Holger Streidl from Carl Zeiss AG and Peter Giese from SAP discuss establishing OSPOs, creating policies, legal frameworks, license compliance, and internal community education. They explore the journey from consuming to contributing to open source, emphasizing the importance of company approaches and engaging employees in open source initiatives.
Open source program offices serve as essential guides for companies like TICE and SAP in navigating open source practices, emphasizing compliance and community engagement.
Carl Zeiss AG's transition from precise optical calculations to software development showcases the evolution of companies aligning with the growing importance of software in modern technology.
Deep dives
The Impact of Open Source on the European Union's GDP
Open source software developers in Europe contributed 63 billion euros to the Gross Domestic Product of the European Union in 2018 by providing source code. Companies like TICE, known for optics and semiconductor technologies, also play a role in contributing to this economic impact through their engagement in software development.
Evolution of Computing at Carl Tice: From Optics to Software
Carl Tice's history in computing dates back to 1955 when they built the first computer, focusing initially on precise optical calculations for lenses and systems. This historical progression led to a transformation towards software involvement, aligning with the increasing significance of software in modern devices.
Roles of Open Source Program Offices at TICE and SAP
Open source program offices play crucial roles in guiding companies like TICE and SAP in their open source journeys. These offices act as consultants, educators, and promoters of open source practices within the companies, emphasizing aspects like license compliance, security, and community engagement. Both companies aim to enhance their open source strategies and contribute to the open source community for mutual benefit and innovation.
In this episode Karsten Hohage talks with our guests Holger Streidl, Corporate Open Source Officer at Carl Zeiss AG and Peter Giese, Director of the SAP Open Source Program Office. They address many of the questions that arise for an enterprise when establishing an OSPO and talk about the commonalities or differences of the OSPOs and their approaches at ZEISS and SAP – for example, when creating policies, building a legal framework, ensuring license compliance, or setting up training and education for the internal community.
Guests:
Holger Streidl Corporate Open Source Officer, Carl Zeiss AG
Holger joined ZEISS in 2019 to work at the Digital Innovation Partners as consultant, trainer, and advocate for the utilization of open source and its underlying principles. He is responsible to evolve the open source strategy of the ZEISS group. His background is computer science. Before 2019, he worked in the area of health IT in the corporate world and in academia for nearly two decades. His first rendezvous with open source was in 2010 when he founded Medfloss.org, a repository indexing about 400 FOSS projects in the area of health care.
Peter Giese Director of the SAP Open Source Program Office
Peter focuses on refining SAP’s open source strategy, developing new tools and approaches for managing open source at scale and on further promoting InnerSource at SAP. Since joining SAP in 1996, Peter has held several managerial and executive positions in application and technology development. Before joining SAP, Peter worked as a researcher at Fraunhofer Institute for Experimental Software Engineering (IESE) and as a development manager at Kiefer & Veittinger Software Unternehmensberatung GmbH. Peter holds an M.Sc. degree in computer science from Kaiserslautern University of Technology.