Linux developers shift the course of an industry

By Scott Handy, ZDNet US
12 September 2003 09:40 AM
Tags: developers, linux, ibm, marketplace, choice, direction, geek
COMMENTARY--Flexibility and choice are the drivers in today's marketplace--and Linux geeks are giving directions.

It's 2:00 in the morning, the Coca-Cola buzz is starting to fade and it's been hours since Domino's Pizza came calling. The only light is the white glow emanating from the monitor. It's time to run the last test andâ€"poof--the system crashes. Welcome to the all-too-familiar world of software developers.

They're a breed unto themselves: the geeks, the nerds, the trendsetters.

That's right--the trendsetters. This motley crew is the driving force behind a revolution. Developers from around the world have shifted the course of the IT industry.

Like most revolutions, it started small. A young developer by the name of Linus Torvalds got tired of dealing with commercial operating systems, like Windows and set off to create his own platform. But instead of keeping his operating system to himself, he made Linux open to all the geeks on the Net so the best and brightest minds in the development community could look at the code and make it better. He wasn't the first person to use this open method for developing software, but his little chunk of code has certainly been among the most successful.

The popularity of Linux has been unprecedented. It continues to be the fastest growing server operating system in the world. The primary driver for its success is the development community.

The development community collectively created a highly reliable, low cost operating system. Over the last couple of years as businesses from a variety of industries realised the benefits of Linux, they turned to the developer community to create applications, like e-commerce, banking, accounting, customer relationship management and inventory management systems that support the open source operating system.

The geeks have responded in full force. In the last few months, the number of new Linux-based applications has skyrocketed. PeopleSoft is moving its entire application portfolio--over 170 different applications--to Linux.

IBM alone has seen a huge shift in the number of corporate developers and Independent Software Vendors creating Linux-based applications to run on its software like WebSphere, DB2, Lotus and Tivoli. Over 50,000 developers have cranked out more than 6500 Linux-based applications built on IBM software. Developers are clearly moving applications to Linux at a rapid rate, but that's not the only thing they're doing with Linux.

Developers embrace Linux on multiple fronts
As software vendors, developers see the opportunity to impact their bottom line and add incremental revenue by porting their existing applications to run on Linux. Look at ACCPAC. They deliver one of the leading accounting software offerings around. By supporting just one operating system, like Windows, they might go head-to-head with Great Plains, another accounting software vendor. But ACCPAC is looking to get an edge over the competition.

Now ACCPAC supports both Windows and Linux. For all the mid-sized companies that are moving to Linux--software vendors like ACCPAC, who have ported their applications to Linux, are the only accounting software in town, because their major competition doesn't support the open source operating system. For these software vendors, it is a business decision to support Linux to help drive incremental revenue beyond the Windows market.

Developers are also starting to use Linux instead of Windows as their development environment of choice--they're saying, "Bye-bye system crashes. Adios reboots. Hello Linux."

In a recent report from an Evans Data study, more than half of Linux developers, 52 percent, formerly Wrote primarily for Windows, while only 30 percent came from Unix.

The reasons for the shift boil down to reliability, low cost and the fact that Linux easily ports to a variety of different servers. Developers can create a Linux-based application and it can run on Intel-based servers, all the way up the chain to the mainframe. Windows-based apps don't have that level of flexibility--they can't run on the big iron, which is a staple in large enterprises.

The open movement started with the development community and as the popularity of Linux has crossed over to CTO offices around the globe--developers are delivering the applications for retail, finance, government and manufacturing businesses to function more efficiently.

Just a handful of years ago no one would have imagined that Linux, the little operating system that could, would alter the course of the IT industry and become the defacto development platform for the next decade.

Flexibility and choice are the drivers in today's marketplace. The geeks set the trend. I for one can't wait to see where they take us next.

Scott Handy is Director of Worldwide Linux Solutions for IBM.

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Talkback 1 comments

    And Linux developers don't wea ...Anonymous -- 16/09/03

    And Linux developers don't wear ties, although the mascot seems to be wearing a tux.

    They [linux coders] will create Linux apps for everything in the near future including the next round of killer apps.

    Why? Because they are allowed to and they are free to do so. No bonds on their side of the fence.

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