Breaking News - Operating Systems & Middleware:
Open Source Influence Growing On Enterprise Software
CollabNet, a provider of on demand distributed software development solutions,
announced it is seeing a rise in the influence of corporate-initiated open
source collaborative development projects which are being used to further the
evolution of proprietary hardware and software applications. Much of the
increased momentum stems from the wide success many open source communities
have had including Sun Microsystems' sponsored OpenOffice.org, NetBeans.org,
and Grid Engine projects, and the realization of the many benefits open source
development provides.
In contrast to a traditional closed model which limits development to a
defined group of programmers, open source development allows thousands of
programmers from different companies in various industries to read, modify,
and improve software source code. The benefits of open source to organizations
are far reaching as the collaborative effort reduces both the time and cost
associated with developing software, and improves the overall quality of
applications by relying on a greater number of experts to fix problems and
enhance functionality.
"By drawing on an expanded network of developers, open source development has
yielded the creation of some of the IT industry's most important products in
major categories including operating systems, Web servers and browsers,
databases and application servers," said Brian Behlendorf, founder and CTO at
CollabNet and a founder of the Apache Software Foundation. "We are now seeing
the application of open source techniques and approaches being used in
corporate environments to help build both internal IT applications and
commercial applications and becoming a part of the mainstream business
environment."
CollabNet currently hosts open source community development projects for a
number of the world's largest companies including investment bank Dresdner
Kleinwort Wasserstein, Intel, BEA Systems, Sybase and Sun Microsystems.
"At first glance, a financial services firm running an open source project may
seem like an oxymoron. However, working with CollabNet we have been able to
increase the number of developers on a key piece of integration technology and
establish it as a standard in the financial services industry," stated JP
Rangaswami, CIO of Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. "CollabNet provides the
ideal development environment for both open source communities and distributed
entities because it is designed for the wide-area network, delivered on demand
as a managed service, and is methodology neutral allowing organizations to
employ the development methodologies best suited for them."
The development model derived from open source projects has also been taking
off inside organizations as businesses are looking for ways to maximize their
development efforts in distributed and globally dispersed/offshore
environments.
"Agile development methodologies have rapidly grown in popularity over the
past several years and share many common foundational concepts with open
source development including cross-team code visibility, peer review, and
continuous integration and testing throughout the application lifecycle.
Enterprises can use these techniques within a wide range of environments
including offshore and onshore distributed locations, corporate-initiated
community projects, private cooperatives, and closed internal communities,"
said Bill Portelli, president and CEO of CollabNet. "So, even enterprises that
may not be interested in open sourcing their code to outside developers can
take advantage of the techniques and benefits of open source methodologies to
reduce the total cost of developing applications."
Some of the companies and government agencies using open source techniques and
approaches inside their organizations include Motorola, Barclays Global
Investors, HP, Samsung, and the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA).
Also, the Avalanche Technology Cooperative, comprised of industry leaders
Jostens, Best Buy, Imation, Nuvolution, Cargill Corp, Thompson Legal &
Regulatory, and Medtronic Inc, is utilizing open source principals and the
CollabNet environment to share intellectual property across its member
organizations.
The CollabNet development environment is helping companies gain business
advantage by giving them real-time insight into the overall application
development lifecycle and delivering process predictability that allows teams
to mitigate business risks. It also reduces application development time
through a structured framework within which the sharing and reuse of
applications become manageable.
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