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Apple Threatens Open Source Theme Project

cloudscout writes "Macworld UK is reporting that Apple is threatening the Mac Themes Project for creating a theme editor. Apple accuses them of contributing to trademark infringement by enabling people to copy Apple's graphics. They've issued a cease-and-desist order insisting that MTP remove their theme editor from all webservers under their control, "including any hyperlink to other locations where the material may be available". They're even trying to invoke a shaky clause in their OS licenses which prohibit reverse-engineering the operating system since the theme editor utilizes unpublished specs. Apple is famous for its unfriendly attitude toward developers and tech media, but this is just ridiculous. How could they possibly suffer any damage by MTP's efforts? " I'm seriously disappointed to see this. Apple's lawyers are their own worst enemy: they've tried so hard to make Darwin open and gain acceptance, and then to pull crap like this. Its just so dumb I don't know how to respond.

141 of 414 comments (clear)

  1. Re:For their own by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    It was written for 8.5, and was included in most of the early betas of the OS. It was removed due to a decision by Apple's management at the last minute. This was probably an aesthetic decision, not a technical one. They probably wanted a "consistent look and feel" accross their platform. This is probably the same reason there are so few customization options in X.

    I think it's highly unlikely that they're planning their own theme editor. The Theme feature is dead, and since 9.1 is likely the last version of classic Mac OS ever, I don't see any way they'd re-introduce it in the future. Even if they theme OS X, it'll likely be a completely different format.

    So I have no idea what Apple's motivation is. They probably just want to kill off the theme feature to make tech support and stuff easier. But if that's true, then they would have disabled the theming feature in OS 9, which they did not do. So I don't understand this decision either.

  2. Re:Double Barrel by Alan · · Score: 2

    Not only boost the popularity of the project itself, but boost the number of people lashing out at apple itself (ie: my email to my fellow geeks at work entitled "why apple is dumb" and referencing this).

    Of course, they wouldn't get the negative PR if they didn't do such incrediably-fscking-stupid things!

    Geeks are prone to lash back at things they object to, sometimese rightly, and sometimes wrongly (insert reference to the linux advocacy howto here). However, I think that in this case we are completely right to lash out at apple, or their lawyers, as they are finishing off with their own feet and turning the shotgun around to point at their own heads.

  3. Re:Double Barrel by Alan · · Score: 2

    We have a geek mailing list at work, and while I wouldn't say "essay" I would say "minor rant" :)

    I'm not crazy!

    I'm not crazy!

  4. Re:What is it good for? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

    I'm not trying to see guns get banned. But that *particular* argument doesn't work very well. There are better ones. I don't want to see the very valid complaint against Apple here get painted with the same brush as the gun lobby's arguments, because that will cause too many people to just throw it out. The primary purpose of a handgun is to be a weapon. They weren't invented for the sake of target practice or picking off squirrels. Those uses came to be later on. Let's not try to pretend that's not the case. Sure, you can use just about anything you want as an improvised weapon. You can run someone over with a car, you can whack someone with a wrench, but those are tools who's dangerous power is totally incedental to their primary reason to exist. Stick to the *good* arguments for gun ownership, like the fact that the government can run rampant when citizens are weak and powerless, or the fact that dependancy on the police doesn't work since they won't arrive until the deed is done, or the fact that it isn't even possible to take the criminal's guns away anyway, and the war on guns would be about as effective as the war on drugs has been (nil).

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  5. Re:What is it good for? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2
    Threat of use isn't the same as actual use. So I say that "using" a gun for self-defense doesn't count unless the gun got fired. That 99% figure is arrived at by the sneaky trick of counting times that the POTENTIAL to use the gun scared someone off. By that metric, The US had used thousands of nuclear missles agaisnt the USSR. Granted, none of them were actually fired, but hey, they were a deterrant, therefore they were "used".

    It's a silly argument, and it's detrimental to bring it up when there are far better arguments for keeping gun ownership legal, like keeping the government honest.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  6. Re:What is it good for? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

    I'm perfectly willing to say that guns not fired were "used" in self defence if you are willing to say that the US used its nukes against the USSR.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  7. Re:Huh? well that's just great... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 3
    wrench: primary purpose - turning nuts.
    screwdriver: primary purpose - turning screws.
    theme editor: primary purpose - making own themes.
    gun: primary purpose - throwing a bullet at dangerous speed through the air.

    See the difference?

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  8. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by hawk · · Score: 2
    and see

    Inventing the Lisa Interface to see that the Lisa GUI predates contact with PARC.


    in fact, it' has all kinds of cool stuff about Lisa.


    hawk, one of about 6 /. readers who understand that Xerox is not the sole inventor of the GUI

  9. Re:BBWC by hawk · · Score: 2
    No, he certainly wouldn't produce that. But I bet I'd love to have one of what he *did* produce given a chance . . .


    hawk

  10. Re:They weren't trying for OSS acceptance. by hawk · · Score: 2
    >I always thought that Apple had to release their kernel source in some form


    Nope. No obligation at all. The simple fact of the matter is that, under certain circumstances, it makes economic sense for a corporation to use an open source model for the "generic" portions of their product--development and maintenance costs may simply be less than the market opportunities sacrificed. In other words, Apple's and IBM's open source activities are driven by economics, not ideology.


    I'm working on a paper on this right now, hopefully available in the late summer or fall.


    o.b. gratuitious plug: grad students in economics with a background in the public goods literature may feel free to contact me about co-authoring the paper :)


    hawk

  11. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by hawk · · Score: 2
    I'm not trying to downplay Xerox's actions; they certainly developed a GUI on their own. I'm only trynig to point out that there was independent work by Apple on the Lisa GUI, including screen mockups, that predate exposure to the Star. Popular mythology has the Lisa and Mac as rip-offs of the sar. Their ultimate form was certainly heavily influenced by it, but Lisa started on its own.


    while I'm at it, a lot of it predates the Star--to a significant extent, Lisa and Mac were implementations of Raskin's master's thesis from the 60's . . .
    i


    hawk

  12. Re:dink thifferent by Ryano · · Score: 2

    "avi tevanian: hey steve, look! some guys are doing kaleidoscope for os X!"

    You paint a convincing scene, but I should point out that the Mac Themes project has nothing to do with OS X: it's about theming OS 8.5 and its descendents through the Appearance Manager. Here's what they say about OS X support on their web site:

    This document is not currently ready for publication. At a later date, we will be posting all of the information we know about using themes in Mac OS X, as well as updates about our development tools. Please check back at a later date, expecially once OS X final is released, information will be posted here frequently.
  13. Re:Why are people so surprised? by docwhat · · Score: 2

    They are not selling the dev tools with every version of Mac OS X. Just this "sort of beta version" that they reciently released.

    --
    The Doctor What (KF6VNC)
  14. Re:Why are people so surprised? by docwhat · · Score: 2

    Let's try rephrasing this:

    This version of MacOSX will come with dev tools. It's is "quasi-beta" which means it's MS-quality release code (*snicker*).

    Future versions/releases will *not* come with the dev tools CD.

    Yeah, some will always be available at the website, but not everything you got with this version.

    Ciao!

    --
    The Doctor What (KF6VNC)
  15. Why did they fund MKLinux? by MushMouth · · Score: 2

    Why did they fund MkLinux in 95 or 96? Long before funding open source projects created any hype. Corperations exist to make profits, by the law of the land (If they don't maximize profits, then shareholders can sue them for fucking up.) Apple believes that funding open source helps their bottom line. any corperation that funds open source projects can only do so if they believe it will help their bottom line. Apple seemed to "Get it" years ago, long before Linux was on the radar of hype. I am guessing that you where still watching the Smurfs in 95 so you are excused for being so ignorant of the facts. Anyway this seems to be a trademark case, and those are somewhat scary, as Trademarks are required to be defended, or else they can be lost. That facts should be more clear before accusations are bandied about.

    1. Re:Why did they fund MKLinux? by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      Why did they fund MkLinux in 95 or 96?
      That was before Jobs returned, was it not? At that time they were also interested in fostering a clone market, i.e. more open hardware. As soon as Jobs got back at the helm he shut Apple up tight.
      Anyway this seems to be a trademark case, and those are somewhat scary, as Trademarks are required to be defended, or else they can be lost.
      It ain't that cut and dried. First of all Apple wouldn't really have to defend this if it were a trademark issue because there is no way they will lose it to genericity (which is what they are required to defend against) as that requires that a majority of the public treat the trademark as generic. See this excellent summary of trademark law for details. But that's irrelevant because they aren't talking about trademarks they are talking about copyright. The story poster got confused. The big clue is the mention of contributory infringement. There is not contributory infringement of trademarks (AFAIK, IANAL); only copyrights.

      Now, to the case in hand. Apple aren't accusing these people of direct infringement (i.e. copying their copyrighted material), they are accusing them of contributory infringement. They are saying that the theme editor allows others to infringe. This is essentially the same thing Napster is charged with. Here is an article hosted by the EFF that discusses contributory infringement. It focuses on the case of peer-to-peer applications, but is well worth a look.

      I don't know much about Apple's themeing system but it seems that they are saying that using the theme editor involves copying proprietary Apple copyrighted code and/or images. That may well be true, and if so then Apple appear to have a case. But either way this is not an action that is justifiable but pointing to trademark law and waving hands. They are going after someone based on the idea that their code is closed and they want to make sure you have to pay to use it. That is quite at odds with their stance wrt Darwin where they clearly want to use "Open Source" as an advantage to them (either directly with code contributions or at least by taking advantage of the buzz word).

    2. Re:Why did they fund MKLinux? by Tech187 · · Score: 2

      They funded MkLinux because they wanted to take away the motivation for hackers to reverse engineer their hardware.

      The last thing Apple Computer wanted was the details of their proprietary hardware to reside in an arch directory of the Linux kernel source. So they released a half-assed psuedo-Linux version.
      This dumped water on anybody's motivation to figure out how to implement Linux on Apple hardware.

      Because of it, nobody ever ripped into the proprietary boot code in the older Macs and revealed the secrets. Thus to run NetBSD on an older Mac, you've got to have a runty little MacOS partition and a bootloader that's a MacOS binary.

      It's obvious to anybody who thinks about it for more than a few moments that Apple was anything but benevolent in releasing MkLinux.

  16. Re:Hold it... by MushMouth · · Score: 2

    I guess you can't read either. This is a TRADEMARK case, TRADEMARKS are required to be defended (Xerox, Photocopy), PATENTS are not.

  17. Re:feed the troll by morven2 · · Score: 2

    There are several charges Apple's lawyers are alleging, and they're quite different.

    The one about infringing the Lanham act sounds pretty bogus to me. The theme editor in question is no more responsible for a trademark infringement a user of it may choose to commit than a camera manufacturer is if I choose to take photographs of someone's trademarked logo and use it myself. There is to my knowledge no history of camera firms, photocopier manufacturers etc. being held partly responsible for trademark infringement using their products.

    Copyright infringement is a very grey area around things like this -- sometimes the makers of tools that can be used to circumvent copyright are liable, sometimes not. However, the theme editor is capable of substantial noninfringing use, which strengthens its case.

    The final argument is that, because the API for doing things like this is not documented anywhere, the only way the writers of this tool could have found out how to do it is by reverse engineering Apple's OS, which is prohibited by their click-thru license.

    It's a possible infringement, but it would be an uphill task for Apple to prove. Firstly, the authors could have discovered the API through other means. If Apple have told ANYONE about them, then it could have been disclosed through that third party. If, say, Apple told a third party software developer how to do these things, and THEIR license agreement didn't have a 'don't reverse engineer' clause, then the theme editor programmers are in the clear.

    Then there's the problem of proving in court that the authors of the editor actually agreed to that click-thru agreement. If they got their hands on the Apple OS second-hand, for example. Sure, the license probably says that if you sell the software, you have to make the buyer agree to the license first -- but what if someone didn't do that? They are liable, not the editor writers.

    Then there's the issue as to whether the agreement had any legal binding whatsoever in the first place. The legality of click-thru licenses is somewhat suspect in most states.

