Subject category:
Strategy and General Management
Published by:
London Business School
Length: 15 pages
Data source: Published sources
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https://casecent.re/p/21439
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Abstract
In an influential 1997 white paper, The Cathedral and the Bazaar, Eric Raymond presented two distinct means for software development. The first, proprietary code, was the cathedral where ''a few high priests laboured to write, test and debug code.'' The second, open source code, was the bazaar, where ''thousands of eyeballs from differing points of view will quickly spot and fix bugs.'' In 1999, when Sun Microsystems unveiled Jini technology it wanted to create a ''bazaar'' for Jini development. However, while development in a ''bazaar'' would maximize Jini''s speed of development and acceptance by the market, Sun needed to minimize its risk of losing the value created by the new technology. Bill Joy, Chief Scientist, engineers a Jini development community to involve the best engineers both inside and outside of Sun while protecting Sun''s interest through source code licensing. Sun''s strategy enables it to access intellectual capital from multiple sources, establish a network of partners to develop Jini-enabled products, and ensure Sun''s ownership of a portion of the value created by Jini technology. The case raises questions regarding the boundaries and ownership of intellectual capital, value creation and the firm''s ability to appropriate the value created, and the use of a networked community for innovation. There is a Spanish translation available ''E302-034-1''.
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Abstract
In an influential 1997 white paper, The Cathedral and the Bazaar, Eric Raymond presented two distinct means for software development. The first, proprietary code, was the cathedral where ''a few high priests laboured to write, test and debug code.'' The second, open source code, was the bazaar, where ''thousands of eyeballs from differing points of view will quickly spot and fix bugs.'' In 1999, when Sun Microsystems unveiled Jini technology it wanted to create a ''bazaar'' for Jini development. However, while development in a ''bazaar'' would maximize Jini''s speed of development and acceptance by the market, Sun needed to minimize its risk of losing the value created by the new technology. Bill Joy, Chief Scientist, engineers a Jini development community to involve the best engineers both inside and outside of Sun while protecting Sun''s interest through source code licensing. Sun''s strategy enables it to access intellectual capital from multiple sources, establish a network of partners to develop Jini-enabled products, and ensure Sun''s ownership of a portion of the value created by Jini technology. The case raises questions regarding the boundaries and ownership of intellectual capital, value creation and the firm''s ability to appropriate the value created, and the use of a networked community for innovation. There is a Spanish translation available ''E302-034-1''.