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Eazel Come, Eazel Go?

An AC writes: "Dotcomscoop.com claims that Eazel (of Nautilus fame) closed down today. A News.com column lends some credibility to this report." It isn't clear whether Eazel went down today, or will close next week, but the end seems certain.

290 comments

  1. New economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I wonder if this heralds the closing of other open source initiative companies. What with the economic downturn and all.

    It'll be a wonder if many developers are able to stay afloat during this time.

    1. Re:New economy by rking · · Score: 1

      It's not open source per se. It's a problem with the whole idea of the license. I can't "add value" to a product because by virtue of adding value, I'm forced to give it away for free.
      Stick with one of the other opensource licenses, BSD, or the Apple on or even IBMs.

      Selling something that can be gotten for free, isn't going to work anywhere.


      So how would using one of the other open source licences help? If Eazel had distributed Nautilus under the BSD licence then they would still be "selling something that can be gotten for free".

    2. Re:New economy by rking · · Score: 1

      With the BSD license, you don't have to give away anything. It's up to you.

      That doesn't make any sense. If you use the BSD licence then you ARE giving the code away. The only choice you can make to "not give anything away" is to choose not to use the BSD licence (and not to use the GPL either). They couldn't have released Nautilus under the BSD licence without giving their code away, that just doesn't make any sense.

      The real problem though was using GPLd stuff as a foundation. If they said, "we're going to sell new UI binaries for Windows," they might have done well. But starting out with GPLd gnome as a base, they were stuck to begin with.

      I'm not at all sure that you're familiar with the subject matter. The Gnome libraries aren't GPLd, they're LGPLd. You can link proprietary software to them, if that's what you want to do.

      There was no way they could make money. Shitty strategy. I'm surprised they got any VCs. Now those guys have a taint on themselves if they ever want to get VC money again.

      I agree with you on all those points. I don't see how using BSD, Apple or IBM licences as you suggested in your original post would have helped though. Under any of those they would have encountered the exact same problem.

    3. Re:New economy by Arctic+Fox · · Score: 1
      It's not open source per se. It's a problem with the whole idea of the license. I can't "add value" to a product because by virtue of adding value, I'm forced to give it away for free.

      Stick with one of the other opensource licenses, BSD, or the Apple on or even IBMs.

      Selling something that can be gotten for free, isn't going to work anywhere.

      Coke sells carbonated water (mostly), but they add value to their water, by using formula 7X. The Colonel's 11 herbs and spices? It's just friggin chicken! These things are "secret" because they make a product better than the ones without it.

      Granted, some code can be GPLd, and if you want to do it, that's great, however, if you're expecting to make money off it, forget it. It wont happen.

    4. Re:New economy by Arctic+Fox · · Score: 1

      With the BSD license, you don't have to give away anything. It's up to you. The real problem though was using GPLd stuff as a foundation. If they said, "we're going to sell new UI binaries for Windows," they might have done well. But starting out with GPLd gnome as a base, they were stuck to begin with. There was no way they could make money. Shitty strategy. I'm surprised they got any VCs. Now those guys have a taint on themselves if they ever want to get VC money again.

  2. Re:uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    this either wins the "Most Obvious Comment" Award ...

    or the "Most Genious Slashdot Comment Of All Time" Award

    I vote for the latter. I laughed out loud.

    Amazing

  3. This is by no means the end. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Listen fellas... The code is GPL'd, isn't it? So who needs a company to develop it? Anyone who wants to can pick up the code and maintain it. Anyone who tells you that nautilus is dead and burried is ignorant of the true meaning of this platform.

    You don't need a company to develop software, or rather, to develop a dream. The founder of Eazel could extend and maintain it himself, on his own time, and the dream does not have to die. If none of the original team wishes to do so, someone else can pick up the code, someone surely will, and it's no big freakin' deal at all.
  4. Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The demise of a poorly-run company who produced a slow bloated product that the majority of the community didn't really even think they needed, will somehow allow a competing desktop to skip ahead a generation?

    I lost you somewhere...!

  5. Eazel and mozilla bloat and ximian slowness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nautilus is slow because it's largely based around Mozilla, which was suppose to have a 1.0 release many moons ago.

    Mozilla (even 0.9) is slow as a turtle on linux (Although I'm using the Windows 0.9 version right now, and it's very fast-- why IS that?).

