The Business Case for Open Source Software

Open source software is generally written by good software developers not by good marketers. It differs from proprietary software in two ways:

  • its source code is available for anyone to see and modify, but you don't need to be a programmer to use it,
  • it isn't backed by a huge marketing budget.
In NZ, Weta Digital employs clusters of powerful Linux servers to render entire worlds as in the Lord of the Rings trilogy and King Kong.

Noteworthy examples of open source include the Linux operating system, market leading Apache web server, and the increasingly popular Mozilla Firefox web browser. Open source software has been quietly taking a commanding position in businesses and organisations worldwide. This column aims to reveal the extent of this shift, and to describe some of the compelling business cases driving it.

Kiwi businesses are increasingly choosing open source solutions for their network servers. A server running Linux and an array of open source applications is a superb choice for any company, offering compelling commercial advantages:

  • low initial cost
  • lower ongoing costs
  • better security
  • reduced risk
  • unhindered growth opportunities

Low Initial Cost

Not many realise that Google's world-beating search technology is provide by huge farms (reportedly hundreds of thousands) of open source Linux servers working together to respond to the market's insatiable demand for answers.

Linux makes extremely efficient use of server hardware: a business with up to 50 workstations - Windows, Mac, or Linux - can be well served by a $1000 entry-level server. A Linux server performs all the tasks a normal office requires using only open source software - that means no software license fees or per-seat Client Access Licenses (CALs). This is of particular interest to businesses with lots of users.

Lower Ongoing Costs

Because of its design and superior code quality, Linux servers are robust and secure, translating to lower maintenance costs. We routinely see up-times of hundreds of days - reboots are almost never required. System upgrades and almost all administrative tasks can be performed remotely. Customers frequently remark at how trouble free their Linux systems are - they "just work".

Adding capabilities to your server is easy - your support providers simply download and install additional open source software: VPNs, SQL databases, anti-spam and virus filters, web servers. Adding workstations to your network doesn't require more CALs, nor systems to manage and allocate them, keeping costs down.

Better Security

Open source systems like Linux are more secure and lower risk by design. Linux uses the same security model as multi-user mainframe UNIX systems, refined and tested on networks for over 30 years. The fact that none of the hundreds of thousands of viruses currently roaming the Internet affect Linux should be proof enough of this. Linux systems also benefit from "prudent defaults" - they are born with their "hatches battened down". Only required services are opened to the world, eliminating unnecessary vulnerabilities without compromising functionality or usability.

Under the bonnet, the Internet is nearly 100% open source: the TCP/IP networking stack that allows tiny chunks of data to zing unerringly to their destinations across the planet; the DNS system that converts website names into server identification numbers (e.g. http://google.com into 64.233.167.99), implementations of email protocols: SMTP, POP and IMAP; implementations of the HTTP protocol for requesting web pages and content languages like HTML, Javascript, and XML which, put together, bring us the World Wide Web - all open source.

Modular design with minimal interdependencies make Linux systems easy to secure and safe to patch in the event that security vulnerabilities are identified. Open source developers tend to be very responsive to security problems as they have no commercial interests to protect or PR spin to apply. The Ubuntu Linux distribution we deploy guarantees 5 years security update support - free of charge!

Reduced Risk

Linux offers many ways to protect your data against hardware failure and accidental deletion - software RAID, journalling filesystems, automated backups and version control are enabled on most of our deployments.

The licenses under which Linux and other open source software are released pose far less risk to businesses than proprietary software licenses. With open source, there's no risk of the BSA knocking on your door, requesting that you perform a license audit... at your cost!

Unhindered Growth Opportunities

As your business grows so do your IT requirements. Our customers are finding that servers originally intended to support 10 workstations now happily support 40. Most still aren't breaking a sweat. On the server side, this growth costs nothing except perhaps bigger hard disks.

The Internet is simply a number of technology standards, most invented by researchers at public organisations like universities and government agencies.
Most of the software applications implementing these standards were developed by their originators in collaboration with peers elsewhere in the world.
To spread the uptake of the technologies - that they would be used by other researchers as the building-blocks of still richer forms of communication - most were open source from the start.

Our customers constantly strive to improve their internal practices. Inevitably, that involves integrating disparate IT systems on a data level. Open source software bend over backwards to "play nicely" with proprietary systems as well as other open source applications by employing open standards where ever possible.

Conclusion

If you have an IT infrastructure, you can benefit from integrating open source into the mix. Many find the open source philosophy appealing, but it's the dispassionate scrutiny of serious business people that is driving its quiet ascendency. In future columns, I will describe other scenarios where businesses have found open source software to be the best solution.

This article, written by Dave Lane, appeared in the February 2007 issue of The Channel Magazine. Reprinted here with permission. Article reprint available for download below.

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