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2009 Media Coverage


Black Duck Software 2009 Media Coverage


Below, you can find 2009 media coverage for Black Duck Software. To read an article, please click on the link below.

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2009.12.19 -  Dr. Dobbs Journal - "Proactive Management Required"

2009.11.17 - 451 Group Blog - "Where open source was, and where it is now"

2009.11.06 - SDTimes.com - "Black Duck identifies public projects that may be security risks"

2009.10.27 - itWorldCanada.com - "Open source algorithms a regulatory risk"

2009.10.24 - Dr Dobbs - 'Beware Open Source Encryption"

08.27.09 - Ostatic.com - "On the Whys and Wherefores of Open Source Licenses"

08.21.09 - SDTimes.com - "Black Duck data shows C, Java rule open source"

08.13.09 - Ostatic - "In Open Source, Languages Used for Web Apps Are on the Rise"

08.12.09 - RedmondDeveloperNews - "New Stats Find Dynamic Languages on the Rise by Open Source Developers"

08.12.2009 - InfoWorld - "Does GPL still matter?"

The Business Case for Automating Open Source Code Management Webinar with Black Duck Software

Thursday, August 6 at 2:00 p.m. ET

Maximize ROI Using Open Source in Software Development

Waltham, MA August 4, 2009 – Black Duck Software (www.blackducksoftware.com), a leading provider of products and services for accelerating software development through the managed use of open source software (OSS), will hold a Webinar to discuss the issues and challenges of using open source software, providing software development managers with tools to estimate the costs to manage these issues manually. The Webinar will discuss the benefits of adopting automated processes to control costs and attain a higher level of control and visibility into the use of open source code in software development.

To listen to a podcast with Black Duck Director of Product Marketing Eran Strod about the webinar, go to http://www.blackducksoftware.com/resources/podcasts.

Webinar
: The Business Case for Automating Open Source Code Management

Date: Thursday, August 6

Time: 2:00 p.m. ET

Cost: No charge

Registration: https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/885995176

Topics for discussion:

  • Legal and security compliance issues related to the use of open source software
  • Evaluation of the cost drivers associated with the manual processes associated with the management of open source software
  • Benefits of automated processes to manage the use of OSS
  • Top implementation approaches

About Black Duck Software

Black Duck Software is the leading global provider of products and services for accelerating software development through the managed use of open source and third-party code. Black Duck™ enables companies to shorten time-to-market and reduce development and maintenance costs while mitigating the risks and challenges associated with open source reuse, including hidden license obligations, security vulnerabilities, unsupported open source and version proliferation. The company is headquartered near Boston and has offices in San Francisco, Amsterdam and Hong Kong, as well as distribution partners throughout the world. For more information, visit www.blackducksoftware.com.

Black Duck, Know Your Code and the Black Duck logo are registered trademarks of Black Duck Software, Inc. in the United States and other jurisdictions. Koders is a trademark of Black Duck Software, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders.

Contact

Peter Vescuso
Black Duck Software
press@blackducksoftware.com
+1 781-891-5100
Ann Dalrymple
TopazPartners
adalrymple@topazpartners.com
+1 781-404-2432

07.07.2009 - Port25 - "CodePlex: 10,000 Hosted Projects and Counting"

07.01.09 - cnet.com - "GPL declines as open source moves to the Web"

07.01.09 - ZDNet.com - "Is the GPL losing its grip?"

06.30.09 - Information Week - "GPL Usage: Growing And Shrinking, Both"

05.21.09 - IT Knowledgebase Exchange - "Open source cataloger adds CodePlex to its knowledgebase"

05.13.09 - Embedded Computing - "Hybrid software development: Mixing open source with other code"

05.06.09 - Ostatic - "Over 35 Free, Essential Open Source Resources and Apps"

04.28.09 - ComputerWorld - "How many billions is open-source software worth?"