    Not sure if it was a mistake for Nautilus to base so much around Mozilla, but it sure will make the companies who own other open-source projects rethink their strategies.

    And then there is Ximain, which is the defacto Gnome distribution (They probably have the largest and most active user base); and took weeks to release Gnome1.4 with the new Nautilus. How long will it take Ximian to release Nautilus1.0.3? I'm too busy to install this stuff myself.

    The moral of the story here? Work with other projects, but don't base your entire future on projects that are out of your control.

    Anyways, thanks to the Nautilus developers for your product. It's pretty, but slow, and better then gmc

  6. pixie dust of open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Companies need to be able to make money selling their products. I'm one of the few people in technology that doesn't hate Bill Gates. I think it is strange how much people don't like Bill Gates" -- Linus Torvalds in CNET's interview this week

    Sounds like a lot of people should listen to Linus and learn something. It isn't about some kind of war against Microsoft. It isn't about blindly following some silly philosophy about all software being free, about getting rid of intellectual property rights. It isn't about hating Bill Gates and Microsoft for reasons you have long ago forgotten and that are not valid anymore.

    We live in the real world here and you can't expect to just have fun and hack away on some nice project for three years and not having a clue about how it will ever make any money. Sooner or later, you run out of money and when that happens, it's not pretty. Wake up and smell the reality here! Too many fools are acting like freaking religious cult members, not paying attention to the obvious facts. Open source can produce great software under some conditions - some proof of this; Linux, Apache, Emacs, Perl, gcc, Gnome.. Open source can also produce shitloads of worthless crap; Mozilla, MySQL, Nautilus and about 100000 projects on SourceForge.

    I have yet to see a single case where an unestablished company would have made sustainable profit with a good open source based business model where they would give away their main product for free. It just does not work! The whole notion of it is bizarre.

    1. Re:pixie dust of open source by magnwa · · Score: 1

      I can't discuss who or what, but I can say that MYSQL most definatly is a good opensource application that is being used in VERY mission critical LARGE SCALE professional settings. So.. please don't imply that FUD here. Mysql is a great product that is only going to get better (and in our field testing, kicked the daylights out of a few commercial DB's) Magnwa

  7. Re:Give me a break, troll! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If the development of Qt Free Edition would have stopped, it would have been released under BSDL. Check out The KDE Qt Foundation

    There was no such thing when KDE started. It was a response to Gnome and to Harmony.

  8. Re:Standard X desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But, then again, you have a history of KDE advocacy and GNOME bashing, so why should we believe anything you say?

  9. uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    if i told you that i was going to start a company based on a free file manager for a free operating system, what would you have told me?

    that's right, you'd have said, "dude, you're a fucking moron."

    this company never should have existed, it had no business taking VC from anyone.

    IT'S A FILE MANAGER. see? see how stupid that sounds?

    1. Re:uh by Zach+Baker · · Score: 2
      Just wanted to point out that even ESR doesn't envision a business plan where open-source software development itself is the core business. All the models in his essay are for companies that use the software in their real business, or that use it to add value to support, hardware, proprietary software, trademarks, content, t-shirts, etc. So maybe future businesses should take heed of this and work on their actual profit center first.

      As we know, however, Eazel went into business developing open-source software because it was a useful buzzword to raise capital with. Nothing wrong with that, really. Like Super Chicken would say, they knew the job was dangerous when they took it.

    2. Re:uh by Servo · · Score: 1

      Thank you! People are such fantatics, that they don't look deeply enough at the heart of things.

      I was half asleep when I posted the first message, so it didn't come out exactly as profound as I was attempting. But, the jist of it was the same.

      Sure, you might buy into ESR's beliefs (I do to an extent.) But you gotta eat. If you want to make money programing, you are going to have to get a job working on propietary software. Sure, a couple people might get jobs doing maintainance work on open source, but its a position where 1) your lucky as hell to have gotten it. 2) your supporting an overall effort to produce value added products and services focused on open source, not the piece of open source software itself.

      This whole thing on making money with open source reminds me of the "underpants gnomes" episode of South Park. Step 1: Steal Underpants. Step 2: ??? Step 3: Profit!

      Sure, you can make money using Linux/Open Source, but you can't make, and won't make by producing the open source product as your primary purpose.

      Redhat works because they produce value added products/services around open source. Their main business model is notto produce software for you to download for free. It is to produce things extra that compell you to buy the packaged version (ie, documentation, media, shiny stickers, support)

      Another successful model of leveraging open source is in IBM's adoption of Linux. IBM sells an S/390 (a mainframe for those not reading slashdot lately) with Linux. First off, they have saved by not having to develop and manage the complete Operating system and application software. They only have to work on porting to their platform. Plus, they make money on service contracts and installation fees.

      Once again, I'm tired and probably doing more harm than good by ranting. Look out for an article I'm working on that goes into detail how to *really* use open source to make a buck (or two!).

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
    3. Re:uh by Servo · · Score: 2

      I think you hit the nail on the head here, the MARKETING people came buzzing. Marketing Departments are the root of all evil in today's economy. They try to sell things that they do not understand, and give false hopes all the way around.

      I just had a revelation. Somewhat offtopic, but, does anybody realize that in order to have free software, we must have proprietary software? Somebody somewhere has to pay these programmers, or they'll starve to death. If you are going to live in a capitalist society (which most of us don't really have a choice), then you gotta do SOMETHING to make money to survive.

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
    4. Re:uh by ethereal · · Score: 1

      Not that it was necessarily a great business plan, but they did have more of a plan than that, you know. Something about selling additional services as part of the file browser, kind of an ASP/network storage thing.

      It was (as Dennis Powell pointed out the other day) a breathtaking amount of money for a file manager, though. Whew!

      Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    5. Re:uh by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      If you are going to live in a capitalist society (which most of us don't really have a choice), then you gotta do SOMETHING to make money to survive.

      I'm pretty sure work has to be performed in Socialist societies, too.

      On another note, since Douglas Adams died today, we should do something in his memory, to memorialize his great contribution to our culture. I suggest that we load up all of the marketing people onto "B" Ark and send it on its way... ;)

      - - - - -

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    6. Re:uh by vrt3 · · Score: 3
      Somewhat offtopic, but, does anybody realize that in order to have free software, we must have proprietary software? Somebody somewhere has to pay these programmers, or they'll starve to death.

      I suggest you read Eric S. Raymond's "The magic cauldron" for a thoughtfull essay on that subject: http://tuxedo.org/~esr/writings/magic-cauldron/

      --
      This sig under construction. Please check back later.
    7. Re:uh by Drone-X · · Score: 2

      They never planned to make any money from Nautilus directly but from their services. Too bad they never got to test them.

    8. Re:uh by felipeal · · Score: 1

      >IT'S A FILE MANAGER. see? see how stupid that sounds?

      If that was so simple, Micro$#&t would not being sued for integrating its "file manager" with its "OS"!

    9. Re:uh by Billly+Gates · · Score: 3

      I actually met the main developers at Linux Expo in New York Last Winter and believe me they were clueless. I am not saying anything bad about it technically but here is my expereince.

      I walk to the booth and immediately the guys with the tags from marketing quickly buzzed around me like fly's around a bowl of potato salid. I work for a finicial company according to me i.d. tag ( I do hardware support, not a stockbroker ) and they assumed I was an investor.

      He mentioned how Eazel was going to take over and that even gnome-helix would fade away as Eazel would take gnome into the sunset.

      I then asked him simply, how is eazel expected to make an income?

      he replied, well netscape was free and made it big and we expect to make it big like netscape. Marc Anderson made millions of dollars off of netscape??? What the hell?

      I mentioned to him that netscape was not free until microsoft began shooving its nose into the gorund with IE/Windows product tying. He then mentioned, well since gnome is going to be number one because sun and redhat said so, means nautulis is also going to be number one because were the best. ???

      I was about ready to ask again for a more clean answer how Eazel was actually planning to make money and then a ral investor stood behind me so I did not want too piss anyone off so I nodded my head and walked aay in disbelief.

      You mentioned that its a file manager and nothing else but the point is that it has no value. with helix you get constant updates and a few apps you would not get elsehere. With Natiulus you get uh wwll frankly natiulus.

      Its a shame that a few brilliant software engineers can do something so stupid that even soneone wiht an i.q. of 80 can relise it was bound to failure.

      I do not regret them going out of bussiness but I do fear that Microsoft will use this as proof that all free software is bound for failure.

      I can see it now Steve Balmer: "Just look at linuxcare, turbolinux and now eazel, omg redhat may be next! Free software really doesn't work. See I told you so."

    10. Re:uh by baywulf · · Score: 1

      No idiot, they were sued for integrating its web browser with its OS.

    11. Re:uh by Alatar · · Score: 1

      You start off by saying you met the main developers, and then follow with a story about how the marketing guys are idiots? Marketing guys are always idiots! What about the developers?

    12. Re:uh by MSBob · · Score: 2
      you are going to live in a capitalist society (which most of us don't really have a choice)

      I'm sure fixing you with immigration papers for Cuba or better yet North Korea shouldn't be too challenging. Yup. You have a choice. All it takes is just one trip to your nearest North Korean embassy.

      I just realised the preversity of this idea. Imagine if all OSS developers headed to N. Korea and started writing software from within there (esp. proprietary software) the country would quickly become richer by several orders of magnitude. Funny idea.

      --
      Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
    13. Re:uh by Drgnkght · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a plan, just one problem. Where are you going to find a marketing person to sell the idea to venture capitolists? I imagine building an Ark would be rather expensive. ;-)

  10. Re:Give me a break, troll! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Tell me something.
    Instead of the way things went, what would have happened if Trolltech was bought out by MS, and Qt suddenly became off-limits overnight?
    The KDE team would had to have rewritten Qt from the ground up (which there at one point was a project for called Harmony, but KDE refused to switch over to it when it became usable because it didn't offer identical features to Qt).

    The viewpoint of the KDE team was always "we'll cross that bridge when we get there". But in some situations it is just too costly to cross that bridge, and the project dies out. If AT&T hadn't messed with UNIX as it did, Windows NT could very well never have even existed, because Microsoft would have stayed out of a marketplace with such a dominant, free, OS spanning the crown. But instead everybody knows what happened, and now BSD is only a shadow of what it could have been, and linux, which WAS written from the ground up, leads the pack.

    The point is, as soon as you introduce something non-Free into a Free project it becomes tainted. From there on out the future of your project is out of your hands, no matter what features you add. And the only thing you can hope for is for the non-Free thing to become Free, as with Qt. KDE got lucky, really lucky, and that they, and the KDE fans, won't admit to that is ignoring the truth.

    Having said all that, it is one hell of a desktop, and having seen the latest version in action yesterday I might just start running it myself. But I was vehemantly anti-KDE as long as Qt wasn't GPL. And so, as the original author, I still don't trust the KDE leadership.
    But that's not important anymore, because I don't trust the GNOME leadership anymore either. Even though the GNOME codebase itself has never went through a KDE/Qt-like debacle, the GNOME leadership is mired in political and commercial movements. There's nothing wrong with making money, but somehow I get the gut feeling GNOME isn't following the direction best for the users (looking at Nautilus and all...)

    I guess we can learn a very simple thing from this: no matter what the theatre is, there will always be a show to watch, and someone to boo at.

  11. No CORPORATE involvement?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    >KDE has spent a great deal of time building a GUI desktop suite with little to no corporate involvement

    Are you HIGH?
    KDE is a DEMO for Troll Tech. Why do you think people didn't take them at their face value, when they were brazenly trumpeting their "misunderstanding" of the GPL?

    Unlike many of the die-hard GPL folks, I don't object to proprietary stuff on Linux. In fact, I buy lots of it (Q3, VMware, Might and Magic, Photogenics...).

    What I *do* object to is a private company gaining strong leverage of Linux... be it in the kernel (as most would object to) or in the desktop (as some/many would object to).

    Remember, Microsoft started with just a DOS. You'd have to have your head in the sand to not see the Microsoft emails where they conspired to "fix" Microsoft apps (including Windows) so they would fault under DR-DOS.

    Maybe Troll Tech wouldn't stoop to such things, but maybe they would. They are a for-profit corporation, and have a legal obligation to their shareholders to generate profit by any means possible. Multinational corporations control ENOUGH of our private lives.. why cheer our conceeding yet one more freedom?

    Remember, the largest faction of KDE developers are on the Troll Tech payroll. Remember the Harmony project... the KDE developers told them that even if Harmony was a plug-in substitute for Qt, and it was better by being thread-safe... they STILL wouldn't use it.

    I write crossplatform apps in Python. Every time I curse Tk, I also curse Troll Tech because I can't develop GPL software using Qt, if that software may be used on Windows (don't give me bunk about it's because Windows isn't free... Solaris isn't free either!)

    Personally, I wish TT would make Qt totall GPL (all platforms), maybe keeping the very latest stuff under the QPL on Windows. I don't need the fancy stuff in the latest Qt.

