Down-stack open source companies starting to pair up as expected

by Dennis Byron on January 28, 2008

Because of the val­u­a­tion Sun (JAVA) put on its acqu­si­tion of MySQL’s open source data­base soft­ware busi­ness on Jan­u­ary 16, we said that open source infra­struc­ture and mid­dle­ware soft­ware com­pa­nies would need to start pair­ing up with “pro­pri­etary” part­ners fast (see sec­ond point in linked blog post). Their value was dropping.

Troll­tech of Nor­way has wasted lit­tle time, agree­ing to be acquired by Nokia (NOK). The issue for most of the open source soft­ware (OSS) folks now is that
– Cit­rix paid some­where north of 100x 2007 rev­enue for Xen­Source in Octo­ber 2007, bet­ting it would be 10x 2008 rev­enue
– Sun paid 20x 2007 rev­enue for MySQL in Jan­u­ary 2008, bet­ting it can take on the market-dominant Ora­cle (ORCL) data­base with­out hav­ing to spend the R&D dol­lars to develop a data­base from scratch
– On Jan­u­ary 28, Nokia looks to have paid four times Trolltech’s 2007 reveue (sub­ject to a guess at Trolltech’s growth in 2007 over 2006’s 174.1 Nor­we­gian Krone and sub­ject to my doing the cur­rency con­ver­sion correctly).

If there’s big value in OSS now, it’s in the appli­ca­tions side of the mar­ket, exem­pli­fied by Yahoo’s (YHOO) 2007 acqui­si­tion of Zim­bra.

But that win­dow may be clos­ing fast as well.– Den­nis Byron

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