際際滷shows by User: North_Bridge / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: North_Bridge / Tue, 06 Dec 2016 18:00:34 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: North_Bridge 2016 Future of Cloud Computing Study /slideshow/2016-future-of-cloud-computing-study/69884474 focc2016slide-161206180034
North Bridge and Wikibon, announced the results of its sixth annual Future of Cloud Computing Survey, which analyzes trends in cloud computing, adoption, use and challenges on a yearly basis. The study provides the broadest and deepest exploration of cloud in the industry with 53 leading cloud companies participating as collaborators. This years survey received 1,351 responses, a record-breaking number, representing a 60/40 balance of user/vendor perspectives spanning senior executives to practitioners across all industry sectors such as Technology, F.I.R.E., Government, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Media, Professional Services and Transportation. According to Wikibons July 2016 report based on market conditions and recent public cloud revenue results of Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and IBM; public cloud spending is expected to accelerate rapidly, growing from $75B in 2015 to $522B by 2026 at a compound annual growth rate of 19%. Within each public cloud segment continued rapid growth rates are also expected during this period: SaaS (19% CAGR), PaaS (33% CAGR), and IaaS (18% CAGR). Wikibon estimates that by 2026, cloud will account for nearly 50% of spending related to enterprise hardware, software, and outsourcing services. Cloud Strategy Based on our survey, while slightly less than 50% of all companies either have a cloud first or cloud only strategy; some form of cloud strategy is pervasive among all with 90% of companies surveyed reporting that they use it in some way. A new finding this year is the fact that a surprisingly high number, 42%, of companies surveyed derive 50% or more of their business through cloud-based applications. In fact, a whopping 79.9% of the companies surveyed were getting some revenue from the cloud. This speaks to the digital transformation occurring across many industries and how many are looking to not only move more quickly with the cloud but profit from it as well. Read more: http://www.northbridge.com/2016-future-cloud-computing-survey]]>

North Bridge and Wikibon, announced the results of its sixth annual Future of Cloud Computing Survey, which analyzes trends in cloud computing, adoption, use and challenges on a yearly basis. The study provides the broadest and deepest exploration of cloud in the industry with 53 leading cloud companies participating as collaborators. This years survey received 1,351 responses, a record-breaking number, representing a 60/40 balance of user/vendor perspectives spanning senior executives to practitioners across all industry sectors such as Technology, F.I.R.E., Government, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Media, Professional Services and Transportation. According to Wikibons July 2016 report based on market conditions and recent public cloud revenue results of Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and IBM; public cloud spending is expected to accelerate rapidly, growing from $75B in 2015 to $522B by 2026 at a compound annual growth rate of 19%. Within each public cloud segment continued rapid growth rates are also expected during this period: SaaS (19% CAGR), PaaS (33% CAGR), and IaaS (18% CAGR). Wikibon estimates that by 2026, cloud will account for nearly 50% of spending related to enterprise hardware, software, and outsourcing services. Cloud Strategy Based on our survey, while slightly less than 50% of all companies either have a cloud first or cloud only strategy; some form of cloud strategy is pervasive among all with 90% of companies surveyed reporting that they use it in some way. A new finding this year is the fact that a surprisingly high number, 42%, of companies surveyed derive 50% or more of their business through cloud-based applications. In fact, a whopping 79.9% of the companies surveyed were getting some revenue from the cloud. This speaks to the digital transformation occurring across many industries and how many are looking to not only move more quickly with the cloud but profit from it as well. Read more: http://www.northbridge.com/2016-future-cloud-computing-survey]]>
Tue, 06 Dec 2016 18:00:34 GMT /slideshow/2016-future-of-cloud-computing-study/69884474 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2016 Future of Cloud Computing Study North_Bridge North Bridge and Wikibon, announced the results of its sixth annual Future of Cloud Computing Survey, which analyzes trends in cloud computing, adoption, use and challenges on a yearly basis. The study provides the broadest and deepest exploration of cloud in the industry with 53 leading cloud companies participating as collaborators. This years survey received 1,351 responses, a record-breaking number, representing a 60/40 balance of user/vendor perspectives spanning senior executives to practitioners across all industry sectors such as Technology, F.I.R.E., Government, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Media, Professional Services and Transportation. According to Wikibons July 2016 report based on market conditions and recent public cloud revenue results of Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and IBM; public cloud spending is expected to accelerate rapidly, growing from $75B in 2015 to $522B by 2026 at a compound annual growth rate of 19%. Within each public cloud segment continued rapid growth rates are also expected during this period: SaaS (19% CAGR), PaaS (33% CAGR), and IaaS (18% CAGR). Wikibon estimates that by 2026, cloud will account for nearly 50% of spending related to enterprise hardware, software, and outsourcing services. Cloud Strategy Based on our survey, while slightly less than 50% of all companies either have a cloud first or cloud only strategy; some form of cloud strategy is pervasive among all with 90% of companies surveyed reporting that they use it in some way. A new finding this year is the fact that a surprisingly high number, 42%, of companies surveyed derive 50% or more of their business through cloud-based applications. In fact, a whopping 79.9% of the companies surveyed were getting some revenue from the cloud. This speaks to the digital transformation occurring across many industries and how many are looking to not only move more quickly with the cloud but profit from it as well. Read more: http://www.northbridge.com/2016-future-cloud-computing-survey <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/focc2016slide-161206180034-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> North Bridge and Wikibon, announced the results of its sixth annual Future of Cloud Computing Survey, which analyzes trends in cloud computing, adoption, use and challenges on a yearly basis. The study provides the broadest and deepest exploration of cloud in the industry with 53 leading cloud companies participating as collaborators. This years survey received 1,351 responses, a record-breaking number, representing a 60/40 balance of user/vendor perspectives spanning senior executives to practitioners across all industry sectors such as Technology, F.I.R.E., Government, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Media, Professional Services and Transportation. According to Wikibons July 2016 report based on market conditions and recent public cloud revenue results of Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and IBM; public cloud spending is expected to accelerate rapidly, growing from $75B in 2015 to $522B by 2026 at a compound annual growth rate of 19%. Within each public cloud segment continued rapid growth rates are also expected during this period: SaaS (19% CAGR), PaaS (33% CAGR), and IaaS (18% CAGR). Wikibon estimates that by 2026, cloud will account for nearly 50% of spending related to enterprise hardware, software, and outsourcing services. Cloud Strategy Based on our survey, while slightly less than 50% of all companies either have a cloud first or cloud only strategy; some form of cloud strategy is pervasive among all with 90% of companies surveyed reporting that they use it in some way. A new finding this year is the fact that a surprisingly high number, 42%, of companies surveyed derive 50% or more of their business through cloud-based applications. In fact, a whopping 79.9% of the companies surveyed were getting some revenue from the cloud. This speaks to the digital transformation occurring across many industries and how many are looking to not only move more quickly with the cloud but profit from it as well. Read more: http://www.northbridge.com/2016-future-cloud-computing-survey
