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10/22/98 INTERWKOZD
10/22/98 Interactive Wk. Online from ZDWire (Pg. Unavail. Online)
1998 WL 28937516

Interactive Week Online from ZDWire

Copyright (c) 1998 ZD Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Thursday, October 22, 1998


Open code frees up the Net

Charles Babcock


To date, the idea that software developers working within multiple
organizations without compensation to call their own could possibly
mount a serious challenge to Microsoft's hordes of wealthy or
soon-to-be-wealthy programmers -- working from the safe solidity of a
near-monopoly in the programs that control the operations of desktop,
portable and server computers -- has been scoffed at as the wishful
thinking of the company's plentiful but weak detractors.

Indeed, the dissemination of free software whose basic instructions
are open to a worldwide community of developers to improve or alter has
made little dent in mainstream corporate planning. Such "open source"
code and the entire free software movement have been seen as
occasionally successful, mainly in the delivery and maintenance of the
widely used Apache Web server that still outguns Microsoft (Nasdaq:MSFT)
and Netscape Communications Corp.'s (Nasdaq:NSCP) commercial challengers.

But a closer look at the record of development of Web-based computing
puts the efforts in a much different light. In fact, the free software
movement has delivered commercial-quality products in every key
component of software infrastructure for computing in a hyperlinked
world. Free software gave the Internet much of its start, from the
Mosaic browser to the basic Web server. Obscure innards such as the
Domain Name System, which translates numeric Internet addresses into
English names such as www.baby.com, and domain name servers come from
the same heritage. Now, operating systems are in the collaborative
developers' crosshairs, from the much-publicized Linux flavor of Unix to
Free BSD, the software that is at the heart of the most heavily
trafficked site on the Web, Yahoo! Inc.'s www.yahoo.com (Nasdaq:YHOO).
And with the use of Web sites to conduct electronic commerce likely to
spread like wildfire -- some estimates put the amount of worldwide
e-commerce at $344 billion by 2002 -- more and more companies are likely
to move to adopt the programs that become Web standards, with the fact
that they are free as an extra, compelling incentive.

Earlier this year, SBC Communications Inc. (NYSE:SBC) replaced 36
Windows 95 and Windows NT workstations at its Kansas City, Mo.,
operations center with Linux workstations because they handled the
results of a giant network monitoring system better. The system displays
warning alarms triggered on the network of a subsidiary, Southwestern
Bell. The graphics-intensive system caused the Windows 95 workstations
"to lock up on average every 4.2 minutes. The Windows NT workstations
locked up every 2.58 minutes," said Randy Kessell, a manager at the
center. The Linux workstations haven't had a problem.

Gary Nichols, manager of network administration at WavePhore Inc.'s
(Nasdaq:WAVO) WaveTop business unit which distributes content from Time
Inc., People and Money magazines and Warner Bros., was asked to rebuild
the corporate network a year ago.

"I completely modeled the network around the Internet," and was
surprised to find free source code such as the Apache Web server, the
PERL scripting language, the Samba network connection and the MySQL
(Structured Query Language) relational database, "were just as useful
inside the company as on the Internet." Nichols runs Linux on 30 of
WaveTop's 45 servers for such tasks as e-mail, Web servers and the
firewall. He figures he saved $30,000 in license costs of Windows NT and
Sun Microsystems Inc.'s Solaris by using the open source code.

"I bought $100 worth of Linux CDs and books and got the same
functionality," he said.

Out of Microsoft's control

These examples illustrate how Microsoft no longer dictates the
standards that determine the business computing environment, and how
difficult it will be to dominate the standards set for doing business on
the Web. Microsoft acknowledged as much in a Sept. 25 financial filing
that said one of the few threats on its horizon was Linux. The company
still dominates in desktop applications. There are no open source code
equivalents -- yet -- for Office-style word processing, presentation
graphics and spreadsheets. But the importance of the operating system
itself has receded. Both browsers and Web servers can do their jobs
while remaining indifferent to the underlying operating system.

Of course, skeptics doubt that complex software can be developed
consistently by open source code groups, which tend to form voluntarily
under loose leadership. "I'm very leery of the shared source code
movement," primarily for the known difficulty of complex software
development, said Hadley Reynolds, director of research at the Delphi
Group, himself a Microsoft skeptic.

Support of open source code, often provided by e-mailed responses
from its developers, strikes information systems managers as a key
weakness. They want someone under contract to fix glitches on demand.

Still, the Apache Web server is so reliable that it has gained 52
percent of the market against commercial competition from Netscape (7
percent) and Microsoft (23 percent). IBM Corp. (Nasdaq:IBM) recently
joined the Apache Group as a contributing developer and announced it
will support Apache for customers of its WebSphere application server
product line, another form of commercial support for an open source code
product.

What looked like a few amateurish success stories is now turning into
a movement with much larger implications. Microsoft may be able to
stretch out an antitrust showdown with the U.S. Department of Justice.
But software developers have a way of changing the nature of computing
on their own.

Confronting problems

Indeed, free solutions come because developers confront a problem
"that has no commercial solution, or the commercial solution is viewed
as overpriced," said Larry Wall, developer of PERL.

But it is the very nature of these new economics that makes many
companies worry. The rap against the free software movement is that it
will fall down from eventual lack of momentum -- meaning that source
code developers can't continue to do this without some means of
financial support.

The developers themselves disagree. They don't need to be paid for
their efforts. It's intrinsic to the Internet culture to collaborate in
solving the next problem, and they enjoy the camaraderie of doing so.hey
also save their companies' money, while their employers make money on
other software or services for which they can charge.

