Slashdot Mirror


Red Hat CTO Responds To Allchin's Comments

A reader writes: "C|Net has a small interview with Red Hat's CTO Michael Tiemann rebutting the remarks Jim Allchin made about Open Source being bad for innovation. It's in Windows Media or Real media." It's a pop-up window on the right side - and this is continuation of the Allchin story.

232 comments

  1. Re:Open Source FAA software? by divec · · Score: 1
    There's only one "company" that can test the software, and that's the FAA.
    Plus the equivalent bodies in the hundred-or-so other countries in the world.
    --

    perl -e 'fork||print for split//,"hahahaha"'

  2. Re:I've said it before by CargoCult · · Score: 1

    OK - when did you last spend money on pr0n - riiiight....

    The CD/MP3 thing s different as there is a bandwidth issue for most people and MP3 quality sucks, even at 128 encoding rates. (WMA codecs are better tho') - also there is the cd-art pleasure of the real thing.

    Libraries pay a rate to authors based on how often their books are borrowed (at least in the UK), given you are only borrowing the book this seems fair. Note that photocopying the book, even a library book is not allowed.

    I bow to Heinlein "TANSTAAFL" - there aint no such thing as a free lunch......I have found this to be true.

    --
    **Vanuatu or bust**
  3. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by Chops · · Score: 2

    Innovation, (n): Anything that does what it's supposed to do. See also "freedom"; both definitions have been recently updated.

  4. Re:Nice links by Darchmare · · Score: 2

    Last I heard, you can play RealMedia from within Linux, but not Windows Media files. This is an issue of practicality.


    - Jeff A. Campbell

    --

    - Jeff
  5. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by HeUnique · · Score: 2

    Well, it's not that hard actually. I could answer him this way..

    Jim boy - do you use the Internet? maybe surfing a bit? writing an email? downloading a file maybe?

    Well, if you do one of these - most chances that they are working on an open source operating systems (like DNS, web servers, email servers, ftp servers) AND they are based on open industry standard...

    So Jim, could you say it for at least 2 microsoft "technologies"? I hardly think so..

    --
    Hetz (Heunique)
  6. Re:Allachin is no patriot by thopo · · Score: 1

    is loyalty to an ideal that forms the basis of the best nation ever created by Homo Sapiens

    ehm are you talking about "gods own country", the US? open your eyes and go outside.

    --
    keep it simple.
  7. Re:Allchin is a lunatic indeed. by LazloTheDog · · Score: 1
    From the article cited above:

    Other post-NT 5.0 features outlined by Allchin included the unification of Web and Win32 application programming interfaces -- something Microsoft is already working toward...

    Kinda scary, they have been working towards .Net for some time. If they succeed, it will be the death of the de-centralized internet as we know it. I don't think they will, but it's going to a rocky ride for us all.

    Jonathan Moran

    --
    Oink, Oink!!
  8. Um... by Greyfox · · Score: 2
    Never argue with an idiot. They'll bring you down to their level and beat you with experience.

    We should treat Microsoft as the irrelevant, proprietary 80's company that they are and concentrate on making our software better. Oh, and lobbying Congress to save taxpayers millions of dollars by using open source software.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  9. Direct link to video by pmsyyz · · Score: 1
    --
    Phillip
  10. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by QuMa · · Score: 1

    Huh? Slightly? The BSOD is done in VGA text mode, which has only 16 colours, and no changeable palette. So unless they've made the BSOD graphical in win2000.....

  11. Re:Try this link to the interview, instead... by Corporate+Drone · · Score: 1

    *shrug* Sorry; thought the issue was a broken link. Don't ask me to fix c|net...

    --
    mmm... yeah... You see, we're putting the cover sheets on all TPS reports now before they go out...
  12. W2K bluescreens still alive and kicking by alienmole · · Score: 1

    My girlfriend runs W2K Professional. She still gets blue screens. Seems the only way MS will ever get rid of those is by changing the code that produces those screens, to use a different color...

    1. Re:W2K bluescreens still alive and kicking by caldodge · · Score: 1

      There's no need to wait for M$ to change the code. Simply head to here for information on changing the colors (at my last job I chose red lettering on a black background).

  13. Re:I've said it before by sheldon · · Score: 2

    At RedHat and VA Linux's burn rate of investment capital... Will they still be in existence in 3 years?

    2 years?

    The end of 2001?

    Then will Linux be supported by Catholic Charities?

    Will programmers feed their children at soup lines?

  14. Re:slashdot security problem by HedCheez · · Score: 1

    Get this. It actually worked for me. When I downloaded the security patch and tried to execute it. I recieved a window telling me I did not need the patch and refused to install it! Good job Microsoft. You bunch of goons.

    From now on I will be using Netscape/Linux on the web, only.

    --
    Never goose a wolverine --./fortune
  15. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by T3kno · · Score: 1

    I personally like the fact that fecalsoft has slightly changed the shade of blue on the BSOD in W2K. I wonder how many hours marketing people sat around arguing about that color, after all it is the most viewed screen in the OS.

    --
    (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
  16. Re:Hmm.. by SaxMaster · · Score: 1

    yes it does, at least on my machine

    --
    "Dancing is the vertical expression of a horizontal desire" --Robert Frost
  17. Re:look what problem Open Hardware caused... by Twanfox · · Score: 1
    Compaq reverse engineered the IBM Bios.

    ...

    But, Components from Intel and Microsoft were left closed.

    What.. components.. were left closed by Intel and Microsoft? What does 'Open Hardware' have to do with 'Open Source Software'? I'm kind of confused here why you made this sort of statement.

    Besides, (Intel) are there not Intel-Compatable CPU chips? Amd and Cyrix having been the ones I know about seem to be along those lines, and AMD chips actually do very well. This is bad?

    And as for Microsoft... Open source provides one BIG advantage. There's a bug in the linux kernel (example). Some nobody programmer discovers this, discovers it's actually a very fundamental problem, and you can only see in the situation he created. Having the source, he can go in, and tweak the few lines of code that need to be changed, and viola, announce to the kernel developers, and you have a secured kernel within maybe week, probably sooner. How long does it take Microsoft to bring out a patch THAT WORKS when a bug is discovered in their system. Case in point, the Outlook/Melissa Virus flaw. Last I heard, they didn't really fix this, they just turned it off. Ah well. Closed source rules, apparently, right?

  18. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Bluesee · · Score: 3

    Whoa, soldier!

    Many points I would make here, hoping they fall on open ears. I think Tiemann would agree with you off the record that Allchin is a lunatic. He fairly called MS evil, but there are things I don't think you understand.

    First the premise that MS is dead in the water (waitaminute, is this flamebait?? oh well...). It's hard to believe that a katrillion dollar company is dead in the water, but if they are dying, then let's make sure they don't take too many of us down with them. I don't know if you noticed, but they are starting to lobby legislators A Lot - check out today's Wired News . If they succeed in gaining credence with legislators who then make laws stifling Open Source (what kind of laws? Someone mentioned the licensing of programmers yesterday...), we may indeed suffer as 'we' become outlaws.

    Linux and the open source replace MS? Not likely. Not until the Linux OS matures at least enough so it becomes a viable alternative to Windows. Before you consider this point flamebait, you must admit: our Moms would have a terrible time getting Linux to run, but they are comfortable with MS. I can't say much more, as I am only a reluctant Windows user (but some day...).

    Your line, "The truth will out, as it has been shown throughout history" makes me wonder if you 'read' the piece. Tiemann actually addresses the arrogance of MS in believing that it can control the truth much in the same way that the Church sought to control the Truth a thousand years ago. This brought on the Dark Ages until people realized that the Truth exists independently of peoples wishes. We could actually experience a Dark Ages in computers, you know... what would it be like? I don't know, but it's got a crappy OS running the show and every click you make can be heard clear up to Redmond and D.C. I think it would involve loss of privacy And innovation as open source programmers become dispirited and disjoint. We would then live in a kind of 1984 where life is crappy as hell but we are told things are getting better every day. And I damn sure would not be allowed to type this stuff. Or maybe I could, but I would find out that my OS liked me less and less and I get the BSOD every three minutes instead of twice a day...

    Is MS evil? Would they do anything to keep themselves on top, including lowering the entire world so they are relatively superior. I don't know, why don't we ask them?

    This 'rebuttal' is absolutely essential so that the snide remarks of a very very powerful lunatic don't go by unchallenged. I salute Tiemann for stepping up to the plate and calling a spade a spade, standing before the Great Evil like David to Goliath...

    ...or maybe Galileo to Pope Urban VIII...

    --
    SDMI: Finally! Music that won't rip or burn! Brought to you by the fine folks at RIAA.
  19. Re:slashdot security problem by jonnyq · · Score: 1

    It only seems to work with IE and javascript enabled

  20. Re:Allachin is no patriot by browser_war_pow · · Score: 1

    No kidding but if you don't have ideals then what kind of government will you have?

  21. Re:Define "innovation" by _ganja_ · · Score: 2
    If you're going to nit, get it right! :-)

    It was Paul Joseph Goebbels, who was made propaganda leader of the Nazi party in 1929. When Hitler gained power in 1933 he was made the minister for public enlightenment (nothing to do with the WM) committed suicide on May 1, 1945, as Soviet troops were storming Berlin.

    In fact the translation of Goebbels' idea that you refer to is "Is people as told something oftern enough and long enough, they start to beleive it".

    His diary's maybe availible on the net somewhere as they were published in English many years ago. A real evil fucker but a genius at mass mind control.

    Here ends today's history lesson.

    --

    A journey of a thousand miles starts with a brutal anal raping at airport security

  22. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by pantaz · · Score: 1

    Regardless of Allchin's mental state, the real problem exists in the clueless legislators and corporate PHBs that believe him.

  23. RIPOFF! by Oddball · · Score: 3

    That is an incredibly blantant ripoff. SOME credit should be given to the origonators (AFAIK):
    Modern Humorist
    MP3 Poster
    Yeesh.

    ------

    --
    "A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street." - Doug Linder
    1. Re:RIPOFF! by Oddball · · Score: 1

      well, ok, maybe it's not - maybe Modern Humorist ripped off this guy's work. I assumed he swiped it was at first.
      At the very least, it's odd how similar the two are.

      (score: -2 (flaimbait))

      --
      "A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street." - Doug Linder
    2. Re:RIPOFF! by drix · · Score: 1

      I've had the humorist poster on my wall for over a year...

      --

      --

      I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
  24. open-source commerical software by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 2

    >There will always, always be a need for commercial software. First of all, some software is DULL, and no one will want to code it for fun. Secondly, there will always be companies with deep pockets who can fund a very competent closed-source project. And what about apps like air traffic control?

    Why do you assume that commerical software must be closed-source? You can be paid to write open-source. There are examples of how that would work in an open source world. Suppose you ran a hostpital, or an airport or something. Now you would not particularly care about computers, but you would need the benefits that a custom-built, complex (and dull) software system can bring.

    You will need to pay someone to write software for you. But why does this imply that it must be closed source software? *It does not*.

    You get several important benefits on demanding that the source for the software made for you be opened:
    - You are not locked into a single provider of enhancements and fixes. You are not forced to pay a single provider whatever they want to charge.
    - You can pool costs with other institutions with similar needs for the same or similar software.

    Given time and effort (and a corporate sponsor, which is guaranteed in cases like this) open-sorce softaware can and often does suppass closed-source software for functionality, reliability and flexibility.

    --

    My Karma: ran over your Dogma
    StrawberryFrog

  25. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by HeUnique · · Score: 2

    Well, my friend...

    Go ahead, grab Redhat 5.1 (if you can find one) and try to compare Linux to what Linux is today. Compare the X windows, desktop enviroment, compare hardware support, applications, gaems, usability, stability, performance..

    Do not forget - it took Microsoft 15 years of some hard work, some hand twisting, companies/technologies buying, stealing/copying from others (I'm sure apple fans will be delighted to tell you about that), and lots of threatening - and what do you got in terms of operational and stability? this!

    So yes, today Linux is not supporting all the hardware - but go out and ask ANY company about this hardware support and all of it within 2 years and without much co-operation from the vendors - and you won't find a single company who wouldn't want this achivement!

    So how will Linux be in 3 years? my bet will be: totally different, much more easier for newbies/Windows users, and much bigger install base.

    --
    Hetz (Heunique)
  26. "The Best Nation" (OT) by Phouk · · Score: 1

    "the best nation ever created by Homo Sapiens"

    I take offense at that phrase, for two reasons:

    • First, your statement implies that all other nations are somehow inferior to the US. Don't you think that's quite rude in the virtual presence of thousands of readers from other countries?

    • Second, you say that "America is best" as if it was a fact not in need of reasons, or of saying what you mean by "best". Sorry, but those are the hallmarks of an unreflected prejudice.

    What, actually, is America as a nation best at?
    Is it the most democratic? The biggest? With the best quality of living? With the fairest judicial system? The best-educated? The most beneficial to world peace? etc.

    Please think about it.

    --
    Stupidity is mis-underestimated.
  27. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Frodo · · Score: 1

    Email has totally removed our need for physical mail

    You wish. Most users are totally uneqipped to pass anything but plain text over email. And on top of this, email is highly forgeable and no established and recognized standard of protection exists.

    The web has totally supplanted the old-fashioned print industry

    You wish again. Sadly but true, current web has no established practices, standards and tools for mass-production, like print does. HTML/XML/CSS is only getting standartized, and pages are still bearing "Internet explorer only" signs. Imagine printed booklet which reads "for wearers of Cartier glasses only". WWW is technology in it's teenage years, and it has to mature. It will happen, eventually, but to say it's already happened is to ignore the reality.

    Also, WWW as it is is highly volatile media, and only widely used way to really preserve it is to print it out on paper. Observing modern company functioning, the paper amount has not become less - though it uis surely less than it would for the same function without electronic means. I.e., function expanded, while paper amount preserved - meaning, function/paper ratio increased - but it'not right to say that the paper gave it's way. It just has less market share now, but it didn't disappear in no way.

    And on top of this - I have yet to see solution that would come close to the plain old printed book in usability and price. There is just no such technology on the market.

    --
    -- Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes.
  28. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    Your list of programs is made up almost entirely of knockoffs, copies, emulators, and similar cloneware. I'm not sure how you can argue that open source creates innovation based on this list:
    • implements similar functionality to windows ICQ
    • conforms to the MPEG audio encoder standard
    • arcade emulator
    • based on the NCSA httpd
    • another POSIX implementation

    (The only thing even marginally innovative here is apt-get, a lame command line tool that works around the lack of software packaging standards in Linux. It's not present on other systems only because they have no need for it.)

    The open source community has yet to produce anything as innovative as the WYSIWYG word processor or the spreadsheet metaphor. Open source does not innovate in end-user space, only in developer space. All popular end-user open source applications are knockoffs of better-known commercial applications, e.g., the GIMP as a wannabe Photoshop, and StarOffice as a wannabe M$ Office.

    Tim

  29. Re:Open Source stifles innovation - is this true ? by Lover's+Arrival+Tha · · Score: 1

    Let us analyse this sentiment a little. The hallmark of the open source philosophy is that there be a group, or bazaar, of developers who all work at a project as they see fit. The problem with this is that they are suspect to all the usual forces that affect humans in normal society. In a company, programmers have to follow the dictacts of those above, and 'those above' have to follow the dictacts of the shareholder and the consumer. This forces them to do be innovative. However, in Open Source, people are subject to a whole gamut of other forces. "what is cool (enlightenment), what is uncool, peer pressure, any of the myriad forces of petty jealousy and human strife, in a chaotic environment. An open source programmer is like a cowboy in the wild west, trying to stake out his claim to some land. He is not conserned with being innovative in this context, but in stealing land from those already present, be it other cowboys or native americans. This is the truth as I see it.
    They fuck you up, your mum and dad.