    1. Re:No CORPORATE involvement?!?! by puetzk · · Score: 2

      and kde already maintains their own qt-copy CVS, which, while it generally isn't too divergent from TT's official versions does sometimes get things like font-AA first. The infrastructure for it to be a real fork is quite soundly in place, should such a move every be necessary (hopefully it never will be though!)

      --
      The Matrix is going down for reboot now! Stopping reality: OK. The system is halted.
    2. Re:No CORPORATE involvement?!?! by bero-rh · · Score: 2

      KDE is a DEMO for TrollTech

      While they may look at it as one, it isn't - KDE has many more lines of code than Qt.

      [Possibility of TrollTech doing Microsoft-like games to prevent competition]

      Even if they wanted to do that, they couldn't - how do you hide this sort of thing in GPL code?
      Somebody WOULD patch it out and, if necessary, fork the product. If nobody else did, I would.

      --
      This message is provided under the terms outlined at http://www.bero.org/terms.html
  12. Funny observation about Slashdot people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    When a company announces it's "doing something for Linux," ....everyone is excited. But when that company fails...damn...the dogs come out... Indrema. When this thing started, I could only read good things about an open source game console. When it failed, the hindsight kicked in. All I read about was the "I knew it would fail" messages. Eazel. Everyone on Slashdot (save the KDE goons) loved it. Now that there is word of closure, the hounds circle again. My bet we'll be seeing Loki bashing again shortly... No need for flames, just an observation... Oh yeah, to appease the Slashdot people - M$ sucks!

    1. Re:Funny observation about Slashdot people by ekidder · · Score: 1

      Woah.. you've been reading a different Slashdot than I have, then. People wanted blood long, long before Indrema and Eazel shut down.

    2. Re:Funny observation about Slashdot people by joto · · Score: 2
      Hopefully, it's not the same people replying both times.

      My guess is that people excited about Company X building linux products reply the first time. People who see their failed business model just keeps their mouth shut (either because of lack of interest, or because they are afraid to loose karma). When Company X fails, the situation is reversed. Simple?

  13. Re:Standard X desktop? by HeUnique · · Score: 2

    excuse me, but would you mind taking a look at Ximian business plan? then compare it to reality?

    Sure, they got $15 million from investments, but they only recently got CEO, so I assume they burned lots of money without almost getting any money in - those really great booths in Linux World, the stuffed monkeys that they gave, T-shirts, etc - do costs lots of money you know..

    So go look at CNet report about Eazel - they tried to get some money from Sun, who, in returned kicked a polite "NO" back to Eazel. Why do you think that Sun will give money to Ximian if they'll be on the red bar in the financial terms (and they will if they won't start pulling their heads out of their butt and start charging for services like Red Carpet etc)..

    If my calculations are correct (based on things I hear from people close and in Ximian) - unless they start making money NOW - they won't be existing in the next 4-5 months..

    --
    Hetz (Heunique)
  14. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Micah · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of GNOME RPMs and binary tarballs without Ximian.

  15. Re:Free speech doesn't have to mean free beer by Micah · · Score: 1

    That type of license might have made some sense, but it also would have excluded it from being the main file manager in GNOME, which was its primary point. They need to get it in front of as many eyes as possible to profit from their services.

    Too bad they're not staying around long enough to really get into those services. Would anyone have paid for them? I know I would not have, but I'm pretty cheap these days.....

  16. Show of hands..... by Micah · · Score: 1

    how many of you would have forked out money for Eazel's proposed "services"?

  17. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Micah · · Score: 2

    I don't think you'll get GNOME developers to move to KDE. Remember...

    * GNOME is the official desktop of the GNU project. There are hundreds or thousands of people that will keep developing it for that reason alone.

    * There is much more to GNOME than Eazel and even Ximian. It's largely worked on by volunteers.

    Hopefully they'll be able to keep developing Nautilus. I used it a bit and liked it.

    I believe GNOME and KDE will both exist and have loyal followings for at least 4 more years. One will probably emerge the victor. I agree with you that KDE has the best shot. But GNOME is by no means out.

    Disclaimer: I'm a KDE user myself, even after playing with Ximian. But I love Gnumeric!

  18. Compliance, not licensing by KMSelf · · Score: 2

    The issue with the Qt license was that it is incompatible with the GPL, but was being used to adapt GPLd applications to the KDE desktop. This violated the terms of licensing of the GPLd software in question. I believe you've misstated the objection -- it wasn't against Qt-GPL but against Qt-QPL.

