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Just came across the Open Solutions Alliance (OSA), “a nonprofit, vendor-neutral consortium dedicated to driving adoption of comprehensive open source business solutions” and am so pleased to see SpikeSource and CollabNet — along with Sourceforge and others — playing such an integral role.
Why should you care?
There are over 140,000 open source projects listed on Sourceforge. Some are incredibly active…others less so…but there is such a wealth of useful software available that it’s creating a baseline of information technology products that the world is leveraging. The result is that all of us can then strive for ever higher possibilities in efficiency, creativity and innovation driven by technology and the Internet as a platform for the future.
I’ve personally installed and learned (albeit from a high level) a couple of dozen of the most popular projects in content management, blogging, ecommerce, forums, courseware and groupware as well as other categories. Here’s the kicker: it’s VERY difficult to coordinate and orchestrate (as an administrator) a deployment of these packages since every administration model and user interface is different…and forget about it if you’re just a power user trying to deploy something for your non-profit or small-to-medium sized organization. You wanna make ‘em present on a Web site like they’re an integrated whole? Whaddya nuts! Better hire a bunch of really smart developers and keep your fingers crossed that you’ll be able to upgrade any of these software offerings individually without breaking integrations and thus your Web asset/site/application.
Want to present them to your customers, prospects or constituents as a whole offering that looks-n-feels like one, holistic Web asset/site/application? Again, good luck and happy budgeting. Want to teach and train others on how to deploy and use all of them? Time and money is all you need and alot of hair ’cause you’ll be pulling most of it out of your head.
Why else should you care?

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