SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Open Source and Linux

Open source apps stack risk user lock-in, experts contend

Open source apps stack risk user lock-in, experts contend

By:  Eric Lai  On: 07 Dec 2006 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Vendors are scrambling to offer open source application stacks as an alternative to integrated sets of proprietary applications that have long locked users into the technology of a single supplier.

Vendors are scrambling to offer open source application stacks as an alternative to integrated sets of proprietary applications that have long locked users into the technology of a single supplier.

Some vendors and analysts, however, are quick to criticize the emerging stacks, arguing they could lock in users the same way integrated stacks of one vendor’s applications have in the past. “Stacks are rigid and deterministic,” said Winston Damarillo, CEO of Simula Labs Inc., an open source software provider in Marina del Rey, Calif.

Simula Labs last month announced its Community-oriented Real-Time Network (Core), which the company described as a flexible framework for building, running and managing open-source software. Simula Labs also announced that open source software providers Covalent Technologies Inc., LogicBlaze Inc., Megere Inc., WebTide and Chariot Solutions have agreed to support Core.

The Core offering allows users to customize open source stacks, offering more flexibility than the pre-certified stacks, Damarillo said.

Davis Tharayil, CIO at Home Insurance Co. in New York, is in the process of testing another alternative to a pre-certified open source application stack: a custom server appliance from Raleigh, N.C.-based rPath Inc. that’s designed to integrate Ingres Corp.’s open source database with a stripped-down version of Linux.

Home Insurance was looking for a lower-cost alternative to Oracle databases running on Solaris-based servers.

Tharayil said that the insurer did not consider emerging pre-certified open source application stacks in its search for a plug-and-play product. “A full stack just wasn’t necessary,” Tharayil said. “I’ve been in the business for 35 years. Every time something new comes along, they say it’s a silver bullet. I still haven’t found one.”

Dennis Callaghan, an analyst at The 451 Group in New York, said the rPath model is impressive, though he noted that the company has “a pretty small niche and customer base at this point.”

James Governor, an analyst at RedMonk, a Denver-based consulting firm, said the tidiness of open-source stacks will likely continue to appeal to some customers despite their rigidity. He suggested that the true standards-based component modularity promised by service-oriented architectures will likely make the current stacks less relevant.

Application stacks have a long history among mostly large vendors of proprietary software, such as Microsoft Corp., IBM and Oracle Corp. Such vendors contend that their integrated software products can boost interoperability and cut costs, though suppliers of best-of-breed software often note that such products also lead to vendor lock-in.

To date, the task of integrating open source software is mostly the responsibility of corporate users or their highly paid consultants. Such projects could easily wipe out the savings from using free software.

QuickLink061647


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 799   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Eric Lai Eric Lai is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Consultant and Enterprise Insights blogger
Consultant and Enterprise Insights bloggerSurveys show users are attracted to the lower cost of open source, but interoperability is a major factor. Bob Young weighs in
No more middleware consolidation: Iona CEO
No more middleware consolidation: Iona CEOAn open source middleware group says large firms that have recently acquired middleware developers are capable of innovation, but they will be more preoccupied with integrating their companies and consolidating customer bases. Find out how independent companies are reacting to Oracle’s takeover of BEA Systems
IT Infusion Inc.
IT Infusion Inc.A site best known for hosting projects is now opening up a repository of service listings for consultants and vendors that specialize in non-proprietary applications. Can it beat traditional referrals?
VIDEO: iPhone vs. HTC Touch Diamond
we chatted with microsoft canada recently to get the skinny on how the htc touch diamond and its windows mobile os stacks up against the almighty iphone. see for yourself!
blog comments powered by Disqus