Opensourcing by itself does not provide any service for customers. But
there are now plenty of companies proposing these services, along with
support, and including opensourced softwares also in their service offers.

But servicing these apps or components at the software level (including for
fixing security issues, or helping to fix some incorrect translations, or
documenting some processes) is something frequently forgotten: a company
just provides helps for installing the full package of an OS with some
installation wizards and some doc only for their own specific products
added on top, but forget all the rest.

At most they will provide links to public forums, but not everyone wants to
discuss publicly about the problems they encounter: they want private
support and confidentality or protection of their privacy by having direct
contact with the service provider, which whom they may show private data or
conversations used along with the supported apps. For that of course the
customer service will be often paid/subscribed.

Having private support is something that must be developed, and that cannot
be supported by a live community: you need people you can trust or with
whom you can create contractual agreements. That's where there are
companies like Ubuntu or RedHat (or now even Microsoft in their Azure
environment or for the new bash environement in Windows 10, with a
collaboration between Microsoft and Canonical, or with Oracle and IBM which
also have these supports for professional offers, or with Steam that
supports gamers on the Linux platform, or with Google that supports the
Linux-based Android system, including with paid subscriptions for private
support...)

I would then not conclude that such services do not exist, but they are not
sufficiently developed and not enough visible: most Linux projects in fact
forget to promote their service providers, and many people are left alone
with the terms of the open licences that offer them *no warranty* at all,
no responsable team to take in charge privately their problems.

We should promote those external companies (and give them an opportunity to
help opensourced projects by donations to the projects and direct
involvement in the projects, in exchange the projects will include some
minimum non-exclusive banners or an online directory that users can browse
and then make their choice for the service they want to pay). This is done
however in some indirect projects such as conference events organized in
various places (but most of these events are too far away and too costly
for going there: people want to get supprot directly by mail, or phone, or
want that their service provider to come in situ with qualified
professionals and with recognized and standardized working methods).

On 08/01/2016 11:49 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
>
>
> *Gentlemen, If you believe that the future of Open Source should be in the
> application area, your example of using a small portion of Quick Books
> revenue to improve an Open Source product are missing the entire process of
> having users.... Commercialization, advertising, Customer service,
> documentation, help systems... at the end of the entire process is the
> technical product (program).  The technically most important part of a
> product, is almost the least important part of bringing a solution to the
> real world.  Try looking at the almost non-existent market penetration of
> Libre Office / Open Office is due to the price, FREE, means nobody telling
> me why I want to use the product, nobody telling me the product exists (NO
> advertising), no training seminars for VARS, no product co-commissions = NO
> REASON I SHOULD Hustle my users into the product.  I will get to service
> the product and get nothing for recommending it. John A. Ward*
>
>
_______________________________________________
Osdc-list mailing list | This is a place for our readers, writers, moderators 
and artists to discuss matters concerning Opensource.com and otherwise do the 
work that makes this a community practicing the open source way.

Sign-up for our weekly newsletter: http://opensource.com/email-newsletter

Send a message: [email protected]
Change preferences: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/osdc-list
Unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/options/osdc-list

Reply via email to