The Rise of Open Source
Recent research indicates that proprietary vendors have lost £30 billion to Open Source, which would exceed the combined income of Microsoft, Oracle and Computer Associates. In Europe it has been estimated the Open Source market could rise to 30% of the overall market by 2010. Replay of Unedited Live Footage of IOTC 2008 - Track One showing Shane Coughlan (Free Software Foundation Europe), Colm MacCarthaigh (Joost), Graham Taylor (Open Forum Europe), Adam Jollans (IBM), Stephen McGibbon (Microsoft), Adam Gzella (DERI), Michael Shiloh (OpenMoKo), Paul Lynch (Hosting 365), Alan Roberts & Alan Guinane (AIB Bank), Adrian Bowyer (RepRap Project), Eoin Brazil and Bryn M.Reeves (Red Hat).
Limited Edition DVD's of Speaker Session are available, priced at €12.99each plus Postage, Package & Insurance. Email for Availability
Graham Taylor from the Open Forum Europe examined the various claims, looking at real experiences across Europe, the opportunities and risks, and seek the conclusions relevant for users. Before you think the claims are too optimistic, or too pessimistic watch Graham's presentation above and see how Open Source is rapidly growing and impacting all IT organisations.
Follow IOTC 2009 via RSS, Twitter or Facebook.

Graham Taylor is Chief Executive of OpenForum Europe, which is not-for-profit, independent of any organisation and was launched in March 2002 to accelerate, broaden and strengthen the use of Open Source Software in business and government.
Read more
Keep Updated
Enter your email to receive agenda, lecture, speaker, special offers,
competitions and conference updates
Adam Jollans - IBM
Colin Rooney - Adempiere Project
Geoffrey Grosenbach - Top Funky
Stephen McGibbon - Microsoft
Tim Bunce - Data-Plan Service
Adam Gzella - DERI
Bryn M.Reeves - Red Hat
Brian Nitz - Sun Microsystems
Kevin Noonan - Calbane
Patrick Collison - Live Current Media
David Coallier - Irish PHP User Group
Colm MacCárthaigh - Joost.com
Noirin Shirley -
Eoin Brazil - University of Limerick
Adrian Bowyer - RepRap

