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    10 reasons to use open source in business

Open source software might be cheaper than alternatives, but it has many other business benefits, too.

By Richard Hillesley, 21 Aug 2009 at 15:12

Office Workers

Proprietary data formats give us no assurance of permanence or diversity, force dependence on the continuing popularity of a particular product, and are liable to alteration between different versions of the software. The user is locked into an involuntary upgrade cycle with an individual vendor, with few guarantees of consistency, and has little long term control over the viability of the data.

Open standards allow a user to be platform, vendor and software independent. Standards make networking possible, and make it easier to upgrade and move customised software solutions from one platform to another.

Access to technology at the source

Open source has also allowed and encouraged research and development laboratories in academia, public service and commercial industries to gain access to technologies that might otherwise be prohibitively expensive, which in turn has led to increased participation and feedback.

For instance, GNU/Linux and open source have led the field in clustering and virtualisation technologies, which were initially developed from academic research. (A side effect of this is that Linux has revived the market for the mainframe).

For similar reasons many smaller startups - as Google once was, for example - have based their operations on the use of free software. It is doubtful that Google would have been as successful as it has, had the company not been able to customise Linux and the Google filesystem on clustered servers to build its original search and storage algorithms.

For the company deciding to come over to Linux cost may be the initial motivation. Software is a tool, and not the final objective of the company. There is an over-riding interest in having software that "just works" at reasonable cost, and this is where GNU/Linux comes into its own.

Freedom

Most advocates of free software would claim that freedom, "not as in beer, but as in spirit", is the principle advantage and purpose of open source, and from this principle emerge all the other benefits of free software.

In the words of Richard Stallman "free software is a matter of the users' freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software." More precisely, it refers to four kinds of freedom, for the users of the software:

"The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0).
The freedom to study how the program works, and adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).
The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements to the public, so that the whole community benefits (freedom 3). Access to the source code is a precondition for this."

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3 comments

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Even More Reasons

These are all very relevant reasons to use open source. Thanks for the great article. More reasons that center around the theme of leveraging the highly decentralized model of open source as a way of exploiting innovative crowd sourcing on the cheap is explained at http://www.dynamicalsoftware.com/open/source/corporate/site

By gengstrand on Saturday Aug 22

6 people out of 9 found this comment useful.

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One More Reason

It is often mentioned that GNU/Linux will run on older hardware, but the real benefits come from the new development of low-powered, solid-state hardware running GNU/Linux, thus creating quieter and less cluttered office environments. See http:///www.cellularity.co.uk

By 6tricky9 on Wednesday Aug 26

2 people out of 2 found this comment useful.

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"Anti-virus software is not required"

Surely any system should be protected against attack, both from viruses and any other malicious code or activity?

By Ali_H on Thursday Aug 27

2 people out of 7 found this comment useful.

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