Enterprise content management (ECM) firm
Alfresco Software’s latest research
uncovers some interesting pointers about how companies are evaluating and
deploying open-source software. The short version is: not in the same way as
they are deploying other types of software.
Alfresco’s Open Source
Barometer aims to take a regular reading of how, where and why companies are
deploying open-source software. It is far from empirical as the only respondents
are users of its own open-source software. However, it is far-reaching, based on
some 35,000 responses to its most recent poll, and skewed towards large
organisations. It is a fascinating insight into the still immature and
fast-changing open-source world.
Among the most significant trends unearthed by Alfresco is that open-source
software does not exist in a silo but is typically blended with, and even
resides on, proprietary software. For example, when Alfresco asked about
evaluation, 40 per cent of respondents said they used Windows to road-test the
software, compared with 35 per cent on Linux. This is in spite of the fact that
many more actual deployments are on Linux than on Windows.
That split suggests that open-source developers that do not have a
Windows-based option could be missing out on attracting business adopters to at
least look at their offerings. Also, it is clear that many firms will skip
traditional vendor selection procedures when looking at open-source software,
perhaps because of perceptions that there is a low risk and low cost associated.
“It’s a tongue-in-cheek statement but Windows is good for open source because
that’s where people start to use it,” said Ian Howells, chief marketing officer
of Alfresco. “People will look at four or five vendors, see if they can make it
work, and then make a quick decision. They download it to their laptops, try to
get it going, and make a choice.”
Incidentally, the Alfresco data also backs up other polls suggesting that
very few users are running Vista just two per cent, compared with 63 per cent
on XP and 28 per cent who are Windows 2003 loyalists. Even the venerable Windows
2000 hosts many more Alfresco users than Vista.
On Linux, two companies appear to be sprinting away from the rest; Ubuntu
with 23 per cent and Red Hat Enterprise
Linux on 35 per cent. As for databases, 60 per cent are running the open-source
leader and recent Sun purchase MySQL, compared with 14 per cent on Oracle and 13
per cent on SQL Server.
With application servers there is also a clear open-source leader in Tomcat
with
a 70 per cent share, ahead of JBoss with just 18 per cent.
What is interesting is that firms that adopt open source seem to be creating
a snowball effect, with certain companies already having achieved critical mass.
Already, Red Hat for Linux, MySQL in
databases, and OpenOffice in productivity applications are clear leaders in
their categories. “There’s a network effect,” said Howells. “It’s in nobody’s
interest to have eight packages.”
Another interesting trend is in geographical patterns of open-source
adoption. Whereas in proprietary software, North America tends to be dominant in
sales, and European sales approximately follow size of economies, open source
fluctuates wildly, with Spain, for example, being an enthusiastic consumer and
the UK lagging.
As an example, in Alfresco’s poll of desktop applications suite usage,
OpenOffice is very popular in France and Germany but only half as popular in the
UK.
Also, some programs are hugely popular in some geographies and much less so in
others. In Germany, for example, Suse Linux is four times more popular than Red
Hat, but Red Hat is far larger elsewhere.
This can partly be explained by relative enthusiasm of governments and the
need to drive down costs but there may also be cultural factors at play, with
some companies keen to support local firms and challenge the dominance of the US
in enterprise software.
Also, patterns of adoption appear to be viral in open-source software, with
positive feedback quickly circulating via the web.
“It’s not a normal distribution pattern,” said Alfresco’s Howells. “Usually
when you start a software company, you create demand for it in a sector and no
one outside even knows who you are. For example, when we set up Documentum we
created demand in pharmaceuticals. But in open source you get this long-tail
effect.”
Clearly, open-source software is still at an early stage in its development
but the certainties of proprietary software may be replaced by a more complex
pattern
of adoption.
“When we started, we asked ourselves should we start on a Lamp [Linux,
Apache, MySQL, Perl/PHP/Python] stack rather than a Sun/Oracle/BEA stack,”
Howells said. “But we found out quickly that just because it’s an open-source
program, it’s not all on Lamp, and adoption varies by geography and many other
factors.”
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article