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SAP has changed its mind about open source: exec

SAP has changed its mind about open source: exec

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 29 Jul 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An SAP exec, who considers himself a “change agent,” says the German company now believes development efficiency and product interoperability will be the fruits of using open source. One analyst thinks this is good for SAP’s inflexible image

“I wouldn’t have put SAP and open source together,” said Hearn. “They’re listening. That’s the bottom line.”

Hearn said SAP’s move to make its use of open source code more systematic is an acknowledgement of how “frightening” it can be. “So SAP has obviously been listening to that and they’re putting together a means for those people to be able to do it a little bit easier, to integrate the open source tools,” said Hearn.

Yet SAP’s association with open source is a little unexpected given the sheer size of SAP’s business, said Hearn. “My take on that is you get what you pay for. SAP is not exactly what I would consider inexpensive,” said Hearn. “It’s like an oxymoron.”

Hearn thinks SAP’s use of the Black Duck Suite is probably a bigger deal for Black Duck than it is for SAP. “It’s a huge feather in their cap,” he said.

As for the battle that SAP has been facing regarding changing its monolithic image, Hearn thinks taking a more systematic approach to open source in development will help soften that rigid appearance.

“It would definitely make them look a little bit more flexible, a little bit more open in terms of what they will allow in,” said Hearn.

He added it’s a move that sets them apart from other large enterprises, especially in light of vendors like Apple Inc., which recently caused a stir when it turned its nose up at Flash, saying it would focus its support on alternative standards like HTML5 instead.

Claus considers himself very much a “change agent” in transforming how SAP develops interoperable software and how it innovates with other industry players.

But SAP isn’t just reusing commodity components. The company is “increasingly playing an active role” by giving back to the open source community, said von Riegen. In 2009, SAP was the third-largest contributor to the Eclipse Foundation with almost two million lines of code.

Follow Kathleen Lau on Twitter: @KathleenLau










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more
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