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Free/Open Source Software Global Maturity Matrix (FOSS GloMM)This is a discussion on Free/Open Source Software Global Maturity Matrix (FOSS GloMM) within the Open Source News and Opinion forums, part of the Open Source Analytics category; I have stated a few times that the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and its advocates don’t have a vision of the future that I find viable. I have read statements ... |
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![]() | I have stated a few times that the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and its advocates don’t have a vision of the future that I find viable. I have read statements that the best custodians of FOSS are tiny consulting companies, and that Microsoft and Oracle should be barred from participating in FOSS. I don’t see how the software needs of the world can be met by tiny services companies, or how we can magically make the existing market players disappear. But I can’t complain about their vision without providing any vision of my own. So here it is. The Vision I subscribe to the theory that a vision is a dream + a plan. The Dream In the future, across the globe, every individual, business, organization, and government entity will have FOSS suitable for all their needs. That is not to say there there is no proprietary software any more – their certainly will be – just that any and all normal requirements can be met with FOSS. In this future the notion of intellectual property will still exist, as will software patents (unfortunately). In this future, any software or services company, of any size, whether local or global has the opportunity to participate in the FOSS realm. We will reach this goal incrementally via an evolution of FOSS software, an evolution of the existing market players, and the creation of new market players. The Plan 1 – Establish Metrics Here is my proposal for assessing the state of the dream. By country, we score each software domain in terms of how well FOSS provides suitable solutions that are:
We also score the software with regards to how well it supports all the needs (including support, training, and professional services) of:
Operating System and Middleware 1.** *Operating System (OS) 2.** *Database (RDBMS) 3.** *HTTP and Application Servers 4.** *Network Management and Monitoring 5.** *Enterprise service bus (ESB), message queue (MQ) 6.** *Email 7.** *Instant messaging 8.** *Calendaring Horizontal Applications 9.** *Customer Relationship Management (CRM) 10.** *Locally-compliant Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) 11.** *Content Management Systems (CMS), knowledge base 12.** *Call center, case tracking 13.** *Ecommerce 14.** *Online meeting and conferencing 15.** *Voice over IP (VoiP) 16.** *Collaboration – forums, wiki etc 17.** *Reporting, analysis and Business Intelligence (BI) 18.** *Online training 19.** *Financial, Budgeting and Planning, including public sector 20.** *Distribution Desktop Applications 21.** *Word processing 22.** *Spreadsheet 23.** *Presentation 24.** *Graphics editors 25.** *Printing tools 26.** *Software and web tools (compilers, editors etc) Vertical Applications 27.** *Healthcare 28.** *Education 29.** *Government 30.** *Agriculture 31.** *Insurance 32.** *Retail, including Point of Sale 33.** *Telecoms 34.** *Petrochemical 35.** *Pharmaceutical 36.** *Travel and hospitality 37.*** Engineering, Manufacturing, Construction 38.*** Textiles Obviously, within each of these vertical domains there are multiple applications. Scoring here will be tricky. System Integrators 39. The local availability of systems integrators that can implement FOSS stacks and solutions. Scoring is done per country and per domain and is scored from 0 to 9. A score of 0 indicates there is no FOSS option for that domain and geography. A score of 9 indicates the existence of three different FOSS options that meet the needs of large organizations. We can color code by range, red=2 or less, yellow=3 to 6, green=7 or more 2 – Census We need to find out how close we are to achieving the dream. Volunteer organizations and sponsoring organizations score each domain for a single country, providing notes about the FOSS packages assessed and any services options assessed. The results of the census are publicly available at all times. Academia and analysts could provide much of this data. 3 – Close Gaps Based on the results of the census, sponsoring organizations provide resources and guidance to help close the gaps. Sponsoring organizations will have many different motivations:
4 – Repeat Steps 2 and 3 As time goes by and we repeat steps 2 and 3. The Matrix flushes out gradually, and becomes greener and greener. Until… 5 – Declare Victory In my opinion FOSS has won when, and only when, the entire sheet (7000-8000 cells) is lit up in green. At this point the value of FOSS will be clear to everyone. Maybe attitudes towards intellectual property will change then. But we can’t expect them to change before we get close to this point. Summary As this gradual global evolution occurs, the existing market players will have to adapt to new market conditions. What they do, and how well they do it, is up to them – but they are welcome to participate. Just because Oracle is now the ultimate custodian of MySQL, does not mean that MySQL should not be listed as one of the FOSS databases. Microsoft, IBM, SAP, Oracle should be accepted into this evolution – whether they survive it is up to them and the global and local markets, not up to anything else. Any organization that produces FOSS, or localizations, or documentation, or provides services or support for FOSS is deemed to be a friend of GloMM – no matter what their size, history, or business model. So that’s my vision. I have a defined goal, a way of measuring progress, mechanisms for getting there, and ways for existing market players to participate. I claim it to be reasonable, rational, and viable. I have no resources at my disposal to execute on any of this. Its just a vision. If only I had a dream + a plan + resources ![]() More from James Dixon’s Blog ... |
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