monopoly maintenence,
in the form of enforced incompatibility with everyone
else's products, expensive litigation,
redundant "upgrades" to keep the revenue stream moving,
and the other trappings of all monopolists.
Open Source advocates, with the closely allied Open
Document people, are the next generation of competitors.
Microsoft was able to kill its proprietary rivals, but the
Open Source / Document folks are the future, morphed from
their old proprietary roots to develop a plan around that
world altogether. They learned from the Unix experience,
one of the most bitter feuds in computing. They are the
work-around to the problem of Microsoft. I believe they
will eventually drain the swamp.
- I'd love to hear more about SAP's open source work
- by Matt Asay September 3, 2007 1:21 PM PDT
- @deshpaa: Can you email me? I'd enjoy learning more about what SAP is doing around open source. Maybe we could profile it here?
- Like this Reply to this comment
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