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/v3-uk/news/1990456/open-source-marching-management-space
01 Aug 2007, Tom Sanders in California , V3
The system management market will be the next market for open source to attack, analyst firm 451 Group predicts in a new study.
In the past venture capital investors have poured significant funds into open source startups. It will be a long time before they will form a threat to CA's Unicenter, HP's Openview, IBM's Tivoli and BMC. But Raven Zachary, research director for the group's open source practice, told vnunet.com that "the long term does look troubling".
Adoption of open source management software from vendors such as Alterpoint, Hyperic or Zenoss will initially be limited to a few non-mission critical systems, he projected. But following a path similar to that of the Jboss application server, they will grow their installations and threaten the large vendors within three to four years.
Incumbent vendors, meanwhile, are likely to respond by releasing parts of their technology under an open source licence, which would essentially amount to a price drop. BMC recently hired a chief open source officer, IBM is already moving parts of Tivoli to the Eclipse open source project and CA has successfully open sourced and spun off its Ingres database.
Alternatively, they could launch a free, limited functionality version of their software to fend off the threat of an open source alternative. Oracle, IBM and Microsoft all responded this way when open source databases became mainstream.
The open source vendors for now focus on selling a premium, proprietary version of their software. Hyperic is following this business model, and the Zimbra email software and Sugar CRM enterprise software have had some success with it. But Zachary pointed out that customers consistently indicate that they prefer a Red Hat-like subscription model bundled with support over a paid premium product.
Do you agree?
Not!
"IBM is already moving parts of Tivoli to the Eclipse open source project"
If you mean packaging BIRT as a reporting offering that is a long way from moving parts of Tivoli ...
John Willis
Posted by john willis, 01 Aug 2007
The "Us Vs. Them" mentality is not good for the customer/user
There is a bigger issue here. The "us vs. them" mentality (Big 4 Vs. Little 4) being stirred up in response to "Managing In The Open" is leading us in the opposite direction from where we need to go.
I love open source systems management (heck, i helped start the movement). However, only by working together will the system management tools improve for the one person that matters in this picture; the customer.
I?ve posted a longer reply here: http://talk.bmc.com/blogs/blog-whurley/whurley/re-managing-in-the-open
Best,
whurley
Posted by whurley, 03 Aug 2007