    --
    They fuck you up, your mum and dad.
    They may not mean to, but they do.
  30. Re:Open source development model and innovation? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2
    However, once it is initally released, the software can be easily developed by anyone who can submit their work back to the team that owns the project. In this way bugfixes can become quickly available, new features can be quickly, if unofficially added, etc.

    Right. But consider large, complex, and specialized software projects - I don't mean stuff you find shrinkwrapped at Best Buy, or downloadable off a web site, I'm thinking of the software that runs things like phone system. That sort of work can't really be carried out by J. Random Hacker in his basement. (Do you have a telephone switch in your basement?)

    Instead of free (as in beer) patches that you and I make to "scratch our itches", telephone companies would be asking for bids for free (as in speech) patches and improvements from the likes of IBM or Lucent. So there wouldn't be people working just "as they see fit", there would be sustained well-managed efforts with real money changing hands, as well as all the usual free software benefits.

    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | http://www.infamous.net/

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  31. Re:I've said it before by interiot · · Score: 4
    You're arguing that it would be bad if 100% of software development were done open source. There are several arguments why the opposite situation would be equally bad.

    But neither set of arguments matter. The current situation-- where some software is developed open sourced and some closed --works to produce diversity, as well as providing economic incentive to programmers.
    --

  32. 78 days? I'm so impressed. by jcr · · Score: 3

    Kid, I've seen NeXT systems stay up for years.

    Microsoft products only look reliable in comparison to other microsoft products.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  33. If I had ever endorsed Linux anywhere, I'd be ashamed now to be connected to people like those.

    why? I don't use their slant on Linux. And honestly in reference to Microsoft, if they'd kept things at a level more like that of Windows 95 before trying to go megalomaniac on destroying other companies, I'd probably not even really detest them.

    Red Hat Software has done some really good things for Linux. They made a relatively easy to install version, developed one of the better (not the best IMHO, but so?) package management tools, and they support their product. In short, they take all of these wonderful little things that people write, bundle them all up and get them working together relatively well. Back in 1995 when Microsoft was not concerned with markets and domineering (at least as overtly as now), I liked their stuff. Windows 95 (no bloody a, b, or c) was not a horrible product, especially for someone like me at that time who didn't have very much background. Its interface was decent, it had faux-3d dialogues and window borders that looked really classy, and since I didn't leave the computer on at night, it was irrevelant how much it crashed. Now, this is a different story, with them tiring of their UI and integrating a web browser into the OS Kernel, as well as their attacking and destroying other companies who actually do build good products, I would very much like for them to be slapped around and disciplined. I doubt it'll happen, but I think they've gone past their heyday. The exec who made the comments recently is proof of that. They won't evolve, so they're trying to force all of us to stay back.

    Back to what I was originally hinting at, if you don't like something that the Red Hat people say, then Don't use Red Hat. Remember, they are a company, and there are other companies too, like SuSE, VA, etc, and if you really don't want corporate, go Slackware or Debian, or roll your own. I don't see what good trashing on others who work hard to deliver a product is going to do, but if one doesn't care, oh well.

    "Titanic was 3hr and 17min long. They could have lost 3hr and 17min from that."

    --

    IBM had PL/1, with syntax worse than JOSS,
    And everywhere the language went, it was a total loss...
  34. This just is not right by kbeyer · · Score: 1

    I am not from the United States, but if I understand this FUD-Master right,
    Microsoft wants to influence, ahem bring to the attention of the government,
    that OSS is "hurting" the economy.
    They will come to my government too, wich in fact is somewhat embracing
    and FUNDING OSS (http://www.berlios.de/partners/index.php.en - note that BMWi is
    the ministry for economic affairs of germany) to promote "competition" between OSs.

    Apart from that, they want to tell my government, that it
    SHALL NOT make the software it produces with the money it
    GETS FROM the people available TO THE people?

    And in addition to that WASTE that money by not using the
    source available BECAUSE OF Open Source Software?

    That is insane. Plain and simple. I have to write a letter to
    my represantive.

  35. News.com by terracon · · Score: 1

    The Real Media content on news.com used to play fine under linux + netscape and Real Player but they redesigned the site about a month ago and since than video content does not play on linux it just Stalls nicely. It just sits there doing nothing.

  36. Here's a plain link for RealPlayer by Booker · · Score: 3
    The stupid java/css/plugin deal won't work for me...

    Try this link to go right to it. (This is the 220Kbps realplayer stream)

    ---

  37. Re:Hmm.. by Alan · · Score: 1

    How about this.

  38. Re:I've said it before by adimarco · · Score: 1

    So pr0n is the result of creative impetus? Heh.

    Yes! Although for a slightly different definition of 'creative' :)

    heh

    a

    --

    "I think any time you expose vulnerabilities it's a good thing." -Attorney General Janet Reno
  39. Re:I've said it before by kettch · · Score: 1

    If open source and F/free software stifles innovation, then the opposite should be true. Software that has it's source guarded by a horde of private S.S. guards, and is restricted, and expensive as hell should be just awesome!

    That said, Microsoft's next operating system should be fast, powerful, easy to use, stable, and come with a crate of chips.

    Since we all know that will happen about the time that Satan starts ordering longjohns, I just wanna tell Allachin where he can stick his "innovation"
    ----------------------

    --
    Opportunities multiply as they are seized. --Sun-Tzu
  40. Re:I've said it before by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

    There is a floating point of equilibrium between monetary cost and quality/support. A certain quality of software/support is available "for free". Higher quality software/support can be gotten for payment (even open source software is better if the developers can afford do it full-time).

    Microsoft is complaining about where the equilibrium point may be drifting. Microsoft is effectively saying that there is no commercial value in (some of) what they produce because you can get the equivalent for free.


    OpenSourcerers
  41. yes, but.. by PopeAlien · · Score: 1
    news.cnet.com also has an interview with Alich. That is damn hillarius. He must have said " I love" about 20 times. " I love devices", "I love XP", " I love win200" , " I love lin... err "

    ..but did he say "I LOVE YOU"?..Talk about your innovations!

  42. Re:I've said it before by kettch · · Score: 1

    However, I am a firm believer that Microsoft will always have a place in every bussiness, and home on the planet. "Hey, do you think that the coffee table is a little bit tilted?" "Yeah, just grab a coupla those windows CD's and stick 'em under the leg, that should straighten it out"
    ----------------------

    --
    Opportunities multiply as they are seized. --Sun-Tzu
  43. Re:Et by cob2k25 · · Score: 1

    presque,

    c'est pas "tout" mais "tous"

    merci.

    et vive la liberte, vive l'independace!
    15 fevrier 1839

  44. Re:Anyone else see something wrong? by pipeb0mb · · Score: 1

    Ahhh.
    RealPlayer 8 is incredibly stable on my VA Linux 420, running Mandrake 7.2. I listen to Limbaugh every day, and can view the latest Foo Fighters, etc. with NO problems.

  45. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Lover's+Arrival,+Thu · · Score: 1
    Yes! Or when he backhanded me across the room because I had blatantly faked an orgasm! That was great! It has been so long since I've been either beaten or rucked!

    Although, you must admit that I am clearly fucked in the head!


    You fuck me, because I'm a whore

    --
    You fuck me, because I'm a whore
    But really, you fuck me because I'm a big slut!

  46. Re:Microsoft is high technology, Linux is inferior by ellem · · Score: 1

    Don't feed the troll...
    ---

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
  47. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by mybecq · · Score: 1
    Also my NT 4 Server have been running for more than 109 days now.

    I'd like to see you measure this under Win2000. Microsoft has broken BOTH ways of measuring uptime reliably.
    • GetTickCount() rolls over at 49.7 days
    • "HKEY_PERFORMANCE_DATA\\System\\System Up Time" returns some ridiculous figure like 149000 days...
  48. Re:I've said it before by adimarco · · Score: 5

    Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    riiiiiiight. just like how writers will stop writing books when people can read them at the library for free. just look at how cd sales have dropped since people can download mp3s. what a shame it was when the whole porn industry died with the creation of jpegs!

    obviously, nobody ever does anything without being paid! creative impetus, p'shaw! all the great creative works in the history of the human race were done for a salary, right?

    oh my people, what have i done unto thee?

    a

    --

    "I think any time you expose vulnerabilities it's a good thing." -Attorney General Janet Reno
  49. Re:DivX by AFCArchvile · · Score: 1

    Hell yes! It's legal for use. The big problem with it is the fact that it's being used to compress movies into files small enough to fit on one CD-R. DivX is just like mp3; it's just a compression format. The content and its copyright status determines the legality of the file, not the format.

    --
    "Ancillary does not mean you get to rule the world." --U.S. Circuit Judge Harry Edwards, speaking to the FCC's lawyer
  50. Re:This is a troll HOW exactly? by Kwantus · · Score: 1
    Look at by whom the comment was written. :)

    zactly... I thought it actually had a good point buried in it, that open source projects have coordination challenges (eg, the SGI story awhile back, perhaps), and it was couched in irony; but it turned out to be platform for an asshole that delights in reading its own posts. *sigh* slashdot...

  51. Re:Depends on your product. by goingware · · Score: 2
    I think Tim does have a point, in that much open source software has quality problems, but my argument is that I haven't observed closed-source to be any better - one can point out glowing examples of good process in both camps, and bad process too.

    What I am trying to do with the Linux Quality Database is twofold - make it easier for regular users to participate in the quality process for the Linux kernel, and to encourage improvement in the quality of free software in general, by giving tips on how to do so and links to resources that enable you to do it.

    I think one problem is perfectly natural - a lot of programmers are just not very experienced, and have not had the opportunity to work in a way the encourages quality yet. And this goes for both closed source and open source programmers.

    It's a matter of education; a lot of people may try to get the bugs out of their products, but simply struggling valiantly is not the right way to approach it - I hate to repeat this tired old phrase, but "Work smarter, not harder".


    Mike

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
  52. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm a W2K user.

    When I want to remind myself what a BSoD looks like, I boot linux on a spare box and run the screensaver.

    I just have to hope that it doesn't core dump first.

  53. Re:Allachin is no patriot by Kwantus · · Score: 1
    I plan to serve in either the Army or the Navy after college

    I'd stay out of the Navy were I you... their latest ships are operated by M$ -- poorly. (look for `Navy'...)

  54. Re:Nice links by Garfunkel · · Score: 1

    Did you even go and look? I clicked on the link and it brought me to CNet's page where in the side bar (just like the Slashdot editor said) was a link to the stream. And looky there, links to both the Real and Windows Media streams.

    Maybe you should get a clue before ripping into someone.

    --
    -jay
  55. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by dalinian · · Score: 1

    Even if there is lots of innovative stuff, the innovations made are hardly of any use to anyone. Like that bash assembler we just saw here on Slashdot. :-)

  56. That C|Net report by BEHiker57W · · Score: 1

    Where can I download a good Windows Media player for Linux so that I can watch RedHat attack Micros~1?

    -Brian

  57. Re:I've said it before by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 1
    You seem to not know how the industry works. Microsoft has been known for hiring the top programmers, period. Microsoft Research is the most prestigous position a programmer can find! The truth is, Microsoft *does* hire the best people, because they can pay the top buck.

    Bah again! You're saying that 1) Microsoft hires all of the top programmers and 2) that these people are only programming because Microsoft gives them a big fat paycheck. How on earth can you make these assertions? Maybe if Microsoft didn't pay them top dollar they wouldn't be working for Microsoft, but a lot of them would probably go on programming somewhere because, for a lot of top programmers, the money is just a nice fringe benefit.

    And your assertion that all top programmers work for Microsoft is just absurd. There are oodles of top notch programmers working elsewhere - James Gosling and RMS spring to mind. You say that a position at Microsoft research is the most prestigious position a programmer can get, but that is a very subjective statement and one that most people I know would strongly disagree with. Even for those who don't loath Microsoft, positions such as professorships at MIT, Stanford, or somewhere like that carry a lot more prestige than working at Microsoft. And for the many who do loath Microsoft... well, they would find your statement laughable and their opinion is not to be discounted because they make up a sizeable portion of "the industry".

  58. Here's a goodie.. by technos · · Score: 4
    --
    .sig: Now legally binding!
    1. Re:Here's a goodie.. by rgmoore · · Score: 1

      It would be better if the programmer in the picture appeared to be working on a PC clone (you know, the kind of computer MS is interested in), rather than an iMac. Of course I also think it would be funnier if the devil in the Red Army uniform looked more like the BSDaemon, so maybe I'm not qualified to comment.

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    2. Re:Here's a goodie.. by Perlguy · · Score: 1

      Yes, I did get the image from modernhumorist and modify it.

      I have the original image hanging in my office. I thought that it was so perfect for this that it *had* to be done!

      I am totally graphically retarded, I am sure that someone, perhaps the original artist, could make it into a "real" picture - I'd love to see that. (Notice how the characters have no ears? =)

      I have since modified the image so that it lists where I originally got the image (something I should have done in the first place)

      As for the "rip-off" comments. Pthbthbth... You are just jealous that you didn't think of it first.

      ;)

      Perlguy

      --
      -- Windows security? Sure, which ONE would you like? -me
    3. Re:Here's a goodie.. by Leto-II · · Score: 1

      mirrored on my schools webserver... try and slashdot that!

      http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~tehrenkr/opensource1 .gif

      It seems to be just an edited version of this picture that was made for MP3s... Is there something before that?

      http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~tehrenkr/mp3.jpg

      Fear my low SlashID! (bidding starts at $500)

      --
      Do not anger the worm.
  59. For those of you who can't view the video... by Kara+B. · · Score: 3

    You know who you are. Maybe you use Lynx, maybe you haven't got a sound card or maybe real player crashes when you open it. Any way, here's what went on in the video for you:
    The clip begins with a head shot of Michael Tiemann
    Michael: Recently Jim Alchin made some comments about open source, microsoft and innovation. He said open source will suppress innovation. Well I'm here to tell you that the open source movement, which we at Red Hat are proud to be a part of, is constantly innovating. In fact, I'm so innovative, I'm not even wearing pants right now!
    Camera slowly zooms out to reveal that Mr. Tiemann is in fact nude from the waist down. He is also obviously excited.
    And let me tell you something else Mr. Alchin, we know what innovation means. Open source has allowed thousands of volunteers around the world to collaborate on code for the passion of it. Michael grabs his crotch to emphasize the word passion then releases it.
    Why don't you go check the SpecWeb99 benchmarks Mr. Alchin, you'll notice that our innovative new kernel support for http enables us to blast right past IIS 5.0 on equivalent hardware.
    And look at our desktop code, we've got skinning support in every layer of our gui, hows that for innovation you dissapated fuck?
    At this point Michael Tiemann abandons all pretense of reasonable discussion and begins howling obscenity at the camera and punctuating it with frequent pelvic thrusts. this continues for about 15 minutes.
    Over all, I thought the rebuttal was somewhat unprofessional but nevertheless quite compelling. I could watch it again and again and again. Mr. Tiemann may lack self controll, but DAMN - he could run a 3-legged race all by himself.

    --Kara

    --
    --Kara
    Before you ask, I already have a boyfriend and he's more of a man than you'll ever be.
    1. Re:For those of you who can't view the video... by SquadBoy · · Score: 1

      I would kill Jim Alchin's mother for a mod point to give to this. :)

      --

      Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
  60. Re:Open Source and the Military by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    I would be curious how Dr. Neumann responds to these facts. The two largest open source projects which have tracked bugs in a useful way, Mozilla and Debian, have both shown ever-expanding defect curves, and Mozilla now sits at upwards of ten thousand open bugs. How is this a demonstration of enhanced reliability by the open source method?