2016 Future of Cloud Computing Study from North Bridge
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2016 Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2016-future-of-open-source-study-61431845/61431845 2016-future-of-open-source-study-160427191542
The 2016 North Bridge & Black Duck Future of Open Source Study marks the 10th Anniversary of this survey. The study examines open source software trends on an annual basis. Notably, the 2016 survey findings position open source as todays preeminent architecture, the foundation for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, and big data. In terms of the strategic influence open source has on their business, respondents see it as an engine for innovation, with 90% reporting they rely on open source for improved efficiency, innovation and interoperability. The most compelling reasons cited in the survey for use of open source included flexibility and freedom from vendor lock-in; competitive features and technical capabilities; ability to customize; and overall quality. The 2016 results also show that the rapid adoption of open source has outpaced the implementation of effective open source management and security practices. Nearly half of respondents report they have no formal processes to track their open source, and half reporting that no one has responsibility for identifying known vulnerabilities and tracking remediation. Key 2016 Insights: Open Source Is The Modern Architecture. Open Source is the foundation now for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, big data and more. Open Source IS the Engine of Innovation. Open Source is driving business because it facilitates faster, more agile development. This translates into quicker builds, accelerated time to market and vastly superior interoperability. There is a new generation of companies and business models emerging. Respondents report that in the next two or three years, the business models that will generate the most revenue for open source vendors are SaaS (46%); Custom Development (42%) and Services/Support (41%). Challenges remain: Open Source security and management practices have not kept pace with rapid adoption. In the wake of high profile breaches, there is likely to be more emphasis on security. Participation and contribution will secure the future of open source. Investing in the open source community spurs innovation, delivers exponential value and most of all, its fun. It continues to grow as a key hiring and retention tool in IT shops of enterprises, governments, and startups alike.]]>

The 2016 North Bridge & Black Duck Future of Open Source Study marks the 10th Anniversary of this survey. The study examines open source software trends on an annual basis. Notably, the 2016 survey findings position open source as todays preeminent architecture, the foundation for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, and big data. In terms of the strategic influence open source has on their business, respondents see it as an engine for innovation, with 90% reporting they rely on open source for improved efficiency, innovation and interoperability. The most compelling reasons cited in the survey for use of open source included flexibility and freedom from vendor lock-in; competitive features and technical capabilities; ability to customize; and overall quality. The 2016 results also show that the rapid adoption of open source has outpaced the implementation of effective open source management and security practices. Nearly half of respondents report they have no formal processes to track their open source, and half reporting that no one has responsibility for identifying known vulnerabilities and tracking remediation. Key 2016 Insights: Open Source Is The Modern Architecture. Open Source is the foundation now for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, big data and more. Open Source IS the Engine of Innovation. Open Source is driving business because it facilitates faster, more agile development. This translates into quicker builds, accelerated time to market and vastly superior interoperability. There is a new generation of companies and business models emerging. Respondents report that in the next two or three years, the business models that will generate the most revenue for open source vendors are SaaS (46%); Custom Development (42%) and Services/Support (41%). Challenges remain: Open Source security and management practices have not kept pace with rapid adoption. In the wake of high profile breaches, there is likely to be more emphasis on security. Participation and contribution will secure the future of open source. Investing in the open source community spurs innovation, delivers exponential value and most of all, its fun. It continues to grow as a key hiring and retention tool in IT shops of enterprises, governments, and startups alike.]]>
Wed, 27 Apr 2016 19:15:42 GMT /slideshow/2016-future-of-open-source-study-61431845/61431845 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2016 Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge The 2016 North Bridge & Black Duck Future of Open Source Study marks the 10th Anniversary of this survey. The study examines open source software trends on an annual basis. Notably, the 2016 survey findings position open source as todays preeminent architecture, the foundation for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, and big data. In terms of the strategic influence open source has on their business, respondents see it as an engine for innovation, with 90% reporting they rely on open source for improved efficiency, innovation and interoperability. The most compelling reasons cited in the survey for use of open source included flexibility and freedom from vendor lock-in; competitive features and technical capabilities; ability to customize; and overall quality. The 2016 results also show that the rapid adoption of open source has outpaced the implementation of effective open source management and security practices. Nearly half of respondents report they have no formal processes to track their open source, and half reporting that no one has responsibility for identifying known vulnerabilities and tracking remediation. Key 2016 Insights: Open Source Is The Modern Architecture. Open Source is the foundation now for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, big data and more. Open Source IS the Engine of Innovation. Open Source is driving business because it facilitates faster, more agile development. This translates into quicker builds, accelerated time to market and vastly superior interoperability. There is a new generation of companies and business models emerging. Respondents report that in the next two or three years, the business models that will generate the most revenue for open source vendors are SaaS (46%); Custom Development (42%) and Services/Support (41%). Challenges remain: Open Source security and management practices have not kept pace with rapid adoption. In the wake of high profile breaches, there is likely to be more emphasis on security. Participation and contribution will secure the future of open source. Investing in the open source community spurs innovation, delivers exponential value and most of all, its fun. It continues to grow as a key hiring and retention tool in IT shops of enterprises, governments, and startups alike. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2016-future-of-open-source-study-160427191542-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The 2016 North Bridge &amp; Black Duck Future of Open Source Study marks the 10th Anniversary of this survey. The study examines open source software trends on an annual basis. Notably, the 2016 survey findings position open source as todays preeminent architecture, the foundation for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, and big data. In terms of the strategic influence open source has on their business, respondents see it as an engine for innovation, with 90% reporting they rely on open source for improved efficiency, innovation and interoperability. The most compelling reasons cited in the survey for use of open source included flexibility and freedom from vendor lock-in; competitive features and technical capabilities; ability to customize; and overall quality. The 2016 results also show that the rapid adoption of open source has outpaced the implementation of effective open source management and security practices. Nearly half of respondents report they have no formal processes to track their open source, and half reporting that no one has responsibility for identifying known vulnerabilities and tracking remediation. Key 2016 Insights: Open Source Is The Modern Architecture. Open Source is the foundation now for nearly all applications, operating systems, cloud computing, databases, big data and more. Open Source IS the Engine of Innovation. Open Source is driving business because it facilitates faster, more agile development. This translates into quicker builds, accelerated time to market and vastly superior interoperability. There is a new generation of companies and business models emerging. Respondents report that in the next two or three years, the business models that will generate the most revenue for open source vendors are SaaS (46%); Custom Development (42%) and Services/Support (41%). Challenges remain: Open Source security and management practices have not kept pace with rapid adoption. In the wake of high profile breaches, there is likely to be more emphasis on security. Participation and contribution will secure the future of open source. Investing in the open source community spurs innovation, delivers exponential value and most of all, its fun. It continues to grow as a key hiring and retention tool in IT shops of enterprises, governments, and startups alike.
2016 Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2015 Future of Cloud Computing Study /slideshow/2015-future-of-cloud-computing-study/55986236 cloudcoveronly-151209180355-lva1-app6891
2015 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study, with Wikibon |Broadest exploration of cloud trends, cloud migration & evolution of the cloud computing sector. Survey participation was the largest to date and included responses from 38 countries. 50 collaborators supported the 5th Annual Future of Cloud Computing study, which reveals that cloud has become an accepted and integral technology. Furthermore, the study shows that despite deployment gaps among clouds, we should expect a future powered by hybrid cloud technologies. The question of whether companies are using the cloud has morphed to how deeply cloud adoption is integrated within the business. From the bottom to the top, all products and services will in some way be powered by the cloud making the promise of goods and services that have the potential to be better tomorrow than today. IT departments have reclaimed the reins on driving company technology strategy and cloud adoption as roles, skills and processes have shifted. Importantly, Were also seeing the emergence of the cloud as the only way businesses can truly get more out of their data including analyzing and executing on it real-time. On the investment front, 2015 could tip the scale from private to public capital for SaaS companies.]]>

2015 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study, with Wikibon |Broadest exploration of cloud trends, cloud migration & evolution of the cloud computing sector. Survey participation was the largest to date and included responses from 38 countries. 50 collaborators supported the 5th Annual Future of Cloud Computing study, which reveals that cloud has become an accepted and integral technology. Furthermore, the study shows that despite deployment gaps among clouds, we should expect a future powered by hybrid cloud technologies. The question of whether companies are using the cloud has morphed to how deeply cloud adoption is integrated within the business. From the bottom to the top, all products and services will in some way be powered by the cloud making the promise of goods and services that have the potential to be better tomorrow than today. IT departments have reclaimed the reins on driving company technology strategy and cloud adoption as roles, skills and processes have shifted. Importantly, Were also seeing the emergence of the cloud as the only way businesses can truly get more out of their data including analyzing and executing on it real-time. On the investment front, 2015 could tip the scale from private to public capital for SaaS companies.]]>
Wed, 09 Dec 2015 18:03:55 GMT /slideshow/2015-future-of-cloud-computing-study/55986236 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2015 Future of Cloud Computing Study North_Bridge 2015 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study, with Wikibon |Broadest exploration of cloud trends, cloud migration & evolution of the cloud computing sector. Survey participation was the largest to date and included responses from 38 countries. 50 collaborators supported the 5th Annual Future of Cloud Computing study, which reveals that cloud has become an accepted and integral technology. Furthermore, the study shows that despite deployment gaps among clouds, we should expect a future powered by hybrid cloud technologies. The question of whether companies are using the cloud has morphed to how deeply cloud adoption is integrated within the business. From the bottom to the top, all products and services will in some way be powered by the cloud making the promise of goods and services that have the potential to be better tomorrow than today. IT departments have reclaimed the reins on driving company technology strategy and cloud adoption as roles, skills and processes have shifted. Importantly, Were also seeing the emergence of the cloud as the only way businesses can truly get more out of their data including analyzing and executing on it real-time. On the investment front, 2015 could tip the scale from private to public capital for SaaS companies. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/cloudcoveronly-151209180355-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2015 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study, with Wikibon |Broadest exploration of cloud trends, cloud migration &amp; evolution of the cloud computing sector. Survey participation was the largest to date and included responses from 38 countries. 50 collaborators supported the 5th Annual Future of Cloud Computing study, which reveals that cloud has become an accepted and integral technology. Furthermore, the study shows that despite deployment gaps among clouds, we should expect a future powered by hybrid cloud technologies. The question of whether companies are using the cloud has morphed to how deeply cloud adoption is integrated within the business. From the bottom to the top, all products and services will in some way be powered by the cloud making the promise of goods and services that have the potential to be better tomorrow than today. IT departments have reclaimed the reins on driving company technology strategy and cloud adoption as roles, skills and processes have shifted. Importantly, Were also seeing the emergence of the cloud as the only way businesses can truly get more out of their data including analyzing and executing on it real-time. On the investment front, 2015 could tip the scale from private to public capital for SaaS companies.
2015 Future of Cloud Computing Study from North Bridge
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2012 Future of Cloud Study /slideshow/2012-future-of-cloud-study/46284940 2012northbridgefutureofcloudstudy-150325143314-conversion-gate01
2012 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with 39 collaborators.]]>

2012 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with 39 collaborators.]]>
Wed, 25 Mar 2015 14:33:14 GMT /slideshow/2012-future-of-cloud-study/46284940 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2012 Future of Cloud Study North_Bridge 2012 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with 39 collaborators. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2012northbridgefutureofcloudstudy-150325143314-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2012 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with 39 collaborators.
2012 Future of Cloud Study from North Bridge
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2014 Future of Cloud Computing Study /slideshow/2014-north-bridge-future-of-cloud-study/45901635 2014northbridgefutureofcloudstudy-150316131524-conversion-gate01
2014 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study | Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 72 collaborators.]]>

2014 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study | Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 72 collaborators.]]>
Mon, 16 Mar 2015 13:15:24 GMT /slideshow/2014-north-bridge-future-of-cloud-study/45901635 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2014 Future of Cloud Computing Study North_Bridge 2014 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study | Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 72 collaborators. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2014northbridgefutureofcloudstudy-150316131524-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2014 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study | Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 72 collaborators.
2014 Future of Cloud Computing Study from North Bridge
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2013 Future of Cloud Computing Study /slideshow/2013-future-of-cloud-computing-study/45901617 2013futureofcloud7-10-13updated3-4-15-150316131451-conversion-gate01
2013 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 57 collaborators.]]>

2013 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 57 collaborators.]]>
Mon, 16 Mar 2015 13:14:50 GMT /slideshow/2013-future-of-cloud-computing-study/45901617 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2013 Future of Cloud Computing Study North_Bridge 2013 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 57 collaborators. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013futureofcloud7-10-13updated3-4-15-150316131451-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2013 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom + 57 collaborators.
2013 Future of Cloud Computing Study from North Bridge
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2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study /slideshow/2011-future-of-cloud-computing-study/45899982 2011northbridgefutureofcloudcomputingstudy-150316123921-conversion-gate01
2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom, 451 Research + 30 collaborators.]]>

2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom, 451 Research + 30 collaborators.]]>
Mon, 16 Mar 2015 12:39:21 GMT /slideshow/2011-future-of-cloud-computing-study/45899982 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study North_Bridge 2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom, 451 Research + 30 collaborators. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2011northbridgefutureofcloudcomputingstudy-150316123921-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study|Results of industry-wide survey conducted in partnership with Gigaom, 451 Research + 30 collaborators.
2011 North Bridge Future of Cloud Computing Study from North Bridge
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2014 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2014-future-of-open-source-study/43793416 2014futureofopensourcestudy-150122132004-conversion-gate02
2014 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with panel moderation from North Bridge and panelists: Lou Shipley, CEO at Black Duck Software (@loushipley) Jeffrey Hammond, Principal Analyst at Forrester Research (@jhammond) Guy Martin, Senior Open Source Strategist at Samsung Research America (@guyma) Kerrin Perniciaro, Manager of IT Communications & Web Strategy in the Division of Information Technology (DoIT) at Stony Brook University (@SBUDoIT) Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (@BrianG_Jasper) A record-breaking 1,240 industry influencers took the 2014 survey, answering questions about OSS trends, opportunities, key drivers of open source adoption, community engagement, and the business problems OSS solves now and in the future. study highlight this democratization and proliferation of open source in three main areas: new people, new technologies, and new economics. Open source is enjoying a proliferation that starts with a growing number of new developers at the grass roots. Many then go on to join enterprises who themselves are engaging in open source projects. Further news in the survey shows enterprises now organizing to contribute back more actively; as they realize the importance of open source innovation to jumpstart careers and kickstart projects. As our survey continues to show open source is consuming the software world as the inherent quality, functionality, and increasingly ease of deployment creates a powerful gravitational pull on people and industries. This self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle will result in the most exciting applications having an open source foundation. Which is why many of the leading technology areas such as cloud, big data, content management and mobile are treating open source as their 'foundational platform. Further, more new areas like the Internet of Things, which requires interoperability and extensibility, can only be met by open source initiatives, hence the emergence of new communities such as the AllSeen Alliance, according to the North Bridge Press Release.]]>

2014 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with panel moderation from North Bridge and panelists: Lou Shipley, CEO at Black Duck Software (@loushipley) Jeffrey Hammond, Principal Analyst at Forrester Research (@jhammond) Guy Martin, Senior Open Source Strategist at Samsung Research America (@guyma) Kerrin Perniciaro, Manager of IT Communications & Web Strategy in the Division of Information Technology (DoIT) at Stony Brook University (@SBUDoIT) Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (@BrianG_Jasper) A record-breaking 1,240 industry influencers took the 2014 survey, answering questions about OSS trends, opportunities, key drivers of open source adoption, community engagement, and the business problems OSS solves now and in the future. study highlight this democratization and proliferation of open source in three main areas: new people, new technologies, and new economics. Open source is enjoying a proliferation that starts with a growing number of new developers at the grass roots. Many then go on to join enterprises who themselves are engaging in open source projects. Further news in the survey shows enterprises now organizing to contribute back more actively; as they realize the importance of open source innovation to jumpstart careers and kickstart projects. As our survey continues to show open source is consuming the software world as the inherent quality, functionality, and increasingly ease of deployment creates a powerful gravitational pull on people and industries. This self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle will result in the most exciting applications having an open source foundation. Which is why many of the leading technology areas such as cloud, big data, content management and mobile are treating open source as their 'foundational platform. Further, more new areas like the Internet of Things, which requires interoperability and extensibility, can only be met by open source initiatives, hence the emergence of new communities such as the AllSeen Alliance, according to the North Bridge Press Release.]]>
Thu, 22 Jan 2015 13:20:04 GMT /slideshow/2014-future-of-open-source-study/43793416 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2014 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2014 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with panel moderation from North Bridge and panelists: Lou Shipley, CEO at Black Duck Software (@loushipley) Jeffrey Hammond, Principal Analyst at Forrester Research (@jhammond) Guy Martin, Senior Open Source Strategist at Samsung Research America (@guyma) Kerrin Perniciaro, Manager of IT Communications & Web Strategy in the Division of Information Technology (DoIT) at Stony Brook University (@SBUDoIT) Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (@BrianG_Jasper) A record-breaking 1,240 industry influencers took the 2014 survey, answering questions about OSS trends, opportunities, key drivers of open source adoption, community engagement, and the business problems OSS solves now and in the future. study highlight this democratization and proliferation of open source in three main areas: new people, new technologies, and new economics. Open source is enjoying a proliferation that starts with a growing number of new developers at the grass roots. Many then go on to join enterprises who themselves are engaging in open source projects. Further news in the survey shows enterprises now organizing to contribute back more actively; as they realize the importance of open source innovation to jumpstart careers and kickstart projects. As our survey continues to show open source is consuming the software world as the inherent quality, functionality, and increasingly ease of deployment creates a powerful gravitational pull on people and industries. This self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle will result in the most exciting applications having an open source foundation. Which is why many of the leading technology areas such as cloud, big data, content management and mobile are treating open source as their 'foundational platform. Further, more new areas like the Internet of Things, which requires interoperability and extensibility, can only be met by open source initiatives, hence the emergence of new communities such as the AllSeen Alliance, according to the North Bridge Press Release. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2014futureofopensourcestudy-150122132004-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2014 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with panel moderation from North Bridge and panelists: Lou Shipley, CEO at Black Duck Software (@loushipley) Jeffrey Hammond, Principal Analyst at Forrester Research (@jhammond) Guy Martin, Senior Open Source Strategist at Samsung Research America (@guyma) Kerrin Perniciaro, Manager of IT Communications &amp; Web Strategy in the Division of Information Technology (DoIT) at Stony Brook University (@SBUDoIT) Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (@BrianG_Jasper) A record-breaking 1,240 industry influencers took the 2014 survey, answering questions about OSS trends, opportunities, key drivers of open source adoption, community engagement, and the business problems OSS solves now and in the future. study highlight this democratization and proliferation of open source in three main areas: new people, new technologies, and new economics. Open source is enjoying a proliferation that starts with a growing number of new developers at the grass roots. Many then go on to join enterprises who themselves are engaging in open source projects. Further news in the survey shows enterprises now organizing to contribute back more actively; as they realize the importance of open source innovation to jumpstart careers and kickstart projects. As our survey continues to show open source is consuming the software world as the inherent quality, functionality, and increasingly ease of deployment creates a powerful gravitational pull on people and industries. This self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle will result in the most exciting applications having an open source foundation. Which is why many of the leading technology areas such as cloud, big data, content management and mobile are treating open source as their &#39;foundational platform. Further, more new areas like the Internet of Things, which requires interoperability and extensibility, can only be met by open source initiatives, hence the emergence of new communities such as the AllSeen Alliance, according to the North Bridge Press Release.
2014 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2013 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2013-future-of-open-source-study/43793183 2013futureofopensourcestudy-150122131410-conversion-gate01
2013 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with thought leaders from North Bridge, Acquia, Black Duck, Thomson-Reuters, Hortonworks, & Jeffrey Hammond, Forrester. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The 2013 survey represents the insights of more than 800 respondents the largest in the surveys history - from both non-vendor and vendor communities. study reveal the cultural impact of open source software and its influence on everything from innovation, to collaboration among competitors, to hiring practices, is revolutionizing the way organizations work and do business. It's been recognized that software is eating the world. Our seventh annual Future of Open Source survey points to the fact that open source is eating the software world. This year's results signal a shift in reasons why open source is chosen over proprietary alternatives. Increasingly, enterprises see it as leading innovation, delivering higher quality and driving growth rather than being just a free or low-cost alternative. Going forward, as broader adoption creates a virtuous cycle of innovation and investment, we can expect more disruption from open source, new business models and many more exciting new projects and companies, according to the North Bridge Press Release. Cloud adoption continued to rise in 2013, with 75 percent of those surveyed reporting the use of some sort of cloud platform up from 67 percent last year. That growth is consistent with forecasts from GigaOM Research, which expects the total worldwide addressable market for cloud computing to reach $158.8B by 2014, an increase of 126.5 percent from 2011. This years survey finds several important shifts in why and how cloud computing is being used, obstacles to adoption, where cloud decision-making resides within organizations, and how the vendor landscape is changing. It also serves as a barometer for the industrys progression. Feedback from across the different categories of respondents was consistent, signaling a convergence of vendor and user needs. Further, the survey reveals that business is driving the revolution deriving clear benefits from cloud adoption in the form of continuous innovation and business agility to yield competitive advantage.]]>

