LinuxWorld
Subscribe to this site with RSS

OpenLogic wants to count open-source users - openly

Open-source enterprise software developer OpenLogic wants open-source users to stand up and be counted in a worldwide census -- and is offering a new software tool to help the process.

The number of licenses sold gives vendors of proprietary software a pretty good idea of how many people are using their code, assuming there are not too many pirated copies in use, or licensed copies gathering dust on shelves. They can also draw on information about paid upgrades or service contracts, or sell unique license keys, verified by a central server each time the software is installed -- or even used.

Open-source software developers have no such luck: the very nature of open-source licenses makes such verification methods impossible. One clue they have is a count of how many people have downloaded the software from their Web sites. Reaching 1 million downloads is a rite of passage for open-source projects: SugarCRM, for example, passed that landmark in May.

Such counts, though, may underestimate the number of users, as anyone who obtains open-source software is free to redistribute it by any other means they choose -- as long as they accompany it with a copy of the open-source license and make the source code readily available.

On the other hand, they may wildly overestimate the number: people may download the software with no intention of using it, since there is no financial disincentive to doing so, or they may download it multiple times if they upgrade it, wipe and reinstall their system or have several computers.

To come up with an accurate figure for the number of users of various open-source applications in the enterprise, OpenLogic has released an automated census tool, OSS Discovery, itself available under an open-source license.

It hopes that businesses will scan their machines using the tool and contribute the data about the applications they are using to an open database.

The tool could offer advantages to IT managers too, said OpenLogic, enabling them to build up a picture of the software installed on desktops and servers around their business and compare it with that used in other enterprises.


The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.

RE: OpenLogic wants to count open-source users - openly By Jerry Merfeld on January 7, 2008, 7:08 pm Reply | Read entire comment Tools like this make asset management a much easier process. Keeping track of devices and software in medium and large organizations can be very difficult and costly....

All comments (1)

Note: Register to have your user name appear; otherwise your comment will show up as "Anonymous."

*Anonymous comments will only appear once they are approved by the moderator.

Featured Whitepapers
Newsletter sign-up

Sign up for one of Network World's newsletters compliments of Linux World

Linux & Open Source News Alert
Web Applications Alert
Video & Podcast Alert
Security: Threat  Alert
Virtualization Alert

Email Address: