The term open source refers to something people can modify and share because its design is publicly accessible. Behind any successful open source project or product there is typically a passionate and close community collaborating under the virtue of transparency to develop services that break from tradition. This is a cultural issue. One that pushes the industry to evolve and transition in getting organizations to adopt open source. This interesting topic came to us from SDX Central in their article, “The Greatest Asset to Open Source is Community.”
By design, open source software licenses promote collaboration and sharing because they permit other people to make modifications to source code and incorporate those changes into their own projects.
According to Kelsey Hightower, staff developer advocate at Google, we’re seeing the benefits of open source right now. The point is being made that it is simply not possible for proprietary vendors with closed limited resources and ideas to ever compete with something that is not only open to the world, but the world is contributing towards.
Melody K. Smith
Sponsored by Access Innovations, the world leader in thesaurus, ontology, and taxonomy creation and metadata application.