“When you want software as a service”
Lol. Nobody wants software as a service.
Say that to my employer who just replaced our in-house developed system with a service and made my job disappear.
And even if they did, the notion that you need proprietary software for that is a lie. There’s nothing wrong with paying a provider to host and admin some AGPL software for you.
Smaller businesses without in-house IT sometimes do, though. Sure they can get an MSP. But if their purpose is to facilitate a software vendor to connect to a server with business specific software they don’t understand, they might as well just get it as a service.
Especially when it’s software that just needs yearly updates due to changing regulations.
I definitely agree that more often than not, the above doesn’t apply, but there specific situations where SaaS actually does make sense and will have a lower cost in money and time.
I wouldn’t be surprised if this article was commissioned by a big tech company like Apple or Microsoft.
It isn’t meant as a hot take. It’s just some vapid business article written for middle management who doesn’t have any actual technical knowledge.
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Holy moly, the cookie tracker list on that site is longer than my arm! And I hate how deceptive is the “accept all” button - it implies it means "accept all settings, rather than “accept all tracking software”.
As for the article itself, the author presumes (or is being intentionally deceptive) that FLOSS is unsupported, and completely omits Canonical.
The only valid reason i agree is “don’t use FLOSS if it doesn’t support your hardware” but that probably means that you’re using highly specific hardware, or are suffering from vendor lock-in and should phase out the proprieatry hardware whenever possible.
Tone like this
Talk to an open source evangelist and chances are he or she will tell you that software developed using the open source model is the only way to go.
doesn’t help, but many of those arguments are sound in the corporate ecosystem. Imagine trying to run a help desk when user A is trying to import a powerpoint presentation on ubuntu or when a new sysadmin is trying to deploy nextcloud.
When corporations get involved in making open source fit their needs, the result can be a co-opted project like chromium that isn’t really open.
That said, when it’s the right tool for the job, use it. Or let’s work on dissolving corporatism and encouraging businesses that don’t need policies to fit 10,000 apathetic users.
Ah yes, the fabled support contracts for enterprise applications.
Where you have to answer the same questions over and over again. Don’t worry, in 3-10 business days you’ll be talking to someone who has actual experience with it. Who then labels your problem as a bug that they won’t fix soon.
None of those reasons show any reason for proprietary software to be inherently any better than open source, it is just comparing a specific product or service to another one and not that being proprietary in and of itself has any advantages for the business.