    Commercial projects I've worked on have always shown a distinctly downwards bug trend during alpha and beta phases, while it appears that open source bugs just go up and up -- when anyone even bothers to chart them.

    Tim

  61. Re:I've said it before by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

    and I'll say it again. Microsoft has a good point about open source and inovation.

    I would disagree. In fact, I would say that Microsoft hasn't a clue as to what innovation is... or more like their definition of innovation is more like what I'd call 'immovation'.

    Basically if open source gets out of hand,

    What do you mean by 'out of hand'?

    normal software development will cease,

    That will never happen. If for no other reason than the fact that the type of thing that Open Source is most a threat to (shrink wrap boxed software) is what only a small percentage of programmers are paid to work on. Most programmers work in the IT departments of companies where they are writing primarily software for a specific business. Open Source greatly benefits this type of programmer because they can re-use other people's code instead of inventing everything from scratch.

    At most what will have to happen is that a different way of rewarding programmers will have to be developed. There are a lot of people working on different angles for this, and we are still a ways from seeing which method or methods are going to win in the long run.

    and the quality of software will go down. Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    Not only does that make assumptions that aren't necessarily true (that the only motivation of "top programmers" is monetary), but it completely ignores the fact that if more code was open sourced, more of the top programmers could review and fix each other's work, which would lead to an improvement of software quality.

    I just don't see how you can refute this argument.

    Just because you can't see it, doesn't mean it can't be done.

    It is really a pretty flimsy argument. Microsoft is just spreading alarmist fears in order to try to protect their own interests.

  62. Re:Allchin is a lunatic indeed. by CommanderTaco · · Score: 1
    Umm... let's see what exact off the wall predictions you're referring to here:
    Among these [post NT 5.0 design points] are 64-bit support, more and better clustering, richer and more fully integrated client-server storage and data-center class management, said company officials.
    Nothing crazy there...
    user interfaces in the post-NT 5.0 timeframe will be "maintenance-free" and "adaptive"
    Maintenance-free might be stretching things, but still, nothing too objectionable.
    Other post-NT 5.0 features outlined by Allchin included the unification of Web and Win32 application programming interfaces
    We can see their work on this beginning with .NET...
    Allchin said that post-NT 5.0, Microsoft will "take NT up into the traditional mainframe arena, but also down into the embedded and real-time" spaces
    Here's that mainframe quote... all right, not quite there yet, but he does say "post-NT 5.0." I'm not trying to be a microsoft apologist, but this is hardly the ridiculous article you made it out to be.
  63. Re:Hey toady boy... get your butt out of Bill gate by LennyDotCom · · Score: 1

    Yes they do have a good browser or Windows boxes, however it's absoulte shit on a Mac,

    Sorry you have that backwards the Mac version is acually better tehn the winblows version

    --
    http://Lenny.com
  64. This is *so* ripped off. by gdek · · Score: 1
    The original was brilliant; I sent an email to Modern Humorist months ago, in fact, telling them that they should make a T-shirt out of it. And so they did. I am now a proud owner of the original graphic on a T-shirt.

    Perlguy needs to either prove that his work is original, or 'fess up, because this is just bullshit.

  65. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by BLAG-blast · · Score: 1

    I'm a W2K user.

    When I want to remind myself what a BSoD looks like, I boot linux on a spare box and run the screensaver.

    And you think that has nothing to MS trying to be as good as linux?

    I hope Red Hat desides to take the BSoD out of linux - oh hey wait - never mind.

    --
    M0571y H@rml355.
  66. Re:Yeah, it really sucks to get paid! by cob2k25 · · Score: 1

    who cares about money?

  67. Re:Legislation by BeanThere · · Score: 2

    They went to Congress to whine rather than competing against MS with their own products

    No, MS was brought to court by the DOJ because they broke the law, plain and simple. Tying the two products was the LEAST of the many things that MS did to stifle competition and keep Netscape out (in fact, it is quite possible that nobody would ever have complained about the product tying had it not been done in conjunction with so many other anti-competitive practices) - I recommend you go read the findings of fact and other documents resulting from the case. You don't seem to know much about antitrust laws and the reasons for their existence. I recommend you go do some reading.

  68. Mod parent UP by devjoe · · Score: 1
    Thank you for going in and finding the real link. On Netscape 4.76, Realplayer 7, Linux I too kept getting the "you need a plugin" screen. (And when you follow the link, it says there are 0 plugins available.) Of course, I already had realplayer and it is set to use for all of the appropriate content types.

    Once you get through the bogus javascript which breaks everything, and get to the actual video stream, it works just fine.

    And the audio and video are nice and clear over DSL.

  69. vaporware by TB42 · · Score: 1

    "We can build a better product than Linux," he said. "There is always something enamoring about thinking you can get something for free." When are they coming out with this vaporware product?

  70. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Funny, I showed someone my gnome desktop the other day and he pointed and said, "Your corners are round." I asked him what he meant and he said that in windows you can't have windows with round corners.

    Themes are also big, I can make my computer look like any other computer. Funny, isn't MS finally going to have some limited theming in their next version?

    The fact that I have a dozen complete development environments on my own machine without having to pay a fortune is also very nice. If only gcc was a little better at optimizing code for x86, Linux would be at least 5-10% faster.

    And enlightenment had non-rectangular icons and alpha shaded pull downs and pop ups years ago. One of the reasons I didn't like enlightenment when I was running a 386DX25.

    X windows was around a long time before Windows. X's network transparency and security by running through ssh is a big reason why I prefer Linux over Windows. I have been running graphical remote administration tools on UNIX for the past 12 years, and they were exactly the same as the program running on the main window.

    What MS does have is a lot of code optimized to only run on the x86 platform, and the ability to buy any other company when it sees a market that it thinks it can own. They also have access to the API and source code on the Windows platform, so of course their products run better on their own platform. This tactic is best summed up with a saying found in a MS email: "DOS isn't done 'til Lotus won't run."

  71. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Lover's+Arrival,+Thu · · Score: 1
    Allchin may be a lunatic, but I bet he'd fuck me like a rabid wombat! I think that it does take balls to be a lunatic like him. I'd love it if he would "rebut" me!

    Will you "rebut" me? I haven't been rebutted in soooo long, but I need it soooo badly!

    It reminds me of when I was sucking my ex-boyfriend and he was taking an economics class in college. He told me that in order to make money, you have to fuck everyone! That's exactly what I'm trying to do today!


    You fuck me, because I'm a whore

    --
    You fuck me, because I'm a whore
    But really, you fuck me because I'm a big slut!

  72. This is why an IBM Linux distro would be good! by PRR · · Score: 1

    I've said this before (click on my user name to see my previous rants on this) The IBM PC is part of the reason I want an IBM Linux distro. At the time of the IBM PC's introduction '81, there were a wide variety of "small computer" platforms, which is good for vaieties sake, but contained lots of fragmentation. It was at the point where everyone rallied around this one platform (mostly in part because of IBM's name) where things really took off. Everyone decided to support the "IBM PC" platform.

    Face it... Linux has a lot of fragmentation (and M$ made that point with that ad of the mutating penguins) with lots of duplicated effort and inconsistancies. I believe an "IBM Linux" distro could be the one distro that everyone shoots for and becomes a "defacto standard" much like the "IBM PC" did for hardware. God knows the corporate types would accept it.

    There will still be plenty of variety... but it will be more focused. The GPL (and the fact that IBM is largely a hardware company) will keep them honest. If IBM wants to buy Redhat or Suse to get up to speed, fine. IBM has already had good success with their Websphere Server which uses Apache.

  73. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by IronChef · · Score: 2

    Um... I was being sarcastic. Obviously books and snail mail are still around. (and they will be forever I bet.)

  74. How's this for a response by eap · · Score: 1
    I've recently decided that every time MS comes out with one of these FUD filled "We're going to legislate open source out of the picture" diatribes, I'm going to write a letter to each of my congressmen asking them to vote against anything pro MS. I wrote one yesterday to my Sentaor, who happens to be on the Technology Committee.

    I know one person isn't much, but if each of us sends a concise, hand written letter to our congresspersons every time this happens, maybe it will start making a difference.

  75. Childish Quid Pro Quo by boinger · · Score: 1
    Aren't we (the community) stooping to their level by even acknowledging such asinine comments by, in this instance, Microsoft?

    I think that by trying to rebut anything that comes out of the anti-open source camp, we're making it look like we're on the defensive (which, I think, is a valid conclusion if I try to look at this objectively). And being on the defensive generally means one thing: There's some merit to whatever's being accused.

    We don't need this tit-for-tat rebuttal silliness. I think that a simple *shrug* and a "So, let us be less than innovative - you'll see..." would have been more than plenty.

    --
    Send your friends messages of love at fuck-you.org
  76. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    Actually I look at the System Idle Process, it's not perfect but if it says that it's been running for 2644 hours, I'm pretty sure that it have at least as much uptime.

  77. Define "innovation" by K8Fan · · Score: 4

    Microsoft has been pounding on the word "innovate" and the phrase "freedom to innovate" so hard in an attempt to beat it either into submission, or to bend it into meaning what they want it to mean. There is innovation going on at Microsoft, in their graphics research division, but damned little of it to do with Windows.

    They seem to have adopted Musolini's theory of "The Big Lie" that if you shout something at people loud enough and long enough that eventually they will will believe it, no matter how perposterous.

    --
    "How perfectly Goddamn delightful it all is, to be sure" Charles Crumb
    1. Re:Define "innovation" by muonman · · Score: 1

      I think it's (note correct usage of "it's") pretty obvious that he was just trying to avoid the obligatory end of thread mandated by Godwin's Law.. Of course you have spoiled his plan..

      --
      Anything NOT worth doing is NOT worth doing well...
    2. Re:Define "innovation" by rgmoore · · Score: 3

      Just a nit, but it was actually Hitler who made the comment about the importance of "The Big Lie"; Musolini wasn't that smart.

      Actually, the comments surrounding the basic one about the importance of the big lie really scream out in this case. The key point that Hitler made was not so much that shouting long enough and loud enough would drum the lie into the mind (though he did believe that about propaganda in general- keep it to a few often repeated points) but that a sufficiently big lie takes on a life of its own. I think that Microsoft's has done pretty well in that department; they've been so successful in framing the argument in terms of stifling innovation that most people have forgotten to look at how derivative all of Microsoft's products are. They've also done a decent job of shifting the focus from legality (has Microsoft broken the law) to practicality (would punishing Microsoft have negative consequences).

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    3. Re:Define "innovation" by ellem · · Score: 1

      They seem to have adopted Musolini's theory of "The Big Lie" that if you shout something at people loud enough and long enough that eventually they will will believe it, no matter how perposterous.

      Notice that it is working? CIOs still buy MS stuff. Third party developers still make stuff for MS.

      The lie is working

      I'm not happy about it, but it's true

      ---

      --
      This .sig is fake but accurate.
    4. Re:Define "innovation" by GodSpiral · · Score: 1

      MS's definition here, is that companies won't innovate because the competition is free. So they shouldn't even bother trying to make a product, cuz a free version exists already or will be made.

      For me, as a windows developer, I find MS stiffles a great deal of innovation, since anything I produce that is of great value, can be reproduced by them. They have after all very smart and talented developers in larger quanities than anyone else. They can furthermore enhance the OS to favour their competing product.

      So, I as an innovating potential commercial application developer have more to fear from the MS monopoly than OSS software.

      OSS can stifle commercial competition, but innovation is not really affected. The Software's customers can innovate and contribute to the benefit of all the product's customers.

  78. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by sheldon · · Score: 2

    An awful lot of academic research is funded by corporations these days. Often part of the agreement is the resulting technology will be licensed back to the businesses which funded the research.

  79. Re:Nice links by sulli · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but MPEG works everywhere.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  80. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by jbailey999 · · Score: 1

    Most ideas that come out of life aren't worth persuing. The great part is to see that some people do attempt them, and provide a nice learning experience for the rest of us.

    In the corporate world, you have to rely on yourself and your coworkers for your scope of experience.

    In the Free Software world, I have Torvalds, Cox, Stallman, Raymond, etc. as part of my scope of experience. That's really powerful.

  81. Re:I've said it before by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 2
    Basically if open source gets out of hand, normal software development will cease, and the quality of software will go down. Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    I just don't see how you can refute this argument.

    Bah! I say the end result would be the exact opposite. If money were to leave the industry then the people still programming will be those who love to program and who are passionate about their work. Having the money leave would do a good job of weeding out all of the lousy hacks who write crappy code because they only care about getting their fat paycheck. Fewer crappy programs being churned out means the quality of software in general will rise. The quality of software today sucks and getting rid of the programmers who don't actually like programming would be one of the best ways to improve this.

  82. Re:I've said it before by jeffry_smith · · Score: 1

    >

    Logic error. The majority of programmers don't work in the software industry. They get paid salary for in-house software development. Guess what? Under Open Source, they still get paid for in-house software development. And, lots of other companies pay people to do one-time software development, that goes back into the pool. Why? Because they need someone to fix a problem.

    You just won't see people paying for proprietary software. Those companies are threatened. Programmers are not.

  83. Re:Open Source stifles innovation - is this true ? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2
    The hallmark of the open source philosophy is that there be a group, or bazaar, of developers who all work at a project as they see fit.
    No. There's nothing at all about open source or free software processes that dictates such a model.

    There's absolutely no reason that open source software can't be produced by people working in a more typical development environment - the only difference is that instead of handing the customer a tape or CD with just binaries at the end of the development contract, they also get source and freedom to do with it as they please. In this case, the "bazaar" is not composed of individual developers, but of companies vying for development contracts.

    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | http://www.infamous.net/

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  84. What components were left closed? by cworley · · Score: 1

    The CPU from Intel and the OS from Microsoft were the closed components after Compaq reverse engineered the bios on the IBM PC.

    You may be a bit young to remember the early 80's. The CPU and OS are an order of magnitude more difficult (than the bios) to reverse engineer. Even now, if you make an Intel clone CPU, you have to pay Intel a license fee (except Transmeta, which uses a code-morphing emulator).

    "What does Open Hardware have to do with Open Software?"

    Open hardware was the PC revolution. Apple got PC's started... but the model was closed, like IBM. IBM ligitimized the PC, but it was still a closed platform. Reverse engineering the IBM bios started the PC revolution. That's when competition was allowed in the hardware components. That's when the prices came down, and the technology grew at a record pace. IBM tried to recapture the the market by creating a closed PS2 bus, and later the OS2 OS, but neither attempt worked.

    The Open Software revolution will most likely be similar. A decade from now we'll probably look back on the propriatary software model like we now look back on the proprietary hardware model.

    Finally, I don't think you saw the sarcasm in my post. I was trying to say: I want those same "problems" we had with the open hardware PC revolution.

    --
    When I die, please cast my ashes upon Bill Gates -- for once, make him clean up after me!
  85. song lyrics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    To the tune of "God Bless the USA"
    (Apologies to Lee Greenwood)

    If tomorrow Microsoft was gone
    It would not change my life,
    I would laugh at Jim Allchin
    for blaming Linux for his strife
    I'd thank my lucky stars
    I use open source today
    If he can't take competition
    Allchin ought to go away

    Jim thinks I'm being un-American
    Just because my software's free,
    But I won't forget the G-P-L
    has given rights to me
    And I gladly give software to you
    and copy it every day,
    'Cause there ain't no doubt we wrote this stuff
    and we're giving it away

    For critical applications
    I want source code I can see
    need a firewall that kicks butt?
    Then use OpenBSD
    From Detroit down to Houston
    and New York to L.A.,
    People take their software all apart
    and they audit it every day

    Jim thinks we act un-American
    'cause we did not pay a fee
    for crappy software we can't trust
    when uptime's what we need
    Open source means microsoft is through
    things seem better that way
    I trust software that I can read
    `Cause I know that there is no back door
    Allchin can go away

  86. Re:Looks like you [programmers] live under a rock. by cworley · · Score: 1

    "How is hardware closed?"

