MESSAGE
DATE | 2003-10-02 |
FROM | From: "Inker, Evan"
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] Foot in the Door for Open Source?
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Foot in the Door for Open Source?
By Michael Y. Park Enterprise Linux IT October 01, 2003 http://www.enterprise-linux-it.com/perl/story/22397.html
There is no question about it: As far as David-and-Goliath scenarios go, the scrappy open-source office applications that have taken on mighty Microsoft Office could not have picked a seemingly more invincible foe. Bill Gates' silicon empire is just about as powerful and wealthy a corporate organization as has ever existed. Next to it, outfits like OpenOffice, StarOffice and Corel Office look like ragtag guerilla fighters and, frankly, kind of puny. But it is not necessarily wise to write off the skinny kid with the sling quite yet. Though Microsoft's Office applications hold a lead in the business market that would daunt General George S. Patton, open-source office applications are doing better in the SMB (small to mid-size business) markets than experts expected.
"The bottom line is that, where the market is right now, I don't see huge traction for OpenOffice or StarOffice. But, that said, I think you will see pockets where those products make sense," Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox told NewsFactor. || ||
Wooing Mom and Pop And those pockets are in small and mid-size businesses -- those of 1,000 employees or less -- where paying top dollar for Microsoft's very expensive productivity suite does not make much sense.
In conducting research for a new report, Wilcox found that open-source productivity suites did "surprisingly well" in the mid-size business market, with the OpenOffice suite alone claiming a share of about 6 percent. Furthermore, he found that some 19 percent of small businesses ran Linux on their desktop, and a whopping 26 percent ran Linux on their servers.
Who's Afraid of the Big, Bad Word?
The figures surprised Wilcox, but for ebullient OpenOffice marketing project leader Sam Hiser, they only justified the optimism he feels about open-source suites' chances against Redmond.
"It's simply that it works great, it's coded better, and it costs less -- it's free," Hiser told NewsFactor. "There's no question that open-source office suites are technologically true, robust and secure enough. Linux desktops are about to explode."
And Microsoft knows it, he said -- "they're terrified."
Still Cool and in Control
If so, a Microsoft spokesperson did not show it when he gave a cool response about his company's faith in the free market -- a safe bet when that company owns over 90 percent of the market for desktop-productivity suites, according to Wilcox's research.
"There has always been healthy competition in productivity applications, which gives customers an array of options to suit their needs," Dan Leach, lead product manager of Microsoft's information-worker product management group, told NewsFactor. "When customers make their choices based on business value, they have consistently chosen the Office suite because it gives them the tools they need to be more productive, better able to create documents, collaborate effectively and share information," he said.
Despite his relatively cheery news for OpenOffice and its colleagues, Wilcox, for the most part, agreed that Microsoft really has nothing to fear from them. In other words: Don't get cocky.
"Microsoft Office is a very entrenched competitor," he said. "Microsoft also has benefits from its proprietary Office file formats, and businesses that have a lot of documents in Word or Excel have some legitimate concern about compatibility. If they do business with other people, they want to make sure the documents they produce can be read by other people," he pointed out.
Technically, Microsoft Office 2003 does support the XML file format that's been settled upon as a standard by most open-source applications and a technical committee of the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards -- a committee of which Microsoft is not a member. But because Microsoft Office 2003 relies upon proprietary schema, its files are essentially unreadable to other productivity suites.
Splashing Cold Water on Open-Source's Face
Hiser said that OpenOffice version 1.1, due this week, can translate Microsoft files with an accuracy of 90 percent.
But anything less than 100 percent is not good enough, Wilcox noted. He also pointed out that, even though OpenOffice boasts a six-percent share of the desktop-productivity suite market, that does not mean that some of those OpenOffice users do not also use Microsoft Office. Furthermore, though fans of open-source applications brag that they are free, they often neglect to mention ancillary costs, such as training and actually implementing the new software. If developers of open-source office applications really want to topple Microsoft, they have some work to do, he said.
"The bottom line is that open-source productivity suites need more parity with Microsoft Office in functionality and [they need] to address the issue of file formats," Wilcox said. "They need to develop better translators so they can actually read or produce Microsoft Office's proprietary formats, because that's what's most widely used out there."
But there is a huge threat that constantly looms over Microsoft, he added.
"OpenOffice isn't the threat. The threat to Microsoft is itself," Wilcox said. "It has a huge problem getting companies, especially large companies, to upgrade to newer versions of Office. So it's not OpenOffice they're worried about -- it's the two- or three-year-old versions of their own products many of their customers are still using."
Open-Source's Opening?
And that, Hiser said, is where open-source applications come in. Tired of Microsoft products designed to become obsolete after a year, disgusted by Microsoft constantly hectoring its clients into buying the latest upgrade, users of all stripes have begun defecting to the openness of open-source, he says.
"All the time, people look at OpenOffice and say, 'Good luck -- we've seen them come and go,'" he said. "They don't understand a couple of things about the environment today. People are really [angry] at Microsoft -- the way they operate, the way they're really not true and don't care about the customers. People are fed up."
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