Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

IBM exec on Linux apps: 'I'm tired of waiting'

By Stephen Lawson , IDG News Service , 08/07/2008
Newsletter Signup
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Open-source software may not make major inroads into industry-specific enterprise applications, according to an IBM open-source guru.

The next 10 years will be "do or die" for this type of application, said Bob Sutor, vice president of open source and standards at IBM, in a LinuxWorld keynote address Wednesday. That was one of a series of 10-year predictions he made to mark the tenth anniversary of IBM embracing Linux.

So far, he said, there is little open-source software written for use in specific industries.

"I'm getting tired of waiting," Sutor said. "Either it's going to happen or it's not going to happen."

Many enterprises use general-purpose applications such as Mozilla Firefox, but few have industry-specific Linux applications, Sutor said. The public sector, especially education, offers glimmers of hope with software such as the Sakai collaboration and learning environment, he noted. For other industries, open source may take a long time to gain traction or may never gain it, Sutor said.

"You may believe that there will come a day where all software is free software, or open-source software ... [but] it's not tomorrow, and it's probably not next year, and it's probably not 10 years from now," he said.

One thing that has kept some enterprises from embracing open-source software is the proliferation of different licenses, Sutor said.

"When customers say 'I'm ready to use open source,' [they] don't want to see the license du jour," Sutor said. They won't tolerate a lot of ongoing change in the legal aspects of using a piece of software, he said.

Fortunately, out of approximately 60 open-source licenses approved by the OSI (Open Source Initiative), a handful of licenses are used for roughly 90 percent of open-source projects, Sutor said. Among them are Apache, Eclipse, Mozilla and versions of the GPL (General Public License) and Lesser GPL. Over the next 10 years, these will be refined and there will be less pressure to craft different types of licenses, he believes.

Meanwhile, Linux will be used in a wide variety of devices and various Internet-based services, such as cloud computing and SaaS (software as a service) and judged less as an operating system on desktops or even the x86 hardware platform, Sutor predicted.

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print
Partner Content

Explore the Ultrium Edge

The powerful tape technology can address data security with tape encryption as well as long term data protection.

Find Out More

Disk and Tape Square Off

Discover what disk and tape really cost and which solution provides lower total cost of ownership and optimizes energy use for your organization

Download this White Paper

Don't Fall for the Myths

The Clipper Group explores the truth behind the myths of tape, digging into the misconceptions in the disk vs. tape debate.

Review this information

information examination

An examination of information security issues, methods and securing data with LTO-4 tape drive encryption

Read this analysis

Comment
Login
Forgot your account info?
Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed