David Weaver
IBM Open-Sourcing AIX or Power?
In a new article (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/08/16/ibm_sun_open_source), The Register interviewed IBM about open source projects and strategy. IBM spokespeople offered some intriging comments, containing some amazing (and entertaining) insights. I'm irresistably compelled to have a little fun and share them here ...
When asked if/when IBM would be following Sun's lead and open source its AIX operating system or implementations of its Power processor architecture, IBM replied,
- "Open source is about communities, not releasing ... large pieces of code that nobody is interested in or contributing to"
Good point -- 4,500,000 downloads clearly indicate that no one out there is interested in OpenSolaris. Those 5 million lines of source code sure are sitting on the shelf, getting terribly dusty.
As compared to all the downloads of open-source AIX, of course. Or the open-source Power implementations -- IBM has open-sourced so many (zero) Power implementations, why, nothing else compares.
...but ... but ... wait a minute, what was the original question? I almost forgot. Oh yes, if/when would IBM open-source AIX and Power? IBM's answer, buried in verbal mice-type, somewhere in the midst of providing a new, definitive description of the meaning of open source, was "Um ... well ... NO, IBM isn't open-sourcing either AIX or Power". (Glad I had my reading glasses on, or I might have missed it!)
Then there was another fun nugget in the article:
- OpenSolaris and OpenSPARC are not "great examples of tremendous traction"
Regarding OpenSolaris (the most robust, scalable operating system on the planet) -- "ditto" the earlier comment about 4.5 million downloads. No traction there ... none at all.
Regarding OpenSPARC -- the vast number (zero) of Power processor implementations that IBM has open-sourced, especially current ones (IBM says "no way"), gives it tremendous credibility to comment on open-source hardware projects, so OpenSPARC must not have any traction, despite its tons of downloads. And there have been soooo many open-source hardware projects of this magnitude before, that OpenSPARC must be just a "me-too" project. (including OpenSPARC, the exact number of such projects would be ... yes, that's right: one).
Nowadays, it is so "last century" to open-source your most up-to-date, 32-thread, 8-core, 64-bit processor; it seems like everyone is doing it!
(...but, wait -- everyone who has a 32-thread, 8-core, 64-bit processor has open-sourced it. Notably, that big company who started it all ... the one known for innnovation, the one with the three-letter name [spelled S-u-n])
So check out The Register article -- it's fine (and fun) reading!
[ T: OpenSPARC ]
Posted at 05:06PM Aug 16, 2006 by dweaver in Sun |