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November 17, 2008
Open source in every business within 12 months says Gartner
Major benefits bring management challenges warns analyst group
By ComputerWorldUK reporter
Open-source software is almost universal in the enterprise a survey from analyst group Garner has confirmed.
New research has highlighted quite how pervasive open source software (OSS) has become, with 85 per cent of companies currently using OSS and the remaining 15 per cent expecting to in the next 12 months.
The findings come from a Gartner survey in May and June 2008, which covered 274 end-user organisations in Asia/Pacific, Europe and North America, and raise a series of management issues for businesses.
Open Enterprise
Now read Glyn Moody on Gartner's FUD
The analyst group found that 69 per cent of companies surveyed lacked a formal policy for evaluating and cataloguing OSS usage. This could open up “huge potential liabilities for intellectual-property violations,” it warned.
"Just because something is free doesn't mean that it has no cost," said Laurie Wurster, research director at Gartner.
"Companies must have a policy for procuring OSS, deciding which applications will be supported by OSS, and identifying the intellectual property risk or supportability risk associated with using OSS. Once a policy is in place, then there must be a governance process to enforce it."
OSS is being deployed almost equally in mission-critical and non-mission-critical environments for new projects, said Gartner.
The top three reasons for using OSS were total cost of ownership, cheaper development the fact that it is easier to embark on new IT projects or software initiatives using an open source base.
“Some respondents indicated that they also use OSS as investment protection against a single vendor ‘owning’ the entire IT department,” Gartner noted.
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Comments received
pcolon said on Monday, 17 November 2008
“Analysts sell out - that’s their business model… But they are very concerned that they never look like they are selling out, so that makes them very prickly to work with.”
–Microsoft, internal document http://antitrust.slated.org/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/3000/PX03096.pdf
Tommy James said on Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Come on. Gartner may spread a little FUD but they are also telling it like it is. Open source is everywhere, with good reason.
They are great documents on that link. They show you what all vendors would do if they could, but they are not really ammunition against analysts.