    Apple have something of a case, but in a fair trial they have no guarantee of victory. It's probably not a risk they want to take -- if I were Apple, I wouldn't want this to go to court. What if I got found against?

    Apple are, I'm sure, hoping the editor guys fold before trial because they can't afford to defend themselves.

    All the above is ignoring whether it's smart of Apple to do this. From a PR point of view it's a disaster -- Apple really can't afford to be alienating people who'd care about this. The people this hurts are the Apple evangelists and diehard users who are a large part of what keeps the company going.

    I would guess that the PR angle was overridden by Apple's fear that, unless they're hyper vigilant, their interface is going to get stolen out from under them. Not by people playing with themes, but by a big player -- Microsoft, or someone else big -- who will use any failure by Apple to enforce their rights in order to get away with cloning the Apple interface.

  18. This is an outrage! by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2
    And I'm going to respond by refusing to buy any Apple products --

    Oh wait, I've been boycotting Apple ever since they killed the Apple IIgs in order to promote an underpowered piece of crap without sound or even color graphics called... was it 'Granny Smith' or 'Macintosh' or something?

    Well, whatever. I'm really mad now.

    --

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  19. Re:Whatever by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 2

    I can't understand how 'Rip, Mix, Burn' doesn't violate any copyright laws

    Maybe you've forgotten because of all the propaganda surrounding the napster case and the RIAA, but there is a legal doctrine called "fair use". If you own a CD, it is within your legal rights to rip a few tracks from that disc and burn them onto a mix CD. It's no different from making mix tapes to listen to in a car without a CD player. As long as you're ripping from CDs you own, it's legal. Don't listen to the RIAA's 'all copying is piracy' line. They're full of sh*t.

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
  20. Re:If someone knows where to d/l this then... by Lysol · · Score: 2

    http://sourceforge.net/projects/macthemes/

    it was in the original story post.

  21. Re:FSF vs. "Open Source" by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

    It's obvious you've not bothered to read anything Stallman says or you wouldn't say that.

  22. I'm reminded of the old joke... by dejaffa · · Score: 3

    A fish and game warden comes upon a woman sitting along the river with a rod and reel.

    He accuses her of fishing without a license, because she has the equipment.

    She promptly accuses him of rape.

    He's flabbergasted -- he's not even touched the woman.

    The reply: "But you have the equipment."

    Simply making a tool that people could use to violate Apple's trademarks/copyrights/IP and that has other uses is a reasonable thing to do, and, if Apple were reasonable, would not be a problem any more than IE, which allows you to copy Apple's graphics from their website and do with them what you will. I do notice that Apple's not suing Microsoft...

    Dejaffa

    --
    There is no 'i' in team, but there is in fiasco...
  23. Re:It the law people by rhavyn · · Score: 2

    But in this case, their trademark isn't being infringed. They are attacking this software because it "enables trademark infringment". Not because this project is distributing (or even using, I didn't see one Apple or Mac logo on thier site ... not that I looked that hard) but that someone, somewhere might use this software and distribute a trademarked logo.

    Furthermore, they are going after them for reverse engineering because they used OS hooks that aren't published.

    This isn't a trademark case, this is an instance of a company trying to maintain complete control of it's software. It's a lot more like the MPAA and DeCSS then it is making themes.org take down themes that really did have the Apple logo on them (that was an honest trademark case).

  24. Double Standards and Hypocrisy by scav · · Score: 2

    When Apple's advertise on television and other means their iTunes software with "Rip, Mix, Burn", are they not contributing to copyright infringement by enabling people to pirate copyrighted music and other audio? How do you think they would feel if the RIAA issued a cease and desist order on them for this...If someone from Apple is reading this, tell the hierarchy to concentrate on the real "pirates"...

  25. Re:Sounds like MS is just as insane! by kaisyain · · Score: 2

    MS has the single best developer support program of any software company in existence.

  26. Re:they are trying to be profitable. by HiThere · · Score: 2

    For what purpose?
    Philosophy, ***, I removed Windows from my home computer because of license and security issues. It's true, I'd prefer a better word processor (wait a few months), but that's not enough reason to expose myself. Not with UCITA and DMCA roaming around.

    As for Apple. I was interested, now I'm not. I still advise total newbies to go with the Mac, but if Linux gets better, and Apple continues to alienate me, perhaps I'll be willing to give enough support just so that I won't need to recommend them.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  27. Re:Double Barrel by HiThere · · Score: 2

    But they were good enough to earn 10% of the market. I don't think they have that much advantage anymore. They're retreating to the same niche that Amiga retreated to.

    The problem is, the graphic arts aren't that different from every other market. They demand slickness, and they pay a high margin, so if you have a slick enough product, you can retreat there for awhile. But they aren't a large enough niche to maintain a company. So you better have some strategy that will let you move out quickly. Or else you fade into the past as a reverred memory.

    I think that the Mac has a potential way out based on System/X, Darwin, etc. But if they alienate the folk that they need as supporters, it won't work. And this last move has made friends with very few.

    They may see it as protecting their short term profits. I see it as dynamiting their life-support system.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  28. Re:Huh? by HiThere · · Score: 2

    Probably. This kind of action causes me to despise both the company involved and the legal profession in general.

    Just remember, over 90% (95%? 99%? I don't keep track.) of legislators are lawyers. So the legal profession as a group is directly responsible for the mess that we are in, as well as directly benefiting.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  29. Re:Huh? by HiThere · · Score: 2

    You left out the qualifier....

    If you have enough money and time to defend yourself in multiple court actions and appeals.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  30. Re:Open (Market|Architecture) vs. Closed by HiThere · · Score: 5

    Linux may have been developed for the PC computer, created by IBM, MS, and the Federal Justice department, but before then the S-100 bus systems were considerably more open.

    MS was subsidized by IBM because the government was attempting to destroy IBM's monopoly over computer hardware. So IBM found so.meone else to create a PC OS for them.

    Competition? MS lived on indirect government subsidy almost from the beginning! And the "openness" of the PC was because when MSDOS split from PCDOS, MS needed someone to manufacture the hardware. Even with the subsidy they were too small, and IBM didn't dare compete directly (and didn't think it too important, and didn't want to cannibalize their mainframe business). So Compaq and Zenith and Packard and Bell etc. got into the hardware business with the MSDOS operating system. And since IBM had the dominant position, most of the new 16 bit programs were written to run on the PC, and MS new the internals of PCDOS, so they used inside knowledge in creating MSDOS so that the same programs would run on them.

    Fair competition. Yeah! Maybe once, but the more I look, the more it looks like a myth. Insiders making sharp deals is more like it, and certainly much more common, no matter what the laws say.
    (Or so it seems to me.)


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  31. Re:I am the recipient of the cease and desist orde by weston · · Score: 2

    What does it say about slashdot moderators that this comment -- straight from the mouth of a member of the team working on the project, and the guy who actually got the cease and desist -- is moderated to a "3" and random rants against what a stupid decision apple made are up at "5"?

    Granted, it's a stupid decision by Apple. But how much obsessing about it do we need? Especially more than this?

    --

  32. Isn't this the OPPOSITE of Trademark infringment? by weston · · Score: 3

    If you can create your own themes, isn't this the opposite of trademark infringement? After all, this means you're replaceing the Apple trademarked graphics with something else. Something else you or someone else homebrewed.

    There's only two reasons I can think Apple be upset about this.

    1) Fear of having their interface diluted. They don't want the MacOS associated with joe phearsum's 1337-7h3m3. Or maybe even joe graphic designer's luscious theme. It's worse if they throw in apple graphics.

    2) They feel like they're legally bound to defend trademarks.

    Of course, given the fact that most of their customers are fairly loyal, asking people nicely not to use apple graphics in their own themes would probably work....

    'course, now that they've lost goodwill....

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  33. Re:Huh? by sharkey · · Score: 2

    Actually, gun manufacturers are up next. Mostly, it's gun dealers that get sued. Not the ones selling stolen guns out of their trunks, (boots for our European readers), but the licensed and legal dealers selling to law-abiding citizens. Colt has stopped selling to non-government customers to try and avoid their turn on the freedom rapers hit list. Remember, this is America, where going after criminals is too hard. Going after the tool-maker is easier, since they aren't running and hiding.

    --

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  34. Re:Do you think they'll sue me for copying the iMa by sharkey · · Score: 5

    Just don't bolt a handle from an old car door to the top of it, then glue all your mouse buttons together to form one "super" button.

    --

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  35. Re:come on by TWR · · Score: 2
    Well, we all know Compaq reverse engineered the first PC clones, and that was legal. Microsoft created J++ in a clean room environment which was legal reverse engineering.

    First of all, Compaq could reverse engineer because they had the reverse engineering done by people who never agreed to the licence agreement. The ones who were "polluted" (wrote the spec based on the copywritten BOIS) couldn't reverse engineer.

    Secondly, MS did NOT reverse engineer J++. They licenced Java from Sun, and then willfully tried to get around the licence and refused to implement parts of the Java spec. Sun doesn't care if you provide additional non-Sun APIs to work with Java, even ones that interact with native code (Apple has developed many over time with nary a lawsuit). Sun did care that MS violated a licence agreement.

    -jon

    --

    Remember Amalek.

  36. Re:For their own by TWR · · Score: 3
    You have to wonder why apple wrote in their theme system at all... it has been there for a long time and they have never made any use of it.

    Apple put the Theme system in back in 1994 or 1995. It was part of Copland and their idea of a scalable user interface. There were three Themes shown: Platinum, Gizmo, and High Tech. Apple even hired one of the guys who works on Kaleidiscope (a third-party Theme switcher for the Mac).

    When Steve Jobs came back to Apple, he killed Themes. The official reason was that it made tech support too hard: people would call up and it was impossible to know what and where widgets would be on their screen.

    Personally, I think it was just Jobs' control-freak personality showing through. The Apple engineers implemented Aqua as a Theme in OS X (in older versions of Mac OS X, you could remove the Aqua Theme files and you get a Platinum look and feel. I don't know if this still works.), so there's some support for the concept inside the company. It's just crazy Steve Jobs again...

    The bigger question is if Apple is going to try to squish any shareware developer who writes UI widgets to fix the awful problems in Mac OS X. Aqua is pretty enough, but there is such a huge usability problem with OS X, I find my WinNT box at work easier to use than OS X at home. I've been booting back into OS 9 and realizing how _simple_ and _fast_ everything used to be...

    -jon

    --

    Remember Amalek.

  37. not so fast by Scudsucker · · Score: 2

    This theme editor stuff sounds pretty lame, but to make a rebuttal to the rest of your post:

    First, they promised this OS for years, and have finally delivered a product that requires a person to upgrade for $100 to OS 9.something in order to run their "Classic" applications, then spend $100 on the new OS.

    OS 9.1 (what you need to run classic apps) is included in the OS X box. You don't need to purchase it seperatly.

    Not to mention that the average Apple sold in the last few years is a DIMM or two short of the requisite 128mb of RAM.

    If you select the cheap option, sure. Other OEM's do the same thing.

    I priced upgrading my Rev. A iMac a week or two ago because of how everyone on Slashdot raves about OS X. I'm looking at probably $500 in software and memory just to make sure I don't lose a lot more than I gain.

    Only if you pay Apple's exorborant markups for memory. Just walk over to pricewatch, buy a 256 meg stick of PC100 for $45, slap it in your iMac and go nuts.

    o apparently "Think Different" doesn't mean "Different" except in terms of "Make sure different people have the money in your wallet". For $500 I can buy a whole new Wintel box

    Or you could do a couple seconds worth of research on Apple's products and shop around for a better deal on add-on hardware. But then you'd miss out on all the cheap karma from the Apple-hating moderators on Slashdot.

  38. Re:You mean like .... Steve Jobs? by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 2
    Oh god, this is turning into "HAL stands for Hardware Abstraction Layer" all over again.

    --

  39. If Apple Were a Person . . . by Badgerman · · Score: 5
    Let's analyze Apple as if the were a person, not a company.

    • They are unfriendly towards the people they depend on (programmers, etc.)
    • They are very reserved and secretive (there's a reason the PC s dominant over the Mac).
    • They are prone to lash out bizarrely (as witnessed here).
    • They invoke shaky claims to justify their behavior.
    • They are prone to grandiose statements.


    If Apple were a person, I'd think of them as a creative individual with schizophrenic tendancies marked with delusions of grandeur and persecution and a possible self-destructive urge.

    Certainly lashing out at the Themes editor is crazy . . .
    --
    "The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
    1. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2

      So if Apple were a person, he or she would be a prominent poster on Slashdot?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    2. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

      Damn, where are moderation points when you need them ;)

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    3. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by Datafage · · Score: 2
      Yeah, 'cause Lord knows Xerox didn't have anything to do with it...

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

      --

      Nicotine free Amish .sig.

    4. Re:If Apple Were a Person . . . by zaytar · · Score: 5


      In other words - Steve Jobs ?

      --
      /* ICBM Coordinates 32.78N, 79.93W */
  40. So.. let me get this straight. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    Due to licensing of the OS, nobody anywhere is allowed to ever write anything for MacOS using anything but the API's Apple publishes? Yeah.. like that'll stick. That's worse than Microsoft!

    What.. are they jealous because they didn't include a theme editor?

    This is what will kill OS-X. I said over and over again to friends, OS-X is cool, I think it's *really* cool, but I just have this feeling Apple will fuck it up.
    Looks like they're on their way.

  41. Re:come on by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    How is 'copying a grapic file' reverse engineering?
    I'm sorry... talking about the power of your OS, then forbidding anyone to develop for it without purchasing a developer kit & license is rediculous. What this effectively means is that if you 'figure out' how to do anything not documented, you can't share it with anyone, as you reverse engineered it.

    So much for apple.

  42. Mod this up by Argyle · · Score: 2

    Informative IMHO
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    nuclear iraq bioweapon encryption cocaine korea terrorist
  43. Re:Apple, Apple... by Pengo · · Score: 5


    Your right, there are probably more KDE and GNOME users than OSX users out there, but if you have used OSX you would realize that they are two completely different worlds of usability.

    Though technically KDE and Gnome did bring A desktop to UNIX, I have a rough time comparing a window manager/development framework to a true desktop computing environment.

    I have been using OSX for about 5 weeks for development and administration. I don't even turn on my x86 box anymore. With the headstart that OSX already has on KDE/Gnome and the speed that it's moving.. I have a hard time believing that even KDE will catch up to it.

    the problem isn't KDE but the fragmentation of the linux community. The only chance that KDE maybe has to Linux Standards project. Until then I am still fighting with not only administrating our servers but my own workstation, no thanks. OSX is here to stay for me.



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    Would you like a Python based alternative to PHP/ASP/JSP?

  44. Re:Incorrect - 96M is not good by victim · · Score: 2

    I upgraded my rev A iMacs, but it is not good.
    Even without classic it swaps it brains out with 96M of memory. Well, its ok until you start running applications, I assume you wanted to run something rather than just look at the dock.

    Be very careful getting upgrade memory for your iMac rev A. The RAM vendors have forgetten these machines and "works in non-slotloading iMacs" does NOT mean rev A. revA has the little key tab in a different spot on the SODIMM. I'm still looking for a big revA SODIMM. (And returning very nice but incompatible RAM.)

  45. So what? by Shotgun · · Score: 2

    Michael Angelo, Picasso and all those other painters sued Italian paintbrush makers in their day.

    "How can an artist expect to make a living when our paintings and styles are so easily copied by these young upstarts? Everyone who is able to afford a brush considers himself and artist," one notable but whiney famous artist was quoted as saying in a poor rendition of an Italian accent.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  46. Minor corrections by Valdrax · · Score: 2

    None of Aqua is based on Adobe's software anymore. The primary motivation for moving from Display PS to Aqua's PDF-based system was to completely avoid licensing fees from Adobe. These fees were one reason that NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP were so expensive. PDF, however, is an open format.

    Also, rewriting a GUI for Darwin would be pointless, since the Aqua GUI and the Carbon & Cocoa APIs are foundation of every reason to buy Mac OS X. They define the user experience. Using Darwin on it's own just gets you a version of BSD/Mach with a weird filesystem layout and native support for HFS & HFS+ volumes.

    Also, the "theming engine" referred to is simply the Appearance Manager. It was originally intended to support multiple Mac OS interfaces, but Jobs ironically decided that allowing users to drastically change the interface would be confusing. (Poor, poor Kaleidoscope users. They must be so confused.) This product is simply a tool to create native Mac OS 8.1+ themes for use in the Appearance manager. I don't really understand what Apple's problem is with it.

    Otherwise, your points are all valid, especially the point about jumping up and down and shouting at Apple.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Minor corrections by Golias · · Score: 2
      Mostly pretty good points, except:

      Also, rewriting a GUI for Darwin would be pointless

      There are an awful lot of Darwin hackers out there that would disagree with you on that point.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  47. Re:The "G4 Fiasco" by Valdrax · · Score: 2

    You don't honestly think the clone market was doing anything other than cannibalizing the Mac market, do you? Most post-mortem analyses of the Mac clone market I've seen point to less than 10% of clones being purchased by people who had never owned a Mac before. Of course, it wasn't long after Apple killed the clone market, including Motorola's own line of clones, that Motorola began phasing out Macs in use in their own business.

    If you read Motorola's website, it's quite clear that they don't care about the desktop market at all. All their documentation and marketing for PowerPC processors (which is all tucked away from their main products) advocates their use in embedded systems. You'll find nary a mention of Apple as a successful customer. The fact is that Motorla doesn't give a damn about Apple.

    As much as I like the technical merits of PowerPC processor family, I've been pushed over the past year into the firm belief that Apple should once again make the move to a different processor family or to begin designing a strategy that can continue to fund OS development without depending on hardware sales. I'm convinced that the failed AIM alliance is nothing but an albatross around Apple's neck. Maybe if Exponential's technology hadn't have been inferior to the PPC 750, we'd have a company dedicated to the Mac for survival right now that could keep Apple going.

    In the end, the G4 fiasco was a sign that Apple has tied its destiny to the whims of two companies who are content to let them die. Motorola will fiddle while Cupertino burns, and that great titan IBM, will simply shrug.

    (Is that enough pointless and melodramatic literary references for you all? <g>)

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  48. Re:The "G4 Fiasco" by Valdrax · · Score: 2
    Three things: first the Mac clone market was in it's infancy and less than two years old (my memory may be off on this, I haven't checked) so it's natural that it would be Apple's market share that initially suffered. I bet IBM had the same experience in the early days of the PC market.
    Look how well that worked for IBM's PC business. They're basically a marginal player in the market they created. The OS that operated those machines, MS-DOS, was independent financially from the success of the original hardware maker's sales. This is not the case for the Macintosh.
    Second that 10% of clone buyers being new buyers is more than Apple managed up till the iMac was released.
    That was a conservative figure since I couldn't remember the exact statistics. The basic fact is that those machines weren't making nearly as much money for Apple in Mac OS and Mac ROM sales as they were costing in lost Apple machine sales.
    Thirdly, there is no guarentee that those Mac owners who bought clones would have bought from Apple if the clones hadn't been available. Every time there a story here about OS X or Apple a whole bunch of people complain about the cost of Apple hardware.
    Maybe they wouldn't have that financial quarter or the next, but this was in the heyday of the transition of users from m68k to PPC machines. If they wouldn't have bought from Apple then, they would have either bought from Apple in the future, or they would've moved to the Wintel platform. We can't really estimate if the clones significantly staved off movement to Wintel, unfortunately. In the end, though, I believe that the clones were a financially suicidal move for Apple. The damage done by the ending of clones was far less than clones would've done if they had continued. I know that my dream machine in the day was not an Apple machine, it was a Daystar MP machine.
    Of course they don't now. Apple screwed them. First Apple dragged their feet over CHRP, then they dragged their feet over PPCP, and then they killed off any opportunity for Mototrola to sell the processors to anyone but Apple. Why should Motorola care? The documentation used to be there. IIRC, you could even get a reference motherboard layout from either IBM or Motorola. They were both committed to AIM, it was Apple who weren't.
    Well, CHRP & PPCP were all part of the clone days, when they predicted you would no longer need an Apple Toolbox ROM to run the Mac OS in the future. If Apple had made that move, there would've been no ending the clone fiasco. You do have a good point, though, that IBM and Motorola were backing PREP/CHRP/PPCP pretty well until Apple yanked the carpet out from under them. Perhaps I've been forgetting Apple's role in the slow dissolution of AIM. Moves that seemed necessary at the time may have hurt them in the long term.
    As for Exponential, well Apple killed them so they've no one to blaim but themselves for that.
    Well, Exponential killed themselves too. Their processor was hotter, drew more power, was more expensive, and was slightly slower than the PPC 750. It was a no-brainer which chip Apple should've gone with. In the end, though, if Apple had given a little wellfare to the company, they might still have one loyal processor vendor.
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    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  49. The "G4 Fiasco" by Valdrax · · Score: 3
    3: Remember the whole G4 fiasco? I wonder how many people actually bought one of those 350 mhz G4 processors....
    Um, no, I don't remember it. What are you talking about?

    I'll take this one.

    I remember this clearly because I was looking to purchasing my PowerMac G4 around that time. Originally, the first PowerMac G4s were going to be shipped with 400, 450, and 500 MHz processors. However, the thrice-damned Motorola was well into the swing of giving Moore's Law the finger, and they couldn't produce enough 500 MHz processors to meet the demand. Apple made a move that many, including myself, considered ill-advised at the time. Since they couldn't sell 500 MHz PMG4's, they retroactively adjusted the entire line -50 MHz for the same price. 400 MHz machines became 350 MHz machines for the exact same price. They simply waved their hand over all orders and changed them. I think I remember them giving special condolance offers to people who already had orders in the system, but everyone afterwards had to pay the same for less. It was a total rip-off.

    I ended up with a 400 MHz (middle-of-the-line) machine, with the intention to upgrade it with a dual-processor card (which has yet to materialize), but I feel a little upset in that I could've gotten that processor for cheaper before the change.

    Anyway, that's what he was talking about.
    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:The "G4 Fiasco" by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      However, the thrice-damned Motorola was well into the swing of giving Moore's Law the finger, and they couldn't produce enough 500 MHz processors to meet the demand.
      That's a little harsh. Apple (or rather Steve Jobs) brought this on themselves by killing the Mac clone market. When they did that IBM left the AIM alliance and Motorola lost any chance to sell it's processors to more than 5% of the market. Naturally they no longer have the sort of budget necessary to keep up top quality development on the processor. Frankly I'm suprised Motorola have bothered to keep the desktop PPC line going at all, it can't be making them much.

      I don't know whose direct fault the G4 fiasco was. Either Motorola weren't straight with Apple or Apple weren't straight with everyone else. Either way it was Apple's subsequent actions that pissed everyone off, more than Motorola's inability to deliver a 500MHz part.

    2. Re:The "G4 Fiasco" by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      You don't honestly think the clone market was doing anything other than cannibalizing the Mac market, do you? Most post-mortem analyses of the Mac clone market I've seen point to less than 10% of clones being purchased by people who had never owned a Mac before.
      Three things: first the Mac clone market was in it's infancy and less than two years old (my memory may be off on this, I haven't checked) so it's natural that it would be Apple's market share that initially suffered. I bet IBM had the same experience in the early days of the PC market. Second that 10% of clone buyers being new buyers is more than Apple managed up till the iMac was released. Thirdly, there is no guarentee that those Mac owners who bought clones would have bought from Apple if the clones hadn't been available. Every time there a story here about OS X or Apple a whole bunch of people complain about the cost of Apple hardware.

      If you read Motorola's website, it's quite clear that they don't care about the desktop market at all. ... You'll find nary a mention of Apple as a successful customer. The fact is that Motorla doesn't give a damn about Apple.
      Of course they don't now. Apple screwed them. First Apple dragged their feet over CHRP, then they dragged their feet over PPCP, and then they killed off any opportunity for Mototrola to sell the processors to anyone but Apple. Why should Motorola care? The documentation used to be there. IIRC, you could even get a reference motherboard layout from either IBM or Motorola. They were both committed to AIM, it was Apple who weren't.
      As much as I like the technical merits of PowerPC processor family, I've been pushed over the past year into the firm belief that Apple should once again make the move to a different processor family or to begin designing a strategy that can continue to fund OS development without depending on hardware sales. I'm convinced that the failed AIM alliance is nothing but an albatross around Apple's neck. Maybe if Exponential's technology hadn't have been inferior to the PPC 750, we'd have a company dedicated to the Mac for survival right now that could keep Apple going.
      Oh, I agree. Apple should definitely move elsewhere (which pratically means x86). Ideally they should just port to PC but they won't do that because they still believe they can make more money selling proprietary hardware. As for Exponential, well Apple killed them so they've no one to blaim but themselves for that.
    3. Re:The "G4 Fiasco" by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
      Look how well that worked for IBM's PC business. They're basically a marginal player in the market they created.
      Yet their "marginal" position in the market gave them $16B personal system (i.e. PC) sales in 2000. That's double Apple's $8B hardware sales. And you can be sure that a sizable chunk of IBM's other $21B hardware sales are servers for PC clients. Besides their piece of the market isn't that marginal; Dell's sales were only $25B and Compaq's personal system sales were $21B for 2000. The thing is you can't just look at market share because it's sales revenue that counts. IBM make more today off just direct PC hardware sales than they did as a closed hardware monopoly. The question is how much they'd make now if they still were. I suspect Apple's share would be much greater if that were the case, possibly 50% or higher.
      That was a conservative figure since I couldn't remember the exact statistics. The basic fact is that those machines weren't making nearly as much money for Apple in Mac OS and Mac ROM sales as they were costing in lost Apple machine sales.
      At the time it was hurting Apple, sure. The theory is that eventually the Mac (clone) market would have grown and Apple would have got a piece of that growth. Today the Mac market might have been 20 or 25% of the total market, with Apple's share still 5% or so of the total market (excuse me for pulling these numbers from my arse). They wouldn't have been making more on hardware but they would have been making more of software. Ultimately the pro-clone argument was that Apple didn't need hardware sales in the same way that Microsoft doesn't need hardware sales, and that cheaper hardware was the key to growing the market significantly. Given that 5 years on Apple has not managed to grow their market share significantly, even with the iMac, you've got to wonder if they made the right decision. Personally I believe they didn't; I think they should have waited a few more years at least. Of course I'm not in the company, I don't know if they could have survived those few years without massive restructuring; the indications are that maybe the couldn't.
  50. Re:What amazes me so much.... by Valdrax · · Score: 3

    4: Or maybe how they claim PowerPC processors kick the crap out of x86 processors. Remember how they used to say the G4/450 was double the speed of a Pentium III/450? Somebody explain to me how a G4/733 (with an extended pipeline as the P4 has) can be double the speed of Pentium 4 1.5 ghz if that was the case. Do the math people....

    Well, you're kind of off-base about the pipeline.
    MPC7400 -- 4-stage pipeline (Fetch, decode, execute, and writeback)
    MPC7410 -- 4-stage pipeline (Ditto...)
    MPC7450 -- 7-stage pipeline (Didn't find the names)

    All this information can be found on Motorola's website in their technical specs for the processors. I'm very unhappy about them moving to a 7-stage pipeline, since that small, simple pipeline has been a key to competing with x86 processors. However, to say that they are just as over-extended as the Pentium IV is ridiculous. The Pentium IV has a 20-stage pipeline! That can be a 20-cycle gap in execution when you have a branch mispredicition. Sure, it can dispatch 6 instructions at once, compared to the MPC74XX's 3 at once, but when 50% of your instructions are memory-bound load/store operations, it doesn't really help that much in the average case. This why even the Athlon doesn't bother with more than 3 even with its 15-stage pipeline.

    Granted, Apple is exaggerating by saying that just because certain operations (all SIMD-heavy Photoshop filter) complete at half the time of a top-of-the-line Pentium system, that the PowerMac G4 is always going to be twice as fast. However, the fact remains that for those operations, a chip clocked at half the speed does perform twice as fast. It does go to show that MHz as a rating of performance is just an imaginary figure used to blow magical marketing smoke. Apple just decided to Blow Smoke Different.

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    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  51. Re:why is this bad? by Junta · · Score: 2

    But what they are doing is *not* copying th look and feel of Macintosh for other environments. They are providing a tool that allows users to change the appearance of the classic MacOS environment from the default Platinum look. A lot like Kaleidoscope for Macs, but intrudes further into the depths of the system than Apple likes. I don't see how this project in any possible way could hurt Apple's bottom line. It is a product that offers a nice feature *only* to Mac systems. You would almost think that this was a case of completely clueless IP lawyers seeing the words "mac" and "theme" in a free project and lump it together will all the other stupid theme related stuff they have been going after. I still am of the opinion that it will take more than different window decorations to make me shell out a few thousand for a new computer, and that all this stuff does nothing but hurt apple. I wonder if they would be as eager to toss around cease and desist orders at people who actually had enough money to defend themselves, and not just at people who they know lack the money to go to court to defend themselves.. Seems somhow cowardly to me..

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  52. They are duty bound to do this by Bazzargh · · Score: 4

    I can't see a single post commenting that - as usual - companies sometimes threaten suit for trademark infringement because they are legally obliged to.[1] Don't forget that if you don't defend your trademark, then it becomes something anyone can use. This would be worse for apple than letting the themes site continue.

    I don't think anyone gains out of this but the lawyers. If Mr MacThemes managed to engineer his software such that it couldn't copy images tagged as apple's trademark[2], then I think the suite would disappear like snow off a dyke, since as everyone is pointing out, this hurts Apple too.

    -Baz

    [1] IANAL
    [2] And why not? It would be trivial for apple to put 'Registered Trademark of Apple Corp' in a tEXt chunk of a PNG or whatever.

  53. Re:Incorrect by HerrNewton · · Score: 2

    Classic isn't pretty with anything less than 128 MB. After all, you have to consider that you're basically running MacOS 9.1 as an application, PLUS also running your classic applications in the same memory space, and then running all of that on top of MacOS X. MacOS X itself will get along with as little as 64MB of RAM. Course it'll be slow, but its still quite usable.

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    Am I the only one who thinks Microsoft is a misnomer? Perhaps Macrosoft would be a better fit?
  54. Think Different ads by HerrNewton · · Score: 2

    The ads ran with the permission of the estate/family of the person featured in the ad.

    Apple didn't make Caesar Chavez a sell out. His family did.

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    Am I the only one who thinks Microsoft is a misnomer? Perhaps Macrosoft would be a better fit?
  55. Re:For their own by prizog · · Score: 2

    It is not a copyright issue.
    <BR>
    <BR>
    The article says: "improperly copying Apple's copyrighted software code and graphic files".
    <BR><BR>
    <I> ...And all the blubbering slashbots</i>
    <BR><BR>
    You don't agree with someone (but didn't even bother to read the article), so you unsult them? Real mature.
    <BR><BR>
    <i> Someday they will grow up and work in the real world, and find out that things don't always break down to "us vs. them".</i>
    <BR><BR>
    Who said anything about "us vs. them"? People don't like Apple Corp's actions, so they get decide to do something about it - would you rather they just sit there and let major corporations steamroller individual rights and freedoms? Well, given all your talk about the "real world", probably - for you, the "real world" is one where people don't have ideals, hopes, dreams. Well, that's certainly not the real world I know. One day, you'll realize how artificial your "real world" is - I just hope you don't fuck up too many lives before then.

  56. Re:For their own by prizog · · Score: 2

    Settle down. Apple is not "steamrollering" over anybody's rights. They are protecting their rights, specifically, their trademark rights, from those who they believe are violating them.

    Their lawyers ought to know better - this couldn't *possibly* be a trademark violation. Yes, I understand the nature of trademark law. Do you?

    Your attitude is exactly what I was talking about. You hear about one company suing one group and start shouting bloody murder at the top of your lungs, instantly insisting that Apple is an evil emprire out to destroy your freedom.

    Your mention of "one company" is a total red herring - that company is Apple. I never said that Apple is an evil empire - I said that they did something which is wrong, and which infringes on my freedom of speech. Why should I not complain when something like this happens?

    I would bet $100 that you never even used Themes... you probably have not even heard of them before today, and more than likely are not even a Mac user...

    So, we must be entirely self-interested bastards? We can't stand up for principles?

    yet you are among those complaining the loudest

    I would hardly call a post to Slashdot a loud complaint.

    because you make the knee-jerk, yes "us vs. them", assumption that any big company that sues a small group must be out to ruin democracy.

    It's hardly an assumption - I read the fucking article, and the quote from the letter *tells* me what they're doing. They are abusing their power, and attacking people who have done nothing wrong - again, this isn't an assumption, it's what their letter said.

    Count to ten, think calmly.

    Given that I actually read the article, clearly I'm thinking more calmly than a troll like you who rushes off to post before learning what the letter said.

    You might come to realize that while Apple may be wrong about the extent of their trademark rights, they very well might credibly believe that they needed to press this case in order to protect their trademarks.

    If you had actually read my post or the article, you would know that the only thing Apple said was about copyrights, *not* trademarks. Macworld said things about trademarks - but there's no *real* evidence that this is a trademark case. I don't see how it could possibly be - and if you knew anything at all about IP law, you would agree.

  57. Re:For their own by prizog · · Score: 2

    Considering the Themes project people themselves have come out and said, A) Apple is simply covering their asses, they had to do this, B) they are currently negotiating with Apple so that everyone is happy, C) the "Letter" was a legal formality.

    OK, now I've read their list archives, and I can say that this is totally wrong. Especially the copyright stuff, but also the TM stuff (See below)

    I would say this is simply a trademark issue which is not understood by anyone, other than the parties involved.

    Not understood by you, maybe - but I can (now) read the letter that Apple sent. I can understand the issues - they claim contributory infringement under the copyright, trademark, and trade dress acts, as well as licence violation. Well, there's no such thing (at least in Title 15 ch. 22) as contributory TM infringement... So, they have no need to cover their asses (copyrights don't require that). They *know* exactly what they're doing - and it's *wrong*.

    The funniest thing here is this was a rumour of a cease and desist letter, and everyone went ballistic.

    A news report is not a rumor.

    Did Slashdot editors try to contact members of the Themes Project? For that matter did Macworld UK?

    Presumably, MWUK was contacted by one of the members - they *did* have copies of the letters. Or, maybe they didn't - but the mailing list archives were and are publicly available.

    This is shotty journalism at it's worst. If you want to change the world, you have to do your homework.

    I looked up the applicable laws - what did you do?

  58. Comparing Apples and Intels by wiredog · · Score: 2

    Is like comparing Apples and Oranges. They're both fruit, but. For the same processor speed the ppc does perform operations significantly faster (though not 2x) than the x86. Different architectures between the same families. Actually, I think that the x86, at the same processor speed, is slower than alphas and sparcs.

  59. Re:If someone knows where to d/l this then... by WillAdams · · Score: 2

    As I noted in my story submision, the website proper at http:/www.macthemes.org hasn't ben up-dated since 20 March and still has all the files available for d/l, unlike, AFAICT the Sourceforge site.

    Wiliam
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    Lettering Art in Modern Use

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    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  60. Re:feed the troll by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    But the perrenial comeback: What if you 1) do not see the license or 2) do not agree with it? Just because it's there doesn't mean you have to agree to it. If you bought a book that had a piece of plastic on it that said "By reading this book you agree to give us your firstborn child", would you really put any credit in it? A contract is only good when BOTH parties agree on it. Now if they had you sign some legal paper *at the time of purchase* that would be another issue...but then they'd deservedly lose many many customers.

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    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  61. Re:feed the troll by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    "By clicking I Agree and continuing to install the software"

    There are many (legitimate) ways to install or use software without going through a clickwrap installer. If the company suspects all it's customers then it really should be having them sign agreements at time of purchase. Once I own (have in my physical control) a piece of software, they have already given up their rights. They can only hope that I will read their instructions, play nice, jump through their hoops, and rescind rights I already have when I leave the store.

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    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  62. Re: KDE/GNOME "advancedness" by Dwonis · · Score: 2

    A few people have said that KDE and GNOME brought Unix to the desktop. What is the obsession with KDE and GNOME? Am I the only one who thinks they are both too bloated to ever become a desktop standard? Sure, they're flashy, but they're both slow and almost unusable (practically speaking) on a 486. Even on faster machines, WindowMaker with fspanel is *much* faster, and therefore more usable.

    So I ask: you who use KDE/GNOME: what kind of machines do you have? Have you tried WindowMaker?
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  63. Re: KDE/GNOME "advancedness" by Dwonis · · Score: 2
    What is annoying are the little things, like not being able to resize windows by dragging out their corners - i.e you can only resize horizontally or vertically

    I do it all the time. Try grabbing the bottom left or right corners.

    No easy way to get a 'taskbar' - most of my apps appear as the default WM icon, which is extremely unhelpful I suppose i could go and assign a bitmap to each app, but i'd rather just have a taskbar, not some giant square brick with an unrecognisable glyph on it.

    fspanel should suit your needs there.

    I agree WindowMaker is lacking in some respects, but given my options, I would (and do) choose it over anything else currently available.
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  64. Re: KDE/GNOME "advancedness" by ikekrull · · Score: 2

    Sure i've tried WindowMaker, but it kind of sucks compared to GNOME/Sawfish.

    I actually do use Windowmaker on my server, since i haven't bothered to install GNOME on it, and it is fast.

    What is annoying are the little things, like not being able to resize windows by dragging out their corners - i.e you can only resize horizontally or vertically

    No easy way to get a 'taskbar' - most of my apps appear as the default WM icon, which is extremely unhelpful I suppose i could go and assign a bitmap to each app, but i'd rather just have a taskbar, not some giant square brick with an unrecognisable glyph on it.

    I do like the 'slide-up' menus, but you can't fix the menu in place, which makes it too easy to shift it around, and the 'sliding' behaviour seems erratic when run remotely, even with animations turned off.

    There seems to be 2 icons produced for each app - whats up with that?

    I used to use enlightenment (which was, arguably, the project that got linux noticed on the desktop) till i found sawfish, and now i wouldn't use anything else on my workstations.

    I would like to see a hybrid between the GNUStep style of 'dock' and GNOME desktop functionality.. i.e. get rid of the 'panel' and replace it with a WindowMaker 'dock'.

    Wmaker sliding, tearable menus are neat, and a great idea, but they need to be dockable, and you should be free to use a window manager that doesn't limit you like the WM default one does.

    Thats just my 2c. I certainly agree that a full GNOME/KDE setup is pretty slow and bloated, and i'd like to see more of Window Makers good ideas adopted into a stripped-down GNOME subset for those of us who don't run linux on 1GHz monsters.

    Maybe i just need to hack about with this stuff some more....

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    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long
  65. Re:Huh? by bugg · · Score: 2
    Perhaps if the people who developed software that pissed companies off spend hundreds of millions of dollars on lobbying efforts, they would write the laws to idemnify themselves.

    My rule (which isn't too far from the law) is that if the intent in creating the product was to enable people to commit a crime, then it shouldn't be allowed. Obviously there's plenty of shades of grey in cases like this- but this specific case, it seems very clear to me that this is fair use.

    --
    -bugg
  66. Fuck lawyers... by supabeast! · · Score: 2

    This crap is all legal stuff. No intelligent person in Apple outside of legal would really believe that this is good for the company. Any idiot can look at the situation and see that this is done for one reason - allowing the lawyers to rack up more billable hours.

    Eventually Apple will get with it an throw the bastards out. It might take a while, but eventually they will realize the same thing that AOL/Time-Warner did during the Harry Potter legal mess: YOU DO NOT MAKE, NOR SAVE MONEY, BY ATTACKING PAYING CUSTOMERS.

  67. How Long... by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    Must we put up with this IP crap before we engineer an invitation-only VPN on top of the net to give us a buffer from the corporate assholes? Kick 'em all off the net if you ask me.

    --

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

  68. Re:Worse, hardware disappearing by Mononoke · · Score: 2
    The culprit, of course, is the new firmware update Apple unceremoniously dropped onto Mac owners, the one that makes RAM that doesn't adhere to their "stability standards" appear unreadable.
    Read the technote you linked to again. RAM built to Apple's standards (thereby making it suitable to be sold for your iMac) still works after the firmware upgrade. Whoever sold you the RAM and told you it would work in your iMac lied to you and owes you a replacement. Or, you can keep the cheap not-quite-up-to-spec RAM and blame every freeze/crash/panic on whoever you happen to be most pissed at at the moment.


    --

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    NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
  69. Re:Worse, hardware disappearing by Mononoke · · Score: 2
    It seems aparent that Apple went out of their way to make "unblessed" RAM NOT work. Way to keep your users locked in, Apple!
    Locked into what? Apple doesn't make RAM. Apple isn't the only source of RAM that meets the standards. How are the locking they users in?


    --

    --
    NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
  70. Re:What amazes me so much.... by Mononoke · · Score: 5
    Hehe, I'll bite...

    1: They overcharge their customers for what is otherwise standard equipment that you can get for half the price on the PC side.
    If it's "otherwise standard equipment" why buy it from Apple? The Apple store's dropmenus aren't the only place to find RAM and bigger hard drives.

    2: Just a few weeks ago Apple released a firmware upgraded that disallowed the use of a large number of 3rd party RAM sticks. Could this be because Apple isn't making any money selling 128 megs of ram for $ 256.00? (Check the RAM Upgrade prices at the Apple Store)
    The firmware upgrade didn't disable any DIMMs that were actually built and operating to specs. Apple's tech info note #60839 explains this better than I can.

    3: Remember the whole G4 fiasco? I wonder how many people actually bought one of those 350 mhz G4 processors....
    Um, no, I don't remember it. What are you talking about?

    4: Or maybe how they claim PowerPC processors kick the crap out of x86 processors. Remember how they used to say the G4/450 was double the speed of a Pentium III/450? Somebody explain to me how a G4/733 (with an extended pipeline as the P4 has) can be double the speed of Pentium 4 1.5 ghz if that was the case. Do the math people....
    "They" being Apple, I assume. Apple never made claims like that. However, it has been documented that the G4 performs some operations up to twice as fast as a Pentium of the equivalent clock speed.

    5: And now this..... did you honestly expect anything different? As far as Apple and Open Source are concerned - its simply a take and take relationship. They have shown many times that they are completely unwilling donate something to the Open Source community (and dont mention Darwin until you actually try and use it) and this action does nothing but strengthen that resolve in my eyes.
    Is Apple somehow obligated to contribute to the "Open Source community"? BTW, Darwin is available for x86 machines.

    I agree that Apple should fire (or at least muzzle) their law firm, but overall it's not that bad of a company.
    --

    --
    NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
  71. Re:If someone knows where to d/l this then... by jbridge21 · · Score: 2

    There will be a copy in the Censored Archive as soon as I'm finished downloading it.

    Link is in my .sig.
    -----

  72. Re:They are duty bound to do SOMETHING by frankie · · Score: 2
    if you don't defend your trademark, then it becomes something anyone can use.

    True, but... you can defend your trademark without being an asshole. There was an excellent article in Webtechniqes about this very topic, written by an intellectual property lawyer. A few crucial quotes:

    " While lawyers have an obligation to a court to say things in documents that are reasonably based on the law and fact, they have no such obligation when sending the proverbial nasty letter. "
    " Rather than litigate against your best customers, license them to use your mark in connection with their fan sites. You maintain control of the trademark; your fan uses that mark strictly in conformance with your corporate trademark policy, and you now have an evangelist instead of an enemy. "
    " Every time one of these legal actions backfires against an overreaching lawyer and his or her client or company, I always ask myself, "What were they thinking?" The answer usually turns out to be that they weren't. "
  73. ok, let me get this straight.... by hawkbug · · Score: 2

    Apple is allowing people to "copy" DVDs with their new Macs, and THAT's ok. The minute someone tries to write open source software allowing their users to edit Mac OS X themes, that's suddenly a crime against THEIR copyrights and intellectual property?!?!?!? Apple - BITE ME.

  74. Think Different still applies... by debaere · · Score: 2

    Think different than the open source philosphy that made OSX possible...

    Think different than computer business practices that work...

    Think different that helping developers help you by creating software that enhances your systems capability and credibility...

    Anyone else think Apple is being run as a tax shelter for Jobs & Co?


    DOS is dead, and no one cares...

    --

    DOS is dead, and no one cares...
    If there's a Bourne Shell, I'll see you there
  75. Re:Open (Market|Architecture) vs. Closed by PerlGeek · · Score: 5

    "Microsoft clobbered Apple -- and the rest of the industry -- with openness."

    That was IBM, not MS. Even IBM didn't want to build an open system, they were forced into because Apple already had such a lead that IBM didn't have time to design a closed system. When clonemakers reverse-engineered the PC, IBM sued them and lost.

    Microsoft was never for openness, and neither was IBM. The US courts and IBM clonemakers were responsible for cheap, open PCs.

    "Linux itself exists only because Microsoft created the modern microcomputer industry, where standardized, fully-documented hardware was available at reasonable prices dictated by a competitive marketplace."

    Intel created the modern microcomputer industry. IBM helped them with the software side. The competitive marketplace, again, existed because of the PC clonemakers and the US courts, in spite of IBM. Microsoft never even entered the picture.

    "It's no coincidence that Linux was first developed for the same hardware platform as DOS."

    Coincidence? That was Linus' personal decision: beacuse the 386 was fairly cheap and fairly capable. Because Intel made a good, cheap chip. Not because of MS.

    "Microsoft has always been open and competitive. They encourage competition and thrive on it."

    MS is an anticompetitive cartel. They use anything from copyright law to patent law to contract law to undocumented features to make sure their competition does not have a chance.

  76. What is it good for? by steveha · · Score: 2
    gun: primary purpose - throwing a bullet at dangerous speed through the air

    car: primary purpose - accelerating a ton of metal at dangerous speed (on the ground, which is where small children play)

    We wouldn't have interstate crime much if it weren't for cars. Every time a person is carried off in a car by a serial killer or kidnapper, you might expect to see the car maker sued as an "enabler". But you don't see that.

    You don't see that because people understand that cars are much more often used for buying groceries than for carrying off victims. No jury will buy this "enabler" nonsense.

    And the same thing turns out to be true of guns. Well over 99% of all guns never hurt any human being; they are used for target shooting, self-defense, simple collecting, etc. Thousands of guns are used each year for bad things, but there are millions of guns in the country. The problem is that you can get juries to buy this "enabler" nonsense because many folks these days don't own or even understand guns.

    I'm sure it is possible for the theme editor to be used to infringe Apple copyrights, but the same thing is true of any screenshot utility. Will Apple go after those folks as "enablers" next?

    steveha

    --
    lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
  77. Re:What's next? Screen grabbers? by cloudscout · · Score: 2

    Oddly enough, apple has included a screen grabber in their OS for ages. The Classic MacOS allows you to take a simple snapshot of the screen and MacOS X includes a relatively robust "Grab" application that lets you do much more.

  78. I hadn't thought of that by cloudscout · · Score: 2

    By Apple's own logic, iTunes is just as bad. It enables users to copy protected works as well.

  79. It isn't what you think by cloudscout · · Score: 2

    You should probably read up on the project before making comments like this. The Mac Themes Project has a theme creator so you can make themes FOR YOUR MAC! This isn't a program to make other operating systems look like the MacOS, this is a program to let you tweak the MacOS to look however you want it to, similar to Kaleidoscope under the Classic MacOS.

