DOKK Library

Open-minded CEOs

Authors opensource.com

License CC-BY-SA-3.0

Plaintext
                                                            Open Visions Issue One




       OPEN-MINDED
       CEOS
       A collection of essays and interviews from opensource.com




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       IN THIS BOOKLET
       ARTICLES

       3    The open source renaissance
            Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft
       5    Transparency, participation, and collaboration:
            The distinguishing principles of open source
            Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft
       8    How does open source affect company culture?
            Mårten Mickos, CEO of Eucalyptus Systems
       10   An architecture of participation
            Mårten Mickos, CEO of Eucalyptus Systems
       13   Open source hardware: Fast and malleable
            Nate Seidle, CEO of SparkFun
       16   The best idea wins
            Jim Whitehurst, CEO of Red Hat


       INTERVIEWS

       18   Glen Moriarty, CEO of NIXTY
       21   Aaron Fulkerson, CEO of MindTouch
       25   Micki Krimmel, CEO of NeighborGoods




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                                                                                           Introduction 1




       Open source
       changes the world
       And when the world changes, so do the ways       But the leaders we feature here embrace
       we work together in it.                          these potential consequences, because they
                                                        know that openness can produce positive
       At opensource.com, we explore how
                                                        results unlike anything we’ve ever seen.
       embracing open source principles and
                                                        While some of their peers redouble their
       practices — like transparency, meritocracy,
                                                        efforts at secrecy, hierarchy, and control,
       community, participation, collaboration, rapid
                                                        these open-minded CEOs have chosen a
       prototyping, and sharing — can lead not
                                                        different tack.
       only to a powerful method of engineering
       software, but to a whole way of life. An open    They’re all working in different fields, but wo-
       source way of life.                              ven throughout their essays and interviews
                                                        are some important — and difficult — uni-
       The essays and interviews collected here are
                                                        fying questions: How can we bring people
       the fruit of an ongoing conversation about
                                                        together to do great things? What motivates
       living and working the open source way.
                                                        them? How can we coordinate them when
       Their authors are CEOs from some of today’s
                                                        they unite? How does working the open
       most intriguing companies. We call these
                                                        source way allow us to anticipate the future
       leaders ’open-minded’ because of their intu-
                                                        and adapt to thrive in it? And what counts as
       itive sense that the open source way is the
                                                        success? Their answers are compelling.
       best way to do business. You’ll see what we
       mean. These authors are tireless champions       The first part of this volume consists of
       of open source values in their organizations     essays that open-minded CEOs have penned
       and their communities.                           for opensource.com, essays teeming with in-
                                                        sights into what it means to organize people
       Working the open source way isn’t always
                                                        for achievement in the twenty-first century.
       easy, as any of our contributors will quickly
                                                        In part II, we feature interviews with the
       note. Fostering an organizational culture that
                                                        heads of companies aiming to reinvent entire
       encourages employee autonomy, extensive
                                                        domains — education, for instance — the
       collaboration, and rigorous meritocracy can
                                                        open source way.
       disturb traditional management styles. Being
       transparent can open a company to new            Each piece is an example of how being
       risks. A commitment to rapid prototyping will    open-minded can radically alter not only how
       likely produce some embarrassing failures.       we work, but also how we lead. Enjoy.
       And sharing forces everyone to rethink no-
       tions of ownership, property, and value.




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      Open-minded
      ceos
      articles




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                                                                           The open source renaissance 3




       The open source
       renaissance
       Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (originally published March 2010)


       It occurred to me recently that the open           others to share in the use of their patents
       source movement is really nothing less than        and copyrights, because they think such
       a renaissance. Perhaps that sounds grandi-         distribution will dilute their value — when, in
       ose, but stay with me.                             fact, sharing can substantially enhance the
                                                          value. Fundamentally, “open source” is about
       If you think about it, for a few hundred
                                                          the sharing of ideas big and small and the
       years, some of the most significant advance-
                                                          modern renaissance represents newfound
       ments by mankind have come from, and are
                                                          understanding that sharing creates new value.
       maintained in, proprietary (closed source)
       methodologies.                                     In many areas of science, the sharing of
                                                          ideas (even patents and copyrights) has long
       Take, for example, U.S. patent and copyright
                                                          been commonplace. The world’s best and
       protection laws and policies. They reinforce
                                                          brightest physicists, astronomers, geologists,
       proprietary, “closed source” rights and
                                                          and medical researchers share their discov-
       policies. As a result of this system, many
                                                          eries every day. Without that sharing, the
       substantial U.S. companies have formed
                                                          advancement of their ideas would be limited
       around breakthrough ideas, but incentives
                                                          to just what they themselves could conjure.
       are in place for those companies to guard
                                                          By sharing their ideas through published
       and protect their intellectual property, even if
                                                          papers, symposiums, and so on, they open
       others outside the company could extend or
                                                          up many possibilities for improvements and
       advance it more rapidly.
                                                          applications that the originator would have
       Now, to be clear, patent and copyright             never considered. Of course, the Internet
       protection is necessary because it prop-           has provided an incredible communication
       erly encourages the origination of ideas           platform for all those who wish to collabo-
       through the notion of ownership. But, too          rate freely and avidly and is, arguably, the
       few people consider the upside of allowing         foundation for this renaissance.




