CRN article - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Ned Lilly |
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Subject | CRN article |
Date | |
Msg-id | 3AD9A7A3.C230AAE2@greatbridge.com Whole thread Raw |
Responses |
Re: CRN article
|
List | pgsql-hackers |
Folks, By now, I imagine a number of people have seen the piece on the Computer Reseller News website about Great Bridge and PostgreSQL. While I think we're all happy to see the increased visibility for PostgreSQL (especially as compared to the Oracles of the world), it's fair to say the article wasn't perfect. As Nathan Myers observed in another post, they rarely are. ;-) I thought the reporter did a good job of talking about Great Bridge's business model and how we work with resellers and third-party software developers (which after all is the focus of the magazine). Sure, there were some minor errors of fact, like the confusion over PostgreSQL's Berkeley origins, and the use of the word "licensing." But of greater concern to us, and the reason I'm writing this note, is the lack of clarity about the open source community that has built, and continues to build this software. Great Bridge is one company, one member of a large community, and a relative newcomer to the party. We employ several leading PostgreSQL developers, and give back to the project in many ways, but at the end of the day, we're still only a very small part of the larger project - which precedes us by many years, and could very easily survive us as well. We are *a* marketing channel for PostgreSQL (not *the* channel), provide services around the software, and release a QA-certified distribution (bundled with other tools and applications), but we know that it's not *our* software. It's everyone's, and I'm sorry the article didn't adequately represent that reality. Having said that, I'd ask everyone to take a deep breath, as Nathan suggested, and realize that it's still early in the adoption cycle for open source in the larger business world and the mass media. There will continue to be nuances that seem blindingly obvious to us, but slip right through the reporting and editing process in the trade press. That's ok, as long as we correct those errors, as delicately as possible ;-) We all have a shared stake in PostgreSQL being more widely used and appreciated, and how we respond to things like this will go a long way toward furthering that goal. You can all be justifiably proud of the work that's gone into PostgreSQL, leading up to the terrific 7.1 release; a big part of Great Bridge's job as a marketing organization is to make sure the world finds out about it - an ongoing job that we take very seriously. If anyone has any questions about Great Bridge's position on this kind of stuff, please feel free to email me off-list. Thanks, Ned -- ---------------------------------------------------- Ned Lilly e: ned@greatbridge.com Vice President w: www.greatbridge.com Evangelism / Hacker Relations v: 757.233.5523 Great Bridge, LLC f: 757.233.5555
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