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Alan Shimel

Open Source and The Cloud: Like Peanut Butter and Jelly

Open source is not competitive to the cloud

By Alan Shimel on Thu, 11/11/10 - 12:51pm.

I am not sure why some people think this, but yesterday I read two articles that clearly seem to pit open source versus cloud solutions and open source versus managed services. In my mind nothing can be further than the truth. In fact open source is the great enabler of both of these technologies. Much of the underpinnings of the cloud are in fact open source based. From Linux to the original open source Xen to OpenCloud, the software infrastructure in the cloud is by and large open (except for perhaps Microsoft Azure of course).  In fact one could say without open source, what kind of cloud would you have?

When you look at what applications are being run in the cloud, once again you find open source. Whether it be CRM like SugarCRM, or Drupal or MindTouch or a host (no pun intended) of others. The apps people are running in the cloud are by and large open source.  The database they are using is usually open too. Even some of the "glue" of these massive cloud based sytems rely on open source like Hadoop and Cassandra.  So why would people think the cloud is a threat or competitive with open source?

In my friend and editor Julie Bort's article, Jason's Deli has chosen Google Apps over an open source email solution. Forgetting for a second how much of the Google gmail and apps are built on open source, was that really an open source versus cloud decision? I don't think so. It was a cloud versus non-cloud decision.  The benefits of the cloud versus an on premises solution are about the same whether it is open sourced or not.  

What would be interesting if Jason's Deli had chosen Google Apps over a hosted open source email solution. But even if they had, all that means is that someone needs to make a better hosted, open source solution. That is the real power of the cloud to open source. It makes for an instant commercial open source strategy. Take an open source solution that is competitively equivalent in the market and sell it as a hosted, SaaS solution or managed solution.  

That is the great promise of what the cloud can bring to open source.  No longer will you need to download and tinker with open source software (OK, some of you will because you like to). Much like Standing Cloud offers, you will be able to just log on and fire up an open source solution in a matter of seconds. There will be some cloud based open source offerings that will just host your app for you in a IaaS model, there will be others that use SaaS or PaaS and all of the configurations and such are done.  In that kind of vision open source and cloud go together like peanut butter and jelly!

The same is true in a managed services world.  Managed services are moving more and more to a cloud based model. Again so much of the infrastructure is open source based. So many of the tools used to manage are also open source based. So when I see an article asking "Does Open Source Fit Into A Managed Services Strategy", I have to ask myself, how can you do it without it?

So please lets not start thinking of open source solutions somehow in competition with cloud solutions. If you do, you may just find out that your enemy is you.

 

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About Open Source Fact and Fiction

As co-founder and Managing Partner at The CISO Group, Alan Shimel is responsible for driving the vision and mission of the company. The CISO Group offers security consulting and PCI compliance management for the payment card industry. Prior to The CISO Group, Alan was the Chief Strategy Officer at StillSecure. Shimel was the public persona of StillSecure as it grew from start up to helping defend some of the largest and most sensitive networks in the world.

Shimel is an often-cited personality in the technology community and is a sought-after speaker at industry and government conferences and events. His commentary about the state of security, open source and life is followed closely by many industry insiders via his blog and podcast, "Ashimmy, After All These Years" (www.ashimmy.com). Alan is now also a regular contributor to The CISO Group’s security.exe blog and podcast.

Alan has helped build several successful technology companies by combining a strong business background with a deep knowledge of technology. His legal background, long experience in the field, and New York street smarts combine to form a unique personality.

Disclosure: The CISO Group sells a software-as-a-service PCI compliance application called SAQPro. The company is independent and does not represent any other vendor's products as a reseller.

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