How open source will transform the coming decade

By Dana Blankenhorn | Oct 22, 2009 |

I still don’t know what to call this decade, yet it’s nearly over.

The 1900s were called the “aughts.” This one is called the 2000s, which is silly because it will still be the 2000s when our descendants are partying like it’s 2099.

Decade name fail.

Still, the calendar does not lie. The teens are nearly here. And what most IT managers want from the next decade is a big cut in the project failure rate, and a redefinition of what constitutes failure.

My C|Net colleague Matt Asay (above) was shocked, shocked to learn recently that half of all projects are considered successes if the software just works. Forget about doing something useful, or transforming business operations, or (god forbid) making money for you.

My wife is now finishing up such a project. It’s been going on for ages. I probably know more than I’m supposed to about it, but all I really know is it’s really, really hard and really, really complicated. Reminds me of the IBM 360 disaster. That’s what taught project lead Fred Brooks about The Mythical Man Month, the idea that the more people you throw at a project the slower it goes.

Her company staged a big celebration a few weeks ago when the software first ran, which she found silly because full implementation is still months away, and there are miles to go before she sleeps. But I can understand the enthusiasm. Past studies have shown enormous rates of IT project failure, ranging (depending on how you measure it) from one-thirds to nearly two-thirds of all projects.

Failure can be spectacular. ZDNet’s Michael Krigsman wrote last year that the largest maker of fire engines in the world went bankrupt over an IT failure. The city of Atlanta, where I live, is going through an election right now where one of the big issues is the failure of the city’s computers to deliver a spreadsheet the council can use to analyze its own budget.

Big vendors use the risk of failure to justify their big buck contracts, but the failures noted in the paragraph above were both blamed on big vendors. One source of reaction against health reform might well be fear of IT failure. It happens to hospitals and it’s painful.

At his blog System Architectures for Complex Enterprises, Roger Sessions writes that 2.75% of our GDP is in the form of IT, and that failed IT projects cost the global economy over $6 trillion last year.

Wow.

Asay says there’s a solution to all this. Open source. Which companies top the annual satisfaction survey of CIO Magazine? Red Hat and Google, the largest supplier and user of open source software, respectively.

Open source has spent this entire decade replicating what closed source can do, but it is now poised to go beyond it. What makes it valuable is not low cost. It’s visibility. The fact that you, and your vendor, and even competitors, can help fix problems and develop capabilities means open source wins in usability.

With open source you can literally try before you buy. You can know the stuff works, that the first success hurdle is cleared, before you write a check to anyone.

What open source does in the enterprise is not so much lower costs as transfer them, from the front of the project to the back and beyond. It’s adaptation, training, and support that really make the difference between a project that barely succeeds and one that really transforms.

The teens, or 2010s, whatever we decide to call them, will be the decade of open source.

 
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    Chuck1411

    10/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How open source will transform the coming decade

    How does open source solve project costs? I was just at the OSI site, and there they say to open source, gives people the right to redistribute the software, therefore implying that the software is free and therefore no revenue generated for the project team. We all have to be paid, how does open source solve this?

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    fdomke

    10/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How open source will transform the coming decade

    I agree that "many eyes" and "many hands" are important. But I think the most compelling thing about open source is the buying model. And 'free' sounds good - but often commercial support is needed.
    With proprietary software, an enterprise must make a live-or-die decision before they do anything with the product. That's just madness. There may be a POC, but that provides little comfort.
    With open source, and enterprise proves the value of a product first - and then decides whether commercial support is necessary and appropriate.

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    vbnomad@...

    10/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How open source will transform the coming decade

    I fail to see how sharing source code will fix what causes most project to fail: very bad management. Outrageously unrealistic time lines, budgets or expectations can not be solved by open source.

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John Dodge

John Dodge has answered the call of journalism for 33 years, most of the time covering technology, engineering and business. While he's run magazines, newsweeklies and web sites, reporting and writing always took up half his time. He has have plied his craft at the WSJ, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, the Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He would have like to have been around when Boston supported seven or more newspapers (1940s) and while steam locomotives still pulled trains, but that era was nearly over by the time he raced into the world. That said, he has been blogging and shooting and editing video, writing for web and other online contents tasks for years now.

He has won numerous journalism awards in the past two years, including two Eddie Golds, one Neal finalist and the IEEE Award for Distinguished Journalism all for his reporting and coverage of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

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John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.
The Thinking Tech blog focuses on technologies such as virtualization, smart electric grids, enterprise 2.0, open source, data center management, green technology and the intersection between the innovation and application of these advancements.