    Everybody, except Transmeta, must pay Intel a license fee for x86 clones. That's closed.

    "Anybody can write software, but hardware is complex."

    Spoken like a true Double-E. Just because software is easier to patch doesn't make it less complex. Just because you've taken your requisite course in FORTRASH and found programs easy to write, does not help you understand the enormous complexity associated with the integration and maintenence of an application that actually does something useful.

    Hardware either works or it doesn't work. Nice and simple. Plus, it has analog tolerances: it will continue work in situations outside intended boundries.

    Conversely, software embodies complexity theory: it takes on behavior as if at random. Furthermore, every statement in a digital language is fragile (no such thing as an analog tolerance): if it's wrong (no matter how close it is to being right), everything breaks with it. That's why EE's say: "if builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, the first woodpecker to come around would destroy civilization".

    They don't understand complexity at all.

    --
    When I die, please cast my ashes upon Bill Gates -- for once, make him clean up after me!
  87. Re:Ho hum by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    invaded by honest but mind-controlling aliens

    They should go here to obtain the software and hardware to deal with this problem.

    MOVE 'ZIG'.

  88. My experience is not so positive by goingware · · Score: 2
    I don't know what commercial projects you've had the pleasure to work on, but that's not been my experience, and I've worked for a lot of closed-source companies.

    Some of the most amazing excuses for "software" get packaged up by commercial companies all the time and sold to an unsuspecting public.

    This is not always what the companies want, not by any means, but often they feel they have no choice.

    Scientific American did an article called "The Risks of Computing" a while back, I'm not sure if Neumann wrote it but it was where I found out about the Risks forum, and what it documented is that in any software system, the number of bugs steadily increases over time but the reproducibility of each individual bug goes down, so in the end you have 100,000 bugs each of which you will experience just once in your career.

    There are ways to lower the upward bound of bugs, for example on Linux you can use Bounded Pointers for GCC and make great strides in a hurry - but then although you'll have fewer bugs you'll have different kinds of them.

    Improving QA by using test suites is another important step, as I discuss in this article on Using Test Suites to Validate the Linux Kernel.

    You think your commercial vendor uses test suites? Guess again. It's so frustrating when I have a client who I cannot convince there's a reason to actually perform QA of any sort, let alone use test suites.

    Another way of lowering the upward bound is to use Unit Tests - but despite the fact that I've seen unit tests advocated in many places, and I guess they're more popular, the one time I have ever seen them put into practice on a project I've personally worked on is when yours truly used them on a consulting project last year.


    Mike

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
    1. Re:My experience is not so positive by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
      I don't know what commercial projects you've had the pleasure to work on, but that's not been my experience, and I've worked for a lot of closed-source companies.

      Well, one of my several commercial projects, Mac OS 8, was at the only mainstream company on your resume, Apple. I can assure you that we agaonized over the bug curve for the user interface software I worked on. Ditto for every other significant commercial project I've ever worked on.

      You think your commercial vendor uses test suites? Guess again. It's so frustrating when I have a client who I cannot convince there's a reason to actually perform QA of any sort, let alone use test suites.

      I sympathize, although since I know you have used RADAR at Apple, I wonder why you are so insistent that major developers don't track bugs or use test suites. At Apple User Experience, we had written test suites for all our components.

      My answer to the problem of development managers not caring about bugginess has been to refuse to work with any software company that does not have a strong SQA organization or does not plan to create one. Fortunately I have never been short of work. All major software companies have already adopted quality methodologies and they do pay off. Unit testing, test suites, and bug tracking are the norm in serious commercial software development.

      Then you have the seat-of-the-pants guys who just won't use a quality process. In other words, they're just as bad as the open source community. Fortunately, they are a minority among major software developers.

      I remain unclear on how a methodology with no quality standards can be more reliable than a methodology which does. It seems rather like an oxymoron. Raymond claims that given enough eyeballs, all bugs become shallow. The Debian and Mozilla bug curves demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt that he is wrong. Open source software is extremely buggy and the only reason people aren't more aware of that is that most open source projects don't track bugs in any useful fashion.

      Tim

    2. Re:My experience is not so positive by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
      Here's a note from Peter Neumann's home page:

      Open-box software is not a panacea -- it does not solve all the problems. It still requires all of the discipline in development and operation that we would like to see in proprietary closed-box software. But it has enormous potential, and needs to be pursued as a serious contender.

      In other words, open source software could be more reliable than closed source software, if it were produced in a disciplined way. Anyone who imagines that it is created in that way ought to spend a little more time at Freshmeat.

      Tim

  89. people don't understand 'freedom to innovate' by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 1

    that's why people think Windows is so great, they don't know how good it is be to be free. I am Empowered by my Linux system far more so that I could ever expect to be using any MS WIndows products.
    I try to explain this to people all the time, that, Although you pay lots for your computer, MS OWNS YOU, if you're runnig windows.
    Perhaps they (the normals) are best influenced by just plain calling Microsoft EVIL in a televised interview. EVIL is a nice term to cover MS without going into NDA pressures, software development, and the open free flow of information.
    Linux is the start of a Utopian world. As we all pool our resources together, instead of looking to "protect" innovation under the guise of "intellectual property", soon the world will be fully automated, and we can all sit around and Doodle with great open source software like Gimp and Blender .
    I hope the world can see MS as it really is, a company trying to pull wool over their eyes with outright lies and deception. I hope the guy at MS who said all this stuff gets some help, his view of the world is either seriously warped, or he has a serious lack of personal integrity lying to the world like he did.
    I fear that many people will discount what the Redhat guy was saying because he was wearing a silly read hat on his head in the interview. they'll think to themselves "what's windows? that reminds me, I need to call my ISP to ask what kind of illegal operation is going on there!"

  90. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by luge · · Score: 2

    I'm not saying he's hard to answer- the BS about "freedom to innovate" was also easy to answer. But despite that it had a lot of impact. This could have the same impact, if we aren't careful.

    --

    IAAL,BIANLY

  91. Re:Anyone else see something wrong? by RelliK · · Score: 1

    I actually think it's stupid that the companies choose to use these formats. Not just because they are proprietary but also because they are inferior. Why not use mpeg? Its quality is much higher than RealPlayer/QuickTime/WindowsMedia, etc. and it's available on all platforms.
    ___

    --
    ___
    If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
  92. Re:Today's User Friendly ;) by eudas · · Score: 1

    actually that "...why don't they?" was someone's +5, funny post on another thread just a day or so ago. i thought it was amusing that it would show up on userfriendly.org the next day. maybe they read slashdot.org. (ya think?) :)

    eudas

    --
    Blessed is he who expects the worst, for he shall not be disappointed.
  93. Open Source FAA software? by FlightTest · · Score: 1

    Not on your (mine actually) life!

    Guess who those "big companies" would be that were writing the ATC software. Probably the airlines. Think they might be tempted to give their airplanes the best routes and send the competitors out to sea? Think they might write it to favor faster airplanes and deny service to General Aviation? No thanks, I think I'd rather have a disinterested third party writing the software for ATC.

    And you'd lose the benifits of open-source anyways. There's only one "company" that can test the software, and that's the FAA. How many people have their own airspace in which to test out a beta version of Gnu-ATC 0.9? How can you submit bug patches when you can't run the code and use it in a real-world (or simulated real world) environment to see what the bugs are?

    Sorry, there are just some things that open source software doesn't make sense for, and this is one of them. A single customer software package requiring highly customized and extremely expensive hardware to run, where a bug in the code can cause the death of close to 1000 people (think runway collision of two 747's) doesn't sound like something that would lend itself to community development.

    --
    Merde, il pleut encore!
    1. Re:Open Source FAA software? by graxrmelg · · Score: 1

      Guess who those "big companies" would be that were writing the ATC software. Probably the airlines. Think they might be tempted to give their airplanes the best routes and send the competitors out to sea? Think they might write it to favor faster airplanes and deny service to General Aviation?

      That's right. With closed-source software, you wouldn't know that was happening -- in fact, we don't really know it isn't happening right now. But I thought you were trying to argue for using closed source.

    2. Re:Open Source FAA software? by raju1kabir · · Score: 2
      Sorry, there are just some things that open source software doesn't make sense for, and this is one of them. A single customer software package requiring highly customized and extremely expensive hardware to run, where a bug in the code can cause the death of close to 1000 people (think runway collision of two 747's) doesn't sound like something that would lend itself to community development.

      Open source doesn't just mean community development. It means that everyone can audit the code. This includes the FAA, the airlines, the control tower engineers, the airplane manufacturers, anyone who has an interest in it being as good as possible and who can benefit from knowing its weaknesses.

      The reason I use Linux and FreeBSD in production environments isn't because I have a pressing urge to write kernel code. It's because I want to see the code when something unexpected is happening, so I can maneuver my environment back into the realm of the expected.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
  94. Re:I've said it before by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    riiiiiiight. just like how writers will stop writing books when people can read them at the library for free

    90% of Writers are pretty damn poor.

    what a shame it was when the whole porn industry died with the creation of jpegs

    Yes it is somehow dying, not because of jpegs but because of those who distribute pr0n they do not even own.

  95. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by lukel · · Score: 1
    Open source stifles innovation. This is demonstrably arrant nonsense.

    Not necessarily true. Sure some innovations have come through open source development, but a lot of open source development involves using ideas from closed source products, i.e. not really innovation but borrowing. Now, if the development of these closed source products is expensive, the development will only take place if the Microsoft or whoever believes the cost can be recouped, e.g. through monopoly profits when the product is finished. However, if the there is a prospect of competing with an open source project who will take the best ideas from the product and ship their version for free, then the expected monopoly profits are lower, maybe even to the extent that it is not worth investing in innovation at all. Hence, Open source stifles innovation. Of course, this negative aspect of open source has to be weighted against the benefits (of which you give good examples), but there is a sense in which his claim is defensible.

    Open source is bad for the intellectual-property business. .... Businesses built on artificial scarcity will fail and should fail.

    There is no good reason why they should fail. In fact, economic theory gives us a cause to believe that some degree of artificial scarcity improves welfare as it provides the necessary incentive to invest when technologies that are expensive to design but easy to copy. If there were no artificial scarcity, some firms could not recoup their R&D costs. I'm not denying that there are costs to artificial scarcity - there clearly are - but the optimal system would involve maximising the difference between the costs and benefits rather than ignoring the benefits and throwing out all artificial scarcity because there are some costs.

    To me it seems that although Alchin's statements were clearly motivated by self-interest and bias, so are those of most of the people criticising him.

  96. Just about peed my pants by coolgeek · · Score: 1
    Tiemann: I don't think it's possible to look into the soul of Microsoft and determine if they are truly evil

    Technically, that's not slanderous at all... =)

    --

    cat /dev/null >sig
    1. Re:Just about peed my pants by alprazolam · · Score: 1

      i was amazed he kept a straight face while wearing the hat. that in itself made me like red hat.

    2. Re:Just about peed my pants by coolgeek · · Score: 1

      You could see him knocking down a smirk right at the beginning.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
  97. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    dude it's a server, why would I install tons of software on it? No as long as I can remember I haven't installed any software since 109 days on that machine. Yes the default screensaver is enabled. It's a 400 GIG File Server for about 300 users.
    My point is that this is old news. Nowadays in my experience any Server OS will be able to last at least more than 100 days. I don't know but where I work in, server uptime is not much of an issue. Sometimes we have to upgrade harddisks on the servers but we do that on the weekend so no one notices. But that's about the only reason that brings a server down. The last time I saw one of our servers crash was about 18 months ago because of a harddisk failure. If you really can't stand MS, talk about the qualities of Linux instead of just saying that Windows Crashes a lot, yes we all already know that Win95 crashes a lot.

  98. Re:I've said it before by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 2

    Basically if open source gets out of hand, normal software development will cease, and the quality of software will go down. Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    I just don't see how you can refute this argument.

    Easy to refute..faulty logic..you assume that no one will pay for software that is open source.

    In a free market, things that need to be created will be created. And that goes for innovation too.

  99. Re:I've said it before by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    Evidence? ask any p0rn webmaster and they'll tell you. Why would any user pay for p0rn that they can get for free? Nowadays it takes a lot of marketing, advertisement, link exchanges, etc. to be able to survive in the web p0rn industry.
    Fortunately enough they can always count on AOL users :) Probably not for long.

  100. As direct a link as I can get. by echo · · Score: 1
  101. Re:Microsoft is high technology, Linux is inferior by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

    1.Microsoft's server software is used by most websites

    Actually IIS is used to run less than 1/3 of websites. Most web sites use Apache, about 60% according to Netcraft.

    2. Microsoft makes the best browser

    Matter of opinion, which some people disagree with.

    and actually innovates with this browser. No other browser supports the technologies MS's browser does.

    What, if any, useful features does IE have that current versions of Netscape Navigator or Mozilla not have? What 'innovations' have they made in browser technology? They've certainly been trying to proprietarize the web, but that isn't something I'd consider a good thing.

    3. MS made the modern internet possible.

    This is the most laughable comment of all. Microsoft didn't know what a network was in 1983, which was when many consider the birth of the 'modern internet'. Microsoft was even late to the web party, not showing up until 1995 after Netscape had been there for a while and even then they just licensed Mosaic, which was already in existance for UNIX, Linux and MacOS as well. The original web browsing platform was NeXT Step, followed by UNIX, MacOS and trailed by Windows.

    What has Linux done that can even compare to what Ms has acheived.

    Linux has become one of, if not the, most popular web server platforms, and it has done it with virtually no advertising budget. Microsoft has spent billions advertising NT/W2K and IIS, and they keep running into a brick wall trying to grow their market share.

    If Microsoft wasn't worried, they'd still be pretending Linux didn't exist.

  102. Re:Red Hat will be around. by King+Babar · · Score: 2
    Sheldon asked: At RedHat and VA Linux's burn rate of investment capital... Will they still be in existence in 3 years?
    I don't know about VA, but according to RedHat their analysts predict profitability by 2002, and a 5 year growth rate of 50%. Their future sounds pretty good to me.

    More to the point, Red Hat only lost $0.01 per share last quarter, and still enjoys strong revenue growth. Their "burn rate" has gotten extremely small. Even if a stalling economy slows their quest for profitability by a year or two, they still have cash to make it through.

    Now, as for VALinux, the situation does not look nearly as bright. There are more and stronger potential competitors out there for them, and no hardware maker is making any money really for the next quarter or two.

    --

    Babar

  103. Some Open Source behaviors discourage innovation. by TheDullBlade · · Score: 3

    The big one is cloning. Every time a really good new program idea comes out and someone tries to sell it, a thousand hackers jump on it and clone it, guaranteeing that the originator won't make a dime. Sometimes, the clone is even inferior, but at $0 it's impossible to compete against.

    Don't get me wrong, proprietary software companies do this too. In particular, MS has done this many times, so the entire software industry is terrified that if they try to sell a new product based on a new idea that it'll hardly be on the shelves before MS has their own version with a giant marketing budget and a hundred tied-sales.

    The important question is, does Open Source innovation outweigh the Open Source threat of cloning?

    I'm not convinced that it does right now. The conflict between open and closed source models is wasting a lot of effort and discouraging many people from creating. However, when the conflict is resolved, I'm sure the situation will be much better than an all-proprietary market.

    Programmers need to be paid, somehow; there are some altruists, but in general people need a reward to expend their time and energy. While there are many indirect ways for Open Source software to be paid for, there is still no way to guarantee that just because you make a good piece of software that is widely-used by people who can afford to pay for it, that you will be paid for it. This is the heart of the conflict: Open Source is kicking out the old sources of income and hasn't fully established new ones.

    I think the answer is the simplest possible one: just give money both to the people who make the best implementation, and the ones came up with the idea behind the software; by rewarding them, you encourage future innovation for your benefit. It's called Mass Market Busking.

    If you hold on to your money unless someone finds a way to pry it from your hands, you can expect that people who want your money will try to pry the money from your hands. If you give money to anyone who benefits you, you can expect that people who want your money will just do work that benefits you. It's that simple.

    Just as the people who bought Wolfenstein paid for Doom, and the people who bought Doom paid for Quake, Half-Life probably wouldn't have been made if nobody had paid for Quake. It isn't just the people you're paying who are being encouraged to do work for your benefit, but anyone who is capable of similar work.
    ---

    --
    /.
  104. Innovation is any idea that benefits humanity. by ishpeck · · Score: 1

    Whether it comes from a corporation, a non-profit organization, volunteers or monkeys on the internet, if it increases our productivity/effeciency or even happiness, it's innovation.

    --

    "If I were to ask you a hypothetical question, what would you like it to be about?"

  105. Re:Is Microsoft afraid? by TechLawyer · · Score: 1

    The NSA/FBI are terrified of OSS because it means they can't hide their backdoors in Windows, PROMIS, or any number of closed-source packages popular over the last 30 years. When any coder can look at a particular distro and see if there is anything screwy, then take it out, the intelligence community loses out. MS would be a perfect sock puppet through which the NSA/FBI can express these concerns. I wouldn't be surprised to see anti-terrorism legislation within 2-5 years requiring that all OS software be closed, purportedly to protect it from terrorist hackers.

  106. Stupidity by R2Q2+THE+GREAT · · Score: 1

    How can MicroSuck be so stupid to even start this? I meanlike I cant see how can opensource destroy creativity . It would only destroy the creativity of microsuck to make stupider products. Whistler is like blowing in the wind!

    --
    --this mesage will self distruct in five seconds--
  107. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 2
    With due respect, he didn't say "dead"; he said "dead in the water", as in "not going anywhere". And they aren't going anywhere. All they have been doing for the last ten or twelve years is bloating out existing products and buying, borrowing, and stealing innovations from other products. I see very little in the way of innovation. Guess we stifled it.

    Well, stifling or no, we won't destroy Microsoft. We can't, really. They have a lot of momentum, enough to keep them floating for ten years or so. But remember--their biggest competitor is old versions of their own products.

    --

    --
    This is not my sandwich.
  108. Re:Someone PLZ find us a transcript! by pallex · · Score: 1

    Yeah, its pretty annoying when you just want to read the damn thing and instead you`re expected to download shit.

  109. Re:Blame all you want. by spood · · Score: 1
    But nobody has ever sued MS because their software crashed.

    M$ doesn't write ATC software. If you don't think they'd get sued if a plane crashed, I think Dubya is looking for some interns...

    --
    ---- Just another spud server.
  110. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    Yes, I have used apt-get. It's a network installer. There's nothing innovative about it.

    WYSIWYG is an innovative approach which has numerous advantages over forcing someone to learn a programming language like troff or tex just to write a text document.

    Your message is a good example of basic ignorance of design values, which is the norm in open source or free software projects. Name me three acknowledged principles of good design without looking them up, and then perhaps you will have demonstrated that you have some actual background in these areas.

    Tim

  111. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by mrdlinux · · Score: 1
    Yes, I have used apt-get. It's a network installer. There's nothing innovative about it.

    Certainly there are other systems, off-hand, such as the *BSD's ports tree, which has similarities (though only the newest APT has ability to build source packages and satisfy dependencies automatically). But this is what I was answering:

    (The only thing even marginally innovative here is apt-get, a lame command line tool that works around the lack of software packaging standards in Linux. It's not present on other systems only because they have no need for it.)

    A statement which is blatantly misguided, as I have pointed out previously.

    WYSIWYG is an innovative approach which has numerous advantages over forcing someone to learn a programming language like troff or tex just to write a text document.

    Obviously you didn't check up my links, or you would know that LyX, a graphical front-end to LaTeX, allows one to write documents using the LaTeX processor without having to know a single thing about LaTeX itself.

    Now you may not agree that automated typesetting is superior to manual typesetting, but surely you must agree that automated typesetting with LaTeX or SGML fits the principles of good design better than manual typesetting. I'm talking about things such as abstraction, encapsulation, and modularity, for example:

    Using "emphasize" instead of "italicize" so you can redefine it easily if style needs to change.

    The "Section" environment that not only renumbers itself correctly but can allow generation of a table of contents easily.

    Being able to use a provided document class to create documents that look exactly as they are supposed to but with a minimum of effort on the part of the writer.

    With the standard WYSIWYG editor, you're gonna have a lot more trouble with these things. Typewriters were great, in their time, but we have computers now.

    --
    Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
  112. Allachin is no patriot by browser_war_pow · · Score: 4

    ''I'm an American, I believe in the American Way,'' he said. ''I worry if the government encourages open source, and I don't think we've done enough education of policy makers to understand the threat.'' People like Allachin sicken me. I plan to serve in either the Army or the Navy after college and willing to die in defense of this country if need be. Yet I almost completely abhor Microsoft-the-institution, Microsoft-the-products and above all else, Microsoft-the-business-model. I believe that our country's IP laws are treasonous to the values of the American revolution and that anyone that supports the DMCA and the like is equally a traitor to the spirit of the revolution and the United States Constitution. These companies know that in a free market they can't make a honest buck. Allachin and his fellow big government stooges at Microsoft are just pissed off because within a year or so, RedHat will cut a profit and so will perhaps other open source companies. That is what they fear the most, the vindication of the open source ideal that freedom of speech/ownership of software and profit are NOT mutually exclusive. So Allachin or however you spell it, I have one thing to say about your comments about the dangers of OSS... don't talk to me about patriotism. You don't know what real patriotism is. It isn't loyalty to a bloated corporate burearcracy, it is loyalty to an ideal that forms the basis of the best nation ever created by Homo Sapiens. The loyalty to the ideal that each man and woman is free to live a peaceful, productive life, without people like you micromanaging them. To me, OSS is the epitomy of that ideal and a government which doesn't at least start planning the implementation of OSS-based systems is not a government that has any claim to calling itself the government of a free people!!!

  113. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    LyX is a joke, apparently. It's supposed to be a Windows program but it has twenty pages of installation instructions. Needless to say, I didn't bother evaluating its user-friendliness any further than that. You guys just don't get it.

    Tim

  114. Re:I've said it before by mav[LAG] · · Score: 2
    Why am I replying to a troll from a userID in the 300s? Oh well :)

    Basically if open source gets out of hand, normal software development will cease, and the quality of software will go down. Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    There are so many things wrong with these statements that I don't know where to start. But I think the real problem is one of mindset. You're used to a world in which crappy software has made billions of dollars for a few companies over the last twenty to twenty-five years or so. Much of that value has been gained from the secrecy of source code.

    Thus it seems suprising to you that another model has emerged - where top (yes top) programmers work on software and make the source available for nothing. Not that there's no value - there's plenty of value in distributing that code, supporting it or paying people to improve it (a la Cygnus) - but the inherent value of secret source itself will never be as great as it was.

    Want proof of this? Open Source is already "out of hand." The entire Internet, the majority of its mail infrastructure, the majority of its back-ends and a third of its Web servers run code which is freely available. Funny thing is, top programmers seem to program whether they get paid or not.

    Normal software development (um, what does that mean by the way?) will not cease because there will always be solutions for which the code need not be opened. But if there are better ones where the code is freely available, the market will decide.

    --
    --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
  115. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    BSD brought us virtual memory among other technologies. Surely you think that is innovative?

    Right. Ever hear of a VAX?

    BSD is another clone operating system. It's hard to call it innovative, although in some ways it is technically excellent.

    And lest we forget, BSD was not an open source program when it was being developed. It was tightly held by the Regents of UC and took years to get released in source form to the public.

    Tim

  116. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1

    Jabber appears to be a me-too messaging client, at least from its web site. It looks like every other such client I've seen. "Innovative"? Just because it talks XML under the hood? Please.

    Enhydra is indeed a fine project, and it's the only actually innovative software I've seen listed in this entire thread. I do think developer-facing products like this have the potential of delivering some of the claimed benefits of open source, but what about user-facing products?

    Zope is a slashdot clone. Some innovation.

    Postgresql is a me-too database product, yet another imitation of already existing products.

    KDE and GNOME skinnability came years after Apple's theme switching announcements, and after a third party (Kaleidoscope) beat Apple to market with Mac OS skins.

    So far, we have exactly one innovative product in this thread. For that reason, I don't see a reason to change my position: Open source remains a haven for imitations of commercial software. Open source has never created a new user-facing software product category. Open source does not innovate except for the occasional developer-facing product.

    Tim

  117. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Evil+Adrian · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows that Microsoft is dead in the water in three years, and everyone knows that Linux and the open-source movement will replace them. These things are beyond refutation, so stop pretending you're so innovative for pointing them out.

    I'll refute that. Unless Linux miraculously becomes super user-friendly in the next three years, and also miraculously supports all of the hardware that Windows supports, and reaches the same performance level for multimedia that Windows has, then maybe, maybe Linux will replace Windows. And let's not forget about the X-box. I think you're a lunatic for even thinking that Microsoft is going to disappear just like that.


    ---
    evil adrian
    --
    evil adrian
  118. Hey toady boy... get your butt out of Bill gates by big-giant-head · · Score: 1

    1) No.... something like 65% of the web server market is apache (Open source) 2) Something like 45 of all boxes running said servers are some unix Linux, Solaris, BSD, AIX..... 3)Yes they do have a good browser or Windows boxes, however it's absoulte shit on a Mac, and there is *ix version. Whether it be Solaris, Aix ..... So whats your point Bill-Gates-Ass-licker?? One out of your three points is valid, and the third one is only halfway right??? Just like MS .....They suck more than 2/3's or the time.

    --

    So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
  119. Re:I've said it before by Oztun · · Score: 2

    Anybody notice all the new features built into Windows ME?

    How about the SFP (Software Protection Feature)? This feature was added to ME and 2000 (as WFP) to keep virii from overwriting important files and infecting your computer. This is just an answer to the fact that Unix users don't log in as root (if they are smart) when reading mail and virii can't overwrite system files. If it weren't for GNU (Linux) I doubt this feature would have been added at all.

    Seems to me Linux is forcing Microsoft to innovate. Without competition Microsoft can just keep creating crap that has to be rebooted every 10 minutes.

  120. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    None of your examples of innovation are innovative software products, so we are talking at cross purposes.

    Saying that open source innovated by creating itself seems rather tautological.

    What has it created in software? Can you name one user-facing (not developer-facing) product category that was invented in the open source world?

    Tim

  121. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by mrdlinux · · Score: 1

    No, its not supposed to be a Windows program. It just so happens that some people decided to port it. I have never used the Windows version and I don't have any plans to either. Not when I can just sit down at my Debian box, type "apt-get install lyx", and have it installed on my system for me. Considering that several of my friends and I use it extensively for doing papers and homework, I'd be a little more cautious in calling it "a joke" just because you are using an inferior platform.

    --
    Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
  122. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by T3kno · · Score: 1

    I think I just ate some of his atoms in my cheeseburger.

    --
    (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
  123. look what problem Open Hardware caused... by cworley · · Score: 1

    Compaq reverse engineered the IBM Bios.

    Then, anybody could make a motherboard or adapter. Competition was fierce. Prices were low. Innovations caused PC's to be outdated the month they were bought. Even IBM couldn't compete.

    But, Components from Intel and Microsoft were left closed.

    Intel & Microsoft tyranically ruled the PC (open hardware) revolution.

    If we open the source on the PC platform, we're going to have another revolution with all these same problems (except, of course, the Microsoft monopoly)!

    --
    When I die, please cast my ashes upon Bill Gates -- for once, make him clean up after me!
  124. Allchin is a lunatic indeed. by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 3

    Chuck Flynn is correct: Jim Allchin is a first class lunatic.

    I wish I'd saved the article: this is a guy who claimed, back in November 1997, that Windows NT would become the full equal of a mainframe in three years. Well, November 2000 came and went, and mainframes are still light years ahead of anything Microsoft can do.
    --

    --
    Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
    1. Re:Allchin is a lunatic indeed. by MrGrendel · · Score: 1
      Allchin said that post-NT 5.0, Microsoft will "take NT up into the traditional mainframe arena, but also down into the embedded and real-time" spaces

      He did say that this will be "post-NT 5.0," but notice that Linux is there already. We have Beowulf super-computers, Linux on OS/390, and embeded Linux. I think the fact that Linux has already accomplished several of NT's future goals and MS has resorted to attacking the development model rather than competing directly shows that MS is now playing catch-up with Linux (at least in some areas - there are still a few things NT does better, but the balance is shifting rapidly).

    2. Re:Allchin is a lunatic indeed. by msuzio · · Score: 4

      >I wish I'd saved the article:
      I suspect what you are looking for is here:
      http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/zdnn_smgraph_dis play/0,3441,2129312,00.html.
      The story is quite a hoot regardless of what Allchin himself says; this is a set of predictions for "NT 5.0 and higher" that is nowhere near what they've produced for Win2K or WinXP. FUD rules in all times and all places for Microsoft... :-)

  125. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by dglo · · Score: 4

    Huh? Most of the major open source programs
    I can think of are imitative rather than
    innovative. Linux is an OS implementation
    of Unix, Gnome and KDE are attempts to clone
    MS Windows on Linux, etc.

    The innovative OS programs I can think of
    t(httpd, Mosaic, BSD) tend to come out from
    universities and are more properly the side
    benefits of research rather than the direct
    result of the open source movement.

    Innovation is usually the result of the
    work of a few people rather than the
    output of the million monkeys of the
    Internet.

  126. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Amokscience · · Score: 1

    Ironic isn't it that DOS was chosen over CPM for almost this exact reason. The 'hacker' was too busy trying to manage his life and his project and told IBM to go look for Gates.

    --
    Fsck cluebie moderators. I'll say what I want, offtopic or not. And fsck having to qualify every bloody statement just
  127. Oh poopers... by Eric+Green · · Score: 4
    I work for a company whose main product has a free Open Source competitor. As far as I can tell, they're in no danger of going out of business. There's always going to be people who need more hand-holding and a better user interface than typical Open Source programs provide.

    Besides, it isn't the job of the government to resolve this situation. In a free market, the person who provides the best value is supposed to win the competition, not the person who has the best pull of the government. If this means a few programmers end up switching to a different industry, hey, I have sympathy with them -- but then, as when the automobile put buggy-makers out of business, sympathy only goes so far. Should the government have stepped in to protect the buggy-makers? Or should the buggy-makers instead have switched to making automobile? Most of the buggy makers decided to get government protection. Only one buggy maker decided to switch industries, and that buggy maker (Studebaker) was the only one that survived.

