Drive has 700+ articles for digital transformation leaders written by StarCIO Digital Trailblazer, Isaac Sacolick. Learn more.

Eweek has a great title, Is Open Source Dying? that’s sure to get lots of people clicking. But the article’s title should really read Is Open Source Hard To Implement For Government Institutions? They are the only examples provided in this article of organizations having trouble implementing open source.I expect that large organizations will continue to have trouble implementing open source technologies. The basic problem is that many of these technologies require some real hands on expertise to install, configure and troubleshoot. My experience is that technologies such as Linux, MySQL, and Tomcat include enough documentation and installation scripting to get a system administrator 95% of the way to a stable production environment. But finishing off the last 5% is often less than trivial and can often require some research and tinkering.

A large organization can (and should) purchase support contracts from open source vendors to get help. But I expect that this only goes so far and like the article suggests, even big name service contractors like IBM have financial incentives to push organizations to commercial software. And so does EWeek, afterall, Microsoft, Oracle, and other commercial vendors pay a lot more in advertising than open source vendors.

Is open source dying? I think not – even for large organizations. Everyone is looking for a technology edge on their competition, so one question is, does open source make bleeding edge technologies available to their users faster? I think so. Just look at the number of open source AJAX frameworks and their maturity levels then compare them to the more recent commercial offerings from Microsoft, Adobe, and others. Another question – can large organizations see cost savings by adopting selective open source technologies and deploying them to the most appropriate areas? Absolutely. You can’t tell me that everyone in an organization needs Microsoft Office and can’t be trained to use a product like OpenOffice.

But the author does conclude the following:

Does that mean open source is dying? Of course not. But the open-source community needs to get over its overweening sense of superiority and messianic inevitability;

Also as important – corporations and their CIO’s need to be realistic about open source rollouts. The price of open source is expertise, and you will need some internal experts when you choose to promote one of these technologies into a production environment. You will need time to prototype and experiment. You probably still need support contracts. You should characterize and ideally quantify the ROI. Apply your best practices on selecting and deploying open source technologies as you would a commercial technology.

Published on:

Leave a Reply


StarCIO

My company, StarCIO, provides leadership, learning, and advisory programs for companies looking to accelerate delivering business value from digital transformation. Contact me if you’d like to learn more about partnering opportunities.


Isaac Sacolick

Join us for a future session of Coffee with Digital Trailblazers, where we discuss topics for aspiring transformation leaders. If you enjoy my thought leadership, please sign up for the Driving Digital Newsletter and read all about my transformation stories in Digital Trailblazer.


Coffee with Digital Trailblazers hosted by Isaac Sacolick

Digital Trailblazers! Join us Fridays at 11am ET for a live audio discussion on digital transformation topics:  innovation, product management, agile, DevOps, data governance, and more!


Join the Community of StarCIO Digital Trailblazers

About Drive

Drive Agility, Innovation, Transformation

Drive is the blog for digital transformation leaders brought to you by StarCIO and Isaac Sacolick.

Agility, Innovation, and Transformation are the three primary digital transformation core competencies that every StarCIO Digital Trailblazer must champion in their organizations. Learn more About Drive.


About the StarCIO Digital Trailblazer Community

StarCIO Digital Trailblazer Community

Revolutionizing traditional learning, networking, and advising experiences.

Visit the community


About StarCIO

StarCIO

About Isaac Sacolick

Isaac Sacolick

Author, 1,000+ articles, keynote speaker, Chief StarCIO Digital Trailblazer. Full bio


Driving Digital Newsletter

Driving Digital Newsletter

StarCIO Guides

StarCIO Agile Planning Guides

Digital Trailblazer

Digital Trailblazer by Isaac Sacolick

Driving Digital

Driving Digital by Isaac Sacolick

Driving Digital Standup

Driving Digital Standup

Coffee with Digital Trailblazers

StarCIO Coffee With Digital Trailblazers

Recognition

InfoWorld 2025 Judge
InfoWorld Technology of the Year 2024 Judge
Thinkers360 Top 10 in IT Leadership
Thinkers360 Top Agile Thought Leader
Thinkers360 Top DevOps Leader
Thinkers360 Top in Digital Transfomation
Thinkers360 Top in Analytics
Thinkers360 Top in Product Management

Discover more from StarCIO Digital Trailblazer Community

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading