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The real Chrome threat to Firefox

by Lonnie on Jun.21, 2010, under Commentary, Linux, Nerd Stuff


The real Chrome threat to Firefox lies in add-ons.

This is currently Firefox’s strength. There are literally thousands of add-ons for Firefox today, over 1,000 in web development alone.

But by concentrating on niches, and signing exclusive deals, so the add-on makers work only on Chrome, Google is taking small but telling bites of the market.

The media is already flocking to one such deal. But a second extension better illustrates the trend, and it’s called (naturally) extension.

Extension.fm finds mp3 files on pages you visit and indexes them into a personal music library. This is a seriously cool thing for people like my own son, who loves to regale us at dinner these days by showing the latest music video he has found.

At 19 he’s never gotten into iTunes, and many feel the Apple-Google rivalry will define music in the future.  It’s the next evolution in the music business, from music you own to music you find. And the one rule of music is you want to be where the young folks are, not where I am.

Extension is the kind of game-changing add-on that can move browser loyalties. My son has been dismissive of Chrome in the past. When I tell him of this he won’t be, I guarantee.

And that seems to be the strategy. While Firefox acts like a typical open source project, listing whatever comes in, working with everyone, Chrome acts more like a proprietary outfit, strategically.

This is a key difference between Google and most open source companies. Most are looking to build an ecosystem however they can get one. Google can be more careful.

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Will WordPress jam Drupal with Thelonius

by Lonnie on Jun.21, 2010, under Commentary, Linux, Nerd Stuff


WordPress 3.0, dubbed Thelonius, is now available for download, filled with new features and bug fixes, including a merger of its single-user and multi-user versions.

A blog post at the site says the team is taking some time off to focus on other areas of the WordPress experience, like forums, themes and plugins.

The team said there were over 10.9 million downloads of WordPress 2.9. It’s released under Version 2.0 of the GPL.

Reaction has been enthusiastic. Bloggers, rejoice says Technorati, and DesignTaxi calls it a fine blogging service, while HTML Goodies hails the delivery of the new content management system.

Therein hangs our tail.

WordPress is known as a first-class blogging platform. It’s the platform we use here at ZDNet. I have grown accustomed to its face, and most bloggers I know say it puts other blog publishing platforms, like Movable Type (which I also use) in the shade.

But WordPress is not just a blogging platform. It is, in fact, a full-fledged content management system, a CMS. It has been given awards as a CMS, and beaten Drupal in that category.

Yet that’s not the way the market sees it. Blogging and content management have different markets. Blogging is well-understood by publishers and design houses. CMSs are the property of enterprises and communities.

This doesn’t mean the two types of software are unrelated. I have long believed that the failure of the 2004 Howard Dean campaign had less to do with the scream and more to do with the failure to upgrade from a blogging platform to a full CMS. That failure cost Iowa, and the dispiriting Iowa loss caused the scream.

The two blogger-consultants who recommended the upgrade to the Dean campaign were Jerome Armstrong, who now helms MyDD.com, and Markos Moulitsas of DailyKos. Both were engaged in such an upgrade when they made the recommendation. Kos now has the left’s largest online community and SB Nation, a competitive sports site.

The point is non-political. The market sees a CMS as big boy software, a blogging platform as mere publishing.

Since the launch of its commercial arm, Acquia, Drupal has solidified its niche in the CMS space. WordPress, meanwhile, has stuck to its knitting, hence commentaries like this one in FastCompany, 6 reasons small businesses need WordPress.

CBS, which owns ZDNet, is not a small company. We depend on WordPress. How about a story about 6 reasons big companies need WordPress, with examples?

I think Matt Mullenweg’s team might be well advised to spend less time working on the software, working in their business, and more time working on their business, seeking a way past Drupal. Mobile platforms represent a new opportunity to shake things up, but it won’t happen unless y’all make the competition explicit.

What open source needs right now is a good old-fashioned marketing war. WordPress vs. Drupal, WordPress.com vs. Acquia.

I’ll get the popcorn.

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The big open source news opportunity

by Lonnie on Jun.21, 2010, under Commentary, Linux, Nerd Stuff


Want to beat the you-know-what out of your local newspaper “monopoly?”

Open source has found a way.

Your two ingredients are:

Your site will live locally only in part. Much of it  — the high-cost video part of it — will live mainly in the Google cloud, brought to your readers through embed links.

The key to it all is OpenBlock, which was first funded by the Knight Foundation as Everyblock, then sold to MSNBC in 2009.

The expansion of the open source project is pushed by two newspapers, The Boston Globe and the Columbia (Missouri) Tribune. The funding, again, comes from Knight, but the largest part of the funding goes to OpenPlans, which already has a number of geo-based projects underway.

As the deal indicates this is all aimed at making local newspapers relevant in the Internet age, but since OpenPlans is an open source project there is no reason why new entrepreneurs can’t take advantage of it.

You can start by looking at another OpenPlans project, StreetsBlog, or consider another open source project, the new WordPress. It is, as noted earlier today, a full-fledged Content Management Service, meaning it can scale to where you want it. Or, if you think you need professional help with your CMS, check out Acquia.

The point, as I have said many times, is to organize and advocate your local market. Geographic-based services help with the organizing, and community-created videos can create the advocacy.

