1 / 14

User-Based Innovation & Communities Drive Commercial Systems Software

User-Based Innovation & Communities Drive Commercial Systems Software. James Hamilton GM SQL Server WebData Development & SQL Security Architect http://research.microsoft.com/~JamesRH JamesRH@Microsoft.com 2004.04.15. Introduction. I’m an unrepentant commercial software guy :-)

jayi
Download Presentation

User-Based Innovation & Communities Drive Commercial Systems Software

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. User-Based Innovation & Communities Drive Commercial Systems Software James Hamilton GM SQL Server WebData Development & SQL Security Architect http://research.microsoft.com/~JamesRH JamesRH@Microsoft.com 2004.04.15

  2. Introduction • I’m an unrepentant commercial software guy :-) • Have done some non-commercial S/W work in spare time • Ported g++, gdb, and Taylor UUCP to AIX 1.3 • Ran a UUCP site for years • System Software Focused • 11 years at IBM • Ada & C++ Development Manager • Lead Architect DB2 UDB Database • 7 years at Microsoft • Windows2000 Base Development • SQL Server development team in various roles • Relational System Development Manager • Security Architect • General Manager WebData Development • Interested in better understanding & harnessing user community contribution to S/W systems What follows are my observations & opinions and do not necessarily represent a Microsoft position

  3. Agenda • Driving innovation: users or manufacturer? • Revolutionary change often not user driven • Examples from DB & TP world with which I’m most familiar • Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) • Relational database • Users prime drivers of product evolution • Community drives commercial S/W success • Commercial S/W has always been community dependent • Why not go open source & gain the community contribution? • Parallels between commercial & non-commercial s/w efforts

  4. Revolutionary change: often not user driven • The fundamental changes are often not user driven • Users do drive incremental & evolutionary change • Some examples from DB world: • Online index create • Online re-org • XML datatype • Automated multi-system administration • … • Revolutionary change examples from systems world: • RAID & Relational DB “…Well-managed companies that have their competitive antennae up, listen astutely to their customers, invest aggressively in new technologies, and yet still lose market dominance”

  5. Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks • Disks were expensive, IBM dominated, & growing at sub-Moores law rates • Commodity disk much less reliable & 1/5 to 1/10 the capacity of enterprise disk • “A Case for Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID)”– Patterson, Gibson, Katz • Base observation: Commodity disks with redundancy can be combined to produce larger & more reliable storage SIGMOD, June 1988

  6. EMC Symmetrix DMX3000 • 84 TB Storage capacity • 576 3 ½” commodity Seagate (usually) SCSI Disks • 256 GB Memory & 100 1 Ghz PowerPC CPUs • 10x to 15x storage cost premium over commodity disk • EMC annual revenue: $6.24B (2003 10K filing) • RAID overall annual revenue: $13B (1998 Disk/Trend Report)

  7. Relational Database • “A Relational Model of Data for Large Shared Data Banks”– E. F. Codd CACM 13,6 (June 1970) • “Some industrial motivation and then straight to the math”– Irv Traiger • Broadly debated: CODASYL vs Relational • SIGFIDET and SIGMOD conferences • First IBM System R relational DB user: • MIT Sloan School of Management (System R Phase 0 proto 1975) • System R code base later became IBM SQL/DS • later DB2 for VM & VSE — product still available • Manufacturer research rather than user community pull Relational DB Theory: E.F. Codd SQL Language: Don Chamberlin

  8. Relational Database Market • Overall annual Relational DB market: $8B • Gartner expects 86% of DB revenue to be Relational by 2005 • Many DB & TP industry innovations driven by user partnerships • IBM TPF: American Airlines SABER • Project started 1959 • IBM IMS: Rockwell-NASA Apollo Program • Released 1969 • IBM CICS: Partnership with Public Utilities • PUCICS released 1968 • The innovation required user involvement but they didn’t drive it Source: Gartner 2001

  9. Agenda • Driving innovation: users or manufacturer? • Revolutionary change often not user driven • Examples from DB & TP world with which I’m most familiar • Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) • Relational database • Users prime drivers of product evolution • Community drives commercial S/W success • Commercial S/W has always been community dependent • Why not go open source & gain the community contribution? • Parallels between commercial & non-commercial s/w efforts?

  10. Communities Drive Commercial S/W • Product Support • User community support is the best way to provide scalable, available, high quality product support • It’s difficult to invest enough in a dedicated support team to replace a community based program • Examples form engineering team in which I work: • Participation required of all team members • Newsgroups, customer presentations, feedback sessions, service team internships, customer requirements DB, work with MVP community, sample programs, … • Marketing and Sales also heavily community driven • ISV & reseller sales model common • Shareware & community sales sites

  11. Community Example:www.boatdiesel.com

  12. Why not use Community Development? • S/W business driven by important, difficult to reproduce S/W aggregations • Separates lack-luster profit from the truly impressive • S/W business cost of entry is very close to zero • Profit of most entrants unexciting • Large S/W systems with critical mass very valuable: • SAP, Windows, Oracle, DB2, … • Large S/W aggregations are actively protected • But they are open in many ways • Most support interfaces to allow 3rd party extension • Source is typically available in a controlled way • Open-source S/W systems also actively protected • However, branches are possible and sometimes succeed • Commercial S/W open at key interfaces but user source code mods typically not supported • Both commercial and non-commercial S/W systems dependent upon community for success

  13. Summary • Most product innovation is driven by users • Improvements in speeds, feeds, & features • Applications of existing technology to new domains • Revolutionary changes often not user driven • Fundamental new approaches to existing problems • Especially approaches that are: • Not backward compatible • Don’t adequately solve the entire breadth of the problem domain • All products, whether commercial or not, depend upon user community for support & innovation • User driven support only affordable & effective option • User Community source of most innovation • User development community typically the driver of even non-open source product success

  14. Microsoft

More Related