2013 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with thought leaders from North Bridge, Acquia, Black Duck, Thomson-Reuters, Hortonworks, & Jeffrey Hammond, Forrester. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The 2013 survey represents the insights of more than 800 respondents the largest in the surveys history - from both non-vendor and vendor communities. study reveal the cultural impact of open source software and its influence on everything from innovation, to collaboration among competitors, to hiring practices, is revolutionizing the way organizations work and do business. It's been recognized that software is eating the world. Our seventh annual Future of Open Source survey points to the fact that open source is eating the software world. This year's results signal a shift in reasons why open source is chosen over proprietary alternatives. Increasingly, enterprises see it as leading innovation, delivering higher quality and driving growth rather than being just a free or low-cost alternative. Going forward, as broader adoption creates a virtuous cycle of innovation and investment, we can expect more disruption from open source, new business models and many more exciting new projects and companies, according to the North Bridge Press Release. Cloud adoption continued to rise in 2013, with 75 percent of those surveyed reporting the use of some sort of cloud platform up from 67 percent last year. That growth is consistent with forecasts from GigaOM Research, which expects the total worldwide addressable market for cloud computing to reach $158.8B by 2014, an increase of 126.5 percent from 2011. This years survey finds several important shifts in why and how cloud computing is being used, obstacles to adoption, where cloud decision-making resides within organizations, and how the vendor landscape is changing. It also serves as a barometer for the industrys progression. Feedback from across the different categories of respondents was consistent, signaling a convergence of vendor and user needs. Further, the survey reveals that business is driving the revolution deriving clear benefits from cloud adoption in the form of continuous innovation and business agility to yield competitive advantage.]]>
Thu, 22 Jan 2015 13:14:10 GMT /slideshow/2013-future-of-open-source-study/43793183 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2013 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2013 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with thought leaders from North Bridge, Acquia, Black Duck, Thomson-Reuters, Hortonworks, & Jeffrey Hammond, Forrester. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The 2013 survey represents the insights of more than 800 respondents the largest in the surveys history - from both non-vendor and vendor communities. study reveal the cultural impact of open source software and its influence on everything from innovation, to collaboration among competitors, to hiring practices, is revolutionizing the way organizations work and do business. It's been recognized that software is eating the world. Our seventh annual Future of Open Source survey points to the fact that open source is eating the software world. This year's results signal a shift in reasons why open source is chosen over proprietary alternatives. Increasingly, enterprises see it as leading innovation, delivering higher quality and driving growth rather than being just a free or low-cost alternative. Going forward, as broader adoption creates a virtuous cycle of innovation and investment, we can expect more disruption from open source, new business models and many more exciting new projects and companies, according to the North Bridge Press Release. Cloud adoption continued to rise in 2013, with 75 percent of those surveyed reporting the use of some sort of cloud platform up from 67 percent last year. That growth is consistent with forecasts from GigaOM Research, which expects the total worldwide addressable market for cloud computing to reach $158.8B by 2014, an increase of 126.5 percent from 2011. This years survey finds several important shifts in why and how cloud computing is being used, obstacles to adoption, where cloud decision-making resides within organizations, and how the vendor landscape is changing. It also serves as a barometer for the industrys progression. Feedback from across the different categories of respondents was consistent, signaling a convergence of vendor and user needs. Further, the survey reveals that business is driving the revolution deriving clear benefits from cloud adoption in the form of continuous innovation and business agility to yield competitive advantage. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2013futureofopensourcestudy-150122131410-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2013 Future of Open Source Study; presented via Webinar with thought leaders from North Bridge, Acquia, Black Duck, Thomson-Reuters, Hortonworks, &amp; Jeffrey Hammond, Forrester. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The 2013 survey represents the insights of more than 800 respondents the largest in the surveys history - from both non-vendor and vendor communities. study reveal the cultural impact of open source software and its influence on everything from innovation, to collaboration among competitors, to hiring practices, is revolutionizing the way organizations work and do business. It&#39;s been recognized that software is eating the world. Our seventh annual Future of Open Source survey points to the fact that open source is eating the software world. This year&#39;s results signal a shift in reasons why open source is chosen over proprietary alternatives. Increasingly, enterprises see it as leading innovation, delivering higher quality and driving growth rather than being just a free or low-cost alternative. Going forward, as broader adoption creates a virtuous cycle of innovation and investment, we can expect more disruption from open source, new business models and many more exciting new projects and companies, according to the North Bridge Press Release. Cloud adoption continued to rise in 2013, with 75 percent of those surveyed reporting the use of some sort of cloud platform up from 67 percent last year. That growth is consistent with forecasts from GigaOM Research, which expects the total worldwide addressable market for cloud computing to reach $158.8B by 2014, an increase of 126.5 percent from 2011. This years survey finds several important shifts in why and how cloud computing is being used, obstacles to adoption, where cloud decision-making resides within organizations, and how the vendor landscape is changing. It also serves as a barometer for the industrys progression. Feedback from across the different categories of respondents was consistent, signaling a convergence of vendor and user needs. Further, the survey reveals that business is driving the revolution deriving clear benefits from cloud adoption in the form of continuous innovation and business agility to yield competitive advantage.
