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The network has become the platform

October 18, 2005 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - The open-source community is in the midst of a change, with the network increasingly becoming its own platform built on open-source software, said Tim O'Reilly, CEO of O'Reilly Media Inc., on Tuesday.

This has been demonstrated by the rise of companies such as Google Inc., eBay Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., which can operate unfettered from open-source licensing concerns because they aren't distributing software.

"They deliver their software as a service," O'Reilly said.

O'Reilly was one of several keynote speakers at the O'Reilly European Open Source Convention in Amsterdam, which runs through Thursday. O'Reilly is the founder of O'Reilly Media, a publisher of computer programming help books.

New classes of companies have been built on versions of open-source software, which is fueling the growth of large Web sites, a concept O'Reilly said he calls Web 2.0.

The question of how those companies use open-source software has become more ethical and value-based, O'Reilly said. It all means more questions for the open-source community over just what the definition of "open" may mean in the future, he said.

"I really think we are going to end up asking ourselves five to 10 years from now, 'Do we need a free data foundation to make sure we get our users data out of some of these services?'" O'Reilly said.

As business models and development practices change, it's important for open-source developers to figure out what are the most important projects, O'Reilly said. Among those projects, O'Reilly said he is watching Ruby on Rails, a Web development framework based on the Ruby programming language. He said O'Reilly Media is working on books about Ruby on Rails.

The Web site, housingmaps.com is another, a mash-up of data from Google Maps and real estate listings from Craigslist Inc. The result is a mix where you can look up a house on Craigslist, which offers classified-ad listings in major cities such as San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles.

Users can see photos of a property and push pins where the property is on a Google map. So far, the site is not affiliated with either Craigslist or Google.

"This is the new face of hacking," O'Reilly said.

It's the hacking of data that comes from services rather than on programs. "I think that's a fundamental challenge to the thinking of open-source," he said.

O'Reilly said he has also noticed a fundamental shift in how software integrates with the PC market.

The PC market is commodity-based and has traditionally found Microsoft Corp. dominating the software market and IntelCorp. dominating the chip market, with hardware components in between, such as keyboards and mice, O'Reilly said.

Open-source software started with an intent to supplant Microsoft Office and Windows, but the market is now composed of open-source commodity software components such as Linux, Apache, Perl or Python, he added.

"All of these programs that we know and love have created a role that is analogous to the role of the component PC where value is not captured by selling the components for some outrageous margin," O'Reilly said. "It's instead an enabler -- a huge expansion of the market."


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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