The ObjectWeb consortium is giving itself a makeover this year to make its open-source software more suitable for business use and to help it expand further outside Europe.
The plans include issuing product road maps, marketing itself more actively and opening local chapters overseas. The consortium also plans to become a nonprofit legal entity year, a move that will make it easier for the group to sign business contracts, said François Letellier, a member of ObjectWeb's executive committee.
The changes aim to address what ObjectWeb sees as shortcomings in the way most open-source communities operate. With open-source software becoming mainstream, staff must be appointed to ensure that road maps are adhered to and to deliver software "of a level of quality that enterprises can rely upon," the group said. "In an international and multicultural environment, this requires more than an informal community," it said.
The changes may also help the consortium compete better against big middleware vendors, many of which are starting to offer free and open-source software of their own. IBM, for example, bought Gluecode Software last year, which provides an open-source application server based on The Apache Group's Geronimo project.
ObjectWeb is best known for its Jonas application server, which Red Hat began offering last year as an option with its server software. The consortium has about 100 projects altogether, mostly building infrastructure software. It was founded in 2002 by France Télécom, Bull, and the French National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control (INRIA).
The group now includes about 60 corporate members and 6,500 contributors, including staff at its member companies and volunteers. While ObjectWeb is relatively well known in Europe, however, it's influence overseas is less clear. It is also hard to know how many people are using its software, since they don't pay license fees.
Henry Peyret, an analyst with Forrester Research in Europe, said very few of his customers talk about ObjectWeb. Most of those are large corporations, he noted, and ObjectWeb's software may be more widely used among governments. Member companies such as France Telecom use the software, and developers at many corporations may be using the code unbeknown to their senior managers.
The moves to address business users reflect a trend in which open-source efforts are becoming more commercialized, Peyret said, pointing to successful vendors like JBoss. ObjectWeb's development model is good because its users have a say in how software is developed and what new features are added, but the group needs more visibility among analysts and journalists, he said. The changes it plans to make "are going in the right direction," Peyret said.
ObjectWeb has been planning its makeover for the past year, Letellier said. It unveiled the plans at its user conference in Paris last week.
Among the biggest changes is becoming a legal entity. Business dealings ObjectWeb enters into today are signed on its behalf by INRIA. Becoming a legal entity will allow it to sign its own contracts, set a budget and generally respond better to members' needs, Letellier said.
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