2013 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2011 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2011-future-of-open-source-study/43717065 2011futureofopensourcestudy-150120155021-conversion-gate01
2011 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Tom Erickson, CEO, Acquia; Adrian Kunzle, Managing Director, Head of Firmwide Engineering & Architecture, JP Morgan; Mike Olson, CEO, Cloudera; Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO, RedHat. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. More than 450 respondents took part in the 2011 survey, including representatives from both the vendor and non-vendor communities. Respondents were asked about a wide range of issues impacting the open source software (OSS) landscape, including: economic impact on OSS, key drivers and barricades for OSS adoption, and suggestions for building and maintaining a profitable OSS business model. For the first time, supporting the fact that open source has truly gone mainstream, end users accounted for 60 percent of the survey respondents and the quality of responses continues to increase, spreading across all levels of IT management from developers to a large number of C-level executives. Respondents have identified SaaS, cloud and mobile as the main areas that will have a dramatic impact on open source and that are driving growth. The open source customers are now more focused on maturing technology issues, including improved operational excellence around areas such as support, product management, feature functionality and return on investment. This is in contrast to earlier years where the survey had pointed to things such as the legal implications of licensing and conforming to internal policies. 56 percent of respondents believe that more than half of software purchases made in the next five years will be open source. 95 percent of respondents noted that a turbulent economy continues to be good for OSS, though for the first year ever, lower cost has been overtaken by freedom from vendor lock-in as what makes OSS more attractive. When asked about revenue generating strategies likely to create value for vendors, 56% of the respondents said that an annual, repeatable support and service agreement was the most likely. ]]>

2011 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Tom Erickson, CEO, Acquia; Adrian Kunzle, Managing Director, Head of Firmwide Engineering & Architecture, JP Morgan; Mike Olson, CEO, Cloudera; Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO, RedHat. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. More than 450 respondents took part in the 2011 survey, including representatives from both the vendor and non-vendor communities. Respondents were asked about a wide range of issues impacting the open source software (OSS) landscape, including: economic impact on OSS, key drivers and barricades for OSS adoption, and suggestions for building and maintaining a profitable OSS business model. For the first time, supporting the fact that open source has truly gone mainstream, end users accounted for 60 percent of the survey respondents and the quality of responses continues to increase, spreading across all levels of IT management from developers to a large number of C-level executives. Respondents have identified SaaS, cloud and mobile as the main areas that will have a dramatic impact on open source and that are driving growth. The open source customers are now more focused on maturing technology issues, including improved operational excellence around areas such as support, product management, feature functionality and return on investment. This is in contrast to earlier years where the survey had pointed to things such as the legal implications of licensing and conforming to internal policies. 56 percent of respondents believe that more than half of software purchases made in the next five years will be open source. 95 percent of respondents noted that a turbulent economy continues to be good for OSS, though for the first year ever, lower cost has been overtaken by freedom from vendor lock-in as what makes OSS more attractive. When asked about revenue generating strategies likely to create value for vendors, 56% of the respondents said that an annual, repeatable support and service agreement was the most likely. ]]>
Tue, 20 Jan 2015 15:50:21 GMT /slideshow/2011-future-of-open-source-study/43717065 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2011 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2011 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Tom Erickson, CEO, Acquia; Adrian Kunzle, Managing Director, Head of Firmwide Engineering & Architecture, JP Morgan; Mike Olson, CEO, Cloudera; Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO, RedHat. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. More than 450 respondents took part in the 2011 survey, including representatives from both the vendor and non-vendor communities. Respondents were asked about a wide range of issues impacting the open source software (OSS) landscape, including: economic impact on OSS, key drivers and barricades for OSS adoption, and suggestions for building and maintaining a profitable OSS business model. For the first time, supporting the fact that open source has truly gone mainstream, end users accounted for 60 percent of the survey respondents and the quality of responses continues to increase, spreading across all levels of IT management from developers to a large number of C-level executives. Respondents have identified SaaS, cloud and mobile as the main areas that will have a dramatic impact on open source and that are driving growth. The open source customers are now more focused on maturing technology issues, including improved operational excellence around areas such as support, product management, feature functionality and return on investment. This is in contrast to earlier years where the survey had pointed to things such as the legal implications of licensing and conforming to internal policies. 56 percent of respondents believe that more than half of software purchases made in the next five years will be open source. 95 percent of respondents noted that a turbulent economy continues to be good for OSS, though for the first year ever, lower cost has been overtaken by freedom from vendor lock-in as what makes OSS more attractive. When asked about revenue generating strategies likely to create value for vendors, 56% of the respondents said that an annual, repeatable support and service agreement was the most likely. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2011futureofopensourcestudy-150120155021-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2011 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Tom Erickson, CEO, Acquia; Adrian Kunzle, Managing Director, Head of Firmwide Engineering &amp; Architecture, JP Morgan; Mike Olson, CEO, Cloudera; Jim Whitehurst, President &amp; CEO, RedHat. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. More than 450 respondents took part in the 2011 survey, including representatives from both the vendor and non-vendor communities. Respondents were asked about a wide range of issues impacting the open source software (OSS) landscape, including: economic impact on OSS, key drivers and barricades for OSS adoption, and suggestions for building and maintaining a profitable OSS business model. For the first time, supporting the fact that open source has truly gone mainstream, end users accounted for 60 percent of the survey respondents and the quality of responses continues to increase, spreading across all levels of IT management from developers to a large number of C-level executives. Respondents have identified SaaS, cloud and mobile as the main areas that will have a dramatic impact on open source and that are driving growth. The open source customers are now more focused on maturing technology issues, including improved operational excellence around areas such as support, product management, feature functionality and return on investment. This is in contrast to earlier years where the survey had pointed to things such as the legal implications of licensing and conforming to internal policies. 56 percent of respondents believe that more than half of software purchases made in the next five years will be open source. 95 percent of respondents noted that a turbulent economy continues to be good for OSS, though for the first year ever, lower cost has been overtaken by freedom from vendor lock-in as what makes OSS more attractive. When asked about revenue generating strategies likely to create value for vendors, 56% of the respondents said that an annual, repeatable support and service agreement was the most likely.
2011 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2010 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2010-future-of-open-source-study/43716854 2010futureofopensourcestudy-150120154315-conversion-gate02
2010 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO Red Hat, Larry Augustin, CEO, SugarCRM, Tim Yeaton, President & CEO Black Duck; Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO, Acquia. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from over 550 respondents including both vendors and non-vendors, highlight a range of significant issues continuing to impact the open source software landscape. Economic conditions, key market drivers and forecast for the coming year are among the topics taking center stage.]]>

2010 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO Red Hat, Larry Augustin, CEO, SugarCRM, Tim Yeaton, President & CEO Black Duck; Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO, Acquia. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from over 550 respondents including both vendors and non-vendors, highlight a range of significant issues continuing to impact the open source software landscape. Economic conditions, key market drivers and forecast for the coming year are among the topics taking center stage.]]>
Tue, 20 Jan 2015 15:43:15 GMT /slideshow/2010-future-of-open-source-study/43716854 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2010 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2010 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Jim Whitehurst, President & CEO Red Hat, Larry Augustin, CEO, SugarCRM, Tim Yeaton, President & CEO Black Duck; Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO, Acquia. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from over 550 respondents including both vendors and non-vendors, highlight a range of significant issues continuing to impact the open source software landscape. Economic conditions, key market drivers and forecast for the coming year are among the topics taking center stage. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2010futureofopensourcestudy-150120154315-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2010 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Jim Whitehurst, President &amp; CEO Red Hat, Larry Augustin, CEO, SugarCRM, Tim Yeaton, President &amp; CEO Black Duck; Dries Buytaert, Founder &amp; CTO, Acquia. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from over 550 respondents including both vendors and non-vendors, highlight a range of significant issues continuing to impact the open source software landscape. Economic conditions, key market drivers and forecast for the coming year are among the topics taking center stage.
