Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production

Many commercial software firms rely on opensourcing as a viable model of software production. Opensourcing is a specific form of interaction between firms and open source software (OSS) communities for collaboratively producing software. The existing literature has identified opensourcing as a viabl...

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Main Authors: Damrongsak Naparat, Patrick Finnegan, Michael Cahalane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australasian Association for Information Systems 2015-11-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1221
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spelling doaj-33722c3fef6643a7a81e88c41fae6c0c2021-08-02T06:33:08ZengAustralasian Association for Information SystemsAustralasian Journal of Information Systems1449-86181449-86182015-11-0119010.3127/ajis.v19i0.1221557Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software ProductionDamrongsak Naparat0Patrick Finnegan1Michael Cahalane2UNSW Australia Business SchoolUNSW Australia Business SchoolUNSW Australia Business SchoolMany commercial software firms rely on opensourcing as a viable model of software production. Opensourcing is a specific form of interaction between firms and open source software (OSS) communities for collaboratively producing software. The existing literature has identified opensourcing as a viable form of software production, which could be a substitute for “in-house” or “outsourced” software development. However, little is known about how opensourcing works or is sustained in the long term. The objective of this research is to explain the factors affecting the sustainability of opensourcing as a model of software production. The study employs a single case study of hospital software in Thailand to understand how firms and the communities can live symbiotically and sustain their collaboration to peer-produce vertical domain software. The analysis reveals six mechanisms (positive experience, trust in the leadership of the project leader, the demonstration of reciprocity, marketing the community, enriching knowledge, and face-to-face meetings) and demonstrates how they operate in conjunction with each other to sustain opensourcing.http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1221Opensourcingsustainablemechanism-based theorisingsoftware productionvertical domain software
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Damrongsak Naparat
Patrick Finnegan
Michael Cahalane
spellingShingle Damrongsak Naparat
Patrick Finnegan
Michael Cahalane
Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Opensourcing
sustainable
mechanism-based theorising
software production
vertical domain software
author_facet Damrongsak Naparat
Patrick Finnegan
Michael Cahalane
author_sort Damrongsak Naparat
title Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
title_short Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
title_full Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
title_fullStr Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
title_full_unstemmed Healthy Community and Healthy Commons: ‘Opensourcing’ as a Sustainable Model of Software Production
title_sort healthy community and healthy commons: ‘opensourcing’ as a sustainable model of software production
publisher Australasian Association for Information Systems
series Australasian Journal of Information Systems
issn 1449-8618
1449-8618
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Many commercial software firms rely on opensourcing as a viable model of software production. Opensourcing is a specific form of interaction between firms and open source software (OSS) communities for collaboratively producing software. The existing literature has identified opensourcing as a viable form of software production, which could be a substitute for “in-house” or “outsourced” software development. However, little is known about how opensourcing works or is sustained in the long term. The objective of this research is to explain the factors affecting the sustainability of opensourcing as a model of software production. The study employs a single case study of hospital software in Thailand to understand how firms and the communities can live symbiotically and sustain their collaboration to peer-produce vertical domain software. The analysis reveals six mechanisms (positive experience, trust in the leadership of the project leader, the demonstration of reciprocity, marketing the community, enriching knowledge, and face-to-face meetings) and demonstrates how they operate in conjunction with each other to sustain opensourcing.
topic Opensourcing
sustainable
mechanism-based theorising
software production
vertical domain software
url http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1221
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