    -E

    --
    Send mail here if you want to reach me.
  128. Re:Open Source and the Military by StaticEngine · · Score: 1

    Wasn't part of the impetus behind the creation of the Ada programming language that it had to be readable by non-programmers so that it's correctness could also be verified by government workers/military officials?

  129. Re:Is Microsoft afraid? by rgmoore · · Score: 1

    So is that why the NSA released an Open Source version of Linux designed for high security? Or why they're working on using VMWare + Linux to allow multi-level security on a single box? Yeah, those bastards at NSA hate Open Source so much, they're trying to kill it by releasing powerful, innovative, Open Source security programs. I guess they're hoping that all of the paranoid looneys like you will die of a heart attack when you find out, leaving the non-paranoid population succetible to their schemes.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  130. This is why an IBM Linux distro would be bad! by jamesc · · Score: 2
    Face it... Linux has a lot of fragmentation (and M$ made that point with that ad of the mutating penguins) with lots of duplicated effort and inconsistancies. I believe an "IBM Linux" distro could be the one distro that everyone shoots for and becomes a "defacto standard" much like the "IBM PC" did for hardware. God knows the corporate types would accept it.

    There's two problems with the above.

    One: IBM doesn't want to make their own distro. They've said so themselves. This is a good thing. Since they're playing fairly even handedly with the top few major distros, folks haven't been too jealous/frightened of the massive resources and clout that IBM has.

    Two: Linux doesn't have "a lot of fragmentation" -- it has a lot of specialization. Buy Red Hat for servers and Mandrake (or maybe Corel) for the desktop. Buy SuSE or TurboLinux because they're good solid distros and have the appropriate language localizations. Choose Debian or Slackware for OSS purity. ;^) Select one of the scads of specialized distros for routers, firewalls, X-terms, and rescue floppies. Each distro tries to find its own core competence and to fill its own market niche. And yet, they are all Linux, running a Linux kernel and the GNU libraries. There's less variation between the different Linux distros than there is between Windows 3.1, CE, 95, 98, ME, NT, NT/Embedded, 2K, etc.

    Also, don't forget that Linux is acting as to defragment the *nix market. The *BSDs can run nearly all Linux apps if you turn on the appropriate kernel feature. SCO invented "lxrun", a program that runs many Linux binaries without kernel mods. IBM is porting its LAE (Linux Application Environment), a package of kernel+library interface changes, to most of its product line, and has done the S390 VM port. Who's left? Maybe HP and Sun will get into the act soon.

    There will still be plenty of variety... but it will be more focused. The GPL (and the fact that IBM is largely a hardware company) will keep them honest. If IBM wants to buy Redhat or Suse to get up to speed, fine. IBM has already had good success with their Websphere Server which uses Apache.

    They can do all that without releasing their own distro, just by throwing their support behind the appropriate standards bodies. IMHO, that would accomplish the same thing with less screaming/suspicion by the anti-corporate crowd.
    --

    --
    "You've crossed my Line of Death!" "What? No! Where is it?" "Here in the fine print...."
  131. Open Source produces too much Innovation -- Not! by jamesc · · Score: 2
    Huh? Most of the major open source programs I can think of are imitative rather than innovative. Linux is an OS implementation of Unix, Gnome and KDE are attempts to clone MS Windows on Linux, etc.

    The innovative OS programs I can think of t(httpd, Mosaic, BSD) tend to come out from universities and are more properly the side benefits of research rather than the direct result of the open source movement.

    But, the Open Source Community was derived from (or is closely related to -- take your pick) the scientific and academic communities, just sharing software instead of research, and updated to use the Internet. ESR's essays touch upon this topic. Check out: http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/writings/

    Innovation is usually the result of the work of a few people rather than the output of the million monkeys of the Internet.

    While I agree that true innovation (not M$FT's fake variety) does indeed happen on a personal level, why the elitism? Do you really think that only academics can innovate?

    I suggest that the OSS process brings us back to the days (1600s - 1700s maybe?) in which anyone with a sound mind could contribute to science. You didn't have to go through a 4 to 8 year scholastic meat grinder and become a narrowly focused professional first. Likewise, now anyone who is a good programmer can pick a project and make significant progress. Those who aren't programmers but who can write, can help with the docs.

    The "Next Big Thing" may come from someone in Bangladesh or outer Mongolia, yet they are some of your "million monkeys of the Internet".

    Come to think of it, so am I. We need a new motto:

    The many.
    The proud.
    Innovating in ways never thought possible before.
    The million Internet monkeys.
    8^)
    --
    --
    "You've crossed my Line of Death!" "What? No! Where is it?" "Here in the fine print...."
  132. Re:slashdot security problem by rppp01 · · Score: 1

    hmmmmmm, I have no problem using Opera v5. Must be an MSIE thing.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  133. Re:Anyone else see something wrong? by AFCArchvile · · Score: 1
    Good. Glad to hear that RedHat users can actually watch the RH CTO speak while running RedHat. Otherwise, it would have been hypocritical.

    (The very fact that there's a Windows Media version IS hypocritical; why not do it in DivX?)

    --
    "Ancillary does not mean you get to rule the world." --U.S. Circuit Judge Harry Edwards, speaking to the FCC's lawyer
  134. Re:Yeah, it really sucks to get paid! by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

    I can't write songs with money and the software there is to buy isn't made for an experimenter like me.

    --
    The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  135. Check out the inteview with Alich by sPaKr · · Score: 1

    news.cnet.com also has an interview with Alich. That is damn hillarius. He must have said " I love" about 20 times. " I love devices", "I love XP", " I love win200" , " I love lin... err "

    It was great to hear that Windows 2000 was a perfect launch, and has done better then they expected... hmm. to bad they told the SEC a differnt story. Cnet needs to get some better interviewers, I mean The ammount of crap this guy was shovling, he was standing up there with a snow shovel, and that damn intreviewer was just sitting there with his mouth open. If the M$ winnies are going to take to the air waves we need to have someone that will call them on their shit, and not turn interviews into commercials.

  136. Re:Corporate "fascism" to make free illegal? by Firedog · · Score: 1
    I wonder if it is indeed such an impossible connection to surmise that global corporatism may herald a new form of fascism?

    Indeed, and the scary thing is that it is truly global. There is nowhere you can run to escape it. In previous eras, there were always countries doing different kinds of things; socialism, communism, monarchy, religious dictatorship, democracy, etc. But now, it's all becoming global corporatism, everywhere you go.

    As democracy, in the sense of the historic liberal democracies of the west, is becoming irrelevant to the ability of global capital to make profits, whereas the rise of capitalism necessitated the freedom of a civil society, that this may not be so much longer?

    Democracy, I think, is not just irrelevant -- it actively interferes with the ability of global capital to make profits. This is part of the reason why our democratic freedoms and the Constitution have been under merciless attack during the last 20 years and why they have sustained serious damage.

    Corporations are feudal entities in organizational style. As a result, a society dominated by corporations becomes a feudal society. We're a good percentage of the way there already.

  137. Doesn't anyone read before replying? by TheDullBlade · · Score: 1

    Did I write one word about government intervention? No.

    Did I say Open Source projects always kill proprietary competitors? No, I talked about how it happens often enough to discourage proprietary development.
    ---

    --
    /.
  138. Open Source and the Military by goingware · · Score: 2
    SRI researcher and computer reliability and security expert Peter Neumann is promoting open source to the in various fora, including to an IEEE meeting and the military. His general thesis is that "open box" software promotes reliability because you can both inspect the source code and fix it.

    Go to Neumann's page above and search for "Robust" using the "Find in Page" function of your browser.

    Neumann is the moderator of The Forum on Risks to the Public in Computers and Related Systems and the author of the book Computer Related Risks, so he should know whereof he speaks.

    Please also read Open Source and These United States.

    In the previous article, someone suggested the problem of how to compose a letter to congressional representatives to promote open source - perhaps simply printing out that paper and mailing it to them with a brief cover letter explaining how you've found a way the U.S. Government and Military can achieve substantial savings in its software purchases, along with gains in reliability, would be helpful.


    Mike

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
  139. Re:I've said it before by rgmoore · · Score: 2
    I just don't see how you can refute this argument.

    And I don't see how you can maintain it. Just look at, to pick three obvious examples off the top of my head, Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman, and Larry Wall. None of them was getting paid for their work when they started doing it, but they went ahead and did it anyway. Each one was brilliant and managed to find a way to underwrite his software writing that didn't compromise its status as Free Software. None of them has stopped writing great and often innovative software, either.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  140. Legislation by jtseng · · Score: 1

    The host mentioned how Allchin wanted Congress to pass legislation to protect intellectual property rights. Wait... I remember someone crying foul when Netscape et. al. ganged up on Microsoft to have them stop integrating IE with Windows. They went to Congress to whine rather than competing against MS with their own products. I guess then those companies felt the only way to fight the MS monster was to legislate them to death.

    Now MS might want to do the same to Linux.... They want whine to (and bribe) Congress to legislate against a public domain entity rather than compete on their products' merits. Hmmmm.....

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

  141. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by IronChef · · Score: 3

    Everyone knows that Microsoft is dead in the water in three years, and everyone knows that Linux and the open-source movement will replace them. These things are beyond refutation...

    Exactly -- just as irrefutable as these truths we all know:

    - Email has totally removed our need for physical mail
    - The web has totally supplanted the old-fashioned print industry


    Look, just because something newr, better, cheaper comes along doesn't mean that the old way of doing things is dead. Open source may put MS in trouble -- in SOME areas. But saying they'll be "dead" in 3 years is crazy.

    There will always, always be a need for commercial software. First of all, some software is DULL, and no one will want to code it for fun. Secondly, there will always be companies with deep pockets who can fund a very competent closed-source project. And what about apps like air traffic control? You want to fly into an airport running GNU-ATC v0.9B? Assuming it even got written, no one would use it because for some applications you need a company backing the product -- uptime, reliability, support. And I doubt that open-source support firms like VA Linux can fill in ALL those gaps.

    Open source is great. Just don't make it a religious crusade.

  142. Re:I've said it before by Temporal · · Score: 3

    /me wonders for a moment at why he codes for free.
    /me remembers that coding is fun.
    /me remembers the e-mails he has received praising his work.
    /me goes back to coding. For Free.

    ------

  143. Try this link to the interview, instead... by Corporate+Drone · · Score: 1
    --
    mmm... yeah... You see, we're putting the cover sheets on all TPS reports now before they go out...
    1. Re:Try this link to the interview, instead... by echo · · Score: 1

      That's nice, but it still doesn't work when I click on the "Watch this" links.

      Tried Netscape, Mozilla and Konqueror..

      No go.

  144. Re:I've said it before by Shadowlion · · Score: 1

    Come on, man, look at the guy's nick. "Crapflooder20001". Can't you tell a troll when you see one?


    --

  145. Re:Nice links by echo · · Score: 1

    Yes, I went, and the javascript on that site is broken here in Netscape 4.72, Mozilla and Konqueror.

    What's up with that?

  146. Too bad it won't live... by Pac · · Score: 2

    Almost slashdotted already.I could only see the upper half of the image.

    1. Re:Too bad it won't live... by stype · · Score: 3

      Ah well this image is so good, I'll mirror it for anyone who wants it. Of course I have to mirror it on the weakest piece of machinery I can find, for fun, so here it is on my sparcstation ipc, 25mhz, with 24 megs of ram running debian and apache. If I can find batteries for my palm I can setup a web server there too but that might take some time.
      Here it is.
      -Stype

      --
      -Stype
      Bus error -- driver executed.
  147. Anyone else see something wrong? by AFCArchvile · · Score: 1
    It's in Windows Media or Real media.

    Okay, neither can be viewed reliably in Linux, so every Linux user is either going to miss out, or they'll have to hack their system just to digest more pro-Linux FUD.

    I'm surprised that someone didn't have the brain and the free time to write this out in an HTML transcript. Is it that hard to watch the video clip on a Windows machine while typing away at vim?

    --
    "Ancillary does not mean you get to rule the world." --U.S. Circuit Judge Harry Edwards, speaking to the FCC's lawyer
  148. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by tim_maroney · · Score: 1
    I'm not using an inferior platform; I'm using a Mac. But there's no Mac version, so I started trying the Windows box they make me use at work. Looks like it would take hours just to install and configure the thing -- talk about old thinking....

    Tim

  149. I thought your name looked familiar by goingware · · Score: 2
    Tim,

    I think we've met, or at least corresponded when I was at Apple.

    I was on the Traditional OS Integration team during System 7.5.3 and 7.5.4, and then later worked on PowerBooks. When I started, my manager was Jennifer Ahlquist. I worked with Dave Lyons, Jim Murphy and those guys.

    I'm afraid my work on PowerBooks didn't lead to much, but I managed to do some good as a "debug meister". Some of what I learned I pass on to other mac developers in my page:

    You might be a little shocked by what I have to say on the next page though. I don't think there could ever have been anybody more loyal to the Macintosh platform than me (bleeding in six colors, etc.) - but then read:

    I'm afraid the page about why I became a BeOS developer is temporarily disabled. It's at my old ISP in Santa Cruz and I'm always late paying my bill now that I'm living in Maine. Once I send them a check you'll be able to read it again. Eventually I'll move it to my own domain.

    Anyway, one more way to lower the upper bound on the bugs is to build assertions into the core of one's development framework. Lots of people use assertions when they're looking for a specific bug (and that's my style), but the ZooLib cross-platform application framework is riddled with assertions, and the more frequently a class is likely to be used, the more likely you'll find an assertion in it.

    This is something that's available to anyone, but ZooLib was the first time I found it very widely used, and the result was that the product I wrote with it had the least bugs of any substantial program I've ever had the pleasure to work with (note - I also did a little unit testing).

    While Instant Makeover is not open source, ZooLib is, under the MIT License.

    By the way, the reason the Mac version of Instant Makeover is "coming soon" and not already available is because those deadbeats stiffed me for seven weeks pay - and told me they were going to at the end of a 29-hour workday trying to get the beta out.

    During the development of Instant Makover, I usually delivered Mac and Windows builds simultaneously from the same source base. My guess is they can't find a Mac programmer since we parted ways.

    I didn't even take a honeymoon after I was married last summer because of the pressure they were putting on me to ship.

    It was the largest program I'd ever written by myself (but note the extensive use of libraries), although the one thing I feel was worthwhile is that working on it made me a better programmer, something I'm trying to pass on.

    And yes, I did use Radar quite a bit, probably more than most software engineers at Apple because of my job debugging the system software, but read about what I'd really like to see in a bugbase - the idea of having preset, named hardware configurations that a tester can quickly select when they file a bug report is a feature that I was asking for in Radar when I was at Apple.

    Not afraid to speak my mind....


    Mike

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
  150. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by crucini · · Score: 2
    Government support for opensource could be a huge boon to what we are doing...

    More like a huge disaster. Open source does best when it's fueled by individual enthusiasm, not corporate/government mandates. I don't want Open Source software replacing Microsoft in a government agency because of some fiat from above. I want it happening because the the responsible IT managers decide that it delivers the best benefits at the least cost.
    Likewise, if the government funded tons of Open Source developers, the results would suck. If the developers are dumb, they'll write bad code. If they're smart, they'll build overly complex application frameworks and stuff that nobody wants.
    We don't need government support, just freedom from government interference. I'd agree that government employees and employees of government contractors should not be prohibited or hindered from writing Open Source software on their own time.
  151. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by mrdlinux · · Score: 2

    (The only thing even marginally innovative here is apt-get, a lame command line tool that works around the lack of software packaging standards in Linux. It's not present on other systems only because they have no need for it.)

    1.
    You have no idea what APT does, do you? It handles the retrieval and installation of packages, all with minimal effort by the user. Don't like the command line? (Why would anyone not like the command line? :) Then there's gnome-apt, console-apt, aptitude, dselect, etc. The reason why APT is not present on other systems is because those systems are inferior, not because they don't have no need for it. Just remember that the next time you have to personally retrieve your software (even by going to the store, or downloading it from an FTP site) and all its dependencies.
    2.
    What is so "innovative" about the WYSIWYG word processor? It's an imitation of a typewriter! The WYSIWYG word processor is the biggest waste of time for someone using a computer. You have this awesome computing machine, it can do billions of instructions per second, and yet you are doing all the work required to manually typeset and format just like you were still using a typewriter? Fortunately there were some smarter people in this world than those who designed Microsoft Word. Check out LaTeX (using an implementation such as teTeX) and LyX, a graphical front-end for LaTeX that provides a different metaphor for word processing that I would argue is superior to the run of the mill WYSIWYG.

    --
    Those who do not know the past are doomed to reimplement it, poorly.
  152. Hmm.. by PopeAlien · · Score: 2

    Well thankfully it is availiable in two closed-source formats..

    1. Re:Hmm.. by echo · · Score: 1

      Can someone point out a direct URL to the pnm:// stream? Either that or something more direct.

      The site as is does not work in Netscape 4.72 + Javascript + Realplayer 8 + Linux

    2. Re:Hmm.. by david_ncl · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work with bloodly IE5.5 + [Realpalyer 8 | MS MediaPlayer] + 2K either

    3. Re:Hmm.. by echo · · Score: 1

      Just on a whim I went to redhat's site... click on this link.. it worked for me

      Interview

  153. Re:Is Microsoft afraid? by DickBreath · · Score: 2

    But you didn't invalidate his point.

    Just because NSA/FBI wants high security Linux for some people ("We're from the NSA, we're the good guys"), that doesn't mean that they couldn't still want closed source backdoors for the bad guys.


    Those who can, do. Those who cannot, get their MCSE.

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  154. Something to chew on by El+Hooloovoo · · Score: 1

    While I think that Mr. Allachin's diatribe was ridicu^H^H^H^H^H^Hstupid, I have to wonder if some Open Source proponents haven't shot the movement in the foot by opposing Microsoft so rabidly. After all, whether we like it or not, they ARE the dominant force in the software industry, and will be for some time to come. I don't see how MS can be unaware of the "us vs. them" attitude that, while perhaps not prevalent in the open source community, is the one being most forcefully voiced.

    Just a thought.

    ---------------------

  155. Someone PLZ find us a transcript! by Fatal0E · · Score: 1

    I'll look myself, but try to beat me to it.

    "Me Ted"

  156. Open Source produces too much Innovation by Lover's+Arrival,+The · · Score: 2
    Or at least, it does so very often. The problem with having a scrummage of uncoordinated developers is that you end up with tonnes of innovation. Loads of it, bags of the stuff.

    It can often be extremely difficult for a project leader to keep on top of things, with the result that the development process can *sometimes* fork, or spiral out of any real control.

    I think that innovation is the greatest strength of the OSS community. However, in order to harness it properly, a model of how to control and tap it properly and effectively has to be introduced.

    --

    --Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The

    1. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 4

      Probably the most important innovation of the open source community is the open source community. Linux was developed via the internet, taking advantage of this new communications medium. I'm suggesting that the innovation is social, not technical.

      Progress can mean a lot of things besides a new widget. Sometimes it means finding a better way to do something. I'd say that the open source movement is among the most efficient software-producing strategies anyone has ever seen. I didn't say fastest, I said most efficient -- think (total output) / (total input).

      Linus' model for kernel development wasn't obvious, to him or anyone else. Nobody even had a chance to try such a large distributed and uncoordinated undertaking before the Internet was made available to the world public. Linus helped the idea evolve, and made it work.

      The GNU project has done something very similar with their development model though they were more academically focussed and based, if I understand correctly -- which eventually evolved alongside the Linux kernel. The model is still evolving, witness sourceforge and services like cosource.

      These are very real innvoations. I expect that you have a very specialized definition of innovation which allows you to say "Innovation is usually the result of the work of a few people." In particular, I think your special definition is probably something like "Innovation is the result of the work of a few people." You mind seems closed.

      -Paul Komarek

    2. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by norton_I · · Score: 3

      Very often, that is true, though I would say you underestimate the output of the "million monkeys". Go to freshmeat and just browse. Sure, much of it isn't earth shattering, or "pure research", but there are lots and lots of programs that are valuable in their own right. Other programs for Windows or UNIX may have similar functionality, but each one was designed to perform in a particular way as well as possible. In the words of ESR, they all started to scratch an itch.

      A few notable examples:
      licq -- implements similar functionality to windows ICQ, but IMO has the best UI of any instant messanger I have seen. Also, recently added support for SSL encrypted communications, and has a wide array of plugins (nmap, finger, etc) that windows ICQ and other ICQ programs lack.

      lame: conforms to the MPEG audio encoder standard. Similar to several other encoders around, but has (arguably) the best sound quality of any available encoder.

      Mame: free arcade emulator that runs on an incredibly number of platforms, including laser light show controllers and digital camers. These two are good examples of features that have no commercial value, and thus would never be implemented by a commercial developer, yet are way cool, and some people might use.

      Apache: originally based on the NCSA httpd, Apache is now the most flexible web server in existence.

      apt-get: IMNSHO, debian has nearly perfected the process of software distribution, installation, and version management. "apt-get install mozilla" makes inserting a cd and clicking OK from the autorun dialog look horribly complicated. And no commercial software company will ever match it, because they can't keep track of licensing then. Maybe MS will come up with something 10% as good with .NET and "subscription software", where you can install off the net and get billed a subscription, but it isn't worth the cost of giving up control over your computer to get.

      Linux Kernel: The linux kernel isn't just another POSIX implementation. It has an unheard of combination of features for desktop, workstation, server, and embedded system all in one package. It runs more or less the same on many, many platforms, and has features like loopback block devices that are useful, but rare on commercial systems.

      Finally, the availability of free software systems encourages and enables many, many "traditional" research projects at universities and government labs that may have profound impact. Clustering (beowulf's channel bonding, and the KLAT2 flat network neighborhood archetecture), load distribution/fault tolerance, distributed filesystem research, like coda. The NSA's secure linux project. Linuxbios -- 32 bit boot code that can boot up a PC in seconds flat. All these things would have been harder or impossible without free software that was easily tweakable to perform some new task.

      Innovation isn't always about "revolutionizing the world" with a previously unheard of technology, which MS has never done. It can be about taking an existing idea and running with it, to produce the most stable/useful/powerful/efficient/ whatever implementation possible.

      To give credit where credit is due, MS has done some of this. They took the GUI from Apple and others, and reimplemented it. It sucked, but they kept working at it long after most people would have given up. In the end, like it or not, the brought the GUI to the masses. And while windows 98 is not the most stable, efficient, or reliable, it is a GUI that most people can be taught to use for simple tasks, with a relatively small amount of pain.

      Linux is getting there. Installation is still a little rougher than Windows installation (at least when windows installation actually works), but I think I could teach a computer illterate person to use linux for web, email, and word processing.

      It is easy to say "free software is a threat to innovation" because to a traditional software industry point of view it sounds like it has to be true. But it is 100% contrary to fact -- free software encourages more innovation than proprietary software every could. And of course, there is the #1 innovation of free software that all others are lesser than, it puts the user back in control of his computer.

    3. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Look at jabber. It's the most innovative thing I have seen in ages. Jabber may have started off as an instant messaging project but it's really a router for XML. Imagine the possibilities of that!.
      Other innovative open source projects are.
      Enhydra, zope, postgressql.
      Postgres especially has features no other database vendor has even thought of. User defined operators, loadable SP languages, TOAST etc.
      Even KDE and GNOME are innovative in their own right. Is windows skinnable? is the MAC? Who thought of that first?
      Look at BSD ports system, apt-get, hell look at perl and python.
      Open source is where the innovation is really taking place.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    4. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by raju1kabir · · Score: 2
      The only thing even marginally innovative here is apt-get, a lame command line tool that works around the lack of software packaging standards in Linux. It's not present on other systems only because they have no need for it.

      Spoken like someone who has absolutely no experience with what he's talking about.

      To install some software on a Windows machine, you go find it online, download it, save it somewhere, run the installer, restart the computer, wait 5 minutes while it moves more things around and perhaps restarts again, and then finally you're done.

      With apt-get, all you do is type that one command. Done.

      And don't even get me started on removing stuff. The Windows way, you go to the Control Panel, find Add/Remove programs, hold your breath to see if there's an uninstaller, run it, look quizzically as it asks you 500 times whether you want to remove various permutations of X5466N7W.DLL, then restart your computer, and nothing works anymore.

      Guess how it works with Debian? One command, program gone. All done.

      The only thing that even comes close is the Mac; at least most of the time you can remove an application just by tossing the folder away.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    5. Re:Open Source produces too much Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Lover's Arrival, The" consistently produces some of the worst comments I have ever seen on /., gushing with sentimental garbage that reveals little or no actual experience with OSS. It is obvious to me, and I hope to others, that this person has a non-existent technical background, and thus has no idea what he or she is talking about.

      Score:-1, Troll all the way.

  157. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Ig0r · · Score: 1

    Open source (but not Free software) and UNIX are the 'old way of doing things'.

    --

    --
    Soma: because a gramme is better than a damn.
  158. Open source works great on a corporate level. by cduffy · · Score: 3

    Open source does best when it's fueled by individual enthusiasm, not corporate/government mandates.

    Howdy. I work for MontaVista Software, and support open source software professionally, as do my coworkers. Our business model works great -- our customers are happy (as the software they use gets the features and bugfixes they need), our fellow non-corporate developers are happy (as they also get the fruits of our labor) and we're happy (as we're getting paid to work on open source).

    If we hired lousy developers, maybe our results would suck. We don't, and our quality of output is excellent. (It may be an interesting data point that the average age of our engineering force is waaay above average in this industry... related to our choosy hiring practices? You decide!).

    Also, I object to your objection that good coders write useless code. If dumb coders write bad code and good coders write useless code, who writes all the actually usable, interesting stuff you use? Mediocre coders? I doubt it. The folks who write the useless code are the impractical coders, not necessarily the smart or dumb ones -- and it doesn't really matter who they're working for.

  159. Re:I've said it before by Omnifarious · · Score: 2
    Yes it is somehow dying, not because of jpegs but because of those who distribute pr0n they do not even own.

    Really now. And where is your evidence of this?

  160. Open Source produces most of Microsoft's revenue by Nailer · · Score: 2

    * Sendmail
    * WU FTPd
    * Bind
    * Squid
    * Apache

    All these Open source products dominate their markets over all their proprietary competitors (and often, all of their competitors combined). Open Source innovated by building the Internet - except back then it wasn't known as Open Source, it was just software typically licensed under the BSD license.

    The internet is still reliant on Unix and Open Source forall its core architecture. Exactly what has Microsoft innovated? How well did NetBIOS and WINS succeed in the market place? Did they make Microsoft lots of money, or were they abandoned in favor of Internetworking standards?

  161. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by cduffy · · Score: 2

    Now, if the development of these closed source products is expensive, the development will only take place if the Microsoft or whoever believes the cost can be recouped, e.g. through monopoly profits when the product is finished.

    I doubt it'll come for that. I work for a company which treats software as a service. We service and maintain open source software for clients doing embedded-systems development. Some of our products (like HHNet, a networking layer which works over the Compact PCI bus) are things I'd describe as pretty damned innovative. Is the fact that we're releasing our work as OSS stopping us from making money off it? Hell, no!

    Also, a great deal of innovation occurs in non-commercial (academic and otherwise) environments, only to have the final, succesful implementations occur commercially; the success of these commercial implimentations is often due to the availability of documentation, support and the like -- which can be sold individually. Even were commercial development not feasible, however, there's no reason to believe these academically developed innovations won't continue to be implimented by non-commercial interests.

  162. Re:I've said it before by crucini · · Score: 2

    Good point, and one that needs to be repeated when this silly meme of 'programmers will starve' comes up. I know a reasonable number of programmers (including myself) and not one of them is working on shrinkwrap software. In some cases, our employers (reluctantly) open source the code. In others, the code is buried in the bowels of the corporation.
    So this guy making generalizations about 'top programmers' is just silly. First of all, it may be that all the top programmers are maintaining legacy apps at big financial companies. In which case, whatever happens to Microsoft or Linux has almost no effect on them. But its more likely that 'top programmers' are distributed evenly across the different kinds of programmers, which would still mean that the majority of them never come anywhere near the commercial software market.
    To turn this nonsense around, imagine if medical doctors in the 19th century had started patenting their medical procedures and trying to extract royalties. The small minority of doctors who successfully did this would be highly visible. Then if some doctor hit on the bright idea of *not* patenting his discoveries, it would seem like a radical movement that threatens the survival of doctors. Of course, the majority of doctors weren't in that racket anyway!

  163. Looks like you live under a rock. by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

    How is hardware closed? I could obtain information on intel cpu interface and timing diagrams. How do you think VIA, SiS and server Works exist? But hardware is a different beast then software anybody can learn an OS and programming but hardware is extreamly complex. tons of mathmatics and careful design that takes months. Shit if you make one mistake in your design and have sampels fabed from lets say lsi logic with that mistake then you just wasted thousands of dollars on the fabs and have to go back again (Thats why they have software that emulates every logic gate and slowly runs a series of virtual electrical signals through them to test that the device works to spec). software just takes a simple recompile or a patch. also if you look only a small percentage of colleges offer electrical/computer engineering so open hardware would be difficult to even try to get going. lets stick woth OpenSource software for now and maybe in the future we will see hardware. Oh and their is an open CPU and its called MIPS.

  164. Jim Allchin's is a troll by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

    It obvious. What are the chararistics of a Troll

    + They are immature.

    + They make bizaar comments in order to illicite an response.

    + They are an annoyance and should not be encouraged.

  165. What a pathetic Interview. by cybrchld · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but Michael Tiemann is as much an idiot as Jim Allchin in his own way. The guy sounds like he's reading a script and a bad one at it. He did not answer one of the questions given to him he just gave runarounds every time and lame comparisons. It kinda reminded me of the political debates between Bush and Gore. If these are the leaders pushing the open source movement we are screwed.

  166. Ho hum by jd · · Score: 3
    I've e-mailed Microsoft, on the off-chance that it's been invaded by honest but mind-controlling aliens who can tell me if this is simply a lone extremist or the beginning of a jihad.

    So far, it looks like it could be either. And either way, it'll be messy.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  167. Re:I've said it before by Omnifarious · · Score: 2
    Writers were paid to write the books that eventually ended up in libraries, CD sales would have been significanly higher were it not for mp3's, jpegs are a far cry from video.

    And musicians were paid to play the music that's distributed over Napster. And I think you're completely wrong about CD sales. I think they would've been lower. Why's your opinion on this better than mine? Also, what about mpg's, or any of a number of other video formats? Stil doesn't look like porn is dying to me.

  168. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 5
    I'd like to see you actually argue against Allchin's point by using facts or at least opinions.

    Alchin claimed two things:

    1. Open source stifles innovation.

      This is demonstrably arrant nonsense. The whole Internet is built on Open Source software and was innovated through Open Source software. The claim that software developed as part of research projects somehow doesn't count is nonsense. If the source is open, it's open source.

      However, one of the most important innovations in recent computing, the World Wide Web, isn't the result of a research program. It was created at a research centre, yes, but one whose research was into sub-atomic physics. The World Wide Web was developed to solve an administrative problem. It is open source in the classic sense of scratching the developer's itch.

