Tuesday, February 09, 2010  
Google
Web pcquest.com

CIOL Network sites

Search by Issue | Sitemap | Advanced Search

• For most updated version of DQ TOP 20 issue, visit dqindia.com • Visit the New Living Digital 2.0

Home > Tech Trends > Will the Open Source Business Model Die?

    Enterprise Solutions
    Hands On
    ITstrategy
    Developer
    Tech Forum
    SMB Forum
    Trends
    Shootout
    Reviews
    Editorials
    Linux and Open Source
    Technology
    Extraedge
    IT Careers
    Vertical Focus
    News & Launches

Subscribe to Print magazine.


now!


Newsletter


Will the Open Source Business Model Die?

Support is at the center of the Open Source business model. But most consumers don’t want to pay for it


Wednesday, November 29, 2000

If I can make one fairly certain prediction for 2001, it is that by this time next year, there are likely to be fewer Linux companies around. For two years, at trade shows and on other occasions, I have been asking people from TurboLinux, Red Hat, and other Open Source supporters how they expect to make money, any kind of money. The answer usually is something like this "We will sell support contracts."

The Open Source business model may make for an interesting college thesis. In the real world, however, many of these ambitious Linux companies are simply writing a story that’ll end in Chapter 11 (Bankruptcy).

And that appears to be the course many Linux companies are on. The poor financial results of one Linux company after another go to show that the Open Source model is a disaster in progress.

Case in point: TurboLinux. The Silicon Valley company has a great solution to run everything from a single Linux workstation to clusters of powerful Linux servers running large enterprises. The company is among the top three or four Linux distributors. It’s the leading Linux distributor in Japan and the rest of Asia. And the company has been pulling out all the stops these past two years promoting itself in heavy advertising campaigns and large booths at trade shows.

In the first week of November, the company reported a loss of $29 million on sales of just $3 million. After so much marketing effort, that clearly underscores the fiasco of the Open Source business model. Having burned through tens of millions of venture capital dollars from Intel and others, TurboLinux is now asking investors to open their wallets as it tries to raise $60 million in new capital by going public. Wall Street, of course, needs another Linux IPO like it needs a hike in interest rates. Most Linux stocks have plunged from a year ago, leaving investors holding billions of real and paper losses. VA Linux shares have lost 93 percent from where they stood at the end of the first day of trading.

The problem with Linux and other Open Source solutions is that consumers and most businesses don’t want to pay for support. The market expects that if you throw out a solution, it’s supposed to work with little or no expert help. Support is a last resort for when something unexpectedly goes wrong or your own IT people can’t figure something out. And, of course, most companies offer technical support for free as a strategic selling tool.

By making support the center of the Open Source fiscal universe, the industry is sending the message that Linux needs a lot of support and that’s probably too complex for the average IT staffer to figure out. And for most people willing to try out Linux, that’s exactly what it is.

Worse, to be valuable, the actual support that’s delivered must be instant and of such high quality that almost any problem is resolved in one call. But with resources scarce these days, Linux distributors can’t afford to hire and maintain a large staff of highly-qualified technicians who need to be experts in Linux OS, applications, and networking. People who are really good shouldn’t be doing tech support in the first place. They can snap up jobs paying two or three times as much.

While Linux distributors may be going the way of the dot.com industry, that doesn’t mean the Linux OS won’t become a long-term force in the industry. On the contrary, the Linux OS will likely grow in popularity in running networks, Internet appliances and other devices that can benefit from a highly reliable, secure, scalable, and free OS.

But chances are Linux will migrate from a group of idealistic start-ups to being absorbed by giants like IBM, Dell, and Compaq who see Linux as a vehicle to better position themselves against Sun Microsystems and Microsoft.

Paul Stewart
runs Silicon Valley News Service, an IT news service in the Silicon Valley


Page(s)   1   

End of the article

PC Problems? Get a solution in 24 hours. Ask Tech Expert




Untitled Document



Levovo Thinkcentre for all of your business needs



Message boards

Discuss this and many other IT topics at the
CIOL message board

Previous Stories

A Crusoe for your Notebook

Multimedia Mania

Market Trends India

   
 

 
 

Magazine Subscription | RQS | Contact Us | Team PCQuest | Advertising - Print | jobs@cybermedia