Open source roundtable: Dave Rosenberg
Mulesource CEO views enterprise and VC interest as key indicators of open source's potential to lay claim to the core
Follow @infoworldDave Rosenberg, CEO and co-founder of open source SOA infrastructure software vendor Mulesource, is well-versed in capitalizing on open source opportunities in the enterprise, transforming projects into products with viable business models.
InfoWorld spoke to Rosenberg on these and other topics as part of its roundtable on the state of open source. Here's how Rosenberg sees open source's business opportunities evolving.

Dave Rosenberg
CEO and co-founder
Mulesource
InfoWorld: What do you see as the more pressing challenges and opportunities for open source given the current tech climate?
Rosenberg: In the last five years we’ve seen open source go from geek tools to mainstream applications. The challenge for open source, as with any emerging technology force, is to continue to be innovative while delivering high-quality products.
I see the current tech climate as ripe with opportunity for open source. With the murky U.S. economy, companies are much less interested in spending huge amounts of their budgets on up-front license fees to proprietary vendors. IT shops are more interested than ever in controlling their fate -- and controlling their destiny.
The shaky economy means that traditional software companies with expensive sales models will become further relegated to the dustbin, as open source distribution puts software closer to customers
IW: Where do you see open source heading in the next five years, especially with regard to development, community, and market opportunities?
Rosenberg: We’ve already seen the open source development model applied to areas far beyond software. We’ve also seen proprietary companies adopt similar development and distribution tactics to get closer to the user base.
I expect wide-scale adoption of open source in mission-critical applications as open source products continue to mature. I also expect the market opportunities to increase as we see more “closed” companies start to move further into open standards and development models.
Open source is no longer a matter of “if” but instead, a matter of “when.”
IW: Does widespread adoption and commercialization of open source software create new challenges or pressures for open source projects?
Rosenberg: Open source “projects” have a much greater possibility of turning into “products” now that enterprises have accepted open source as part of the core infrastructure, and because venture capital firms have been actively funding open source companies.
These do add pressure but also create more opportunity. And since there are now several successful open source business models to look toward, commercialization is becoming much easier.
IW: What are the next steps needed for open source as a software production methodology to reach the next level?