    2. Open source is bad for the intellectual-property business.

      I can't refute this and neither would I try to. Businesses based on information hiding and artificial scarcity are going to get caned.

      They're going to get caned anyway. Basic economic theory demonstrates that price varies directly with scarcity. There is no natural scarcity in goods which can be copied at marginal cost. Businesses built on artificial scarcity will fail and should fail. It just isn't a stable economic platform.

    --
    I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
  169. Wow..... by rppp01 · · Score: 1
    Asteroid? Neptune? Boy are they out there. Thanks for reminding me how 'shoot from the hip' this company is. They don't care about 4 years from now, they only concern themselves with how much money they can grab over the next 6 months.

    Hey Allchin, when can we expect Uranus? Oh wait, you just gave it to us.

    What an ass.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  170. Re:I've said it before by Temporal · · Score: 2

    If the available open source software in a particular field is lacking in quality, people will always pay money for software that is of better quality. Unless they are zealots. Fortunately, most people aren't zealots.

    ------

  171. Re:Microsoft is high technology, Linux is inferior by edmudama · · Score: 1

    HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAhA

    1. wrong -- more sites serve with apache

    2. MS innovates the most because they have no regard for standards groups

    3. wrong again, MS didn't exist when the internet was being invented

    --
    More data, damnit!
  172. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by luge · · Score: 3

    The problem is that he is a lunatic with millions of dollars of lobbying and marketing behind him. Government support for opensource could be a huge boon to what we are doing, and MS could easily kill it. Rebuttals will be necessary, because MS and other threatened companies will start parroting this line to their congressmen and to others, and pretty soon it'll become conventional wisdom- just like "Freedom to Innovate." Sure, we all knew it was BS- but we don't matter. People who do matter (congressmen, an unfortunately deluded majority of the populace) believed it. If MS makes this a major theme, we'll need to deal with it, and deal with it often. In other words, ignoring MS because they are lunatics doesn't make their power go away.
    ~luge

    --

    IAAL,BIANLY

  173. Is Microsoft afraid? by Eager+Newbie · · Score: 4

    Having read Allchin's statements, and listened to the interview with Red Hat's CTO, I get the impression that MS is growing afraid of not just Linux, but any open source OS or software. Allchin's statement ''I worry if the government encourages open source, and I don't think we've done enough education of policymakers to understand the threat'' raises my eyebrow a bit: here's a company under government scrutiny (not to mention the potential breakup) suddenly running towards that same government for protection??? Anyone else see just a teensy bit of hypocrisy here? Personally, I think MS is slowly killing itself, with new OS versions that appear to be little more than upgrades / bug fixes / new bugs, demands for fast performance on only the latest-and greatest hardware, and insanely high prices for OSes and software. We don't need the DoJ to stop MS, they're stopping themselves just fine, and trying to blame the Open Source community for their failings.

    --
    "Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning." Bill Gates Yeah Right!
    1. Re:Is Microsoft afraid? by Platonic1 · · Score: 1

      I am always bemused by these claims to a "back door" in windows. Why bother with back doors when there are holes in the front one?
      _____________
      I'll bet / with my Net / I can get / those things yet.

      --
      _____________
      I'll bet / with my Net / I can get / those things yet.
      --Dr. Seuss
  174. Re:I've said it before by msuzio · · Score: 2

    There's no reason you can't pay someone to develop open-source software. Why would you think that open-source == not getting paid? It happens all the time, actually. You pay me to develop something you really, really need -- and it's boring or so application-specific that there is no existing interest in open-source solutions.
    I take your money, and we both agree to release the end result as open-source, in hopes that once the hard part is done, people might be encouraged to build on that platform and improve it.

    I mean, look at Mozilla. People are getting paid for that -- lots of people. :-)

  175. Re:I've said it before by Bill+Currie · · Score: 1
    Hear hear! While I program for a living, it's not because of the paychecks, but because it's the only job I could tolerate for a long time. I love to program (I do so for over 16h a day:) and so I chose to make it my living. What I found horifying was working with programmers that not only didn't like programming, but often hated computers! And their code showed it :/

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --

    --

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --
    Leave others their otherness. -- Aratak

  176. Re:I've said it before by TheTick21 · · Score: 1

    what a shame it was when the whole porn industry died with the creation of jpegs!

    then: creative impetus, p'shaw!

    So pr0n is the result of creative impetus? Heh.

  177. Depends on your product. by cduffy · · Score: 2

    Read linux-kernel much? I assure you, the maintainers are quite picky about what gets in.

    Or have you spent time at a company doing professional OSS work? Mine is such -- and I assure you, our process is indeed diciplined.

    Individual developers will often produce bad code -- heck, look at the masses of poor-quality freeware available for Windows. However, well-managed OSS projects do tend to produce good code; take a look at many of the FSF's projects and nearly all major perl modules for examples of OSS projects which have and use extensive test suites.

    The key is well-managed. Poorly managed commercial software produces bad code. So does poorly managed OSS. There may be more poorly managed OSS than well-managed stuff -- but if anyone thinks this isn't so elsewhere, they ought to spend a little more time at winfiles.com.

  178. A Usefull link, perhaps. by bflong · · Score: 2

    I could not browse to the 56k stream of the video. I had to guess the location. Here it is. It's the realmedia 56k stream. The video really sux, but you can hear the whole thing and get a few pictures. :) I had to open the realplayer app to use it becouse the plugin just would not work (in Konqueror or Netscape). http://video.cnet.com:80/cnet_news/template/ramgen .cgi?cpcode=674&asset=http://cnetnews.download.aka mai.com/674/t021501_1500lo.rm&start=0&end=314566&x tn=.ram BTW. I'm one of the guys that hacked his system (DL the RP-8 RPM) to to hear the "pro-linux FUD"

    --
    Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
  179. Re:slashdot security problem by Juln · · Score: 1

    Oh! and I'm sure you know every language there is!
    international moron

    --
    Juln
  180. Re:I've said it before by Enry · · Score: 3

    Then how do you explain the programmers paid by VA Linux, Red Hat, SuSE, IBM, etc.?

    Open Source allows innovation to occur at a rapid pace, since even people who may normally be competitors can team up with a common goal - better software.

  181. Nice links by SClitheroe · · Score: 1

    First, you show your bigotry by linking only to the RealMedia content (even though Real is as closed source and proprietary as MS), and then to top it off, the one link you do provide is broken!

    Nice job Slashbots!

  182. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by spood · · Score: 1
    Assuming it even got written, no one would use it because for some applications you need a company backing the product -- uptime, reliability, support. And I doubt that open-source support firms like VA Linux can fill in ALL those gaps.

    Don't forget the most important reason for having a company backing the product - you need to have someone to blame when something goes horribly wrong. I don't know anyone who is willing to take the personal responsibility for writing bad ATC code. I certainly can't afford the insurance, myself.

    --
    ---- Just another spud server.
  183. You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Call me Ishmael, but I never knew that having an uptime of 78 days was was considered as 'stifling innovation'.

    Now, the BSOD is classic innovation. "We don't need to make our OS run, we'll just put this lovely blue screen to tell our users to reboot."

  184. Re:Some Open Source behaviors discourage innovatio by jfunk · · Score: 2
    The big one is cloning. Every time a really good new program idea comes out and someone tries to sell it, a thousand hackers jump on it and clone it, guaranteeing that the originator won't make a dime. Sometimes, the clone is even inferior, but at $0 it's impossible to compete against.


    You're also forgetting that certain quality and innovation can only be carried through in the OS world.

    Look at the PC BIOSes. They all suck hard. Online help that simply lists the options you can choose from? I could have fscking figured that out with with the PgUp/PgDn keys jackass. (I'm talking to Award here)

    Do you really think it will get better? Can you really make money by pouring into R&D and creating a better one? Companies have tried, but I've seen significantly more Award BIOSes these past year than any other. They all suck and you generally have to go out to the web to figure out what BIOS settings will get your computer working properly. That's much easier when your computer *is* working.

    Then they decide to try sticking advertising in your bootup? It thankfully didn't happen, but they were going to. Why not use that space for some plain-fscking <insert your language here>?

    A project like OpenBIOS has much more of a chance of going somewhere interesting, because money is not a factor. Given proper time, it could provide much better, innovative, software.
  185. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1

    No, this rebuttal is not unnessecary. You're making the mistake of assuming that the slashdot community is representative of the world at large. Nothing could be further from the truth. The majority of our population(I'm guessing that this would include our congressmen) are still pretty intimidated by these computer thingies, have no clue about linux, free software, open source, etc. Not everyone else hates Microsoft. Most people don't know how much their software sucks - it's all they've ever used. To them, Microsoft is all these things that they claim to be. Around here "My name is from Microsoft" brings derision and malevolence. To the rest of the world, that commands a lot of respect. They assume these people know what they're talking about. They have lots of money - they must. If we don't issue public rebuttals, they're going to be believed not because their opinions have any merit but because they're the only ones talking. Looks a lot like how they sell Windows, doesn't it?

    --
    Why?
  186. Blame all you want. by Malcontent · · Score: 1

    But nobody has ever sued MS because their software crashed. MS will laugh it's head off if you try to hold them accountable for anything. Any CIO or CEO who actually is under the delusion that MS can be held liable for anything is dumber then Dubya and Allchin combined.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  187. Let's not reward childish behavior by Chuck+Flynn · · Score: 4

    Allchin is a lunatic. It doesn't take any intelligence or balls to rebut a lunatic. It takes no originalty to take something that no one agrees with, hold it up to scrutiny, and announce that you yourself also disagree with it. It's like ridiculing the mentally handicapped. It lacks all tact and propriety.

    Stop giving Allchin his soapbox. Let Allchin's ludicrous statements fall on deaf ears. Everyone knows that Microsoft is dead in the water in three years, and everyone knows that Linux and the open-source movement will replace them. These things are beyond refutation, so stop pretending you're so innovative for pointing them out.

    When a company like Microsoft makes such ridiculous comments, just ignore them. Let the press decide to report on them however they want; don't sully your own reputation by stooping to Allchin's level. The truth will out, as it has been shown throughout history. Passive resistance is a far more powerful tool than vocal outrage. Just ask Gandhi.

    In short, this "rebuttal" was unnecessary. I hope it's the last of its kind we'll be subjected to.

    1. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2

      That's a good example, actually. And is there any pressing reason for the ATC software to be closed source? I would say no, and in a more enlightened world the FAA would require that the software be open-source. Yet even open source ATC software would be funded in a big way by corporations, since they _need_ it and, as you astutely observe, they wouldn't want to wait for it to form naturally on the web.

      What's the result? Open source programs, programmers getting paid.

      I love it.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:Let's not reward childish behavior by sheldon · · Score: 2

      I'd like to see you actually argue against Allchin's point by using facts or at least opinions.

      Instead you resort to ad hominem.

  188. Re:Some Open Source behaviors discourage innovatio by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1

    The big one is cloning. Every time a really good new program idea comes out and someone tries to sell it, a thousand hackers jump on it and clone it, guaranteeing that the originator won't make a dime. Sometimes, the clone is even inferior, but at $0 it's impossible to compete against. Oh, you mean kinda like what Microsoft did to Netscape with explorer?

    --
    Why?
  189. OT: Windows Media Player vs. Real Player by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 2

    "It's in Windows Media or Real media."

    Hmmm. Okay, this is annoying. There's a link to RealPlayer media, but no link to Windows Media Player.

    I'm running Windows 2000 here, my Linux box is in the other room, and my FreeBSD machine is in the kitchen.

    One of the few benefits of using an odious operating system like Windows is that I have the choice between Windows Media Player and RealPlayer.

    Of course, because of Real's tendencies to change default file associations and "help" you out in other ways, it's one of those rare and special things that sucks harder than Windows 95 Upgrade Edition.

    Across the LAN that I administer at work, I've banned the installation of RealPlayer. For one thing, when it's installed, it takes over some electronics CAD files.

    Until Real stops putting out spyware that changes all Windows file associations, they'll stay off my LAN. Windows Media Player really is the lesser of two evils.

    Anyone know of a port to Linux?

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
  190. Red Hat will be around. by Bun · · Score: 1
    Sheldon asked:
    At RedHat and VA Linux's burn rate of investment capital... Will they still be in existence in 3 years?
    I don't know about VA, but according to RedHat their analysts predict profitability by 2002, and a 5 year growth rate of 50%. Their future sounds pretty good to me.
    --
    "Anyone that has ever gotten an idea based on any of my work and done something better with it-good for you."--J.Carmack
  191. Re:You want Innovation? How about a 78 day uptime by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    Yes it is innovation, have you seen a GUI based OS with an uptime of 78 days? I didn't think so.

    Also my NT 4 Server have been running for more than 109 days now

  192. Today's User Friendly ;) by abischof · · Score: 3

    I found today's User Friendly on the subject to be particularly appropriate :).

    Alex Bischoff
    ---

    --

    Alex Bischoff
    HTML/CSS coder for hire

  193. And we all know that... by pastie · · Score: 1

    Jim isn't going to be able to do anything about the `threat' because he's all chin and no trousers.

    ;)

  194. Of course Allchin is a lunatic! by sl3xd · · Score: 1

    Of course Allchin is a looney - he thinks that Windows is the best OS available. You gotta be a loon to honestly believe that!

    And in the same scentence gives a tacit nod to Linux's quality by saying that Microsoft "can" build a better operating system... not that they have done, plan to, or will.

    --
    -- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
  195. Here is the best way to do this. by Malcontent · · Score: 1

    Start bribes (er contributions) MS makes. Then track the votes of those politicians. Create a web site for all to see. Then when the corrupt politicans introduces the bill to make open source illegal you can nail him with data. Whoever is running against him or her would love the ammunition.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  196. A new niche need by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    voice recognition to convert streaming audio into streaming text for the sound card impaired drones

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  197. Re:I've said it before by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    So Congress should be looking into regulating open source? Do you really want them to waste taxpayer dollars on such a such a monumentally stupid inquiry that would accomplish nothing at best and at worst would seriously limit consumer choice and freedom? Wait...how would that be any different than what they normally do? Anyway, Microsoft has no room to speak wrt stifling 'innovation', and they won't until they come out with a product that is actually innovative and not a rip-off of an OS or design that predates their stuff by several years.

  198. Getting worse and worse... by TheDullBlade · · Score: 1

    Oh, you mean kinda like what Microsoft did to Netscape with explorer?

    Yeah like I talked about in the second fscking paragraph!

    You know, the one that starts with "Don't get me wrong...", as you just did...
    ---

    --
    /.
  199. Open source development model and innovation? by einhverfr · · Score: 1
    As part of a debate:
    The hallmark of the open source philosophy is that there be a group, or bazaar, of developers who all work at a project as they see fit.

    No. There's nothing at all about open source or free software processes that dictates such a model.

    Hmmm.... I think that the latter point of view is a valid point, and I certainly think that this is how quality projects are administrated and initially written. However, once it is initally released, the software can be easily developed by anyone who can submit their work back to the team that owns the project. In this way bugfixes can become quickly available, new features can be quickly, if unofficially added, etc. So in the end I think that the bazaar analogy fits.

    What this means is that with well coordinated projects (Linux, Apache, Emacs, Wine...) innovation is made at a pace which is far above what can be obtained in a proprietary setting.

    Another way that OSS encourages innovation, quite frankly, is by emphasizing programming style and readability. The source might as well be unavailable if it is not in a readable format.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  200. Re:I love it! by alprazolam · · Score: 1

    nobody cares that you don't care. if you don't care, don't post.