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    4 Open-Minded CEOs


       That’s why it’s ironic that one of the laggard    ideas, given that few others would genuinely
       scientific disciplines to embrace open source     be able to exploit them. But, once again, the
       is computer science. For the past 40 years, for   drive to create a business using historically
       example, incentives have been strong for a        consistent methods has limited the pharma-
       company to originate an idea for great soft-      ceuticals industry to closed practices.
       ware, immediately file a patent and/or register
                                                         So, returning to computer science and
       to copyright it, and then guard it religiously.
                                                         software, maybe the reasons for not sharing
       No one would have thought that exposing
                                                         are based on the complexity of collaboration?
       the inner-workings of a complex and valuable
                                                         That is, it’s hard to figure out someone else’s
       software system so that others might both
                                                         software code, unless it’s been written with
       understand and extend it would be beneficial.
                                                         sharing fundamentally in mind. Or maybe
       Today, however, there are countless examples
                                                         there’s a sense that software is art, and I
       where openness pays off in many ways. So,
                                                         want to protect my creative work — more
       why has computer science and software
                                                         like poetry than DNA mapping.
       lagged in the open source renaissance?
                                                         Either way, the renaissance is coming for the
       That computer science is an open source
                                                         software industry. Software will advance and
       laggard is ironic because the barriers to
                                                         solve new problems more quickly through
       entry in the software industry are relatively
                                                         openness and sharing. In this sense, comput-
       low, compared to other sciences. One might
                                                         er science has much to learn from the other
       think that low entry barriers would reduce
                                                         areas of science where open collaboration
       the risk to and promote the sharing of ideas.
                                                         has been so successful for so long.
       But, instead, software developers (and com-
       panies) have spent most of the last 40 years      Fortunately, the world of software is agile
       erecting other barriers, based on intellectual    and adept. According to research by Amit
       capital and copyright ownership — which is        Deshpande and Dirk Riehle at SAP Research
       perplexing because it so limits the advance-      Labs, during the past five years the number
       ment of the software product. But, such           of open source software projects and the
       behavior does fit within the historical under-    number of lines of open source software
       standing of business building (i.e., protecting   code have increased exponentially. The
       land, labor and capital).                         principles that this new breed of open source
                                                         software have forged are already leaving
       Another relative laggard area — and an inter-
                                                         an indelible mark on the industry. Soon, its
       esting comparison — is pharmaceuticals and
                                                         proponents believe, all software companies
       drug discovery. When I talk with colleagues
                                                         will embrace these fundamental open source
       about this barrier-irony phenomenon, this is
                                                         principles: collaboration, transparency and
       the most common other science cited (i.e.,
                                                         participation. The course of this renaissance
       another science discipline that has preferred
                                                         will be our guide.
       not to share). But, in drug discovery the in-
       centives not to share are substantial because
       the need to recover the enormous research
       costs through the ownership of blockbuster
       drugs is extremely high. In fact, because
       the barriers to enter the pharmaceuticals
       industry are quite high, one might think that
       would promote openness and the sharing of




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           Transparency, participation, and collaboration: The distinguishing principles of open source 5




       Transparency, participation,
       and collaboration: The
       distinguishing principles
       of open source
       Brian Gentile, Chairman and CEO of Jaspersoft (originally published September 2010)


       I believe that, over time, Jaspersoft’s dis-     reach not just all technology companies, but
       tinction will be less about it being an open     all other industries as well.
       source software company and more about
                                                        As I’ve described in many settings, the prin-
       its abilities as a great business intelligence
                                                        ciples of open source software are transpar-
       software company1. I expect declining
                                                        ency, participation and collaboration. These
       distinction for our open source-ness will
                                                        principles stand, in many ways, in stark
       partly occur because the success of open
                                                        contrast to the aged, proprietary ways of
       source software and the benefit it brings
                                                        doing business. I’ll briefly define and explain
       the community and customers become
                                                        each of these three principles.
       better accepted and understood each year
       (and, therefore, less unique). I also believe    Transparency
       that the most valuable aspect of the open        Doing the right thing when no one is watch-
       source model will long endure, way after the     ing may be the best definition of integri-
       sheen fades from the download, forum post,       ty. You combine that with frankness and
       or roadmap voting. That is, the principles of    honesty, and you have the first open source
       open source software are its most distin-        principle, transparency. With open source
       guishing characteristic and will eventually      software, anyone can watch. Jaspersoft




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    6 Open-Minded CEOs


       software engineers and our community con-        Open source community distinction emerges
       tributors know that every line of code they      because its members participate by using
       write will be made available for inspection      either their time (i.e., skill) or their money. Ei-
       and comment by a very large community. If        ther is valuable and helps to make the open
       they have any discomfort with transparency,      source project thrive. The only sin in open
       they would choose a different vocation.          source is not participating. In other words, if
                                                        a community member is using open source
       This transparency transcends software en-
                                                        software and deriving real benefit from its
       gineering, though, to all aspects of the busi-
                                                        existence, then participating by providing
       ness. In every way possible, an open source
                                                        time or money should be seen as basic and
       company should be transparent; that is, frank,
                                                        reasonable reciprocity.
       honest and operating with integrity. If a mis-
       take is made — admit it, describe how you’ll     Collaboration
       make it right and move on. If an important
                                                        Collaboration is about collective engagement
       milestone is reached that deserves cele-
                                                        for the common good and is the fastest
       bration — announce it, enjoy the moment
                                                        route to open source project success. If an
       of pride and move on. This is the obligation
                                                        open source project is a neighborhood, then
       an open source company maintains with its
                                                        collaboration is the barn raising. Distinguish-
       customers and community. And, those using
                                                        ing this from “participation,” collaboration
       the open source projects/products must be
                                                        is about helping others in the community
       equally transparent through their actions and
                                                        because doing so advances the project and
       deeds. For example, the community must
                                                        its usefulness for everyone.
       adhere to the terms of the particular open
       source license, using the software only as       My favorite example of collaboration is
       those terms allow, reflecting their transpar-    knowledge sharing through forums, blogs,
       ency. In short, transparency is about doing      and idea exchanges (in some circles, called
       what you know is right. In a community, the      ideagoras). On JasperForge, Jaspersoft’s
       effects of transparency are amplified.           open source community web site, there are
                                                        more than 160,000 registered members
       Participation
                                                        who have collectively offered nearly 80,000
       Actively giving back in a very tangible way is   forum entries across all the listed top-level
       the heart of participation. Making the open      projects. The variety of questions and issues
       source projects, of which each community         being addressed by and for community
       member is part, more successful and more         members within the forums is staggering.
       capable should be the common goal. Giving        And, the vibrancy that emerges through
       back can mean many things, including and         this exchange of skill is core to large-scale
       especially either committing time through        community success.
       code contributions (for those community
                                                        While forum activity remains brisk, I’m
       members with the skill and expertise) or pur-
                                                        equally proud of our guided use of an idea
       chasing/licensing the software if the project
                                                        exchange within JasperForge. Each top-level
       is in any way commercial open source. Code
                                                        project includes a roadmap where commu-
       contributions can include not just feature
                                                        nity members can comment and vote on
       advancements, but language translations,
                                                        planned features. This not only allows many
       bug fixes, and quality assurance testing
                                                        voices to be heard, but provides a valuable
       assistance, among others.




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           Transparency, participation, and collaboration: The distinguishing principles of open source 7


       calibration for Jaspersoft and its community,
       ultimately yielding the most important prod-
       uct features and advancements in approxi-
       mately the best priority order.
       There are many more examples of collabora-
       tion in action, across JasperForge2 and other
       leading open source sites, but these are
       some of my favorites.
       I talk about these three principles of open
       source regularly, and I’m fond of concluding
       that the real benefit of collaboration accrues
       to those who participate transparently.
       That’s just my clever way of mentioning all
       three of the open source principles in one
       actionable sentence.