2010 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2009 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2009-future-of-open-source-study/43716513 2009futureofopensourcestudy-150120153142-conversion-gate01
2009 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO- Acquia;Ron Hovsepian, CEO Novell;John Lilly, CEO Mozilla; M奪rten Mickos, SVP Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, CEO SugarCRM. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from 435 respondents, bring to light a variety of significant issues and topics surrounding open source software, such as the impact of the economic recession, key market drivers, and predictions regarding the types of companies that will drive the next wave of commercial open source success. Disruptive business models are maturing in large markets like Web Content Management and Social Publishing, making it an attractive investment area for the team at North Bridge. However what the survey also shows is that much work remains to evangelize these benefits and establish a credible ecosystem to bring open source solutions to mainstream IT buyers.]]>

2009 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO- Acquia;Ron Hovsepian, CEO Novell;John Lilly, CEO Mozilla; M奪rten Mickos, SVP Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, CEO SugarCRM. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from 435 respondents, bring to light a variety of significant issues and topics surrounding open source software, such as the impact of the economic recession, key market drivers, and predictions regarding the types of companies that will drive the next wave of commercial open source success. Disruptive business models are maturing in large markets like Web Content Management and Social Publishing, making it an attractive investment area for the team at North Bridge. However what the survey also shows is that much work remains to evangelize these benefits and establish a credible ecosystem to bring open source solutions to mainstream IT buyers.]]>
Tue, 20 Jan 2015 15:31:42 GMT /slideshow/2009-future-of-open-source-study/43716513 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2009 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2009 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Dries Buytaert, Founder & CTO- Acquia;Ron Hovsepian, CEO Novell;John Lilly, CEO Mozilla; M奪rten Mickos, SVP Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, CEO SugarCRM. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from 435 respondents, bring to light a variety of significant issues and topics surrounding open source software, such as the impact of the economic recession, key market drivers, and predictions regarding the types of companies that will drive the next wave of commercial open source success. Disruptive business models are maturing in large markets like Web Content Management and Social Publishing, making it an attractive investment area for the team at North Bridge. However what the survey also shows is that much work remains to evangelize these benefits and establish a credible ecosystem to bring open source solutions to mainstream IT buyers. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2009futureofopensourcestudy-150120153142-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2009 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Dries Buytaert, Founder &amp; CTO- Acquia;Ron Hovsepian, CEO Novell;John Lilly, CEO Mozilla; M奪rten Mickos, SVP Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, CEO SugarCRM. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. The study, collected from 435 respondents, bring to light a variety of significant issues and topics surrounding open source software, such as the impact of the economic recession, key market drivers, and predictions regarding the types of companies that will drive the next wave of commercial open source success. Disruptive business models are maturing in large markets like Web Content Management and Social Publishing, making it an attractive investment area for the team at North Bridge. However what the survey also shows is that much work remains to evangelize these benefits and establish a credible ecosystem to bring open source solutions to mainstream IT buyers.
2009 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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2008 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study /slideshow/2008-future-of-open-source-study/43715465 2008futureofopensourcestudy-150120145857-conversion-gate02
2008 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Roger Burkhardt, President & CEO, Ingres; Marten Mickos, SVP, Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, Chairman, CEO, SugarCRM; Mark Shuttleworth, Founder, Ubuntu Jeff Whatcott, VP Marketing, Acquia, Inc. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. ]]>

2008 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Roger Burkhardt, President & CEO, Ingres; Marten Mickos, SVP, Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, Chairman, CEO, SugarCRM; Mark Shuttleworth, Founder, Ubuntu Jeff Whatcott, VP Marketing, Acquia, Inc. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. ]]>
Tue, 20 Jan 2015 14:58:57 GMT /slideshow/2008-future-of-open-source-study/43715465 North_Bridge@slideshare.net(North_Bridge) 2008 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study North_Bridge 2008 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Roger Burkhardt, President & CEO, Ingres; Marten Mickos, SVP, Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, Chairman, CEO, SugarCRM; Mark Shuttleworth, Founder, Ubuntu Jeff Whatcott, VP Marketing, Acquia, Inc. The panel was chaired by North Bridge. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2008futureofopensourcestudy-150120145857-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 2008 Future of Open Source study; presented at InfoWorld Open Source Business Conference Keynote Panel: Roger Burkhardt, President &amp; CEO, Ingres; Marten Mickos, SVP, Sun Microsystems; John Roberts, Chairman, CEO, SugarCRM; Mark Shuttleworth, Founder, Ubuntu Jeff Whatcott, VP Marketing, Acquia, Inc. The panel was chaired by North Bridge.
2008 North Bridge Future of Open Source Study from North Bridge
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-North_Bridge-48x48.jpg?cb=1523447022 North Bridge invests in exceptional people whose ideas have the potential to disrupt the way we live and work. We provide seed-to-growth financing to help transform those ideas into companies and those companies into market leaders. North Bridge publishes annual industry surveys, the broadest of their kind, for Cloud Computing (Future of Cloud Computing, #futureofcloud) and Open Source software (Future of Open Source, #futureOSS). www.northbridge.com/ https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/focc2016slide-161206180034-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/2016-future-of-cloud-computing-study/69884474 2016 Future of Cloud C... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/2016-future-of-open-source-study-160427191542-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/2016-future-of-open-source-study-61431845/61431845 2016 Future of Open So... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/cloudcoveronly-151209180355-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/2015-future-of-cloud-computing-study/55986236 2015 Future of Cloud C...