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Submission + - Can SaaS be open source AND economically viable? (lucidchart.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The CTO behind Lucidchart, an online diagramming app, recently cited the rbush open source project as an invaluable tool for helping implement an "in-memory spatial index" that "increased spatial search performance by a factor of over 1,000 for large documents." My question is this: what risks does a SaaS company like Lucidchart face in making most of their own code public, like Google's recent move with Chrome for Android, and what benefits might be gained by doing so? Wouldn't sharing the code just generate more users and interest? Even if competitors did copy it, they'd always be a step behind the latest developments.

Comment Re:Your monthly algorithm tweak brought to you by. (Score 2) 115

The real question, of course, is whether Google, Microsoft, and Apple will soon have to face a serious international competitor. It's true that Baidu's incremental image recognition changes might not be a game changer. But if there's any substance to these claims about speech recognition, Baidu might be on track to produce an actual competitive advantage in ways highly relevant to consumers.

Comment Covert Operations (Score 1) 84

Those engineers were allegedly working on a car battery for Apple. Perhaps Apple was concerned that details of their work for Apple would leak out. There's also the possibility, depending on how much Apple was paying for those engineers' contracted work, that A123 was able to hire some additional employees with the gains from the project, making their loss essentially a wash for the company. But if you can cash in on the success of the Apple Watch, why not have a go?

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