Apparently patents do matter when it comes to open source software adoption.
In a teleconference preview ahead of next week’s LinuxWorld conference, Matthew Lawton, director of IDC’s Worldwide Software Business
Strategies Group, revealed the results of a non-public survey of IT end users
about their attitudes toward software in general and open source in
particular.
“The potential for copyright and patent infringement is the No. 1 inhibitor right now for organizations in adopting more open source software
in their organization,” Lawton said in the afternoon conference call. “Close
behind that is the availability of support.”
Microsoft has alleged that open source software infringes on 235 patents. Microsoft has yet to name these patents or bring specific patent infringement
legal action against any open source vendor, though it has made deals with
Novell, Xandros, Linspire and others for patent protection.
Despite patent infringement as inhibitor, Lawton was quick to note that there are many drivers to open source.
“Those two inhibitors did not rank as high on the scale as the initial cost,
total cost of ownership and product functionality ranked as drivers,”
Lawton said.
On an overall software basis, the IDC study found that end users are most
interested in product functionality, scalability and reliability. End users
were less interested in having access to source code and the ability to
modify and redistribute source code.
“The key take away is that end users care about what software does and how
well it does it, not how it’s developed or distributed,” Lawson said.
The study found that end users are
interested in evaluating open source in part due to the perception that it’s
cheaper in terms of initial cost and total cost of ownership.
End users are also actively looking for open source alternatives to
proprietary options, which Lawton said illustrates an active interest
in open source software.
“Fifty percent of end users had an objective in their organization around the
use of open source software, and they had budget in 2007 for the use of open
source software,” Lawton said. “For me that’s a high percentage, and it
indicates that, while software criteria hasn’t changed, they are still
interested in evaluating open source software.”
Where is all this open source software headed? According to Lawton in the
near term the same place it’s traditionally gone: infrastructure
software like Linux and databases like MySQL. It’s a scenario that is likely
to stay the same for some time.
This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.
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