The open source software phenomenon has spread far beyond Linux and is
gaining "enormous momentum", according to a report from
IDC.
A new study from the analyst firm claimed that developers worldwide are
rapidly increasing their use of open source software.
Analysis of surveys from over 5,000 developers in 116 countries found that
open source software represents the "most significant all-encompassing and
long-term trend that the software industry has seen since the early 1980s".
IDC believes that open source will eventually play a role in the life-cycle
of every major software category, and will fundamentally change the value
proposition of packaged software for customers.
"The use of open source beyond Linux is pervasive, involving almost
three-quarters of organisations and spanning hundreds of thousands of projects,
" said Dr Anthony Picardi, senior vice president of global software research at
IDC.
"Although open source will significantly reduce the industry opportunity over
the next 10 years, the real impact is to sustain innovations in mature software
markets thus extending the useful life of software assets and saving customers
money."
The study noted that, of the 5,000 survey respondents, open source software
is being used by 71 per cent of the world's developers and is in production at
54 per cent of their organisations.
IDC contends that, despite the proliferation of open source licences, only
three business models are important from an industry and an individual vendor
success point of view: the software revenue model, the public collective model,
and the service broker model.
Competitive success among vendors' open source markets will be determined by
a different set of core competencies than those required to invent and market a
new product, the analyst firm believes.
"As business requirements shift from acquiring new customers to sustaining
existing ones, the competitive landscape will move towards costs savings and
serving up sustaining innovations to savvy customers," said Picardi.
"It will also provide mainstream software to new market segments that are
willing to pay only a fraction of conventional software licence fees. Open
source software is ultimately a resource for sustaining innovators."
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