Archive for the ‘Open Source’ Category

All posts in Open Source category.

Posted: by chrisshipley on March 3rd, 2008 | No Comments »

Categorized: Chris Shipley, Open Source, Social Media

Drupal may well be the unsung success story of the open source movement. The content management platform has been downloaded over 2 million times, as often as mySQL and more than Redhat. So says Jeff Whatcott, the voice of Acquia, the company created to put a commercial wrapper around Drupal in order to extend the content management system’s reach into enterprise accounts.

At Drupalcon this morning, Acquia laid out its plans for a commercially-supported Drupal. The company will ship “Carbon,” the Drupal 6 core release and a set of “essential” extensions wrapped up with documentation and a set of support services. The code will be licensed under the GPL v2 license and Acquia will earn its revenues on maintenance and support subscriptions that let businesses “harness the full open source power of Drupal without sacrificing the accountability and support of commercial software.”

The first subscription offering is “Spokes,” an update notification service that provides “specific, actionable information” about Drupal updates that are fully-tested and supported by Acquia.

Both Carbon and Spokes are due out within the next 6 months.

By Whatcott’s count, more than 900 developers have code in the version six release of Drupal. More than 1800 modules have been created for the community. But “there’s never been a company behind” Drupal to make the open source software palatable to large businesses. “It’s 98% of the way there. Acquia takes it the rest of the way,” Whatcott says.

The question is whether a commercial effort around Drupal will be palatable to the developer community that has so embraced the software. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted: by chrisshipley on February 9th, 2008 | No Comments »

Categorized: Chris Shipley, Entrepreneurship, Europe, Observations, Open Source, Startups, Web 2.0

We were so consumed with all things DEMO last week, that we almost overlooked Sun‘s announcement that it was expanding its “Startup Essentials” program to Canada, France, and Germany. The program gives developers substantial discounts on Sun hardware and software services in a bid for Sun to be the dominant platform for Web 2.0 applications and services.

Seeded in the U.S. in 2006 and expanded to China, India, Israel, and the U.K., the Startup Essentials program has had about 1,600 startups register to date, according to the company, with some 200 companies submitting new applications each month. Sun Startup Essentials is free to eligible companies, those in business fewer than four years and with less than 150 employees. In addition to deeply discounted hardware, participant companies have access to low-cost Web hosting services provided by Sun partners in the communities supported by the program, along with free technical support via e-mail. Sun also hosts occasional “Startup Camps” in key geographies; the next will be held in London in early March.

I talked with Sun’s director of Startups and Emerging Markets Sanjay Sharma about the program prior to the announcement, mostly curious about the country-by-country roll out of the program. After all, in the Web 2.0 world that Sun hopes to conquer, every application is potentially a global one. Why cherry-pick regions when a program like this can blanket the planet with electronic resources? Read the rest of this entry »