Puneet,

re legal indemnification, I don't think the intention is for Autodesk to provide that (directly). Autodesk is funding the creation of a separate legal entity (think Apache Foundation) and that legal entity will be tasked with determining what it will provide and how.

Lowell, thanks for the support ...

Ed, I'm sorry that you feel this way but you certainly have the right to express your opinion ...

Cheers

Paul

On 29-Nov-05, at 12:23 AM, Puneet Kishor wrote:

I must underscore that I am not alluding to any conspiracy of any sort. I am only alluding to the facts that --

1. Putting commercial entries as sponsors of opensource, Autodesk or any other, in the manner that it seems like in the case of MapServer, takes something away from the grassroots community aspect of it all. DMS is fairly innocuous here, and I have little reason to doubt them. I have known them for several years, and some of them are my friends. Others may rightly or wrongly feel differently. I can certainly understand Ed's point of view given his position as a business owner of a similar scale. But, does Autodesk being in the fray preclude, antagonize, or even attract other similar sized commercial entities? How will ESRI or Intergraph or Mapinfo or even Oracle and/or Microsoft (all with interests in GIS and mapping) react?

2. The nomenclature does make it seem like the real MapServer has gotten the short shrift. First there was 'classic' or 'lite.' Then came 'professional.' Now Enterprise seems to be all the rage. I could imagine M2EE (MapServer 2 Enterprise Edition), but MapServer Cheetah just doesn't have the same feel other than providing a convenient pencil cover art for the next O'Reilly mapping-made-easy edition. It does seem like Autodesk is making out here on the goodwill established by MapServer. If not a fork of the source, it certainly will be a fork of the energies. I highly doubt the same folks will be able to contribute to both causes with equal vigor.

On the other hand, yes, legal indemnification might be worthwhile attraction. Does Autodesk really provide that? To what extent? I haven't done my due diligence on all aspects of the deal.



