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In his latest blog entry jonathan gets religion

 

Quotes such as the following show a radical change of mindset

In my view, the economics of free and open source software are identical to the economics of free search, TV, radio, checking accounts or mobile phones - the money's not in the access to the product, it's in the services and value delivered around the product.

 

and

What I've seen customers wanting is open source, open standards, and an open dialog with vendors willing to stand behind their products. They've had enough duplicity and scare tactics.

 

I would like to expand on the first point. Yes what the customers want is free software that is supported and by doing away with the license you focus your value proposition on the implementation of the software. This is a message that clearly resonates in our sales organization. OSS is in fact changing the way software is built distributed and supported. The value proposition is compelling and the movement to free software is one driven by the customers themselves.

 

On the second point of open source open standards and open dialog, jonathan is sounding very evangelical all of the sudden, pretty soon we will hear him say "and remember I love you".

 

Also for those of you that didn't catch that bit in his PS

ps. stay tuned for news on Java's open source accessibility, too...

 

marcf

 

PS: the night he was speaking at that Churchill thing, I was speaking at Stanford VLAB, it was a blast and we had a full house. That is where the action was :) So there.

 

I am still on the road so I will make this a quickie, I need to leave for the airport in 10 minutes (I am at novell brainshare where we announced a big partnership, more on that later) but these 2 articles caught my eye.

 

I am so proud of this article

Don’t let CTO Scott Stark’s outfit fool you. That’s authentic JBoss swag he’s sporting. JBoss runs what it calls the Professional Open Source Model. It ‘combines the cost savings benefits of open source with the development methodologies, support, and accountability expected from enterprise software vendors.’ Easier said than done. But have a gander at the whole JBoss management team. These are software pros. Proof of success came this week, at Novell’s Brainshare conference in Salt Lake City. Novell is handing the keys of its middleware car to JBoss. This was not done lightly. Novell spent heavily three years ago to buy SilverStream, renaming its products exteNd. Novell now plans to co-develop the JBoss Enterprise Middleware Suite (JEMS) and ship a number of its components as part of the 2006 exteNd release. For JBoss it’s distribution and development support in one deal. That’s how the open source pros do it.

 

I don't know why but I am truly proud of Scott. For those who don't know (I didn't) "swag" means "confidence". "That is how the open source pros do it", yeah, dammit, yeah! walk around with our head high, we made it. The company we built is a machine today, it is working today, it is in orbit, beating numbers month after month and stiking key partnerships like the HP and novell ones.

 

A second article gave a good overview of the JBoss federation effort, which we announced at JBoss world, and for your reference I am including it here.

 

Between JBossWorld and the love shown at Novell's brainshare, I have replenished my emotional batteries, it felt just great and I will try to blog in more detail about this soon.

 

Remember we love you,

 

marcf

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