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Q&A: Bob Young speaks out on open source movement

Q&A: Bob Young speaks out on open source movement By:  Rebecca Reid On: 28 Apr 2004 For: IT World Canada Creator

Bob Young is no stranger to open source. In fact, he has one of the most recognizable names in the industry, alongside movement gurus such as Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman and Jon "maddog" Hall. After all, Young co-founded Red Hat Inc., arguably the most successful Linux vendor in the world.



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Bob Young is no stranger to open source. In fact, he has one of the most recognizable names in the industry, alongside movement gurus such as Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman and Jon "maddog" Hall. After all, Young co-founded Red Hat Inc., arguably the most successful Linux vendor in the world. While Young still sits on Red Hat's board of directors, he is also CEO of a digital content creation company, Lulu.com, which is to authors what Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes is to musicians.

This week, Young, a Hamilton-Ont. native, spoke with IT World Canada about his opinions of open source software, where it is heading and how the IT industry will change as a result. Young also plans to discuss similar topics at the University of Toronto's Open Source Conference, which runs from May 9 to 11.

IT World Canada (ITWC): What is the most interesting development in open source you've seen in the last couple of years?

Young: What you're seeing now is all the leading IT corporations around the world using open source, not just doing trials, but doing serious implementations of open source technologies across their institutions. In the corporate world, the financial services companies in New York City are classic early adopters. They need to deploy the latest technology to steal a five-second advantage over their competitors because five seconds can be the difference between several million dollars on any given trade. Additionally, these are the companies that are paying outfits like IBM Corp. and Red Hat Inc. hundreds of millions of dollars for support services and hardware contracts for deploying Linux, Apache, Postgres and MySQL technologies.

ITWC: Why are we seeing an uptake of open source in financial services firms? What can they get from open source that they can’t get from a proprietary product?

Young: The traditional model is that they save money, which is true, and they get better performance, which is also true. But I argue, if you ask leading corporations who are adopting open source the top 10 reasons why, it would change from firm to firm. The only consistent item in that top 10 list would amount to control over the technology.

For the first time open source gives you not just the binaries you want on your computer but gives you the source code that allows you to make changes to the software technology you’re using. This changes the relationship between the customer and the vendor, and suddenly the customer is in control of the customer-vendor relationship, because [for example], if Red Hat doesn't look after a user's systems well enough, the user can go to IBM [Corp.]. Under the binary-only model, if a proprietary software vendor doesn’t look after you but you’ve spent $10 million dollars with them implementing systems, you have no choice. All you can do is whine at them and say "pretty please," and offer them more money.


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Tags: Red Hat, Windows,
Rebecca Reid Rebecca Reid 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.

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