  80. Incorrect by cloudscout · · Score: 4

    MacOS X includes a full version of OS 9.1 in the box with it. Users do not need to, as you suggest, spend an extra $100 to upgrade "to OS 9.something in order to run their 'Classic' applications". If they purchase MacOS X, they automatically get the software required for Classic compatibility.

    1. Re:Incorrect by MyopicProwls · · Score: 3
      Okay. I'll tell you that. I have a rev. A iMac with 96 megs of RAM and OSX works reasonably well. (Note that the RAM requirements will hopefully drop in future releases of the software.) It's not really snappy, of course, and my 96 megs of RAM means I can't really run legacy software but all X software works fine (and there is plenty). I am buying a $110 256 RAM module so I can run legacy software, but it's not required. So your $500 estimate, for me, means $110 in RAM and $130 for OS X. And really, you don't need the RAM necessarily.

      Plus, rev A iMacs were designed to run OS 8.1, not OS X. If you want a superb box for OS X, go buy one. That's what I'll do when I get too frustrated with the speed of my box.

      PS Yes I'm somewhat of a developer (a monor programmer). C++ and Java, mostly, though I'm excited about the possibilities for perl on X. The dev tools work fine on my box.

      MyopicProwls

      --

      MyopicProwls
      My homepage

  81. Double Barrel by cloudscout · · Score: 5
    The best part of this entire issue is that the amount of publicity generated will have two very negative effects on Apple.

    First, this almost completely unknown software is now making headlines on all of the trade websites. This is going to instantly boost the popularity of the project.

    Second, open source contributors are going to be less likely to develop software for MacOS X if they're going to be expected to clear all of their development plans with Apple's legal department first. It's hard to be creative and "Think Different" under these kinds of restrictions.

    Right foot. *BLAM* Left foot. *BLAM*

    1. Re:Double Barrel by floateyedumpi · · Score: 2


      The funny thing is, this was a story which leaked in a big way from the Themes group:
      and they're not too happy about it.

  82. Why Apple, why? by alexhmit01 · · Score: 3

    Why do you attack you fans? Why do you embarass us? Why do you make all of us that defend you feel stupid? Why?

    Who cares about lousy Themes? Why must you guys always come across as jerks?

    Put someone in charge of the legal department from PR, ask not if you can win the case, but ask if this action helps Apple.

    Why?

  83. Re:It the law people by jgerman · · Score: 2
    They should never be given legal protection on something like a theme in the first place.

    Apple: You have a blue background and a white cursor.
    User:Yeah so?
    Apple:That's not a mac.
    User:So what?
    Apple:You can only use a blue background and a white mouse on Apple computers, we have trademark right. Here is your cease and desist order, prepare to be taken to court for damages.

    --
    I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  84. Re:Huh? well that's just great... by jgerman · · Score: 2
    yeah theme editor: primary purpose creating own themes...OWN themes... OWN themes

    Back to the guns though. Throwing bullets at dangerous speeds through the air for what? Killing animals, self defense. Regardless of how you put it its dumb. It's only dangerous when it's ill used. It's the responsibility of the operator, not the manufacturer.

    --
    I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  85. Re:limits of liberty by jgerman · · Score: 2
    Actually true anarchy is a better solution... if not practical due to human nature. Our system is not the 'least worst' of any thing. It's just one way. Is there a better way, yes. Do I know what it is, no. But that doesn't mean we stop looking. and it certainly doesn't mean we just sit back and take it when corporations decide to abuse the system. As far as screw the man goes, I'll be the first to admit that I have serious problems with authority. Does that make me wrong, certainly not. I will always bitch when someone tries to tell me what I can or cannot do when I have the ability to make those judgements myself. This is a case of freedom of expression. I believe, and it is suppose to be the values of this country that the rights of the individual are more important than those of a company. And yet continually, the rights of the individual are squashed over the perceived rights of companies.

    So yeah I guess I do have a better workable idea. It's called a democracy, something that this country is not. But luckily, the laws of this country are mutable and allow us to try and change for the better. Whether it is through simple acts of defiance, or any other method.

    --
    I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  86. Re:Huh? by jgerman · · Score: 4

    Yes that's the best part about the world today. You know I don't see other enablers getting sued. Otherwise gun manufacturers would be gone in a week. You cannot prosecute the tool creator. It's the end user who puts it to use in whatever way they see fit(that's from my department of redundancy department). It makes me sick.

    --
    I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  87. feed the troll by Oztun · · Score: 4

    You missed the point didn't you?

    The editor enables third parties to "improperly copy Apple's copyrighted software code and graphic files.

    So we should stop making word processors because someone might write something that is a copy of something copyrighted?

    unauthorized reverse-engineering of its software.

    This battle has been fought out in court by others and it has been decided its legal to reverse engineer software. It doesn't matter if some group of Nazi's has authorized you.

    Obviously there is a whole lot of history that you are completely blind to. I just thought I'd make these points before other someone starts to agree with you.

  88. Re:Apple is an opensource leader. Shut up already. by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2
    Damn. Now that I've read all that, I've got mushrooms growing in my eyes.
    Support (pre-Darwin) toward the open development of Mk based linux on their hardware AND i386. Commercial benefit to Apple: marginal; academic goodwill.
    BWAHAHAHAHAHA. That's rich. The history of MKlinux can be summed up by repeating the following phrase over and over: "Here you go, Linux community. YOINK!" If apple were serious about this. They'd support LinuxPPC a lot more than they do. Not to mention Be.
    Darwin in general: open, real and both PPC and i386. Benefits developers working on low level MacOS X projects like VPC or drivers and such. Commercial benefit to Apple: marginal; happier developers, goodwill
    If I wanted BSD, I'd install BSD. What does Darwin bring to the table?
    netInfo. Apple handed its NIS++ technology directly to developers for free. They stand to gain little commercially.
    Never heard of it. But if I want NIS, I'm probably using Solaris. If I'm using Solaris, I've already got NIS.
    QSS. Apple commercial benefit: they lose some PPC hardware sales to Linux servers and dedicated network gear.
    Again, never heard of it. But he whosoever shall want network servers shan't go to Apple. Apple doesn't go to Apple, they use Sun. Hell, their support page is written in my old company's web app, Tango. Look for the '.taf' extention.
    OpenPlay/NetSprockets. Perfect example of technology a company sits on, and should open up for others to use. Apple did. Their commercial benefit: Hay.
    Faugh. Throwing another fish into an overstocked pond does not a saviour make. Loki gets props here, not Apple. Apple likes to give the appearance of giving, but only to create a reputation, or when they've got no other choice.
    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  89. For the n+13th time, Darwin != OS X by yerricde · · Score: 2

    OS X is open source. look at it all you want.

    Darwin, the kernel of Mac OS X, is almost-free software. The theme editor lies squarely in Apple's proprietary domain (Quartz/Aqua/Carbon technologies). If you want themes on Mac OS X, run GNOME or KDE with XFree86.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  90. Re:Apple, Apple... by pjrc · · Score: 2
    With the headstart that OSX already has on KDE/Gnome and the speed that it's moving.. I have a hard time believing that even KDE will catch up to it.

    It was hard to believe the DOS world would ever catch up to the all-graphical interface of the Macintosh.

    OSX is going to need to be pretty damn compelling to displace inferior but "good enough" solutions that cost less.

  91. It's not that they're evil. by iMirko · · Score: 2
    I am going to speak as someone who is a long time Apple user (I remember my Apple II compatible fondly), as one who is posting this from Mac OS X, and as one who watched Apple with some interest for a while now. So here's my take with said qualifications:

    You all need to calm down. The first thing to consider about Apple is that it is indeed a large corporation. This means that it has many parts that are not on the whole aware of one another. Apple Legal is always pulling crap like this. No one likes it, but the great thing about Apple is that they do stupid things and then fix them.

    I remember there was a firmware update that, whether or not intentionally, made it impossible to upgrade a G3 to a G4. Remember that? So everyone complained. And they fixed it. Apple nixed the Apple Menu, and everyone complained, so they fixed it. It's life with Apple. One part of Apple messes something up, and then the shit hits the fan, and it is fixed. It's the nature of a beastly large corp. "Apple" doesn't have an opinion on Open Source. I'm sure lots of people at Apple love open source, and lots hate it.

    As for Steve Jobs, the man is CEO of two large corporations. He's busy. Despite his tendancy to micro-manage, if you think this was his idea, you're wrong. He's got better things to do, like convince people that Desktop Video really is the next thing. (I ALMOST might believe it.) Steve Jobs is not a devil. Apple is not evil. I'll take a guess. Legal did something on their own. The upper brass wil now find out, say "How incredibly stupid of the legal department!", chide them vigorously, and try to fix things a bit.

    Boy, sometimes I feel like most slashdotters must think I'm a complete moron for not bowing down to the alter of open source. And it has been mentioned before, ut oh well. There are lots of themes for Mac OS and OS X already, and Apple lets them go. So this is not an attack themes. It's protection of copyrighted material. You might think it's wrong. But that's the issue, not interface customization, not Apple being evil, not open source. It's about copyright, so debate the right topic.

  92. Re:For their own by vsync64 · · Score: 2
    I'm very angry at Apple and especially Steve Jobs he's a loser head. Here are some themes. I have mirrored them with some leet lisp code so if they get lawyerDoSed I can put up a mirror. I like these themes.

    --

    --
    TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
  93. Re:What amazes me so much.... by IronChef · · Score: 2


    The vanishing RAM thing isn't a huge conspiracy. Read all about it here. Most RAM vendors are apparently replacing "missing" RAM with parts that have proper Mac specs.

    Also, someone has written a utility to test and repair DIMMs.

  94. Re:Worse, hardware disappearing by IronChef · · Score: 2


    You had RAM with barely adequate tolerances. OSX is more picky, hence the firmware update locks out out-of-spec memory, which can cause OSX to behave erratically.

    For more info & links refer to my other post:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=01/04/17/162 82 28&cid=401

    But also call your RAM vendor and try to get a replacement.

  95. If someone knows where to d/l this then... by Lostman · · Score: 2

    please post links to the file. I make a habit of downloading things just to have them in "safe keeping" if corporations try to litigate them off the internet...

    I would be VERY appreciative if someone could post a link to where I can get a copy of this soon-to-be-gone app.

  96. Re:It's not just Steve! by MrBogus · · Score: 2

    Well, if you are going to pigeonhole, let me tell you about a few of the Linux, BSD, and OS/2 users that I've met...

    Every platform, including the most pathetic (Windows ME and [DR|MS]-DOS), has it's share of loser advocates. However if you get out and about, you'll find that most Mac users are just plain old ordinary lusers that bought a Mac because somebody told them they could get e-mail with less of a hassle.

    The OS is just something that's necessary for you to accomplish something with a computer. Anyone who takes it more seriously than that is suspect.

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  97. Re:For their own by Golias · · Score: 4
    So I have no idea what Apple's motivation is.

    Their motivation is this:

    It is not a copyright issue. It is a trademark issue, and as has been said here many times before, trademarks exist on an "enforce it or lose it" basis. If they want to retain the right to spank people in the future for ripping off their trademarks, they must remain agressive about enforcing them agains everybody, all the time.

    That's all that is happening here. Their lawyers are over-reacting a little to protect Apple's trademarks.

    ...And all the blubbering slashbots that are filling this page with "they're shooting themselves in the foot" and "we should shun everything they do" comments are just putting their ignorance on display for all to see. Someday they will grow up and work in the real world, and find out that things don't always break down to "us vs. them".

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  98. Re:For their own by Golias · · Score: 4
    Settle down. Apple is not "steamrollering" over anybody's rights. They are protecting their rights, specifically, their trademark rights, from those who they believe are violating them.

    They may be wrong, but that's what we have the courts for.

