> While it's a nice idea, I don't think it works in practice. You're
> trying to measure indirect effects, and if that were in any way
> possible, marketing would be an engineering science.


I agree, measurement of FOSS use in business is very difficult.

The Internet has clearly had an enormous yet difficult to measure impact on 
many buying and selling activities. For example, there is anecdotal evidence 
that many eBay users consult items for sale merely to estimate the going price 
for something, before placing a classified ad in a local newspaper. Ebay 
countered this by limiting access to terminated transactions to members only. 
Similarly, it is said some visit Amazon simply to obtain the ISBN number of a 
book so they can go to their local bookstore to buy it (or even their local 
library to borrow it). In both these cases, no sale was made benefiting the 
Internet sites which provided the information; yet there was an (unmeasurable) 
impact on a local economy.

In the case of FOSS projects, it's notoriously difficult to measure what's 
going on in companies; the usual reliable indicator is a press or consulting 
firm survey of CIOs in which they remain anonymous and they are asked about 
current installed base and future purchasing intentions, etc.

The Internet itself is not so reliable for measurement: for example, Netcraft 
tracks web server usage and publishes statistics on Apache versus IIS, but 
doesn't take into account parked domains. A recent switch to IIS from Apache of 
a large US service provider caused some flutterings in the blogosphere until it 
was revealed that a large majority of the domains were merely parked, which 
means of course the web server is not even used.

The current situation is a clash of ideas. We are still in a period where 
education is necessary -- how FOSS is structured compared to traditional 
proprietary offerings, the danger of software patents to innovation, the DRM 
mess. We can agree that the rapid growth of GNU/Linux in business is 
incontestable; after all, Red Hat, Novell/Suse etc. can count the number and 
size of support contracts sold -- so it's clear that CIOs are getting the 
message. As for *how* they are getting the message, I think it's most likely 
from the Internet, probably from the specialized press illustrating business 
cases, possibly their usual integrators making the transition, maybe even from 
consultants (who in general I think have been slower than business to 
understand the industry changes underway).

Microsoft built their empire in business (aside from cheating through predatory 
and illegal business practices) by supporting developers, ISVs, and 
integrators, the front lines of business IT solutions and support. However, as 
a marketing company, tempted by the easy margins of license-selling, they made 
a critical mistake -- they left *all* business process specialization to third 
parties, a mistake IBM, HP, Sun etc. never made. As a result, Microsoft is 
overdependent on its business partner ecosystem. In this context, perhaps a 
useful metric would be to calculate percentages of self-described FOSS-oriented 
integrators over the past three years; I believe integrators have faced, and 
proposed, the choice between FOSS and proprietary sofware for longer than many 
non-IT businesses.

Sean DALY.

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