The time is now, and the opportunity is here. Newspapers will never seize it. They haven’t over 15 years. You can. Just remember to start from the ad side in, linking buyers and sellers, then move out to advocacy, not the other way around.

The future of local news is open.

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Has Oracle broken its promises to open source?

by Lonnie on Jun.21, 2010, under Commentary, Linux, Nerd Stuff


In the run-up to the Oracle acquisition of Sun, America’s open source advocates were mostly on Oracle’s side.

Oracle made big promises. They wanted the open source assets — Open Office, Java, and mySQL among them. They said they would invest in those assets.

CEO Larry Ellison called predictions by one analyst of massive Sun lay-offs “irresponsible garbage.” Anyone speculating in that direction should be ashamed of themselves, he said.

I wasn’t ashamed. I believed Oracle bought Sun for its hardware business, not its software. I saw Oracle’s promises as pie crust  — easily made, easily broken.

Many Europeans were even more skeptical. People like Florian Mueller of FOSSPatents and mySQL co-founder Monty Widenius stirred up anger across the continent to the pending deal. The European Commission emerged as the key roadblock to the deal.

But trustworthy open source advocates, like Eben Moglen of the Software Freedom Law Center, were adamant. “For its own business reasons, Oracle will heavily invest in MySQL’s future,” he wrote.

The deal was approved.

Now that Sun has been inside Oracle for a few months I believe the skeptics are being proven right. While some analysts say they’re not surprised at recent job cuts, they are pretty deep, in line with the predictions Ellison called “garbage.”  The Wall Street Journal has estimated the job cuts will cost Oracle $1 billion in severance. Sales are slowing.

Worse may be to come. Java is fragmenting. Solaris is increasingly being treated as proprietary, not as open source. Sam Dean of OStatic agrees with me that Open Office is drifting. CNET’s James Urquhart sees mySQL as a minus, not a plus, for the cloud. The M in the LAMP stack is falling behind.

Larry Ellison’s pattern with acquisitions is clear. He engages in asset stripping. He uses vendor lock-in with those he acquires to reach deep into their wallets. He pushes those customers toward proprietary Oracle technologies.

Nothing wrong with that, in theory. But when these assets are created by a community, not a company, when they are part of a commons, I think they deserve protection. They shouldn’t be treated the way BP treats the Gulf of Mexico.

Why anyone expected something different with Sun and its open source assets is beyond me. Ellison verbally attacked all who questioned his motives, and his intentions, but his record had already spoken for him.

As it seems to be speaking in this case.

You may disagree. If you do, I want to hear from you.

Certainly there is an argument to be made that Oracle is increasing its investment in mySQL. But if open source is all about ending vendor lock-in, Larry Ellison is its worst nightmare. And since acquiring its crown jewels, I would argue, that nightmare has slowly come true.

How do the open source advocates who argued for this deal feel about it now?

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Can Apple even dictate what tools you use?

by Lonnie on Jun.21, 2010, under Commentary, Linux, Nerd Stuff


Apple is proprietary. Apple doesn’t like open source.

That’s fine by me. Apple is not a monopoly. As far as I’m concerned they’re shooting themselves in the foot. Android proves that every day.

But there is proprietary and there is proprietary. There is the proprietary that says, I can decide how my gear displays stuff, so Flash won’t. There is the proprietary that says I will control what my device will do, and it won’t do porn.

And there’s the proprietary that says you can only build stuff to run on my gear with my tools.

That is what programmers who use Appcelerator’s Titanium are wondering right now. And if Jobs insists on controlling the tools used to code for his hardware, I think he’s shooting himself in a far more vital place.

At the end of the day, whether you’re writing in Objective C or Javascript, all your code gets turned into 1s and 0s, and all 1s and 0s are created equal. An iPad can’t tell that a programmer originally used Javascript, so long as the code is translated into something the machine understands, Objective C, which Titanium does.

Since its introduction in 2008 Titanium has become an important competitor to Adobe AIR. If Jobs hates Adobe, the enemy of his enemy should be a friend.

So far Appcelerator, which was formed in Atlanta but then moved to Mountain View, is keeping pretty quiet about the issue. Its latest news release notes only that it supports a lot of developers, and is getting more all the time.

But there is a message there for Jobs. Developers can learn a lot of different languages, but most don’t want to. It’s much easier for them to become comfortable with a few tools or programming environments. This makes them more productive.

Appcelerator notes that this makes it popular. Programmers can use whatever system they want to program for whatever target they want. The code is open source, but that’s not the point my friend. The point is programmer comfort.

If forced to choose between comfort and market share, moreover, there’s always Android. Despite its growth and hype Apple iPhones and iPads still represent a small portion of Internet traffic, and the Android platform is now growing faster.

If Jobs has better tools for creating apps, let him compete for programmers’ loyalty. Dictating to them in this way risks the consumer market share already gained, because consumers don’t care about programming tools, only about their own experience.

And if they can get just as good an experience with an Android, plus more apps because programmers prefer other tools to those of Apple, well, the Macintosh was better than PCs in the 1980s, too.

There is a limit to how far a vendor can push a market. Steve Jobs has pushed too hard before. Appcelerator could be the turning point ending the second age of Apple.

Or not.

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