|
If techno-speak
means nothing to you and if you paid for all the software
that you use on your computer, you may shrug this article
off. But you might read on, as the creation of free, or "open
source," software has become an established and viable movement.
Although you cannot invest in open source businesses, you
can donate to its causes. And many people do donate their
time, money, and skills to advance open source product development,
and this involvement means that open source growth may affect
the tech software market.
Allow
me explain open source, to illustrate how widespread this
movement has become, and I'll then share some information
about how this not for profit sector intends to grow. Although
the open source and pay-as-you-go software development models
haven't met head on in the past, the open source movement
is strong enough now that it eventually may influence how
paid software is developed and marketed in the future.
Although
the U.S. government has resisted the open source movement
in the past, in 2004 Bruce Mehlman, the assistant secretary
for technical policy at the U.S. Department of Commerce, stated,
"The Penguin has landed." If you're a true blue geek and an
open source advocate, you know that Mehlman meant his government
institution was finally allowed to use an open source operating
system for their computers. The Penguin is the mascot for
Linux,
a Unix-type computer operating system that was created originally
by Linus
Torvalds in about 1991. This operating system operates
under a GNU General Public License, which means that the code
that makes this operating system function is free, open, and
available for the public to use and to modify.
Linux
offers just one example of what is known as "open source"
software programs that have revolutionized some government
and educational offices and personal households. Institutions
and individuals have latched onto programs that cost nothing
to use, little to maintain, and that are highly competitive
operationally against pay-to-use software programs. According
to one 2005
report [PDF], the number of open source projects available
to developers and users is a "staggering" 30,000 projects
registered at Freshmeat,
70,000 projects at Sourceforge,
and 5,400 Perl modules available at the Comprehensive
Perl Archive Network. You can bet those numbers have
risen substantially over the two years since that report was
written.
The problem
with many open source software programs is that they have
been limited to geek usage over the past decade, as the ability
to understand, install, and utilize the programs was too complicated
for the average person. But, with the introduction of such
offerings as Open
Office, average computer users have begun experience
how it feels to use a free software program to create their
documents and spreadsheets.
While
visible source code and a right to make relatively unencumbered
derivatives from any open source software remains invaluable
to developers, now the average user can benefit from a technological
movement that has become reliable and useful. One glance at
the article "How
the Open Source Movement has Changed Education" reveals
that the open source movement has infiltrated colleges; but
a search for more information reveals that K-12 institutions
have embraced this movement as well. Although Linux steals
the show under the "operating systems" category in that article,
Ubuntu
is rapidly reaching out to the general public.
Ubuntu,
an African word that means 'Humanity to others,' provides
a community atmosphere for their operating system users. But
Ubuntu goes further, because it offers a desktop version of
the software for users who cannot or who will not download
an operating system on their computers. The desktop doesn't
change the computer, but its interface allows users to utilize
other Linux-based free software that's designed specifically
for Linux-based systems.
This new
development - one that reaches out to the mainstream educator,
student, office, and home user - includes a universal perspective.
Many open source software programs compete to provide its
offerings in as many languages as possible and in venues that
are easy for the computer-illiterate to use. As Ubuntu states
in its manifesto, "The Ubuntu distribution brings the spirit
of Ubuntu to the software world."
Open source
software does contain disadvantages. Upgrades are just as
ubiquitous as those provided by paid software systems, but
the open source software upgrades are?yes, free. And maintenance
for open source programs can be difficult to obtain for some
programs, although a new service that caters to open source
maintenance for the business sector has begun to flourish.
Most of those services are not free, but a price comparison
among software tech services reveals that most of the open
source maintenance programs are less expensive than or competitive
with non-open source maintenance program prices.
Much has
changed over the past two years as the open source movement
has become more popular among businesses that want to pay
less for their software and its licenses (including the government)
and among individuals who can now utilize open source programs.
Although non-open source companies have begun to offer "freebie"
downloads that enhance their software programs, this offering
just isn't enough for many users.
The individuals
who have migrated to the open source movement seem to be divided
into various camps. There are those who use open source software
as a means to voice anti-corporate sentiments. Then there
are those who cannot afford costly software, yet they need
to function professionally against their competitors. Finally,
the new products within the open source movement offer a way
for non-geeks to branch out and try new products and services.
This last
group, the average computer user, is the one to watch. As
more average users come face to face with open source software
at their schools and offices, the more this movement may affect
how the tech sector does business. If non-open source software
companies don't alter how they compete against open source
programs, the tech software sector may suffer.
Until
Next Week,
Linda Goin
|