Visual summary of the EventTechBrief.com article, "The Event Industry’s Evangelist of Open Source." Read the full article or subscribe to the e-newsletter at EventTechBrief.com.
2. Pat
Pathade
has
built
his
career
and
two
companies
based
on
the
philosophy
of
the
open-‐source
so7ware
movement.
Outside
of
the
mee;ngs
industry,
open-‐
source
ini;a;ves
are
huge,
programmers
are
prolific,
and
companies
are
profitable.
Inside
the
industry,
there
is
li@le
to
no
support,
and
nothing
that
could
be
characterized
as
a
movement.
Pathade
is
working
to
change
that
scenario,
one
solu;on
at
a
;me.
3. Open
Source
is
a
framework
for
programmers
to
build
so7ware
itera;vely
and
collabora;vely
with
the
understanding
that
their
code
will
be
shared.
The
resul;ng
so7ware
becomes
the
building
blocks
(Drupal
and
Linux
are
two
examples)
for
new
product
offshoots
that
can
be
brought
to
market
much
more
quickly
and
inexpensively.
Par;cipants
form
communi;es
around
their
efforts
to
support
developers,
collec;vely
solve
problems,
and
share
updates.
4. There
was
a
;me
when
open-‐source
prac;ces
were
frowned
upon.
In
the
past,
says
Pathade,
even
Fortune-‐500
companies
cau;oned
customers
against
using
so7ware
that
was
built
on
open-‐source
code
because
they
believed
it
to
be
a
threat
to
their
own
proprietary
offerings
and
because
much
of
the
early
open-‐source
products
were
unstable
and
unsupported.
5. That
belief
has
largely
disappeared.
“There’s
been
a
drama;c
shi7
toward
accep;ng
open-‐source
so7ware.
The
no;on
of
hiding
behind
proprietary
code
is
gone
and
an
industry
of
open-‐source
service
providers
has
emerged,”
Pathade
explains.
As
a
result,
there
are
hundreds
of
companies
being
built
using
open-‐source
code,
including
Dropbox,
Salesforce,
and
Twi@er
—all
big
names
with
millions
of
users
and
strong
mone;za;on
models.
6. Despite
the
poten;al
to
drive
the
cost
of
event
so7ware
down
and
push
the
envelope
on
innova;on,
the
mee;ngs
and
trade
show
industry
has
been
slow
to
embrace
open-‐source
ini;a;ves.
There
is
no
open-‐source
community
to
create
the
building
blocks,
support
development,
or
provide
financial
support.
Event
technology
is
s;ll
dominated
by
legacy
plaUorm
providers
in
registra;on
and
event
management,
for
example,
with
li@le
incen;ve
to
reveal
their
code
to
third-‐party
developers.
7. In
lieu
of
a
community
to
drive
open
source
within
the
mee;ngs
industry
(event
organizers
aren’t
leading
the
charge
either),
Pathade
leverages
the
communi;es
that
have
emerged
outside
the
industry.
Through
his
companies,
he
uses
non-‐event-‐specific
open-‐source
plaUorms,
such
as
Drupal
and
Salesforce,
to
address
event-‐
industry
challenges,
including
data
integra;on
across
disparate
legacy
systems,
web
site
op;miza;on,
and
most
recently,
trade
show
sales
produc;vity.
8. Pathade
believes
one
huge
opportunity
that
can
be
developed
through
open-‐source
strategies
is
in
the
data
field.
“The
industry’s
data
is
not
perfectly
organized.
[Registra;on
records,
exhibitor
profiles,
and
contact
records]
can
be
standardized
so
they
can
be
used
by
mul;ple
organiza;ons.
Data
can
be
contributed
by
groups
and
anonymized
so
that
trends
can
be
observed
and
shared
with
everyone.
Open
Government
and
Open
City
ini;a;ves
are
two
examples
of
what
is
possible,”
he
explains.
9. For
any
true
benefits
to
be
realized
in
the
event
industry,
Pathade
says,
leading
industry
organiza;ons
have
to
come
together.
“Founda;ons
that
are
serious
can
put
together
a
task
force
and
sponsor
some
ac;vi;es,
such
as
an
IT
internship
in
open-‐source
methodologies.
Organiza;ons
can
donate
employees’
;me
to
work
on
projects,”
he
suggests.
Un;l
then,
he
will
con;nue
to
evangelize
open
source
and
develop
solu;ons
with
the
tools
that
are
available.
He
may
be
an
army
of
one
now,
but
every
movement
starts
somewhere.