If this drive is true, it means the ability of one company to
maintain a stranglehold over any key aspect of computing will draw to an
end. Neither Microsoft nor any other commercial company will be able to
position itself as controlling access to the Internet. And that means
the DOJ with its antitrust suit has arrived on the battleground too late
to play a decisive role in overturning any monopolies in software.

"We're building the infrastructure for what the world will look like"
as it switches over to a digital economy, said Eric Tachibana,
co-founder of Extropia Inc., a developer of open source Web site
applications, such as WebStore and Groupware, which are available from
its site. Its applications are in use at Boeing Co. and General Motors
Corp.

It wasn't intended to be this way. Proponents of the open source code
movement, such as the Apache Group's Brian Behlendorf and Wall, said
they didn't set out to beat commercial companies, and in many cases it
wasn't on their agenda to produce something that the rest of the world
would use.

"Open source developers are technical people who sense a need for a
piece of system-level software that doesn't exist yet," said John
Ousterhout, author of the TCL scripting language used to tie together
disparate site elements. He was an open source code advocate as a
computer science professor at the University of California at Berkeley
when he invented TCL in 1988. TCL now is widely used on Web sites to
pull together Common Gateway Interface scripts, Java applications and
database access programs.

But sharing source code in 1988 was a more laborious effort. In those
days, a developer interested in TCL would send him a big, half-inch
magnetic tape reel of the sort used to store mainframe data, and
Ousterhout would take it downstairs from his office to the machinery
room in Evans Hall, where he would load it on a Unix host and copy the
data onto it. Then he'd take it to the post office to mail back to its
sender. That method would make it impractical to send out the 8,000 to
10,000 copies of TCL that go out to prospective users per month over the
Internet, he said.

The Net's leading role

So far, open source successes "have been largely infrastructure
software," said Tim O'Reilly, publisher at O'Reilly and Associates Inc.
(www.ora.com). That's the kind of software that made IBM and Microsoft
powerful, each in their own eras of computing. Now, that very
infrastructure -- the Internet -- makes possible both the long-distance
developers' collaboration and the distribution of their software, he
said. Never before could a piece of free software have instant worldwide
availability and testing by thousands of developers.

The Linux example has begun to elicit interest among venture
capitalists. Kevin Harvey, a partner at Benchmark Capital in Menlo Park,
Calif., sees "a community of developers working together [as] a big and
proven trend." They are likely to find the bugs in a system as they
configure and use it with a wide variety of other components.

Both Benchmark and Greylock Management Corp., a Boston venture
capital firm, have taken minority positions in Red Hat as the company
seeks to expand its staff and more vigorously push the distribution of
Linux.

Robert Young, president of Red Hat, "is doing exactly the right
thing. He knows where he wants to go and the market is behind him," said
Michael Tiemann, founder of Cygnus Solutions, a tools and services open
source code company. Cygnus is built around its GNU's Not Unix open
source code project, which was founded by Richard Stallman to create
tools and compilers for Unix developers. Cygnus gained the backing last
year of two venture capital firms, August Capital of Palo Alto, Calif.,
and Greylock.

Venture capital fears

Some developers fear venture capital could prove to be the undoing of
the movement. If developers start counting on making money on open
source code by creating private companies around it, they may get into
struggles over who controls the code, and it may cease to be open code.

But they also acknowledge that venture capital and private companies
are needed to address the Achilles' heel of open source code: technical
support for products that have no around-the-clock technical staffs or
on-site assistance. The business model for open source companies is to
add to the open source developers' efforts in packaging, marketing and
support, but not to try to take control, said John Oltsik, an analyst at
Forrester Research Inc.

If open source code development broadens, it is not likely that there
will be a single company that ever takes Microsoft's place in the center
of networked computing. Instead, there will be many cells, each making
its own contribution. Indeed, Red Hat's Young jokes that his goal is not
to make his company as big as Microsoft, but to make Microsoft as big as
Red Hat.

At open source company Extropia, Tachibana, 29, said his company's
giveaway applications attract so much development work that he farms it
out to selected developers. He and his partner, Gunther Birznieks, also
29, continue to develop generic Web site applications to be given away,
such as Extropia's WebChat for group interaction.

The practice keeps a steady flow of work passing through the doors of
Extropia as the pair builds a network of 20 skilled developers with whom
they wish to collaborate. And if they develop an application that
becomes part of every Web site, there will be many ways to convert that
success into a long-term business.

It's as if Lilliputians came to hold sway over Gulliver. Size will
not matter on the Internet, only usage of your product. "I feel we could
have an open source code company that is just as successful as
Microsoft," Tachibana said.

The bottom line

With the advent of the Internet, the free software movement has
flourished, rendering the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust case
against Microsoft too little too late.

Weaving a free Web

It's not altogether necessary to pay for software if you want to run
an effective Web site. Networks of developers have collaborated on
creating free software whose lines of code are "open" to improvement by
other parties for key pieces of Web infrastructure. Web Infrastructure /
Open Source Code / Commercial Product Server Operating System / Linux,
Free BSD / Unix, Windows NT Client Operating System / Linux/KDE or Gnome
/ Windows 95/98 Web Server / Apache / Microsoft IIS; Netscape SuiteSpot
Languages / PERl, TCL / Inprise C, C++; Microsoft Visual Basic E-Mail /
Sendmail / Lotus Notes Mail; Microsoft Exchange Photo Editing / GNU
Image Manipulation Program / Adobe Photoshop

---- INDEX REFERENCES ----


COMPANY (TICKER): Netscape Communications Corp. (NSCP)

NEWS SUBJECT: World Equity Index (WEI)

NEWS CATEGORY: NEWS

INDUSTRY: Information & On-Line Services; Publishing; Media; Software (IAS PUB MED SOF)

Word Count: 2122
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