05 March 2008
28 June 2007
Plugging in to Asay Power
I met up with Matt Asay (pronounced "ay-see") recently. I learned from this that he's had what amounts to the perfect career in open source business: training as a lawyer (including some work with Larry Lessig), then stints with Lineo (a pioneering embedded Linux company) and Novell (during which time he founded the Open Source Business Conference) before joining Alfresco, an enterprise content management company that is one of a whole new generation of businesses that collectively make up the open source enterprise stack.
My meeting also confirmed something that I had suspected for a while: that he is the most astute commentator on the open source business scene, bar none.
He has a new outlet for these insights in the form of the blog "The Open Road" on C|net (which means, unfortunately, that the URLs are totally opaque), where he is churning out posts at a rate that puts mere professional writers such as myself to shame. To make matters worse, he's come up with a blindingly obvious and brilliant wheeze for both generating lots of interesting copy and also providing what amounts to a grand conspectus of the entire open source business scene: an emailed survey of top CEOs there. Now, why couldn't I have thought of that?
The results are required reading for anyone who wants to understand the state of free software in the world of business today - and where it's going tomorrow. Here's the list of interviews:
Dave Rosenberg, MuleSource
Javier Soltero, Hyperic
Marten Mickos, MySQL
John Powell, Alfresco
Fabrizio Capobianco, Funambol
Boris Kraft, Magnolia
Kelly Herrell, Vyatta
Satish Dharmaraj, Zimbra
Ranga Rangachari, Groundwork
Dries Buytaert, Drupal
John Roberts, SugarCRM
Toby Oliver, Path Intelligence
Danny Windham, Digium
Bill Karpovich, Zenoss
Mark Brewer, Covalent
Gianugo Rabellini, Sourcesense
Bob Walter, Untangle
Paul Doscher, JasperSoft
Pete Childers, Zmanda
Rod Johnson, Interface 21
Harold Goldberg, Zend Technologies
Eero Teerikorpi, Continuent
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:57 pm 0 comments
Labels: alfresco, covalent, digium, funambol, groundwork, hyperic, interface 21, jaspersoft, magnolia, Matt Asay, mulesource, mysql, sourcesense, sugarcrm, untangle, vyatta, zenoss, zimbra, zmanda
25 January 2007
Open Linux Router
When I wrote about the open source router Vyatta, I noted that it was slightly ironic that only now is free software addressing the area. So it's good to see another project, called simply the Open Linux Router doing the same:
The Open Linux Router will be a network appliance unlike any other. Its modular design will empower the user with the ability to pick and choose what features and/or services will and will not be included on the implementation. By scaling the features and services down, the Open Linux Router can easily be installed on a small, embedded device. Although, if the implementation demands functionality, it is just as easy to add the features, which provides the Open Linux Router with a wide and diverse demographic. Residential and small business implementations have a certain set of needs, while an enterprise implementation requires a more concentrated operation and thats what drives the modular approach to services and features. The learning curve is also greatly reduced through a consolidation of the nominal devices that your IT staff would currently have to master to rise to the same level of productivity. This project aims to encourage open source software for network systems and solutions.
(Via Linux and Open Source Blog.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:28 am 1 comments
Labels: modularity, open linux router, routers, vyatta
16 September 2006
Vyatta Gets VC Dosh
I've written about Vyatta, a company producing an open-source router, before. Now it's got some serious VC dosh: you don't have to be clairvoyant to see that this company is going to be very big. Starting queueing for shares now. (Via Enterprise Open Source Magazine.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:18 am 1 comments
24 July 2006
The Internet Goes...Open Source
There is a great irony at the heart of the Internet. Free software and its characteristic distributed development method were made possible by the Internet. Similarly, many of the earliest free software programs - Sendmail, BIND etc. - helped create the Internet. And yet today, the knots of the Net's interconnections - the routers - are generally proprietary (and usually from Cisco).
So here's an idea: how about creating an open source router? Enter Vyatta, which is doing precisely that. It's been working on the idea for a while, and, according to GigaOM, is close to launching its first product.
Assuming they get it right, I don't see any reason why this shouldn't steadily chip away at Cisco's dominant market share, just as every other open alternative to commoditised products has done. As they do, expect other open source solutions to enter this market soon.