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Home Broadband

OpenStack Becomes Telecom Lifeline

by Dana Blankenhorn
May 2, 2011
in Broadband, business strategy, Communications Policy, e-commerce, intellectual property, Internet, investment, network neutrality, open source, software
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Att-logo The announcement that AT&T is building itself an open source cloud stack based on OpenStack should be no surprise to regular readers here.

As I noted Friday in writing about CenturyLink (the former Qwest, the former US West), telcos see OpenStack as their best move against Amazon, Google, and the obsolescence that comes with being a 19th century technology platform.

This is great news for OpenStack, bringing with it a bunch of really committed programmers, backed by heavy corporate sponsors. But it's also a challenge to Rackspace, the main sponsor.

That's because telcos remain Clueless, and always will be. Like newspaper owners, telco executives think they control monopolies, even when they don't.

So there will be two temptations among the "CenturyLink," "AT&T" and (let's call it) "Verizon" programming teams moving toward OpenStack:

  1. The temptation to tweak the software in order to maintain customer control.
  2. The temptation to fork the software and run off with the code.

These sound like the same temptation, but they're not. If you tweak the software you're keeping up with the latest releases. If you fork it, you're creating a new branch of the software tree entirely.


OpenStackLogo_270x279 The major concern here is that the telcos will take from OpenStack without giving anything back. The software was originally created through Web hosts (like Rackspace) trying to compete with Amazon. The telcos are aiming to use it against those same web hosts, as well as Google, adding the "secret sauce" of their customer control in order to keep going.

My own view is it won't work, in the long run, because this is a competitive, fast moving business and no telco has ever succeeded in that environment. What they're best at is following trends and then using scale, money, lawyers, and lobbyists to muscle out innovation. This is what they did in the consumer ISP space. It's what they think they're going to do in the cloud space.

But I see FAIL in their future. Because what they're going to find out very soon is that, like the newspapers, they're not monopolists at all. They're not even the low-cost provider — Google is. And that when people have choices, they reject the old monopolists as surely as Netizens reject dictators and other gatekeepers.

So this will end in tears, but meanwhile I hope OpenStack can get some help, because an open stack cloud is a very good thing.

Tags: AT&TCenturyLinkcloud softwarecloud stacksIaaSopen sourceOpenStackRackspace
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. Grandstream says:
    12 years ago

    The presenter was very transparent about his experience with OpenStack. They had work that needed to be done but they were short on budget

    Reply
  2. Grandstream says:
    12 years ago

    The presenter was very transparent about his experience with OpenStack. They had work that needed to be done but they were short on budget

    Reply

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