       1. www.jaspersoft.com                            2. www.jasperforge.com




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    8 Open-Minded CEOs




       How does open
       source affect
       company culture?
       Mårten Mickos, CEO of Eucalyptus Systems (originally published February 2011)


       An open source company is naturally a             cannot or should not be shared with everyone.
       company that produces open source code for        How does an organization hold a balance be-
       others to consume. But how does the notion        tween being culturally open and maintaining
       of producing software code in the open            the level of professional discretion required
       affect company culture?                           by its customers, its board of directors and
                                                         others? How do employees know when to act
       I believe that an organization cannot produce
                                                         open and when to keep closed?
       open source code if it is not generally open
       itself. By this I mean having culture of trans-   During my eight-year tenure as CEO of
       parency and of openly sharing information         MySQL, we believed that openness, both in
       and ideas. The same basic environment             our product and our company culture, would
       that is often found in open source develop-       lead to greatness. As a result, there was a
       ment — a sense of open community, where           daily vibration around the topics of open
       everyone is welcome to share their opinions       and closed. For example, it was vital to keep
       and ideas — is often present in open source       information we received from customers
       companies as well.                                confidential, but it was also important to
                                                         make every new piece of the server code
       But a company is different from an open
                                                         open. Knowing what should remain undis-
       source community in a key way: In every
                                                         closed and what could be openly shared was
       commercial entity, there is information that




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                                                          How does open source affect company culture? 9


       a skill that we wanted every employee to            passionate about their jobs and the mission
       master. This kind of deliberation is less of a      of MySQL.
       factor in a traditional corporate environment,
                                                           Today, three years after MySQL was acquired
       in which the default environment is generally
                                                           by Sun, I can still easily detect the MySQL
       closed. At MySQL, each employee had to be
                                                           spirit in my past colleagues when I meet
       empowered and enlightened to know when
                                                           them here and there. There is an assumption
       to be open and when not to.
                                                           that information will be shared. There is a
       Within this balancing act of open and closed,       conviction that debate is useful. What we
       we followed a principle of being open               all know is that inclusiveness and openness
       as much as we could. That’s a good and              of open source communities, when injected
       beautiful principle, but knowing exactly how        into a company culture, can create some-
       to apply it requires fine-tuned judgment. As        thing special.
       noted, we kept customer information and
       minutes from board meetings confidential.
       We did not share personal information such
       as salaries and performance evaluations. But
       we really tried to make everything else open:
       bug database, work lists, design documents,
       and so on. We also tried to keep business
       information open. We were open about
       our business model, our partners, and our
       downloads. And we agreed that in our public
       communication, we should disclose as much
       information as possible.
       Internally we tried to be open, too. We
       informed everyone of broad resolutions.
       We discussed difficult strategic choices on
       company-wide conference calls and in broad
       management meetings. We encouraged ev-
       eryone to have an opinion of everything. This
       radical openness did not come free of charge,
       however. MySQL AB was known as a compa-
       ny whose staff could debate topics endlessly.
       Some of our employees and managers were
       frustrated with the long decision-making
       cycles. Sometimes openness became the
       priority rather than a means to an end.
       But in retrospect, it is difficult to regret the
       way we operated. Although the principle of
       openness may have at times taken a toll on
       our productivity, it also helped foster em-
       ployees who were brilliant spokespersons for
       the company and brilliant decision makers
       on their own, all the while being amazingly




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   10 Open-Minded CEOs




       An architecture
       of participation
       Mårten Mickos, CEO of Eucalyptus Systems (originally published June 2012)


       What happens when half of the world’s pop-         exception. The world used to be about com-
       ulation lives in cities? When over three billion   mand and control. Someone told you what to
       people are online? When there are more             do. There still is a lot of that. But collabora-
       than 15 billion connected devices?                 tive innovation is taking over. We are coming
                                                          to a stage in our civilization where regular
       Old organizational models hit end-of-life.
                                                          functions are masterfully automated and in-
       People behave differently. Organizations
                                                          dustrialized, and our focus as human beings
       behave differently. What worked in the old
                                                          can and will increasingly be on innovation.
       world doesn’t work in the new.
                                                          In the area of innovation, the most powerful
       Through the ages, people have collaborated         creation happens in teams, groups, and
       around common goals. Joint creation and            crowds — across organizational boundaries.
       joint production are not new ideas. It could       When we architect for such participation, we
       be argued that the old religious scriptures        can multiply the power of innovation.
       were crowd-sourced. Most other activity
                                                          Linus Torvalds stumbled over this mecha-
       back then was strictly controlled by a ruling
                                                          nism over 20 years ago. In an act that was
       leader or harsh environmental conditions. But
                                                          part abandonment and part invitation, he
       when people engaged in new and intriguing
                                                          somewhat unknowingly threw out an intrigu-
       topics of the time, they worked together.
                                                          ing challenge to software developers all
       They collaborated.
                                                          over the world: Work with me to build a free
       What is changing now is that participato-
       ry models are becoming the rule, not the




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                                                                         An architecture of participation 11


