| By Sridhar Vembu | Article Rating: |
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| May 19, 2008 01:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
8,936 |
By now it is conventional wisdom to say that there was an
IBM Era of computing, then a Microsoft Era, and now we are in the Google Era.
In this post, I will explain why Microsoft was not the “next IBM” and why
Google is not the “next Microsoft” - there are significant qualitative
differences among them, quite apart from their status as the dominant,
era-defining players. Understanding that qualitative difference is crucial for
third party vendors, like Zoho, to thrive. I was reminded of this because of the
IBM/Google partnership unveiled last week. As an aside, I have coined a kind of
Moores
Law on these computing eras:
The dominant technology company in a generation reaches its pinnacle at about
half the size of the dominant company in the previous generation, and it
retains its dominance for half as long.
The original IBM mainframe era (in contrast to today’s IBM) was one of the
highly closed systems. IBM was not just the dominant player of the era, IBM was
pretty much the entire ecosystem. There just wasn’t a lot of room for third
parties to play in. Third parties were marginalized companies surviving on IBM’s
sufferance or professional services companies (like EDS) or were providers of
cheap replacement parts, which felt vaguely dirty, borderline legal (consider
today’s third party print cartridge situation as an analogy).
Now, the present Google era. Google has the genetic and cultural advantage of being born in an open source world, with a business model that is aligned with rather than antagonistic to open source. It reflects in how they conduct their ecosystem initiatives. Google Gears comes with one of the most liberal open source licenses (BSD license), and we at Zoho particularly appreciate the support provided by Google’s open source teams. In our extensive interaction with them, we could tell how they truly get the value of openness. That openness is going to be the underpinning of the Google era of computing - I hope they never forget that!
OK, that brings me to our own position as an independent vendor. At Zoho, we fully embrace the fact that we play in a Google world. We also fully recognize that opportunities for independent ecosystem players expanded massively during the Microsoft semi-open era compared to what existed in the IBM era, and they will expand even more significantly in the Google open era. Our goal at Zoho is to be an innovative, vibrant, profitable player in this new era. As much as Microsoft utterly dominated computing, vendors such as Adobe and Intuit built thriving businesses (still thriving!). Even more opportunities of that kind exist for independent ecosystem players in the Google era.
That qualitative difference between IBM, Microsoft & Google (seen during their respective pinnacles) is why we see a huge opportunity at Zoho. Our competition with Google is only a part, an important part to be sure, of what defines us. Cooperation with Google, embracing their open standards, is going to be just as important for our success.
Published May 19, 2008 Reads 8,936
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu is CEO of ZOHO Corp. (formerly AdventNet Inc.), the company behind the Zoho suite of online applications. Learn more about Zoho at www.zoho.com, follow us on Twitter at @zoho and contact Sridhar at svembu@zohocorp.com.
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Gary 05/21/08 02:15:25 PM EDT | |||
Good write by Sridhar. At least the first half was very good. His new "Moores Law" is pretty funny though. I suppose he could say it applies to those current actors, but when you half something a few times it quickly becomes nothing. The law is obsolete before it is even written, just like technology. He loses steam when he talks as if openness has been anything more that a way for companies to get their feet in the door and then become as ruthless as Attila. |
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