India Stays Cool To Open Source
India, once seen as fertile ground for open-source software, has yet to embrace the development model in the way many hoped it would.
As a developing country with an emerging pool of talented, industrious programmers, India was once seen as a natural fit for open-source software. But today, while the country has software developers by the thousand, only a fraction of them do work in the open-source area.
A big reason is that most developers work for large outsourcing companies, where decisions about whether to develop proprietary or open-source software are largely dictated by their customers.
The number of independent developers in the country probably adds up to no more than about 2,000, said Vinay Deshpande, chairman of Encore Software, an embedded software and product design company in Bangalore. The rest work for companies where their choice of software is decided for them.
Of those who work for companies, most are highly career-oriented and don't contribute to open-source projects in their spare time.
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