Open source disruption realized
Open source fans are buzzing about Microsoft’s latest move to open its APIs, which follows along the path it has been on recently. Microsoft’s announced intention to open APIs to its Vista, .Net, Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, Office 2007, Exchange and Sharepoint software is no-doubt big, but it also comes as more and more traditional software and even hardware vendors tailor their strategies to address the pervasiveness of open source software in the enterprise.
Another announcement they may have been somewhat overshadowed by Microsoft’s ‘grand opening’ is chipmaker AMD’s new open source application library project, Framewave. AMD, which takes a step similar to what rival Intel did with its Threading Building Blocks (TBB) introduced last year, is trying to encourage more high-performance application development for its processors by establishing an open source community around its open, Apache-licensed AMD Performance Library, a set of more than 3,000 high-performance software routines.
One interesting and refreshing thing about these recent announcements: they involve actual open APIs and open code.
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