16
May

Talend’s site goes multilingual

languages.jpgWe finalized today the fifth language supported on Talend’s Web site.  You will now be able to check out information about the leading open source data integration solution in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.

This truly reflects Talend’s global reach - open source is by nature global, and we owe it to our users to communicate with them in a language they master the best.

Check out these new language sections!

Yves

16
May

New Strategic Partnership with ParAccel

logo_paraccel.jpgWe announced this week a strategic partnership with columnar database appliance vendor ParAccel. This young company (they launched 6 months ago) offers one of the best price performance ratio in the DW appliance market. And they are a great partner to work with!

ParAccel and Talend share a common vision: dramatically decrease the price points of high performance data warehousing solutions. ParAccel provides the storage, we provide the data loading. ParAccel also partners with JasperSoft - another of our strategic partners - for the BI front end. With these 3 vendors, you have a complete BI platform!

16
May

EnterpriseDB’s open source database survey

Our partner EnterpriseDB has launched an online survey to understand how people use open source databases and whether they migrated from a proprietary database to an open source one.

Take the survey, it’s only one page long and won’t take more than a few minutes:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=W_2b8Dx7c8yCs6pZB1jgvQZg_3d_3d

Yves

12
May

Open Source Business Models

While I was researching sources for a previous post, I found in in a 451 Group blog post a reference to a presentation delivered by Marten Mickos at OSBC last year in which he exposed his point of view on Open Source Business Models.

Marten identified 13 Business Models, but he indicates most open source players leverage hybrid models:

“Software is free, but:
1. …we need donations and subsidies to survive (Apache Software Foundation, Eclipse, ObjectWeb)
2. …we sell ads and placements (Mozilla)
3. …if you embed it in closed source, you pay a fee (Trolltech, DB4Objects, Funambol, MySQL, etc.)
4. …services are for a fee (Covalent, Ubuntu /Canonical)
5. …on-going maintenance, monitoring and provision of binaries is for a fee (Red Hat, JBoss, MySQL)
6. …some enterprise features are for a fee (SugarCRM, Zimbra, JasperSoft)
7. …we built a closed-source product around it (EnterpriseDB, GreenPlum)
8. …hardware is for a fee (Sun, Asterisk/Digium)
9. …we sell everything else on the planet, including closed source software (IBM)
10. …that’s not our real business (Ruby on Rails, individual contributors, etc.)
11. …we regret it (Borland with Interbase)
12. …we don’t want to see it any more (any good examples?)
13. …we want to drive web traffic (Yahoo YUI)”

As far as I can tell, these 13 categories cover all the alternatives and monetization modes that exist on the market. Look at Talend, for example: our business model is a hybrid of #4 (services around Talend Open Studio), #6 (subscription features of Talend Integration Suite and Talend On Demand) and #3 (OEMs). This combination provides revenue that pays for R&D and for the improvement of our solutions for all users – including of course the ones who do not pay.

A last comment: as Marten himself said, and given the variety of approaches, open source is not really a business model, but is “clearly the best production method for software”.

Bertrand





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