SpikeSource CEO: Linux all grown up
The recently concluded LinuxWorld Conference & Expo looked like any other big tech industry conference as the logos of Hewlett-Packard Co., Intel Corp., Dell Inc., IBM Corp. and other big names filled the exhibit hall at San Francisco's Moscone Center. That's a change from LinuxWorld shows of a decade ago, when open source was a renegade, even subversive, concept.
Kim Polese, CEO of SpikeSource Inc., says that's because Linux and open source are now battle-tested. SpikeSource helps to integrate various open-source applications in a software stack.
Polese spoke with IDG News Service about the open-source movement and new products SpikeSource introduced at LinuxWorld.
IDGNS: You've introduced a new SpikeSource software suite that helps companies integrate wikis and blogs used for collaboration. How are they coming together?
Polese: Most enterprise users, if they have a blog, typically want to post to a wiki so others can respond and get engaged. Similarly, many people who post to wikis have a blog. So there's an intermixing of the applications inherently. More and more enterprises want to standardize on a suite. They may want to use blogs, wikis and maybe RSS technology, encouraging [people] to collaborate and exchange information. Standardizing on a suite is becoming increasingly important for CIOs, where maybe a year ago, they were saying, "What's a wiki?"
IDGNS: SpikeSource has entered into a partnership with Funambol Inc., which you say is Italian for "tightrope walker," an apt metaphor for the IT manager's role today.
Polese: They are an open-source company providing mobile software. They are becoming embedded in the leading handsets and back-end systems software for big providers like Nokia and others. We're adding mobile capabilities to the applications that we deliver to businesses, including CRM (customer relationship management), content management, e-mail and business intelligence. We provide users with easy mobile access to those applications. Funambol is a natural addition to our portfolio.
IDGNS: You say that one expanding market is for mobile phones in China that run on Linux. How is the Linux market changing?
Polese: We're seeing open-source go everywhere. It started on the back-end data center servers, and we're now seeing it become a part of the standard mobile infrastructure. And as Web-based applications become more popular and Linux becomes more mainstream, midsize businesses will start seeing standard business applications based on Linux. We also see a combination of Windows and Linux in environments. Our customers are running Linux on the back end and Windows on the front end, so we do certify all our applications on Linux and Windows.
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