    Your attitude is exactly what I was talking about. You hear about one company suing one group and start shouting bloody murder at the top of your lungs, instantly insisting that Apple is an evil emprire out to destroy your freedom. I would bet $100 that you never even used Themes... you probably have not even heard of them before today, and more than likely are not even a Mac user... yet you are among those complaining the loudest, because you make the knee-jerk, yes "us vs. them", assumption that any big company that sues a small group must be out to ruin democracy.

    Count to ten, think calmly. You might come to realize that while Apple may be wrong about the extent of their trademark rights, they very well might credibly believe that they needed to press this case in order to protect their trademarks. Things are not always as simple as the Big Bad Corp trying to squish the Little Guy.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  99. Re:For their own by Golias · · Score: 5
    Sound reasonable?

    Sure, except we are talking about two completely different products here.

    The MacOS 8.1 (which is what this lawsuit concerns) is an old product that the probably would rather not spend legal resources licensing out to other people. It's a lot cheaper to just send people letters saying "quit ripping us off" than it is to establish a policy for pricing and distribution of licenses to every tiny shop of GUI hackers that wants to play with it.

    The good news is that Apple eventually treats their old OS releases as Abandonware. You can download System 7.5.3 for free from their website and monkey with it all you want. I suspect that they will eventually do the same with OS 8.0 - 9.1... probably a few months after they have migrated the vast majority of users and apps to OS X.

    OS X, on the other hand, is built on open source code, with open source licensing. You can hack the shit out of "Darwin" all you want. Write a totally new GUI for it, port it to run on a Sparc, whatever trips your trigger. Apple can't open up Aqua, because a lot of the tech involved is owned by another company (Adobe). Nor can they open up Quicktime, which is built on a closed codec that they don't own... but the open kernel and BSD layer is clearly their future direction. Apple is slowly being transformed into the company that NeXT could have been if it didn't lack the resources and market force. As a developer, even if you don't like Apple as a company, this is a Good Thing. NextStep was easy to write for, and if the trickle of new apps already coming in is anything to go by, it looks like developers are having a pretty good time with OS X, too. I suspect that we are going to see some pretty cool ideas emerge out of all this.

    Opening up a company like Apple is like opening up China. Sure you can shout at them and try to freeze them out, but that will just make them shut their doors to all of your ideas. By working with them, you can gradually introduce your philosphies into their worldview. Peaceful transformation is slower than confrontation, but it is also far less painful.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  100. Re:Worse, hardware disappearing by Fervent · · Score: 2
    I still don't agree with Apple's response to the issue. Clearly, the RAM was in perfect working order -- it worked fine in OS 9 for over a year. It almost seemed (to me anyway) that they were trying to find yet another reason to sell hardware out of house.

    Given their past history with 3rd-party hardware providers (a majority of my 3rd-party Mac hardware required updates not included in Mac OS X) this isn't totally unprecedented. I just know that a majority of my hardware drivers loaded correctly on my old box when I installed Windows 2000 -- Mac OS X maimed several of my pieces of hardware, and completely killed others (like my external floppy drive). Sorry, but that's unacceptable.

    If they want the monopoly on hardware they should just say it.

    --

    - I don't care if they globalize against free speech. All my best free thoughts are done in my head.

  101. Re:Worse, hardware disappearing by Fervent · · Score: 2
    I bought it from Crucial (Micron). I thought they were repectable in this business.

    Every other upgrade I've bought from them has worked beautifully, on multiple PC's. Only the Mac coughed up an error.

    --

    - I don't care if they globalize against free speech. All my best free thoughts are done in my head.

  102. If only I had a Mac by the_other_one · · Score: 2

    I would be creating a Rotten Apple theme right now.

    --
    134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
  103. Apple is *way* worse than Microsoft by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

    I've said it before and I'll say it again: Apple has done things in their history that Microsoft never dreamed of. They are absolutely the worst company in the history of the industry in terms of screwing their customers, as well as the rest of the industry.

    Why does Apple get such a pass from a lot of people? Can you imagine what the world would look like if Apple had won and not Microsoft? We would all be running proprietary hardware that costs $20,000 (and probably still without a hard drive like Steve wanted). Fortunately, Apple was too incompetent to truly become a monopoly.

    The irony is that I actually am kind of excited about OS/X. I've wanted a desktop operating system based on Unix for 20 years. But I will NEVER, EVER buy proprietary hardware from Apple. It will only encourage them.

    Our only hope is to finally drive the last nail into Apple's coffin, and hope whoever buys the assets has the good sense to finally open up Apple hardware, and fire all the arrogant SOBs that still think Apple's manure doesn't stink.

    Sorry about the rant, but it's incidents like this that just reinforce my opinion of Apple's arrogance and stupidity.


    --

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  104. Fundamental nature of man vs. OS by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 2
    The OS is just something that's necessary for you to accomplish something with a computer. Anyone who takes it more seriously than that is suspect.

    In theory, programs are just utilities to help you accomplish a given task, cars are just physical transportation devices, the web is a means of providing information, and sex is just a means of perpetuating the species.

    In practice, you've got entire stores devoted to computer games, you've got sports cars, and you've got online porn.

  105. Re:Huh? by jdunlevy · · Score: 2

    Huh? Gun manufacturers are getting sued all the time. Just do a quick Google search, or -- for something current -- take a look at this recent article at the Washington Post web site.

  106. Re:What amazes me so much.... by Siqnal+11 · · Score: 2
    While I agree that this is a bad move on Apple's part, I'd just like to take a moment to point out the fact that you don't know what the fuck you're talking about.

    They overcharge their customers for what is otherwise standard equipment that you can get for half the price on the PC side

    That's completely false.
    Let's take the top-of-the-line Power Mac G4.
    Off the shelf you get:

    • 733MHz clock speed, which is a virtually meaningless statistic.
    • 256K chip cache, plus 1MB backside
    • 256MB RAM
    • 60GB HDD
    • DVD-R/CD-RW
    • NVIDIA card w/ 32MB SDRAM
    • 2 FireWire ports (12Mps each)
    • 10/100/1000BASE-T Ethernet card
    • 56K Modem

    Base price:$3499.00

    Okay, now let's look at what Gateway has to offer:

    • 19" monitor (G4 price doesn't include monitor)
    • 1500MHz processor (see above)
    • 256MB RAM
    • 40GB HDD
    • CD-ROM
    • ATI RADEON w/ 32MB
    • 10/100BASE-T card

    Base price: $2799.00

    So, let's customize it to try & match the Mac.

    • Remove monitor: -$420
    • Largest available HD is 40GB, so we'll add a secondary, 20GB HDD: $135.00
    • DVD-R isn't available, but we'll add a DVD-ROM: $279
    • Substitute CD-RW for CD-ROM: $199
    • Gigabit ethernet card: Unavailable
    • 56k Modem: $25

    Adjusted price: $3332

    Hmmm...that's a difference of $167, and you still don't have FireWire, DVD-R, or gigabit ethernet.

    Remember the whole G4 fiasco? I wonder how many people actually bought one of those 350 mhz G4 processors....

    Huh?

    Do the math people....

    You do the math, moron.

    ...completely unwilling donate something to the Open Source community...

    Apple is a business. Grow up.



    --
    --

    --
    You are a fucking moron.
  107. This is a strange attitude... by graveyhead · · Score: 3

    On one hand, Apple wishes to leverage the power of open source development, and on the other they want control over their intellectual property. There is no doubt that this causes internal conflicts at Apple. They *should* be very careful on how they handle this situation.

    First off, if they alienate open source developers, they lose a significant portion of their developer support. I'm not sure if they care at this point, because they have a working, published product. This is still dangerous for them though because they are scaring away potential open source help for future projects.

    Second, Darwin/OSX can be viewed as something of a ground breaking experiment in alternative development methodologies. As with many past projects, they are really setting future corporate development trends here. Other companies wishing to apply this development method will doubtless follow the trend Apple has already set. If these companies proceed without any notion of what an open source developer sees as right and wrong, the trend is sure to die quickly.

    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    1. Re:This is a strange attitude... by tswinzig · · Score: 2

      On one hand, Apple wishes to leverage the power of open source development, and on the other they want control over their intellectual property. There is no doubt that this causes internal conflicts at Apple. They *should* be very careful on how they handle this situation.

      Too late.

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
  108. Apple, Apple... by update() · · Score: 4
    As one of the Apple zealots, I have to say this is the sort of antic that creates the love/hate relationship we have with the company. Hopefully, this is another case of lawyers reacting on their own, that will calm down in a few days.

    Meanwhile, I'll comment that Rob's statement:

    [T]hey've tried so hard to make Darwin open and gain acceptance, and then to pull crap like this.

    makes the asumption that's central to the Slashdot mystique: that contributing to free software development and buying into Stallmanesque ideology are necessarily intertwined. The reality is that most of the individuals making significant contributions to free software, including Darwin, have little no to interest in the 2600 wannabe mentality that has come to dominate Slashdot and very few of the IP complainers will ever contribute to any project.

    No, the real problem here is that Apple continues to alienate the early adopters, tweakers and hobbyists who are the core of the companies user base and who are the ones who kept it afloat.

    I'll close by pointing out that it was my favorite tech company that finally _really_ brought Unix to the desktop, while Slashdot's pick turned out a slow, bloated Explorer knockoff, and fired half their workers the day they finished it...

    Unsettling MOTD at my ISP.

  109. Lame, just lame by ackthpt · · Score: 3
    There's a commercial on the radio about Jekyll and Hyde buying a car, one wants safety and security, the other power and thrills. They see the same car and cheer, for a moment seeing a bit of themselves in each other. A wonderful quote, in one of the best radio commercials I've ever heard. However, I feel it's a bit like Steve Jobs looking in the mirror and seeing Bill Gates. It's hard to cheer on an underdog under such circumstances.

    --

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  110. Umm... by Auckerman · · Score: 4

    Seems Slashdots manta is if its on the internet, it must be true. This project has an activity of 0% with no released files in 6 months and out of the blue Apple tries to shutdown what appears to be an already inactive project. Did you bother verifing this report?

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
  111. Re:i know how to respond by grammar+fascist · · Score: 3

    They should. Third party developers are the life blood of an operating system - especially an operating system made by a company that doesn't have a monopoly on the applications market.

    Witness Microsoft. It costs a bit to buy VS6, but if a developer can get it, he has all kinds of information and help at his disposal. And he doesn't have to worry about being attacked by Microsoft's lawyers, either. If he's good, Microsoft may even buy his product! What a deal!

    You and I may not like all the stupid shareware and freeware applications - heck, some of them are downright useless. But this is spurring on developer interest and mindshare, and that's what an operating system needs in the long run to survive.

    --
    I got my Linux laptop at System76.
  112. It's not just Steve! by Bonker · · Score: 3

    creative individual with schizophrenic tendancies marked with delusions of grandeur and persecution and a possible self-destructive urge

    I'm platform agnostic, but spent a great while in the company of Mac-users and this is true for just about every one I've ever met.

    The sysadmin at the college where I was a volunteer webmaster? He would constantly go on and on about how great 'his' platform was and how superior it was over Wintel, and then in the next breath complain of all the conspiracies Microsoft was involved in to make sure that he and other Mac users were never able to play the good games or use any of the popular apps. Then he'd turn around and try to see how much warez he could upload to public servers without getting caught.

    The graphic designer I worked with?

    He would spend hours ranting about how our company's PC-using tech support area would abuse him because he was a Mac user, but then go on and on about the hardware superiority of the G3 over the eqivalent Pentium-II's at the time. Then he would fire off incindiary emails to the company president.

    I *could* go on, but I think you get the point.

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
  113. Re:For their own by kilgore_47 · · Score: 3

    Apple has had a modular 'theme' system built into the macos since around system 8.1 (maybe 8.5?) and has never released or even mentioned a theme editor or any themes. In fact, there is only one legit theme file (platinum), so the 'theme' menu in the appearance control panel has only one item in it. All of the themes you can download are unofficial and unsupported, and now I guess they are trying to put a stop to them. You have to wonder why apple wrote in their theme system at all... it has been there for a long time and they have never made any use of it.

