|
Comments
Did you read today's front page stories & breaking news?
SYS-CON.TV
|
Editorials Control Your IT Roadmap
Control Your IT Roadmap
By: Bill Weinberg
Jul. 27, 2004 12:00 AM
In today's proprietary-dominated software marketplace, companies large and small must live with the fact that their own priorities can and do diverge from those of their key suppliers. IT departments and other software and hardware consumers constantly face capability gaps from product end-of-life, features and functionality missing from product releases, and limited hosting options. These gaps raise their real costs and impact the timeliness of internal and external deliverables. Such problems are endemic to any technology ecosystem, but are further exacerbated in markets dominated by a small number of players. At a minimum, open source Linux broadens these technology supply bottlenecks by "N+1" - that is, with open source, IT departments and other enterprise technology consumers gain the critical option of looking inside their organizations for viable, cost-effective solutions, not just outside them. When open source alternatives exist across a marketplace, as they do with Linux and its software stack, the competition drives all players, open and proprietary alike, to become better suppliers, to win their customers' business on a recurring basis. So, instead of building roadmaps to navigate around obstacles thrown up by suppliers, organizations can better plot paths that suit their own business goals. As Linux and open source technology move forward apace with proprietary software, they give IT departments more choice about when and if they need to make investments in new solutions. Unlike the leading proprietary OS and its applications, Linux runs comfortably on legacy hardware (allowing for longer deployment/depreciation cycles). Also, the open source community and the accompanying commercial ecosystem are willing and able to support current and past versions of Linux and attendant applications thus ending forced end of life imposed by proprietary vendors. Open source Linux lets IT departments take back control of their technology strategies and their budgets, and to make more conscious choices about how and where they spend their money. Examples include:
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
SOA World Latest Stories
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
|
SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
Most Read This Week |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||