       operating system. And people did — willingly,      Millions of freeloaders providing a marginal
       spontaneously, and brilliantly.                    benefit amounts to much more than a small
                                                          number of contributors each providing a big
       Soon, a number of free and open source
                                                          benefit. This is why the size of the ecosys-
       software projects were defining the archi-
                                                          tem matters. With three billion people on
       tecture of participation — a model for how
                                                          the Internet, freeloaders are more abundant
       to engage people with different ambitions,
                                                          and more useful than when we had just
       different mandates, different employers (or
                                                          three million people on the Internet (which
       no employer at all), and different communi-
                                                          was approximately the time when the Linux
       cation habits in joint projects that unpredict-
                                                          project started).
       ably but inevitably produce superior results.
                                                          This is why the architecture of participation
       That’s the essence of the architecture of par-
                                                          is now overtaking systems of command and
       ticipation. You construct rules of engagement
                                                          control. The volume of participants is so
       that allow disagreeing people to let their
                                                          large that any attempt to be fully in control
       work products agree. This is a system where
                                                          inevitably leads to a group too small to
       the designer invites input from contributors.
                                                          have meaning. The number of people you
       The end result is an ecosystem that evolves
                                                          can control are vastly outnumbered by the
       faster than any individual initiative, resulting
                                                          people you can only hope to influence, but
       in a work product with fewer deficiencies.
                                                          not control.
       The architecture of participation is more than
                                                          Let us also be clear that the architecture of
       open, and more than crowd-sourcing. Open,
                                                          participation is not anarchy. It is also not a
       strictly speaking, means that you share your
                                                          democracy. Every architecture of participation
       production with others. It doesn’t necessarily
                                                          has an architect. There is a steward of the
       mean participation. Crowd-sourcing means
                                                          project. The steward can be a single individ-
       many people contribute to a production. It
                                                          ual (like Linus Torvalds), a team (think about
       doesn’t necessarily mean that they would
                                                          the creators of the Apache web server) or a
       exchange value with each other. It’s not
                                                          company (such as MySQL AB). The steward of
       enough to be open and it’s not enough to
                                                          the project sets the rules of engagement.
       crowd-source. We must build an architecture
       of participation where different participants      If the rules are too strict or egregious, people
       with different agendas can exchange ideas          will not participate. If there are no rules,
       and models, and everyone has access to the         people will not know how to participate. In
       end results. It’s not easy to do that, but it      the ideal architecture of participation, there
       also is not impossible.                            is a steward of the project that sets priorities
                                                          and design goals and then simply ensures
       The beauty of a well-functioning architecture
                                                          that the field is open for participation by
       of participation is that there is no significant
                                                          anyone and everyone. To scale collaboration,
       distinction or conflict between the public
                                                          it makes sense to create useful interfac-
       good and the private good. It’s just good. It’s
                                                          es — APIs that allow individual initiatives to
       good for each participant, and it is good for
                                                          evolve at their own pace while interacting
       all. It does not matter whether there are free
                                                          with each other through the agreed interface.
       riders or freeloaders in the system, because
       the moment they take any action whatsoev-          Architectures of participation exist all over
       er, they become at least marginally useful to      the technology sector today. It’s not any
       the entire system.                                 longer just about open source. Wikipedia




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   12 Open-Minded CEOs


       brings together those who can express facts
       and concepts in writing. Facebook brings
       together those who can express their daily
       lives. oDesk and the Mechanical Turk bring
       together those who have work capacity to
       provide to others. Kiva.org brings togeth-
       er those who have a penny to spare for
       someone who is working hard. Twitter brings
       together those who can express useful
       information very briefly. The Human Genome
       Project brings together insight about DNA.
       The Khan Academy brings together the best
       in educational practices. The Linux Founda-
       tion continues to bring together those who
       can express computer behavior in the form
       of kernel code.
       We are only in the early stages of the
       architecture of participation. Cloud comput-
       ing is a participatory endeavor. The mobile
       application space is exploding with partic-
       ipation. Large traditional corporations are
       launching social initiatives and participatory
       fora. National governments are opening up
       for citizen participation. The list steadily
       grows longer.
       The ideal architecture of participation com-
       bines the best of ownership of design with
       the best of collaboration by the masses. If
       you have no architect, you have no participa-
       tion. But if you have no participation, it mat-
       ters little what the architect does. When the
       architect (whether it’s a person or a team) is
       a master of the trade and also a welcoming
       recipient of contributions and participation,
       the results can be amazing. 




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                                                           Open source hardware: Fast and malleable 13




       Open source
       hardware: Fast and
       malleable
       Nate Seidle, CEO of SparkFun (originally published May 2012)


       SparkFun is not like BMW. We will never be       lots of bribes from engineering when we
       the company to produce the luxury market         forget to break out the right test points),
       version of breakout boards and development       but over the past 9 years of building stuff,
       tools. I believe the only way SparkFun will      we’ve figured out ways to change quickly.
       survive this quickly changing world is to be     Thanks to the huge efforts of a team of
       malleable. We have to be ready to change.        people1 we can change any part of a design
                                                        (PCB layout, schematic, BOM, firmware, test
       SparkFun’s audience is often a first-time
                                                        procedure, test jig, kit instructions, product
       user and we want them to have the best
                                                        description, product images, you name it) in
       experience with the documentation and
                                                        days, not months.
       resources like tutorials, pictures, example
       code, and anything else we can provide
       to make them successful. By constantly
       revising our products, we often find ways to
       make it more likely for our users to succeed.
       The firmware will get better, we will figure
       out better power protection, and we’ll make
       the end product easier to use. This causes
       lots of stress on our production line (there’s




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 13                                                 9/4/12 5:43 PM
   14 Open-Minded CEOs


       Phillip Torrone recently posted a great article   Now imagine what it was like in the Spark-
       on problems and counterfeits2 in the Open         Fun offices the first time we saw our product
       Source Hardware (OSHW) world. All sorts of        (our baby) built by someone else? It was
       great discussions ensued! Jan Malasek 3 from      not easy. But guess what came of it? We
       Pololu made some great points about the           now know we need to innovate, and do so
       appropriate time and place for OSHW and           constantly. If we can’t be the best at some-
       Paul Stoffregen4 raised some valid concerns       thing, we’d better get the heck out of the
       that OSHW may encourage lower quality             way. Intellectual property allows for some
       products. I’m here to state two things about      protection, albeit at a legal expense. On top
       OSHW as it works for SparkFun.                    of that, IP holders can be tempted to sit on
                                                         their laurels and in this day and age, that can
                                                         be the kiss of death. We use open source
                                                         hardware as a way to stay sharp.
                                                         2. OSHW makes for better products.
                                                         We believe it is better to iterate on a design
                                                         and be and transparent and forthcoming as
                                                         possible. You will find some SparkFun prod-
                                                         ucts with silkscreen errors8 and even green
                                                         wires9. We have even shipped kits without
                                                         the PCB (!!!). Yep, we screwed that one
                                                         up badly but we contacted the customers
                                                         as soon as we found out and sent out the
       1. OSHW makes us a better company.
                                                         missing PCBs. All lessons cannot be learned
       Releasing the design files5 for a product         in a vacuum. At SparkFun, we find it’s better
       means you have enabled all your customers         to give our customers the most options pos-
       and a few competitors as well.                    sible, listen, then incorporate their feedback
                                                         into new product revisions, which is very
       We sold the original Fio6 for about 12 weeks
                                                         much in line with the spirit of open source.
       before Seeed Studio7 sold a better version.
                                                         Some could argue that shipping an unfinished
       Eric Pan runs Seeed Studio and does a fine
                                                         product is not the correct way to do business.
       job of it. They did everything right (kept
                                                         I have had to train myself and the people
       the license intact, gave attribution where
                                                         around me that a project is never done, there
       required) and even improved the design a bit
                                                         are always ways to make it better. This is the
       (they used easier to find parts).
                                                         basis of engineering. We believe we should
                                                         get the product to do one thing well and
                                                         then set it free and allow others to hack on it.
                                                         What we thought was an important feature
                                                         may turn out to be needless.
                                                         It may not appeal to everything, but is this
                                                         fast release cycle a good thing or bad thing
                                                         for Open Source Hardware? I believe this
                                                         is the core of why OSHW is fantastic. We
                                                         have learned from our problems and we