Lowell.Filak wrote:
Just as a side-note I can't envision UMN, DM Solutions, & Autodesk lumped together in the discussion. While I understand the points made and responsibility must be shouldered. I also know that DM Solutions & UMN has always put Mapserver first. I think Steve alluded to the legal protection aspect that comes with Autodesk. Wasn't it a couple of years ago that a copyright holder threatened to sue the world of internet mapping? We thought it was a joke but... Is it possible that DMS & UMN felt the need (pressure) to do it NOW (aka. our next generation app is ready and we need to beat Goliath to market or else we pull out of negotiations)?
Lowell
Puneet Kishor writes:
Greetings all (and Ed). I re-joined the list today on coming across the Autodesk newsblurb. My immediate feeling was, "If you can't beat 'em..." The "you" was Autodesk, and "'em" was you-know- who. That was followed by a little bit of giddyness, as it meant that my beloved MapServer was going high profile. I immediately darted off a congratulatory note to the pater of MapServer. But, the feeling has worn off; and Ed's very thoughtful (and wordy) note below has reinforced some of the diffidence that I feel. First, I do feel that MapServer seems to get the second place here. Everyone and their janitor wants "Enterprise." This Cheetah bullshit ain't gonna work. Makes MS-C look sound like a hobby-kit. Second, Autodesk gets a big, free PR thing out of it, and it doesn't even work on a Mac... I mean, give me a break. I am all for the foundation, have been from the day I chimed in my support at Ottawa... we all wanted to know where to send the check of support, and a foundation would have been such a recipient. This foundation is a bit of a squib, unless one's shilling for Autodesk. That said, I am not as pessimistic as Ed might sound... yes, there never will be another "founder" other than those involved, and yes, personally, I would rather think of UMN as a founder instead of any other commercial entity. But, the key is to find a way out/around this, and get the MapServer brand as de- commercialized as possible.
And, for heaven's sake, lets get the Enterprise moniker.
Ed McNierney wrote:
Folks -
This morning I sent a few comments about the MapServer Foundation
off-list to Steve Lime, and (at my request) he forwarded them on to some of the other folks involved. After a comments by a few folks there were requests that I post my messages to the broader community. This post is
an attempt to do that in a consolidated way.  I apologize for being
wordy, but there's a lot to say.
I've been a member of the MapServer "community" for several years now. The Foundation project is the first time I can ever recall there being a
conscious, ongoing, and deliberate attempt to exclude most of the
community from a discussion of significance about MapServer. A small
number of people - some of whom are dedicated developers who've
contributed far more than I ever have - decided to enter into
discussions that included two commercial firms (DM Solutions and
Autodesk).  No one else got to participate, and the work was
deliberately kept secret. Doesn't sound like much of an "open" project
to me.
A MapServer Foundation is a very, very good idea.  This MapServer
Foundation has gotten off to a very, very bad start. I find myself in
the position of being quite reluctant to support this instance of a
concept I eagerly wish to support.
I think I should start by explaining why I think a MapServer Foundation is a very good idea (as opposed to what others think, even though we
generally seem to agree).  MapServer has been well-served by the
technical and development community that supports it. It has mainly lacked many of the things that make a "program" a "product". It needs better documentation, easier setup and sample sites, product summaries and literature, feature/benefit brochures and comparisons, benchmarking tests, presentations, a coordinated trade show/conference plan, better marketing, directories of consultants, reference sites, etc. I don't mean to denigrate any of the efforts made along any of these lines, but
I think we all know there are things you can currently get from
commercial vendors that aren't available with MapServer. A Foundation would be a great way to provide these things. It wouldn't need to get in the way of the development work, and could complement it by filling
in the blanks.
All of that takes money. A MapServer Foundation needs funding to do these things. Fortunately, there are several subsets of the MapServer
community that are in a position to contribute funding.  There are
commercial users of MapServer (folks like me, GlobeXplorer, etc.),
commercial developers/consultancies like DM Solutions and others, and the government and educational users who tend to not have much money to
spend but can usually contribute something.
To date, organizations interested in financial support for MapServer have been limited to funding specific software development tasks. The pace of that development has been such that every time I raise an idea
about a project TopoZone could fund, it seems that someone else has
gotten there first.  I could have chipped in money for "future
development", but there was no place to put it - it didn't make sense to just send Frank or Daniel or Steve a check and tell them to try to spend it somehow. And I would rather fund the "other stuff" than fund feature development - there's more of a need for it. A Foundation could fix
that, by providing a place that takes in revenue from members and
sponsors, and uses that revenue to fund projects - probably
non-development projects as I mentioned above, since those won't get funded otherwise. The OGC membership model is a relevant and simple
example of this sort of thing.
So what does the Foundation need to do that? It needs to be open and inclusive, eligible to all to participate as peers or as peers within
certain classes of membership.  It needs to be independent of any
particular sponsor, and it also needs to APPEAR to be independent. It
needs to have a clear mission and it needs to simplify and clarify
things for its members and for its constituent base. It needs to be seen as the unswerving voice dedicated to the support of MapServer and
nothing else.
Today's announcement missed those goals by a wide mark. Some of those errors can be corrected, but some we'll have to live with forever. And
most of them could have been avoided by the kind of open, inclusive
discussion we've always had in the MapServer community - until now.
Supporting the MapServer Foundation is a great PR and marketing
opportunity. It appears that Autodesk and DM Solutions were extremely
aware of that, and made sure that they didn't have to share that
opportunity with anyone else. Being a "founder" is very important, and you've already seen Autodesk and DM Solutions take advantage of that through their own press releases today. No other company will *ever*
get that chance - the press doesn't really care about the next few
companies to sign on.  When I created TopoZone in 1999, it was
incredibly important to be the first topographic map site on the Web, because the PR value was so great. I suspect very few folks remember
who launched the second one....
