Resilient Technology

What’s In It for Me? Benefits from Open Sourcing Code

By admin • March 6, 2010 • Filed in: Open Source


Open Source Developers @ Google Speaker Series: Ben Collins-Sussman and Brian Fitzpatrick What’s In It for Me? How Your Company Can Benefit from Open Sourcing Code As the open source community continues to clamor for more companies to open source their code, more and more executives are asking themselves just what open source can do for their company. There are a number of ways for a company to open source an internal project: from tossing code over the wall on the one hand to running a fully open development project on the other to any combination of the two. This talk will discuss the costs and benefits associated with each method as well as how to successfully launch your new open source project.

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Comments

By logicalnetworkingnet on March 6th, 2010 at 8:38 am

Awesome talk. As a small business looking to become more involved in the OSS dev community, this video was very valuable. Thanks!

By aifammafiaaifam on March 6th, 2010 at 8:44 am

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By muzzleray on March 6th, 2010 at 9:38 am

You are not your code.

My other computer? Funny title on the (?) notebook (?)

By zohar5150 on March 6th, 2010 at 9:39 am

X-BOX BILL GATES YAY X-BOX!!!!!!!

By dubonbacon on March 6th, 2010 at 10:02 am

Microsoft bases their whole business on secrets such as the Win32 API and closed file formats. The company will die before opening the code.

Linux is an example of software which “distrupts” a market, like they say in the beginning of the talk.

Opening the code is for companies which are not in the business of selling their software. For example, IBM wants to sell servers and offer consulting, so they want the software to become a commodity. They like Linux for that reason.

I’m not good at english so. Please help me where i can find the text of the conversation?

By dsjfh09kjmsd3kjh on March 6th, 2010 at 11:13 am

heh, just keep in mind that when they are saying “typically …”, they are referring to their own experience. both guys come from SVN project, which is very heavily developer-oriented. so their userbase is quite unique and UNtypical.

as a result, their presentation is based on one rather big assumption. that there’s a pool of high-quality developers just sitting and waiting to jump in and start enhancing whatever is getting open-sourced. this is hardly a reality.

More people should watch this video especially Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh developers!
Since most of the viewers of this video are probably already convinced that open source is great.

An excellent video and very interesting.

 

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