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 14                                                    9/4/12 5:43 PM
                                                              Open source hardware: Fast and malleable 15


       share them10 so that others do not make
       our same mistakes. In a very clear way, we
       educate and enable our customers and our
       competition equally. Similarly, we will stand
       on the shoulders of folks who have had
       great ideas (Leah Buechley11, Brian Schmalz12,
       Bill Premerlani13, and countless others) and
       made powerful tools (Arduino14, Saleae15,
       mbed16, the list goes on). What will separate
       companies from one another in the future
       is not their designs, it will be their service,
       their quality, their price, and their ability to
       produce meaningful products. This is the
       nature of the game we play and it is my job
       to make SparkFun the best at responding
       to incremental change that allows for better
       end products and happier users.




       1. www.flickr.com/photos/sparkfun/6686434511       8. www.sparkfun.com/products/10104?
       2. http://blog.makezine.com/2012/04/18/soapbox-    9. www.sparkfun.com/products/10183?
          counterfeit-open-source-hardware-knock-         10. www.sparkfun.com/tutorials
          offs-101/
                                                          11. http://web.media.mit.edu/%7Eleah/
       3. http://blog.makezine.com/2012/04/25/makes-
          interview-with-jan-malasek-from-pololu/         12. www.schmalzhaus.com

       4. www.pjrc.com                                    13. www.sparkfun.com/products/11115?

       5. www.sparkfun.com/products/10116?                14. www.arduino.cc

       6. www.sparkfun.com/products/8957?                 15. www.saleae.com/logic/

       7. www.seeedstudio.com/blog/2009/01/10/            16. http://mbed.org
          funnel-io-remixed-by-seeedstudio/




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 15                                                 9/4/12 5:43 PM
   16 Open-Minded CEOs




       The best idea wins
       Jim Whitehurst, CEO of Red Hat (originally published May 2012)


       There’s a Southern expression that goes,         of that thought has helped shape collabora-
      “Says easy, does hard.” In this case, it’s easy   tion at Red Hat, even when we’re addressing
       to say that your company is focused on           business questions unrelated to software
       collaboration and ideas. But many execu-         per se. Working this way means that nothing
       tives conflate the terms “collaboration” and     matters but the idea. The idea wins.
      “consensus.” Seeking consensus and creating
                                                        Just as it’s neither possible nor advisable to
       a democracy of ideas is not what we at Red
                                                        listen to every person’s input on every issue,
       Hat would call collaboration. In fact, it’s a
                                                        we don’t want to get to a place where we
       misstep. Rather, managers at Red Hat make
                                                        hold hands and agree on everything. At Red
       it a practice to seek out ideas from those
                                                        Hat, we want to foster effective collaboration
       who’ve shown that they typically have the
                                                        and create an environment focused on ideas.
       best ideas — those who have risen to the
                                                        Over time, the people who consistently have
       top of our meritocracy.
                                                        good ideas will be listened to.
       To get to the top, though, it’s not enough to
                                                        Of course, no one’s immune in the Red Hat
       merely have an idea; you’ll also need to de-
                                                        meritocracy. Being the CEO doesn’t protect
       fend it against all comers. That means there
                                                        me from being called out sometimes. I, too,
       may be disagreements. Voices will be raised.
                                                        have to be ready to defend my ideas. And
       Building your reputation, therefore, can take
                                                        you know what? I encourage it. I celebrate
       time, patience, and a thick skin.
                                                        it. That’s how you can ensure the best idea
       This environment can seem harsh at first.        wins in the end. 
       But keep this in mind: Open source software
       developers say, “In the end, nothing matters
       but the code. The code wins.” And the kernel




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 16                                                 9/4/12 5:43 PM
       Open-minded
       ceos
       interviews




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 17   9/4/12 5:43 PM
   18 Open-Minded CEOs




       Interview with
       Glen Moriarty,
       CEO of NIXTY
       (Originally published September 2010)


       Why is open education important?                    to education? It has gone up! It goes up no
                                                           matter what. When inflation is up, educa-
       Open education is hugely important for a
                                                           tion goes up even more. When we are in a
       variety of reasons. There are several writers
                                                           deflationary environment, as we are now,
       who have covered this space much better
                                                           education still goes up. It is simply not sus-
       than I can; a couple of key people in this
                                                           tainable. I won’t bore you with details about
       space include David Wiley1 and George
                                                           the “education bubble.” The interested reader
       Siemens2. Rather than attempt to cover the
                                                           can check out Anya Kamenetz’s DIY U 3 for
       full range of this question, I’ll highlight a few
                                                           more details. The primary point here is just
       reasons why we think it is important and
                                                           that education is too expensive and open
       especially relevant to what we are doing
                                                           education is a brilliant way of dramatically
       with NIXTY.
                                                           decreasing educational costs.
       Reason #1: Education is too expensive
                                                           Reason #2: The US approach to higher edu-
       In the United States, house prices have             cation doesn’t scale
       dropped 30-40%, gas has decreased from
                                                           David Wiley astutely observed several years
       $4.00 to $2.44, and for those with children
                                                           ago that educators have limited bandwidth.
       (yes, I have 3), a gallon of milk has dropped
                                                           They simply do not scale. We need to find
       from $4.00 to $3.19. What has happened




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 18                                                    9/4/12 5:43 PM
                                                           Interview with Glen Moriarty, CEO of NIXTY 19


