Credit crunch prompts open source adoption

Â…but still not replacing Microsoft

By Matthew Broersma, 29 July 2008 08:22

NEWS

The sluggish economy is contributing to commercial open-source sales, but customers still rank interoperability with proprietary software and vendor viability among their top concerns, according to a survey from the Open Solutions Alliance.

Most of the companies surveyed, including independent software vendors and system integrators that vary in size and business model, showed a clear increase in sales and services related to open source, with 83 per cent of respondents on track for a year-on-year revenue increase this year, the Open Solutions Alliance (OSA) said.

Latest photo stories from silicon.com

Photos: Waging war on the web's bad guys

Photos: How to destroy your hard drive

Photos: It's virtual everything in Cisco's future

Photos: Inside a supercomputer lab

Photos: A peek at the future of telemedicine

Photos: 60 years of NHS tech

Photos: Wi-fi in the great outdoors

Photos: Shopping just got high-tech

Photos: Top tech for the festival season

Photos: Top 5 Bill Gates moments

Photos: Bill Gates through the ages

The result is significant in an economy in which many companies are tightening their belts, the OSA noted.

Respondents were less clear about the reasons for the growth, with 44 per cent saying they 'somewhat' agreed that the recessionary economy is driving open-source sales, and another 29 per cent saying it 'definitely' is.

Companies were, however, less ambiguous about the main factors behind open-source adoption. Price was the top factor, according to 79 per cent of the respondents, followed by reduced lock-in or access to source code at 60 per cent, and customisability at 52 per cent.

The survey suggests open source is growing despite continuing customer concerns over whether the products will work with existing infrastructure and whether the open-source vendors themselves will continue to be viable.

The OSA found 79 per cent of participants said their customers were concerned about interoperability between open-source and proprietary systems, with another 56 per cent worried about interoperability between different open-source systems.

Both licensing questions and vendor viability were cited by 48 per cent of participants as significant concerns that may be keeping potential customers from making a commitment. Other worries cited were support at 44 per cent, security at 41 per cent, and interoperability with Microsoft products at 41 per cent.

Microsoft was a recurring theme in the survey, which painted a picture of IT systems dependent on Microsoft and other proprietary vendors. The large majority of participants - 84.5 per cent said their products ran on Windows or interoperate with Microsoft products, with only nine per cent reporting Microsoft-free environments. Half of respondents had an active partnership with Microsoft.

Other recent research has also indicated that open source is filling in gaps alongside proprietary software rather than replacing it, even when strong incentives for open-source adoption are in place.

For instance, a Forrester Research survey earlier this month found the market for open-source databases to be booming due to new workloads, such as RFID projects, rich web applications and small portals, despite the unwillingness of enterprises to replace their Oracle, DB2 or SQL Server systems with open source.

As in Forrester's research, the OSA found new patterns in IT were a major source of expansion for the open-source economy.

A majority of 72 per cent of companies surveyed by the OSA said software as a service was an important part of their business strategy. Just over half said web 2.0 was providing new opportunities for them, although a third said they were not sure what impact web 2.0 was having on their business.

The OSA conducted an online survey of 45 senior managers and executives in a geographically dispersed area, including both OSA members and non-members. The survey was published last week as part of the O'Reilly Open Source Convention in Portland, Oregon.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