Open source will fail to deliver innovation and is more likely to break
applications, according to
Shai
Agassi, president of the product and technology group at
SAP.
"We all talk about how great Linux is," he said at a speaking engagement at
the Churchill Club
in Silicon Valley.
"But if you look at the most innovative desktop today, Microsoft's
Vista is not copying Linux, it is copying
Apple."
Agassi likened open source to the early days of enterprise applications, when
organisations went into the software and created many customisations and
changes.
When an upgrade was released, those changes would prevent users from
switching to the new version because it would break the software. "Open source
is great for debugging, but it's crucial not to touch [the code]," said Agassi.
SAP is a supporter of open standards and of building innovation on top of a
platform, but wants to limit the openness to added services.
The core SAP application will remain closed, but allow outside developers to
interact with it through open standards. If SAP's software did go open source,
Agassi claimed that the company would no longer have an incentive to innovate.
"Intellectual property [IP] socialism is the worst that can happen to any
IP-based society," he said. "And we are an IP-based society. If there is no way
to protect IP, there is no reason to invest in IP."
Many investors are betting that open source enterprise applications are the
'next big thing'. They are investing in start-up companies developing commercial
open source enterprise applications such as
SugarCRM and
CentraView.
Agassi also lashed out at
Oracle, its main competitor
in the market for enterprise applications, which has acquired
PeopleSoft,
Retek and
Siebel Systems in the past year.
"There are pirates in the market," Agassi said in a reference to Oracle. "
There is a big pirate ship that goes around. But we are sailing faster."
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