       ways to harness non-educators and tech-          education. We believe the open education
       nology to meet the needs of people across        movement will be at the center of education
       America and around the globe. Our current        in 5 years. We are delighted to be part of
       system of closed education cannot meet the       this group.
       goals of the Obama administration, nor can
                                                        There have been comments around your
       it meet the demands of a growing globalized
                                                        content management challenges — how
       economy. Open education can help solve
                                                        will you control content quality?
       these problems because it scales.
                                                        We have several controls in place to help
       Reason #3: Copyrighted materials are limited
                                                        control content quality. First, you can only
       and decrease educational progress
                                                        post or comment if you are logged in. Sec-
       Educational materials that are protected,        ond, all contributions (posts, comments, and
       top-down, and static are limited and hinder      soon content) can be upvoted or downvoted6.
       educational progress. Open educational ma-       These votes are tracked in each person’s
       terials are the opposite: they can be remixed,   reputation points. Additionally, all comments
       altered, and tailored to meet the needs of a     and posts are cataloged and can be searched
       variety of people.                               on a person’s eportfolio7. When a person
                                                        visits another’s eportfolio they see their
       How has NIXTY involved the existing open
                                                        display/professional elements (CV, resume,
       source community and how have they
                                                        recommendations, work examples, etc.) and
       rallied around NIXTY?
                                                        their process elements (comments and posts
       People in general love open education, and       published across the platform). Third, each
       they seem quite enthusiastic about NIXTY.        instructor has full delete capability. They can
       We have received a ton of press (this invited    delete any part of their course. Fourth, and
       article included!), and we are very thankful.    this will be released in the near future, items
       We are still in the early stages, but people     published in WikiCourses will have the option
       see the vision, and it is something that most    of being marked for deletion. Once a certain
       people want to get behind.                       threshold is hit, the content will be automat-
       We have consulted with many open edu-            ically deleted.
       cation experts. Many of them see the value       What are some of the principles from
       in NIXTY and have helped us spread the           the open source way that will help
       word to others. We are very fortunate to         NIXTY’s growth?
       have several experts on our Open Education
                                                        There are a number of principles from the
       Advisory Board.
                                                        open source way that will help NIXTY’s
       We are excited about playing our small role      growth. The first is a sense of community.
       in the open education movement. I’m not          We actively work with students, educators,
       sure there could be a better group of people     instructional designers, and open education
       to work with. John Seely Brown4, in his          experts to inform what we do. They are part
       new book, The Power of Pull 5, talks about       of our community, and their feedback results
       working with people on the edge. His main        in real change on the site. That said, we need
       point is that people on the edge transform       to take things further. We have open forums
       the center. From our perspective, the open       on our site but need to find more ways of
       education movement, now at the edge, is          making direct contributions executable. We
       the primary driver behind transforming           also plan on releasing an API. The second is




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 19                                                  9/4/12 5:43 PM
   20 Open-Minded CEOs


       a commitment to releasing early and often.
       We are a fairly small group of people and
       have limited resources; it helps to look at this
       as a strength. It ties us closer to the com-
       munity and causes us to engage and listen
       in deeper ways. Third, NIXTY is tied to the
       idea of universalism. We are actively working
       to build a global default educational system
       that scales. We care deeply about providing
       tools, and the ability to remix content, so
       that it can be tailored to different contexts
       and geographic regions. Finally, the last main
       principle would be user innovation. NIXTY is
       a platform that others can build on to help
       solve the educational problems we face.




       1. http://opencontent.org/blog/                    5. www.edgeperspectives.com/pop.html
       2. www.elearnspace.org/blog/                       6. http://nixty.com/login
       3. http://diyubook.com                             7. http://nixty.com/eportfolio/glen
       4. www.johnseelybrown.com




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 20                                                9/4/12 5:43 PM
                                                    Interview with Aaron Fulkerson, CEO of MindTouch 21




       Interview with
       Aaron Fulkerson,
       CEO of MindTouch
       (Originally published May 2010)


       Can you tell me a little bit about the culture   where people are scared because they don’t
       at MindTouch? How would you describe the         know if they will be fired from day to day?
       culture at the company that you built? How       Well, that never happens at MindTouch.
       does it reflect the open source way?             Instead, we put people of concern on a
                                                        correction plan for 60 days.
       First and foremost, everybody at MindTouch
       is really passionate about open source and       Regarding excellence, we want our people to
       open standards. Furthermore, Steve and           excel. That’s why we give all of our co-work-
       I built this company around three cultural       ers $600 per quarter to spend on profes-
       tentpoles: honesty, excellence, and pride. We    sional development, which could include
       want to work with people who love what           classes or any other development tool of the
       they do and are always trying to make them-      employee’s choosing.
       selves better at what they are doing.
                                                        And finally, pride. We’ve worked hard to fos-
       The way that we’ve adopted and system-           ter a culture where everyone at MindTouch
       atized these three doctrines (or pillars) ties   feels comfortable bringing attention to the
       in very directly to the open source way. For     co-worker who might be in need of some
       example, we don’t fire anybody on the spot if    improvement. “You know that work you just
       you’ve been with MindTouch for more than 6       did? Well, it’s not the best work I’ve seen.”
       months. Have you ever worked at a company




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 21                                                 9/4/12 5:43 PM
   22 Open-Minded CEOs


       And that goes all the way to the                winners like Jim Gray4 and Robin Milner5 in
       executive team.                                 my time working there. It was a very differ-
                                                       ent experience from what one might expect
       I’ll give you an example. One of our market-
                                                       within Microsoft.
       ing admins had a concern about how one of
       our outside vendors was being treated. She      Speaking of Turing Award winners, I studied
       felt comfortable enough to go to the head       under another while a student at UNC-Chapel
       of the department and say, “Look, I don’t       Hill. Of course, that man is Fred Brooks6, au-
       like how you’re treating this outside vendor.   thor of the Mythical Man Month and founder
       We’ve been delaying, delaying, delaying in      of the computer science department at UNC.
       giving the vendor an answer and haven’t yet     He’s a god.
       paid them.”
                                                       In your experience working at proprietary
       There is absolutely a cultural meritocracy at   companies, do you feel that aspects of a
       MindTouch. The guy who runs our support         company’s culture can stifle innovation?
       team started out as an office manager, and      And, conversely, can aspects of an open
       very quickly moved into running the entire      source company’s culture accelerate the
       support team. He just excelled at it.           rate of innovation?
       And almost every single one of our devel-       Some people, when they first come into
       opers, every single person in engineering,      MindTouch, are surprised by how much
       has a side project that they are working        freedom they have, both in rising to the
       on — whether it’s a side company, or an         occasion and taking on responsibility that
       open source project.                            might be outside of their specific domain or
                                                       sphere of influence, but also in simple things
       Leaving Microsoft to start an open source
                                                       like engaging the community.
       company must have been an interesting
       transition. Can you compare and contrast        I had a new employee once ask me “Can I
       the culture at the company you’ve built         write a blog post on this?” I said, “Well, yeah,
       with that of Microsoft?                         why are you asking me that? It’s like asking
                                                       me if you can go to the bathroom.” (laughs)
       For me, my experience at Microsoft wasn’t
       that different from working at an open          Who can tweet on the MindTouch account?
       source company because Steve and I were in      Whoever wants to! (laughs)
       a small research team that reported directly
                                                       It’s that culture of openness that is so typical
       to Craig Mundie1, who had been the CTO. On
                                                       of open source companies and you don’t see
       my team was Chuck Thacker2, who just won
                                                       in most software companies.
       the Turing Award a few weeks ago, and guys
       like Henrik Frystyk Nielsen3 who also worked    As MindTouch grew and we started bringing
       on HTTP 1.1 and co-wrote the SOAP 1.1 & 1.2     on some people who might have had more of
       specifications. Somehow Steve and I lucked      a background in proprietary companies and
       into this small group.                          were unaccustomed to working with open
                                                       source, it even became apparent to me that
       My time there was very different from what
                                                       for them it felt odd. But as we all grew to be
       most people’s experience might have been
                                                       more comfortable being open and honest
       at Microsoft. It was more academic. I had
                                                       and authentic, it created a humanness for
       the opportunity to not only work with a
                                                       the company that resonates with users and
       Turing Award winner, but I met other award
                                                       prospective customers. And it drives more




