Technology news and Jobs arrow Our Blogs arrow Open Sauce arrow LCA2009: The third wave of open source
LCA2009: The third wave of open source E-mail
by Sam Varghese   
Friday, 23 January 2009
Open source has reached the third wave of its evolution and those who have been using the older models which were procurement-driven need to adapt.

That's the message which Simon Phipps, the chief open source and standards officer from Sun Microsystems, brought to the Australian national Linux conference this morning.

Phipps was the third and final keynote speaker; much like the American singer Vanessa Williams sang, "they went and saved the best for last."

Phipps' talk was the real thing, a keynote by a speaker who knew his onions, one who could engage the audience, and also inject a much-needed bit of humour into his talk, both through the clever uses of some Dilbert cartoons and his own witticisms.

His message, nevertheless, was dead serious. Phipps, who is something of a futurist when it comes to technology, traced the first wave of open source back to the days even before the Free Software Foundation was set up, the time when IBM was in the position that Microsoft is now.

At that time, Big Blue was being investigated for its business practices and decided to unbundle its software from hardware.

Another force that drove open source onwards, Phipps said, was Bill Joy, one of the four people who founded Sun. (The others were Scott McNealy, Andy Bechtolsheim and Vinod Khosla). Joy set up the BSD licence which freed software from some of its shackles.

CONTINUED


 
< Next story in category   Previous story in the category >
iTWire user statistics Visitors last 30 days
694,279
Subscribers 15,210
#1 independent technology news advertise here
  •   *  
  • Search
  • AdvSeach
  • Login
  • Events
  • FreeStuff

- Advertisement -

Featured Whitepapers

Open Sauce - A GNU perspective Subscribe to the RSS
Open Sauce focuses on the wonderful, wacky world of free and open source software where people write great applications and actually allow others to use them without payment.
Follow iTWire on Twitter

About iTWire

iTWire is all about technology news, information, jobs and community for the IT and telecommunications industry professional. Subscribe to our free ICT daily newsletter