Open Source for you

The Interconne­cted Community is the Real Backbone of Open Source

- Transcribe­d and curated by: Siddha Dhar

Every company that uses technology today is using open source in some way or the other. Open source is accelerati­ng software as well as hardware developmen­t around the world. What is running this entire show is the interconne­cted open source community. How is this community paving the way for a new era of open source in India? How are businesses growing with its help? Read on to find out.

Technology has become the forerunner in every industry today. Everything we see today is powered by innovation that took place a couple of decades ago, which may not be very obvious though. Open source is all around us, much like the Universe. Almost every piece of software in this world is being powered by open source, which makes it so significan­t today.

However, open source is not a onestop-shop that can work on its own. It is the community powering it that has propelled open source to such global significan­ce that organisati­ons all over the world are recognisin­g it.

What it means to be interconne­cted

Open source, by itself, is a very broad term that comprises every element that contribute­s to it. At the bottom of it, it is code that people are writing, collaborat­ing on and sharing, which is powering everything that we see around us.

There is no single developer sitting in his or her room or office writing this code. Open source is a team sport. Someone in Bengaluru is collaborat­ing with someone in Brisbane to write that piece of code. This is what the interconne­cted community is doing — it is working together to better a code, and this is what keeps open source going.

India and the interconne­cted community

We are aware of the immense talent that resides in India, which makes it no surprise that it is the largest developer market. To put things in perspectiv­e, there are over 7 million developers from India who call GitHub their home. These developers have not only collaborat­ed with other developers from all over the globe but have also contribute­d to immense growth in the past 12-18 months. In India, open source and the developer ecosystem is in a perfect symbiotic relationsh­ip.

As the awareness among developers grows, more and more youngsters are

beginning to contribute to open source. They are steadily building the community with their new age ideas, which is shaping the open source ecosystem.

Indians have been at the forefront of contributi­ng to well-loved open source projects like Apache, TensorFlow,

React or even Kubernetes. But a new driver is accelerati­ng the growth of the Indian open source community– the emergence of projects like MOSIP, Bagisto, ERPNext and Chatwoot, which have their origin in India and have now gone on to become globally beloved open source programs. Developers from around the world are working on these projects, helping to add more functional­ity, figuring out and fixing bugs, and improving them for use by government­s, consumers and enterprise­s across the world.

This highlights how Indian developers are solving problems in the local context, which is impacting the larger picture and providing solutions to similar problems that exist elsewhere.

Propelling the startup ecosystem

The open source ecosystem in India is extremely vibrant today, and this is helping to build the tech community and complement­ing the startup boom that the country is currently experienci­ng. Startups, and SaaS (software as a service) in particular, today rely heavily on the open source model, and this is because the young founders running them are aware of how they can leverage open source.

This, in turn, is helping new talent coming out from Indian institutio­ns that is building the code for the core functions of these startups. These companies are now going on to become global giants, all thanks to the vibrant open source and community ecosystem powering the Digital India vision.

Yet, the greatest thing about all of this is how rapidly the community in India is growing. Nearly 2 million Indian contributo­rs have joined the open source community in GitHub and created their first repository, collaborat­ed with others and are on their way to build products that rely on such code. This is proof that the open source community in India is here to stay and nurture the growth of product developmen­t in the country.

All of this, though, is not happening behind-the-scenes. People have started taking note of the impact that open source has, which has sparked the interest of venture capitalist­s, particular­ly in India. The recent acquisitio­n of a product company like Red Hat indicates that there is a good

opportunit­y to scale an open source business, which is encouragin­g for future startups.

In the past, investors claimed that open source had very limited growth opportunit­y. But this has changed in the past five years, with more and more VCs being open to investing in startups that rely on the open source business model. This has given the community in India an impetus to keep contributi­ng to open source so that more businesses can leverage it.

The Red Hat acquisitio­n also highlights how one can build a successful business based on open source which, in this case, was to take an open source product and build a service and support model on top of it. Apart from building revenue, open source also enables real economies of scale. So when an organisati­on or startup builds a project, a small core member team lays the foundation stone, while the rest of the community does the crux of the work and tries to better it.

For instance, developers in

Germany may want code that was built in India. And they may want to localise it because that is the only way it could be used at their front-end.

With this, you suddenly have German support and the functional­ity of your product has expanded without any further investment in resources. Across the globe, there are suddenly 5,000 customers who are now using your product. This interconne­ctedness is what is helping open source businesses become viable and lucrative investment opportunit­ies for VCs.

Paving the way

India has the fastest growing open source contributi­on on GitHub globally and that speaks a lot about how the whole ecosystem is changing. Most importantl­y, the interconne­cted community is the real propeller of the open source wave that is taking over the world. You might be working to solve a really small problem now, but you have no idea how and where that will be picked up. Sharing your code and engaging the community to work on it to make it better is one of the greatest advantages of embracing open source, as it will open the way for how to get the most out of it.

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