    --
    ___
    The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason. --Ben Franklin
  114. Nothing new... by DragonPup · · Score: 2

    When Apple lawyers aren't busy sueing 16-year-olds, they are sueing people who make things look like their OS.

    --
    "Useless organic meatbag" -HK-47
  115. Do Apple Legal and PR/Marketing just never speak? by Hormonal · · Score: 2
    It seems to me that Apple's (and a lot of other companies, too) Legal department would do well to at least run this stuff by their Public Relations or Marketing departments before they start sending out nastygrams.

    I would assume that any sane person in either of the latter groups would se this as a Pyrrhic victory at best, and tell Legal to drop it.

    Unfortunately, I wonder if all of the recent talk about copyright infringement (both here on /., and in the rest of the world) has made the lawyers hypersensitive to anything that might come close to perverting Apple's brand.

    Still, if I ever met any of these lawyers at a party (probably not very likely), I wouldn't be able to decide if I should ask him to build me a rocket, or pull a friggin' tumor out of my frontal lobe. They seem to be a little short on common sense.

  116. I am the recipient of the cease and desist order. by lunaport · · Score: 5

    I was hoping to keep this out of the press until we had more time to prepare, but since someone leaked it already

    Apple has two complaints against the software, Theme Machine, which allows users to create themes for the Mac OS. First:

    Specifically, it appears that the Editor enables third parties to create themes that are identical or confusingly similar to Apple's copyrighted and trademarked themes for Apple's MAC OS programs by improperly copying Apple's copyrighted software code and graphic files. You should be aware that by publishing this Editor that enables third parties to create these infringing themes and allowing the public to access and download the Editor, we believe that you are engaging in contributory infringement of Apple's copyrights, trademarks, and trade dress in violation of the Lanham Act.
    So their complaint is not that we are infringing on Apple's trademarks, but that we contribute to other users ability to do so. I can't imagine that argument holding up in any court.

    Additionally, Apple is greatly concerned by the likelihood that your Editor may be a derivative work resulting from the unauthorized reverse engineering of Apple's software. The specifications for the MAC OS themes have never been released, consequently, we believe that your Editor is derived through reverse engineering of the software. We would like to remind you that reverse engineering of the MAC OS is in violation of the software license agreement you accepted upon purchasing a copy of Apple's software.
    Because I did not help to write the program, I cannot speak authoritatively about the methods used to develop it. However, preliminary research indicated that those methods were appropriate via the fair use doctrine established in Sega v Accolade under the Ninth Circuit Court Of Appeals.

    Of course, all of this is moot, because we are just a few random guys who have never met face to face, and have neither the funding nor the desire for a protracted legal battle with Apple. Ironically, we've been doing this for more than two years, and the Editor doesn't even work with Mac OS X. I'll be pulling it shortly, but if you'd like to get involved with the Mac Themes neXt project, please contact me

  117. Apple don't want their API's published by SeaCrazy · · Score: 3

    Well, I don't know a whole lot about OSX or this theme tool. But I believe that this theme tool is open source, right? And it's using some of Apples unpublished API's right?
    I don't think it's the fact that you can make other themes for your mac that they object to but rather that the themes project is, with it's open source, in effect publishing API's that Apple doesn't want published.

    --
    .sig? Get your own damn .sig!
  118. Re:What amazes me so much.... by Zed2K · · Score: 3
    1: They overcharge their customers for what is otherwise standard equipment that you can get for half the price on the PC side.

    You Get what you pay for. Apple hardware is high quality. Not some cheap OEM crap that Dell spits out.

    2: Just a few weeks ago Apple released a firmware upgraded that disallowed the use of a large number of 3rd party RAM sticks. Could this be because Apple isn't making any money selling 128 megs of ram for $ 256.00? (Check the RAM Upgrade prices at the Apple Store)

    The 3rd party memory that now doesn't work under the latest firmware was memory that did not match the specs that the machines should have had in the first place. There is still plenty of 3rd party modules that did work. Those people that got bit by this were the ones who went for the el cheapo sticks.

    4: Or maybe how they claim PowerPC processors kick the crap out of x86 processors. Remember how they used to say the G4/450 was double the speed of a Pentium III/450? Somebody explain to me how a G4/733 (with an extended pipeline as the P4 has) can be double the speed of Pentium 4 1.5 ghz if that was the case. Do the math people....

    Yes please do the math. There is more to the processor than just the Mhz ratings! A 733Mhz G4 will beat a 1.5Ghz P4 in some tests (just like the P4 will beat the G4 for in other specs).

    5: And now this..... did you honestly expect anything different? As far as Apple and Open Source are concerned - its simply a take and take relationship. They have shown many times that they are completely unwilling donate something to the Open Source community (and dont mention Darwin until you actually try and use it) and this action does nothing but strengthen that resolve in my eyes.

    Apple is a company. Heaven forbid they would want to make money and defend themselves...oh my, can't have that. Open source this...open source that. Screw open source! Just give me quality software and I'll pay for it.

    "The Funeral Procession"

    Oh yeah...they've been saying that for years...sing a different tune the repetition is boring.

  119. Let them know how you feel by hazehead · · Score: 2


    go to Apple's feedback page, click the 'Management' radio button and let them know how you feel. If you are delaying or changing your mind about purchasing their products, let them know that too.

  120. Apple's lawyers by tuxlove · · Score: 2

    I've seen a lot of disparaging comments about Apple's lawyers here, and thought I'd throw out a few tidbits.

    First of all, let's get early business taken care of. We're talking about lawyers. Praticing lawyers are almost invariably scum (I'm not including people who become lawyers for the education or other purposes besides actual practice). We all know that. Those of us who have ever dealt with lawyers hate them, unless you're a lawyer too. Even then, you probably still hate lawyers. Especially yourself.

    With that in mind, Apple's lawyers are not doing this for fun, and they're not doing it to justify their jobs, etc. Rhetoric aside, they're probably doing it because they are obliged to defend Apple's trademarks or risk losing the ability to control their use. Should they not defend their trademarks, even in "stupid" cases, they could lose their ability to stop people from using their trademarks without permission. They are duty-bound to do what they're doing. I think someone posted something to this effect, and I'm confirming the truth of it. That's not to say that Apple wouldn't defend their trademark in this manner regardless of the law...

    I've seen some attacks on the quality, etc., of Apples lawyers in this discussion. It's easy to say such things in the heat of anger. It's foolish, however, to think they're lame in any sense (other than perhaps a PR sense). These are the cream of the crop. Why would you expect anything less from a large, powerful company like Apple? I've dealt personally with their legal dept as an outsider, and they are nothing short of scary good. In one instance I saw them get a special form processed by a notorious government agency in a couple of hours with only a few calls; a form which takes any normal mortal *months* to get processed. These people are good, they are powerful, and they don't need to pull stupid stunts to make themselves look good to the bossman. More than likely they're proving themselves on a daily basis.

    Though I hate lawyers, even my own, it's Jobs & friends you should be slamming first and foremost. There are all sorts of creative things they could do to preserve their trademarks, yet not stomp all over the Themes Project. But they're not doing any of those things.

  121. Do you think they'll sue me for copying the iMac? by Malaveldt · · Score: 5

    I taped a Tupperware bowl to the back of my monitor.

  122. dink thifferent by cosmo7 · · Score: 2

    avi tevanian: hey steve, look! some guys are doing kaleidoscope for os X!

    steve jobs: cool!

    AT: shame they can't get any publicity for it...

    SJ: i know! let's sue their asses! sure, it'll make us look bad, but it'll give their project the attention it deserves!

    AT: hey, great idea!

    SJ: i'll get onto it right away!

    AT: yes, but don't stop slamming my dick in the door yet!

    SJ: as if!

    sfx: Slam!

    AT: oooh!

    sfx: Slam!

    AT: ooohh!

    etc etc.

  123. They weren't trying for OSS acceptance. by Lethyos · · Score: 3
    Apple was never trying to get the OSS community's acceptance or approval. They're just a big corporation that is using industry buzzwords to draw attention to themselves. It's cool to say, "we're built on open standards", "we use something that came out of CMU." Apple's not interesting in helping OSS and they never were. It's not surprising that Apple would make an attack at something that utilizes their private technologies. They don't want to be open, they just want to say they're open to help improve their profit margin.

    I was quickly becoming an Apple fan when the whole MacOS X thing began. "Yes, Darwin is open source! We're thinking forward. Here, have our source!" It didn't take long to realize that this was all nonsense. Their motivations are the same as any other large corporate entity: they want to have things their way and they are not going to give an inch.

    And here they are, stomping their feet and pouting. "We don't want anyone to change our interface! It's our interface, leave it alone! *pouting* Oh, and themes were our idea!" Is it any surprise?

    This is simply marketing hype.

    --
    Why bother.
  124. Ugly themes reason for hostility? by uiil · · Score: 2

    Maybe protecting IP wasn't the purpose here. Could it be that some joe 6-pack's theme offended the aesthetic karma of apple's staff colorists?

  125. That "magic moment". by theonomist · · Score: 2

    I seem to have it more and more these days: A sudden instant of strange clarity as I try to figure out what Zope is, or as I download a .wav file of Guido van Rossum squawking about "Vooty Vootpecker".

    It's brief, but highly concentrated: The scales fall from my eyes, and I say to myself: "I don't give a rat's ass about this bullshit. Hooray for those that do, but I just don't." So, I close the browser window and find something interesting to spend my time on.

    You know what? It just happened again.

    --
    "Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive" -- hey, that's me!
  126. Open (Market|Architecture) vs. Closed by theonomist · · Score: 2

    I am always surprised at how much /.'ers like apple and shun m$ when apple always seems to like so much control over their systems.

    Odd, isn't it? Most Slashbots claim to support the free market, but when the rubber hits the road, they'll always break bread with its enemies.

    Microsoft clobbered Apple -- and the rest of the industry -- with openness. They were always open to developers writing for their platforms, and they always relied on open commodity hardware, in sharp contrast to Apple's obsession with closed proprietary hardware.

    Linux itself exists only because Microsoft created the modern microcomputer industry, where standardized, fully-documented hardware was available at reasonable prices dictated by a competitive marketplace. It's no coincidence that Linux was first developed for the same hardware platform as DOS.

    Microsoft has always been open and competitive. They encourage competition and thrive on it. They have always traded freely in the marketplace of ideas. Apple never did, and never will.

    The "open-source" "community"'s affection for Apple is indicative of its real motives and underlying beliefs. If they really cared about freedom -- real freedom, the freedom to do as one chooses with one's own property -- they'd have been supporting Microsoft all along.

    --
    "Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive" -- hey, that's me!
  127. FSF vs. "Open Source" by theonomist · · Score: 2

    . . . the FSF sided with Microsoft and put a ban down on porting GNU to Apple OSes.

    This comes as no surprise.

    Richard Stallman is a man of firm principle and unshakable conviction. Some of his convictions are clearly insane, but others -- such as his belief in the Free Market -- are not. In any case, I feel a great kinship with a man who will not under any circumstances compromise his principles.

    The "Open Source" movement, by contrast, is purely pragmatic. Pragmatism is dangerous: By definition, the pragmatist believes that the end justifies the means. This is the moral and intellectual pit that the "Open Source" "movement" has fallen into. This is why they support Apple and IBM: It's convenient. It seems momentarily advantageous.

    THEY ARE COMPLETELY AMORAL.

    You can't trust amoral people. A man with his eye only on the main chance will sell out his supporters in a heartbeat.

    Don't say I didn't warn you.

    --
    "Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive" -- hey, that's me!
  128. Huh? by sllort · · Score: 3

    Here we are again with companies going after the enablers rather than the people committing the crime:

    Apple claims the editor enables third parties to copy its copyrighted trademark themes

    I claim MS paint enables me to copy Apple's copyrighted trademarks. Just as DeCSS is a possible enabler to a crime, this program and thousands of other utilities can "enable" crime.

    How can they possibly hope to have this stand up in court? Or are they hoping someone will just crumble rather than fight?