04.23.09 - SDTimes - "Open-source uptake on the rise, according to Forrester"

04.22.09 - CMS Wire -  "Open Source Value and the CMS Ecosystem"

04.17.09 - ComputerWorld Canada - "App developers could make better use of open source: Black Duck"

04.15.09 - cnet news - "Study: Open source worth $387 billion (in savings)"

04.01.09 - Dr. Dobbs Journal - Open Source Meets Mobility

03.20.09 - SD Times - Composite development a suite spot for Black Duck

03.13.09 - Commercial Open Source Software Blog - Open Source Governance: Black Duck keeps Quacking, an interview with Tim Yeaton

03.06.09 - Web Journal 2.0 - Stretching 2009 Budgets Using Open Source

02.10.09 - Boston Business Journal - "Black Duck names new CEO, raises $9.5M"

01.21.09 - ostatic.com - "10 Open Source Projects Make the Cut As Rookies of the Year"

Open Source Rookies of the Year for 2008

2008 was another banner year for open source. With software development teams looking to do more with less, we are continuously hearing reports of people considering way to reuse open source components in order to cut development time or costs. The breadth of activity in the open source community is nothing short of mind boggling. To the uninformed, open source = Linux, but there are literally hundreds of thousands of open source components that are high quality, but relatively unknown outside a tightly knit community. They cover the gamut from infrastructure to components to tools to applications. They are written in dozens of languages and work on a range of platforms from the tiny to the gargantuan.

Black Duck Software has amassed the industry’s largest KnowledgeBase of open source and other downloadable code, collected from nearly 4000 internet sites (and counting). The number of open source projects discovered is about 180,000. While there are many well known and well established projects, there is quite a bit of activity around new projects as well.

In fact, we counted over 17,000 projects from the class of 2008 – those projects that show a creation or registration date in 2008. 47% of these newly created projects used the C language. Java came in as the number two language of choice at nearly 28%. Third was Javascript at over 20%. In the world of scripting, nearly 18% of the projects chose to use Perl while only 11% used PHP. These were both higher than Python at nearly 10% and Ruby at 6%. Note, most projects used more than one language and these results are based on the number of projects using a given language, not the number of lines of code created.

We wrestled with an objective measure to identify the most interesting/promising projects. One way would be to look at the number of downloads, but many of these projects are brand new and they don’t necessarily have a following yet. We also could have looked at the amount of code written, but our anecdotal experience is that this would not necessarily select mature and robust projects versus those that are still emerging and undergoing significant improvement.

When a developer has something that they want to share, they tend to wrap it up in a tarball (or equivalent) and produce a release. We would expect projects that support a large number of releases to tend, more often than not, to have a more committed team of talented developers. Our view is that rookie projects that have a larger number of releases, and thus a greater amount of developer activity, are definitely worth further study.

About 57% of all rookie projects offered only a single downloadable release. The other projects averaged nearly four releases each, with the top 185 projects creating more than one release per month. It is true that some of these projects are leveraging previously existing open source development. For example, Beacon Cache is a new project that is based on Gnutella, but we decided, in the end, to include these as well. There is tremendous reuse in the open source world from project to project – that’s a good thing. Some of the world’s leading projects (Xerces, DOM4J, GNU Libtool) are literally each reused by thousands of other open source projects. Some of the most innovative work out there is a fork of something else. That is the essence of community development.

Below are the top 10 rookie projects ranked in order of the quantity of releases. For fun, we’ll call them the 2008 open source rookies of the year. You will notice that, like the greater open source universe, these projects include infrastructure, applications, tools and components that can be used in a wide range of embedded and enterprise systems.

2008 Open Source Rookies of the Year

Open Source in Mobile Applications

Another interesting development is the number of new open source projects for mobile platforms We easily counted over 120 new open source projects focusing on the mobile market. There were over 40 new open source projects targeting the iPhone. Here is a small sample of iPhone projects ranked in order of quantity of releases. A good number of these are software components that developers are writing for the benefit of other developers. As we said above, open source is all about reuse.

2008 Open Source Rookie iPhone Applications

01.02.09 - Open Web Developers Journal - "Hybrid Software Development: Producing Results"




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