I find myself torn by this issue.  On the one hand, I like -- and I mean *really* like 
-- open source projects.  The people I know who work on open source projects are 
top-notch and the products I use (or have used) are good, if not great, pieces of 
software.  This is no surprise:  Like the banjo players in the hills of Western 
Virginia, these products are not undertaken as a means of getting rich, famous or 
otherwise "making a splash"... they are the result of people doing what they like to 
do.  This is how the very best music, poetry, software, etc. is created.

On the other hand, the argument about giving away the fruits of one's labor also rings 
true and harkens back to a quote by Colonel Tom Parker (Elvis' manager), which went 
something like, "Don't give people something today and expect them to pay for it 
tomorrow"   Perhaps an over-simplification, but...


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Michael Silverstein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: 2 марта 2004 г. 7:41
> To: 'Research Triangle Java User's Group mailing list.'
> Subject: RE: [Juglist] Why is volunteering for open source a 
> badthing?(wasTechEngage III)
> 
> 
> Merritt, Eric said:
> >  The vast majority of work for programmers in this country is
> > custom inhouse' development for mid-large companies. These 
> > are the types of applications that don't exist in the open 
> > source world. Also the type of applications that companies 
> > use from open source tend to be operating systems 
> > (linux/bsd), office tools (open office) and the like. How 
> > many programmers could resonable be employed in these types 
> > of endeavors? 5,000 - 10,000? Thats a small percentage of the 
> > total number of programmers nationwide. I don't think that 
> > programmers providing thier work under an open source license 
> > has anything to do with the devaluation of programmers. I 
> > think that, generally, the availablity or people with good 
> > progaming skills for a tenth or less of what a programmer 
> > generally makes in the us is what is devaluing programmers. I 
> > hate to see this happen, but its inevitable. Globalization is 
> > a good thing in the long run, but short term it hurts 
> > specific industries. Right now the industry its hurting us' 
> > the us and european IT industry. Pointing to OSS as the 
> > source of the industries problems is a failure to look at the 
> > wider picture.
> 
> I think OSS is simply one term in a larger economic equation. 
> I don't think any reasonable person could point to any one 
> thing as the cause of large scale economic change, short of 
> some global catastrophe. 
> 
> The effect of hours contributed to OSS projects may be 
> greater than you think. Consider this small, overly 
> simplified example:
> 
> To use your example of in-house projects, in the past 
> companies creating software for these projects faced 'build' 
> vs. buy' decisions, usually doing a little of both. The set 
> of options has now expanded to include 'download for free'.
> 
> If you contribute an hour to an OSS framework and that 
> framework is adopted within 1000 projects that would 
> otherwise have made a 'build' decision, you have effectively 
> reduced the demand for labor by 1000 hours. 
> 
> Alternatively, consider the possibility that some companies 
> would have made 'buy' decisions but were influenced to go the 
> 'download' route by the availability of free software. If 
> enough of that happens some vendors may respond by orienting 
> themselves more toward services, in some cases letting some 
> of their product developers go. These developers enter the 
> labor marketplace, possibly competing against the people who 
> contributed the software. Labor supply goes up, demand and 
> rates go down. These developers start contributing to OSS 
> projects in order to gain experience and get their names out 
> and the cycle continues, or actually reinforces itself 
> through feedback. 
> 
> Or perhaps in some cases companies in foreign countries make 
> 'download' instead of 'buy' decisions so fewer dollars flow 
> back into this country.
> 
> 
> The bottom line is that I'm having difficulty coming up with 
> an economic framework in which giving away one's time to free 
> software projects is a net positive factor in overall job growth.
> 
> Note that this is quite different from companies' paying 
> developers to write software that is then given away for 
> free, like Java, Eclipse, etc. which a somewhat different topic.
> 
> -----------------------------
> Mike Silverstein
> SilverMark, Inc.
> The Object Testing Company
> www.silvermark.com
> 
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