Companies will be attracted to sponsor the Foundation because of that PR value. Unfortunately, that value's gone and nothing will get it back. I'm certainly a potential financial supporter of the Foundation, but I'm
also running a business.  I can't simply give money away, but I can
spend it on things that give me PR and marketing value. I could spend a
pretty substantial (for me) sum as an annual commitment to the
Foundation. I am now a *lot* less inclined to provide that support to
this Foundation, because the value (in PR and marketing terms) is a
whole lot less than it would have been if I could have been invited to the party. I'm certainly welcome to sign on and take a seat right up
near the front - as long as it isn't in the front row.
I don't say that because I'm personally miffed at being excluded - I'm just TopoZone. I say that because we'll never know how many firms and how much financial support could have been raised if someone had tried to solicit input and support in an open, inclusive way. There are lots of us out here. I've been told that it's "incredibly important" that the Foundation be seen as vendor-neutral and that it not be at the mercy of a single funder's contributions. Sounds good, but don't tell me that now - those are both reasons to solicit a larger number of contributing
founding members rather than selling the whole package to Autodesk.
It's not easy to undo that; the Foundation is clearly already seen as an Autodesk initiative by the press (in part because Autodesk has tried to make that point clear) and not many firms are interested in throwing
money at Autodesk - they've got more of it than I do.
My second huge concern is the branding/product lineup for the
Foundation. I woke up this morning to two MapServers where we had one
before.  One of them has the impressive-sounding name "MapServer
Enterprise" while the other is currently named after a large pussycat but may or may not be open to the possibility of being named after a different mammal. There's no doubt in the potential customer's mind which one is the grown-up, field-tested, production-ready, scalable,
capable system.  Unfortunately, they're thinking of the wrong one.
Branding really matters. It's very important. Tyler Mitchell says so, too, on the new MapServer site. Autodesk has zillions of people who know that very, very well. They just bought a great brand and MapServer suddenly managed to take a back seat to itself, something I would have
thought anatomically impossible.  They've managed to appropriate a
well-respected brand name and take center stage with it. Autodesk's press release takes advantage of that ambiguity by introducing Steve
Lime as the "creator of MapServer" without saying which one they're
talking about! Speaking of press releases, in an effort like this it is
common for all founding members to see and sign off on each other's
press releases in advance, something which appears (from some developer
comments) to not have happened here.  This is PR 101 stuff - if you
don't try to keep what you're doing a secret, you might get helpful
advice.
The same is true, by the way, about the questions raised on Autodesk's
patent policy.  This should NOT be an open question *after* the
announcement - Autodesk's patent portfolio and their defense of it are well-known. It should have been one of the first questions raised and answered. Once the Foundation's plans were made public it only took a few hours to bring it to everyone's attention - remember the benefits of
open development?
The "MapServer Enterprise" product just got inserted into the MapServer
family by decree.  Customers know very well that when they see two
similar products side-by-side, usually due to a merger or acquisition, they sit back and wait to see which one gets killed off. This usually
has the effect of discouraging adoption of BOTH products, because
customers don't know which one to implement and don't want to make the
wrong choice.  Believe me, I've been a CTO standing up in front of
customers in that situation more than once - they don't believe you can
serve two masters, and they're right.
Does the Apache Foundation offer two Web servers? Apache Enterprise and
Apache Other?
Can't kill off MapServer, you say? Perhaps not in a technical sense, but if there's a MapServer Foundation and a MapServer Enterprise, who's
going to notice if that other thingy doesn't get the same amount of
attention?  Perhaps the platypus is indeed a good choice, as it may
belong with the nearly-extinct monotremes. You can't kill the MapServer code, but you can certainly kill the brand. Please don't confuse the
two.
Why was the Foundation "announced" when it apparently doesn't actually exist? It seems like today's announcement was designed primarily to
maximize the PR value to DM Solutions and Autodesk - after all, the
press got briefed about it before the rest of us did. As far as I can tell, there isn't any foundation, but when we get one it's going to be great and open to all, because DM Solutions and UMN and Autodesk have all assured each other that it will be. Each time I hear that "now's the time to participate", I cringe because I'm being told that by the exclusive group who deliberately prevented all of us from participating until they decided they had gotten what they needed out of it and it's now OK to let the rest of us inside. The time to participate was last week, or last month, before anything got announced and before we were all handed the Foundation. If the Foundation is really a genuinely open
opportunity for us, then tell us that the inclusion of Autodesk's
product isn't non-negotiable.  Do the rest of us get to insert
MapServer-branded products whenever we want to?
All of these problems were preventable. All it would have taken was an open discussion of the proposal. You get a lot of people spouting off, and then you find out who's really interested. You find out how many
commercial sponsors you can get and at what level of support.  You
create what appears to the public as a truly open consortium that's
worth watching, instead of one that triggers discussions about Autodesk.
You demonstrate right from the start that you have a broad base of
commercial support, with commercial firms from the USA, Canada, Europe,
South America, Australia, etc.  What was the perceived benefit of
keeping the process secret and exclusive? Did someone threaten to pick up their marbles and go home? You can often be surprised at how many folks are willing to contribute their own marbles when something like
that happens - but you never know until you ask.
The MapServer community really needs a Foundation to support it and to keep the product healthy and growing. There are many examples of the creation of such consortia to draw from, both inside of and outside of
the Open Source community.  It doesn't appear those examples were
considered. We really need a MapServer Foundation - I'm not at all sure
that we need this one.

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|Paul Spencer                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |
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|Applications & Software Development                              |
|DM Solutions Group Inc                 http://www.dmsolutions.ca/|
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