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Customer Council Open Source in the Enterprise

Explore challenges, best practices, and business issues of integrating open source in enterprise architecture. Discuss procurement, IP, support, and community engagement. Delve into opportunities, standards, and project initiation. Embrace the potential impact on TOGAF and information flow.

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Customer Council Open Source in the Enterprise

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  1. Customer CouncilOpen Sourcein theEnterprise How and where can members of The Open Group derive value from Open Source 4 February 2003Burlingame, California, U.S.A.

  2. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

  3. How many of your enterprises make use of established open source products within your enterprise? • Linux, Apache, Mysql, PHP, PERL, Sendmail, … Open Source – Are You Engaged? There is “still an insufficient perception of the value of Open Source to the Customer” -- Bruce Perens • How many of your enterprises have incorporated open source code into your systems? (internal, embedded, product) • How many of your enterprises have engaged the open source community in the development of your software systems? • How many of your enterprises consider themselves “members” of the open source community?

  4. Open Source Engagements • Procurement, implementation, integration and deployment of existing Open Source products • Participation in existing Open Source projects with subsequent use within the Enterprise • Starting and managing an Open Source project with or without initial IP contribution • Starting and managing an Enterprise project using Open Source processes internally

  5. Open Group Challenge – Business Issues • Critical Business Issues • IPR • Software Patents, Licensing, TCPA & MDCA implications • Confidence • Mission Critical Open Source? • Integration • Interfaces, Standards, Skills • Support • External vs Internal, Skills, etc. • Business case • TCO, Risk, etc.

  6. Open Group Challenge – Foundations • What can The Open Group do to facilitate addressing these issues? • What can / should be standardized? • How could / should one ensure that Open Source apps conform to standards? • What is claimed? What does it mean? • How could / should one certify Open Source? • Applications? Infrastructure? • What role could / should The Open Group play in homesteading? • How does The Open Group build strong relationships with the Open Source community?

  7. Open Group Challenge – Possible Activities • What Open Source Projects might be initiated within The Open Group • How can Boundaryless Information Flow be enabled by Open Source? • How can we define useful ‘lumps of functionality’ (TOGAF Building Blocks?) in the application and infrastructure arenas? • Might we establish guidelines for engaging Open Source within the Enterprise? • What might be some potential Open Source opportunities of interest to Open Group members?

  8. Ideas from Cannes (replay) Value chain The quick brown fox • Open Source BBs insideTOGAF • IOP-Fests for open source projects • Projects demonstratingopen source in customer projects Architecture Secure email demo The quick brown fox Tested, works Open Source ready for consumption • Define & operate infrastructurefor communities to agree, publish and license open source BBs(“product” feel, but open core) Compatibility map Spec, version License Groups share how to do OSBBs • Forum in which open source projects (esp. “captive” ones) can share experiences, record best practices for re-use, get guidance on legal issues Open Source Open Source Open Source Open Source Open Source Developerscontinueas is Cannes Burlingame Today Tomorrow Act!

  9. Objectives for this session • Broaden the engagement among members • Cannes focus was informative and exploratory • Burlingame focus is on opportunities and next steps • Identify candidate opportunities • Identify opportunities of interest to members • Possibly from within Technical Forums • Agree on a few candidate work projects • Solicit volunteers for engagement • Initiate planning for project success Cannes Burlingame Today Tomorrow Act!

  10. Open Source in the Enterprise, Today • Technology Perspective • Good penetration in opportunistic areas • Proponents are technical experts, heated engagement demonstrates their commitment to progress • Business Perspective • Few use Open Source strategically in mainstream IT • Proponents are seldom business experts, they tend to adhere to an “underground” mindset • Opponents are concerned and skeptical,they need to be convinced of new approach viability • Balance Point • Very conservative, even when positive business case can be made Cannes Burlingame Today Tomorrow Act!

  11. Open Source in the Enterprise, Tomorrow? • Technology Perspective • Open Source process excels within the Enterprise • Shares knowledge among organizations • Leverages technical resources and skills across organizations • Open Source extends the Enterprise • Engages knowledge and skills beyond the Enterprise • Keeps innovation alive through the “Commons” • Business Perspective • New cross-Enterprise business patterns drive the “Commons” • System infrastructure • Application infrastructure • Commoditization • Proprietary value focused on new inventions • Commonly developed solutions to common problems • Balance Point • As aggressive as necessary • Open Source is the strategic core of infrastructure Cannes Burlingame Today Tomorrow Act!

  12. Today’s agenda • Part 1 – Strategic use of Open Source • Open Source in Enterprise IT – experiences • Identify opportunities • Develop a rational way to make Open Source part of the Enterprise Architecture (add to TOGAF?) • Technical Forum opportunities • Part 2 – Best practices • Identify issues and best practices, • Develop a compendium of best practices • Part 3 – Report and attract • Use the BoF to expand participation • Goal 1: Collect critical factors regarding Open Source within The Open Group membership • Goal 2: Identify at least 2 work areas with sufficient interest to start work Cannes Burlingame Today Tomorrow Act!

  13. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

  14. Customer CouncilOpen Sourcein EnterpriseArchitectures How to leverage Open Source strategically,rather than in technical and political niches

  15. Scope of this session • Focus on Issues and Opportunities for Strategic Use of Open Source in the Enterprise • Many places exist to talk about technical merits -- • Political issues are seldom discussed ** • Strategic use of Open Source is still nebulous *** • Example: TOGAF and Open Source • TOGAF is a strength of The Open Group • TOGAF establishes Architectural discipline • Actual requirements • Business case • Integration • Is this a way to maximize ROI from Open Source? • How can TOGAF be applied to Open Source process? • How can Open Source process be incorporated into TOGAF? Scope Discussion Synthesis

  16. Open Discussion • Introductions - Round robin • Personal Interest • Company Interest • Hopes & Expectations • Directions & Solutions • Discussion – What are your opportunities of interest • Methodology – TOGAF, etc. • Business case guidelines, ROI, etc. • Projects of potential interest to Open Group members • Others? • We will then synthesize these inputs • Prioritize items which would help make Open Source a strategic element in Enterprise Architectures • Identify structures needed for further progress • Volunteers? • Next steps (through 2003) Scope Discussion Synthesis

  17. Synthesis of discussion results Scope Discussion Synthesis

  18. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

  19. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

  20. Presentation • “What is this presentation titled?” • Stormy Peters, HP

  21. Discussion • What have been your experiences with Open Source • Lessons Learned • What to do – What not to do • Issues • What issues need resolution or guidance? • Would an Open Group Guide to Open Source be useful? • Volunteers to author such a volume?

  22. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

  23. Next Steps • We have identified some opportunities of interest to members • Next Steps: Explore those opportunities further with interested participants • We have identified some constraints • Next Steps: Explore what The Open Group can do to facilitate Open Source activities • We have identified some of the lessons learned by members • Next Steps: Capture these in a manner that might benefit other members when engaging in Open Source activities

  24. Agenda • Introductory remarks- Carl Bunje, Graham Bird & Walter Stahlecker • Open Source and Enterprise Architecture- Issues, Challenges, Opportunities- Open Discussion • Break • Best Practices - “Open Source in the Enterprise”, Stormy Peters, HP - Open Discussion • Next Steps- Elaine Babcock, Carl Bunje & Walter Stahlecker • Break • After Hours: BoF on Open Source

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