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 22                                                  9/4/12 5:43 PM
                                                        Interview with Aaron Fulkerson, CEO of MindTouch 23


       users and prospective customers. So that’s           keting and other such things to go out and
       one key thing that I’ve seen.                        fight against Oracle and Microsoft.
       Another thing that I have come to realize is         We’ve been successful by making our
       that companies that have tried to own the            products freely available, building up a large,
       protocols and own the standards generally            very fanatic install base of users, and then
       don’t succeed. Look at what happened                 offering them commercial solutions built on
       during the SOA era — you know, SOAP and              top of that.
       all these very heavy web services — the
                                                            Opensource.com is about applying open
       reason why those web services were created
                                                            source principles beyond technology. How
       the way that they were was because large
                                                            do you see open source playing a role in
       companies like IBM and Microsoft and all
                                                            areas such as business, education, law or
       those people who were involved in the stan-
                                                            government? Can you see any opportuni-
       dards creation wanted to sell very expensive
                                                            ties in today’s world for the open source
       heavy tools on top of the services infrastruc-
                                                            way being applied to solve some of our
       tures. And it was frankly a huge failure that
                                                            biggest problems?
       undoubtedly set us back 5, 7, maybe 10 years
       because they wouldn’t embrace these open             Absolutely. We’re seeing it in education,
       standards that already we’ve proven could            obviously, with MIT and several other very
       scale and provide a very extensible platform.        prominent universities making their course-
                                                            ware, videos, and tutorials available online.
       Specifically I’m talking of course about HTTP
       and XML. You look at how these very large            I have also witnessed firsthand how this is
       companies put all of their weight and dollars        changing the legal landscape. It’s funny —
       and marketing budgets and essentially                 and most people don’t realize this — but the
       everything they had into creating this new           small start-up open source companies that
       world of SOA, and all these promises were            came up in the 2004-2006 cohort, of which
       made… it was all about them owning the               MindTouch is one of the younger ones, all
       protocol, owning the platform, providing very        shared the development of things like legal
       heavy tools and ultimately it was proven to          contracts and partner agreements to save
       be a huge failure.                                   on legal costs. My contracts might be a little
                                                            different now, but I remember for the first
       So instead we opt to live in a completely dif-
                                                            few years, MindTouch’s contract templates
       ferent world where it’s open standards and
                                                            tracked back even to JBoss.
       everybody benefits — including companies
       like MindTouch who adhere to open stan-              What I’d like to see — and I’ve pushed hard
       dards. Everything at MindTouch is like-ori-          on this but have never been able to see
       enting… meaning it’s all HTTP. Everything            any movement yet from my efforts — is an
       we do revolves around open standards. And            emergence of open source as applied to
       again, it’s a huge benefit.                          manufacturing. We have seen some projects
                                                            around electric cars, and people like the
       The third thing I’ll say is that MindTouch
                                                            BugLabs guys and others working on per-
       would have gone out of business a long time
                                                            sonal devices and things like that. But what
       ago if we hadn’t been able to build up an in-
                                                            I foresee happening is that as more and
       stall base. In the beginning we bootstrapped
                                                            more of our manufactured products become
       this company — we certainly didn’t have all
                                                            commodities, true innovation will come from
       the resources to dump into sales and mar-
                                                            sharing with one another just how these




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 23                                                       9/4/12 5:43 PM
   24 Open-Minded CEOs


       things are manufactured. I think everyone            an individual’s Twitter and Google “buzz” to
       will benefit as a result.                            determine one’s impact and broadcast power.
                                                            I was a bit skeptical at first but agreed to
       MindTouch recently released a list of
                                                            conduct the analysis, but told my team I
      “The 20 Most Powerful Voices in Open
                                                            wanted to see the list first before posting it.
       Source” 7. According to the post, the list
       comprises “the most vocal” open source               A bit hesitant, I looked down the list and
       leaders, i.e. the ones holding the “biggest          thought “yeah, I can see it breaking out this
       megaphones.” In a community-based for-               way.” What I thought was especially cool
       mat, do you feel that being the most vocal           about it was that there were a lot of people
       is equivalent to being the most powerful?            who I didn’t even know on the list. Channy
                                                            Yun15 from Korea, others from abroad… names
       No, I don’t think that’s necessarily the case.
                                                            and faces that aren’t instantly recognizable.
       MindTouch conducted what was (and prob-
                                                            And I thought that was pretty awesome.
       ably still is) the most comprehensive survey
       of best practices in sales and marketing in          We expected the “I don’t know any of these
       the enterprise open source space, back in            people, so it can’t be right” reactions. But
       September 20098. We had 25 open source               that’s OK. They might be huge in Korea, or
       companies participate in the study, including        huge in Italy, or huge in the communities in
       SugarCRM, Jaspersoft, Alfresco, and others.          which they participate.
       One of the questions we asked was, “Who              So overall, no, I don’t necessarily believe that
       do you think is the most influential person          having the biggest microphone makes you
       in open source?” We had 50 executives                the most influential person. In fact, with
       respond to the question and released the             regards to open source, I think volume can
       results of that question in a post to the            actually be ineffective. Megaphones aren’t
       MindTouch blog in October 20099. Larry Au-           always the best way to reach engineers.
       gustin10, CEO of SugarCRM, received the most
       mentions. Matt Asay11, Mårten Mickos12, Jim
       Whitehurst13, and Dries Buytaert14 rounded
       out the top 5.
       The “Most Powerful Voices” study was a
       different way of looking at this metric. We
       developed an MPV measure that considered

       1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craig_Mundie         9. www.mindtouch.com/blog/2009/10/27/most-
       2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Thacker           influential-people-in-open-source/

