The best way to appreciate this week’s LinuxWorld Conference & Expo
(LWE) in New York is to understand what won’t be showcased there.
At first glance, the open source community might appear to be at a
standstill. Yes, there’s a new FreeBSD.
for Apache 2.x
still the talk of the Debian
expected to announce any major updates to v8.0 or
its Advanced
Server; UnitedLinux only came out with version
1.0 in November.
No…this time ’round, those well-established open source projects are
going to have to step aside for newer initiatives to take centerstage.
“There are a slew of new initiatives that is rounding out the core
technology,” said Henry L. Hall, president of Wild Open Source. “For
example, JBoss and its growing acceptance … I think JBoss has a lot of
potential in that area.”
By “rounding out” the long-time exhibitor and attendee of the LWE show
explained he means “no longer are there just components that you plug into
your infrastructure … but rather enough applications to be able to build
entire systems, if and when these applications become mature.”
Indeed, the time has come for business and IT execs alike to get serious
about the nitty-gritty of open source computing. Since last year’s LWE show when
Linux made huge strides in general purpose computing and entered the mainstream
psyche in general, vendors have been busy finding ways to use open
source in databases, call centers, automation as well as
business-to-business processes outside of the corporate firewall.
webMethods is a good example of the ongoing trend. Back in November, the
Fairfax, Va.-based software services company decided that its integration
platform needed to incorporate JBoss, a
J2EE-friendly
of BEA Systems’ WebLogic or IBM’s Websphere.
Why JBoss? Well…apart from its really attractive price (it’s free,
folks) webMethods chose to combine an app server and an integration platform
for the sake of its customers.
“One of the big beefs against webMethods is that it is a proprietary
platform. Over the last year, they’ve tried to make their business
integration tools more compatible with open source…I think that only
benefits their customers,” said Dan Green, director of the webMethods User
Community.
“Customers that have business logic written in Java, therefore, are able
to use the webMethods Platform to integrate more quickly and for less money.
Their existing code won’t require modification.”
To help LWE attendees better understand the full impact open source
integration can have on any business, Hall and his Wild Open Source along
with other blue-chip sponsors like HP , Dell
, Intel
, Oracle
, NEC
and Sybase
, have joined forces on a new
exhibit called the “Enterprise Solutions Center.”
The 4,000-square foot exhibit (expected to be the largest booth at the
LWE show) will feature Acme Financial Services, a ficticious company — not
owned by Wile E. Coyote or the Roadrunner — that highlights four solutions
areas: Internet, Storage, Wireless and Desktop. The goal is to demonstrate
how open source applications like JBoss can work in harmony with commercial
(a.k.a. proprietary) applications at any level of the enterprise.
“One of the points about integrating open source with commercial
products, of course, is that there will always be transition costs and
perhaps losses of functionality, which in some cases may outweigh the
benefits of just jumping in to a fully open source environment. One can
imagine not only the transitioning of data formats but also the training
needed for IT staff to learn a new way of operating the systems. So the
idea of having both open source components and commercial components
integrated and working together is an important message and one that we hope
to demonstrate at the Enterprise Solutions Center.”
Microsoft, the big newsmaker at last summer’s LinuxWorld
Expo for showing up at all, is expected to return. However, much of the
fanfare may have vanished.
The LinuxWorld
Expo will take place January 22-24, 2003 at The Javits Center in New
York City with conferences kicking off on January 21.