       3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrik_Frystyk_      10. www.linkedin.com/in/larryaugustin
          Nielsen                                           11. www.linkedin.com/in/mjasay
       4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Gray_            12. www.linkedin.com/pub/marten-mickos/0/1b/7b5
          %28computer_scientist%29                          13. www.linkedin.com/pub/jim-whitehurst/9/
       5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Milner             33a/625
       6. www.cs.unc.edu/cms/our-people                     14. www.linkedin.com/in/buytaert
       7. www.mindtouch.com/blog/2010/03/17/mpv/
       8. www.mindtouch.com/blog/2009/09/01/why-
          this-open-source-success-formula-will-increase-
          your-revenue/




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 24                                                        9/4/12 5:43 PM
                                                    Interview with Micki Krimmel, CEO of NeighborGoods 25




       Interview with
       Micki Krimmel, CEO
       of NeighborGoods
       (Originally published October 2010)


       What one big opportunity, outside of tech-         emerge to help facilitate sharing of resources.
       nology, has the best chance of being solved        And emerge they have! Countless services
       the open source way (i.e., through collabo-        such as CouchSurfing, Bright Neighbor,
       ration, transparency, sharing, meritocracy,        Chegg, Relay Rides, and NeighborGoods have
       rapid prototyping, community, etc.)?               launched recently to help people share rooms,
                                                          cars, textbooks, and household goods.
       I think we are at the beginning of a huge shift
       in our economy where we are trading in the        Two books have recently debuted analyzing
       mindless consumption of the 20th century for      this trend, What’s Mine is Yours: The Rise
       a more sustainable, collaborative model where     of Collaborative Consumption 1, and The
       we value community and access to the things       Mesh. A recent study published by Latitude
       we need over ownership. In recent years,          Research and Shareable Magazine shows
       people have become increasingly frugal and        that our increasing use of online sharing
       aware of the impacts of their consumer habits.    tools is a solid predictor of increased offline
       Our strained pocketbooks and our values as        sharing: “75% of participants predicted that
       a society no longer support the conspicuous       their offline sharing will increase in the next
       consumption that has driven our economy for       5 years.”
       decades. Simultaneously, we have become
                                                          I know it seems overly optimistic, but I believe
       increasingly comfortable sharing and con-
                                                          the more opportunities we create for people
       necting with others online. This has created a
                                                          to share and connect instead of spend and
       fantastic opportunity for new technologies to




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   26 Open-Minded CEOs


       purchase, the happier we will be. Now that’s     part of your community. We’re just like you.
       a business model built the open source way.      We created this space to help you connect
                                                        with your community.”
       What are some of the unexpected things
       you’ve discovered from NeighborGoods2            What attributes from the open source way
       experiences that have strengthened the           stand out as pillars for community building,
       communities where people live?                   online and in real life?
       The environmental and financial benefits         Honestly, all the pillars of what you dub the
       of sharing physical goods instead of buying      open source way (i.e., collaboration, trans-
       new are obvious. And honestly, being more        parency, sharing, meritocracy, rapid proto-
       sustainable and saving a few bucks is reason     typing, community) play a role in community
       enough to borrow a lawnmower instead of          building. There is a certain sense of humility
       buying a new one. But it’s not the reason        underlining all those terms that is vital to
       people are sharing on NeighborGoods. By far      fostering any community. The word “com-
       and away what we hear from our members           munity“ gets tossed around a lot these days,
       is that the primary benefit they receive from    but it’s not the same thing as an audience or
       sharing is meeting their neighbors. In my own    customer base. Community requires the par-
       neighborhood, our sharing group has done         ticipation of its members and that requires
       wonders to strengthen our community. With        humility on the part of the organizers.
       a vacuum cleaner here and a wheelbarrow
                                                        How do you apply the open source way in
       there, we’ve created a really solid support
                                                        your everyday life?
       group in our neighborhood. We help each
       other move furniture, watch each other’s pets,   A few years ago, I experimented with what I
       and check the mail when someone is trav-         called The Open Source Dating Project. The
       eling. NeighborGoods helped create a small       idea was that I would go on dates and post
       town feeling in the middle of Los Angeles.       all the details so people could vote for who
                                                        got a second date. It was more of a thought
       Thinking about your role in Al Gore’s An
                                                        project than anything real since I didn’t quite
       Inconvenient Truth, what is the most
                                                        have the nerve to do it. But yeah, I would say
       difficult thing about building communities
                                                        that I incorporate the open source way in
       online, and what advice would you share
                                                        a lot of what I do in everyday life. I decided
       with others?
                                                        early on with all this social media stuff that I
      The biggest mistake is thinking you can           wouldn’t have much of a filter. I try to be as
      “build a community” to start with. Especially     transparent and authentic as possible with
       when you’re dealing with an issue like global    how I present myself on the web. And that
       warming, it’s silly to think you can spark a     openness has provided countless opportu-
       movement from scratch. The key is to figure      nities for me to make a name for myself and
       out which communities are already aligned        to meet amazing and interesting people. I
       with your sensibility and give them a way to     also really enjoy the process of collabora-
       take up your cause for you as a part of their    tion. I consider myself lucky every day to be
       own identity. So you’re not asking people,       surrounded by smart and talented people
      “Hey, come be a part of our new community.”       who are willing to share their knowledge and
       Instead you’re saying, “Hey, look! We’re a       ideas with me. I try to always do the same.




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                                                                                        27




       1. www.opensource.com/life/10/9/book-            2. www.neighborgoods.net
          review-whats-mine-yours-rise-collaborative-
          consumption




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   28 Open-Minded CEOs




       Image credits
       All imagery in this booklet is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
       Unported license (CC BY-SA 3.0).

                                  Cover image
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/billmorrow/7677126048/




                                  The open source renaissance
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4424154829




                                  Transparency, participation, and collaboration:
                                  The distinguishing principles of open source
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4371000464


                                  How does open source affect company culture?
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/5497223174




                                  An architecture of participation
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/7496799718




                                  Open source hardware: Fast and malleable
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/5041738335




                                  The best idea wins
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4426824995




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                                                                                   Image Credits 29




                                  Glen Moriarty interview
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4996643102/




                                  Aaron Fulkerson interview
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4586670271




                                  Micki Krimmel interview
                                  www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4586670271




OSDC_Bundle_OpenMindedCEOs_9707647_0812CS.indd 29                                           9/4/12 5:43 PM
       Written content is licensed under a Creative Commons
       Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-SA 3.0).




       Download an electronic copy of this book at www.opensource.com/CEO




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