    While the LGPL allows use in proprietary software, it is also compatible with the GPL.

    The issue was license compliance, not status, per se. If people start making a general practice of flauting the terms of the GPL, there's a problem.

    What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?

    --

    What part of "gestalt" don't you understand?

  19. Re:Standard X desktop? by Phroggy · · Score: 1
    Thanks for articulating that so nicely; now I won't have to say it. :-)

    --

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  20. Re:Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    Damn straight. I can barely code, compared to a lot of people, but I wrote software to do high-quality dithering from 24 bit to 16 bit for CD mastering. Plus, I've added a lot of tweaks to it- and I kluged together AIFF reading routines, came up with several groundbreaking dither algorithms based on quadratic and primitive root residues, and made it GPLed in hopes other audio hackers can use the code.

    You can't bitch about not having code because other people don't really owe you anything. I develop 'Mastering Tools' at my own pace to suit my own needs. The point is, through _developing_ free software I make it possible for other people to develop other things, offshoots in which the hard work is done. I don't think anyone without a mastering-grade studio could have tuned the dithers I've written- you need specialised monitoring to do that. But now anyone can make a simple little app that just sticks a different GUI on it, or uses some of the dither routines for, say, a game in which it's important that distant footsteps _sound_ distant, in which depth cues are actually well handled instead of sound blaster crap. This is the way the world works- or should work.

    And if nobody re-uses my GPLed routines, that's fine too- I wrote them for _me_ and have already got my investment in time back many times over, in the effectiveness and quality of my new CD mastering processes.

  21. Re:Standard X desktop? by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
    meanwhile other KDE developers worked on a free Qt version
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but as I remember it the main KDE developers didn't help with the free Qt (Harmony), and even worse, they wouldn't commit to using it even when it was finished. If they had actually backed Harmony I don't think Gnome would have existed.

    That was when I saw that the KDE people not only were willing to make serious compromises to expediate their goals, but weren't really committed to Free Software or doing the right thing.

    And if it wasn't for Harmony and Gnome and Debian, Qt never would have had its foundation, the QPL, or eventually the GPL. Those things didn't happen because of pressure from KDE developers, they happened because of pressure from the (idealistic and uncompromising) Free Software community.

  22. Re:Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by dangermouse · · Score: 1

    I may have been a little touchy. But wow, I get tired of hearing the same thing over and over from people who think they're somehow hipping us all to their remarkable insight. I think I'll just take that sleep now.

  23. Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by dangermouse · · Score: 5
    I'm fairly sick of seeing posts from "average users" who have decided to descend from on high and enlighten the "geeks" as to what it is they need. So I'm going to postpone sleep for a few minutes and address those posts, which go something like this:

    I'm a Typical User, and what you geeks just don't get is that we Typical Users don't care about our OS or our window manager. All we're interested in is whether the applications we need exist and help us do our jobs more efficiently.

    Yeah, we know.

    We get it. You only care about the apps. Freaking great. You know what? You still need an OS, and you still need a GUI. In fact, you need an OS and a decent GUI/toolkit before you can seriously even consider writing applications.

    Well, we've got the OS part more or less licked, but it's an interesting realm for us "geeks", so we're going to continue to work on it, continue to talk about it in our little net-centric communities, and maybe even continue to recommend that you Typical Users use a decent OS. The GUI is also interesting, it's shiny, and it's where a lot of development is happening now... so we're going to work on it and talk about it and maybe even recommend a good one of those to you as well. Get over it.

    We know you need applications. We need them, too, because we aren't all full-time "geeks". So don't feel the need to interject into every OS or GUI discussion with some crap about applications, and don't pretend as if we're just too stupid to realize you need them. It's irritating and repetitious beyond belief.

    1. Re:Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      werd. IBM should spend that billion on giving developers a place to sleep. At least VA Linux has the brains to fork web space and shell accounts.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    2. Re:Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by QuantumG · · Score: 2

      werd. You should also understand that 99.9% of the time, we dont give a fuck. Yah, you want you want you want, think yourself lucky we give you anything. Go use Microsoft, just dont come bitching to us when you're pissed off that some stupid little feature doesn't work the way you like. If you learnt to fucking code you could fix it and get on with your life. But no, that's just too damn hard. Warning: Useless analogy ahead! You're the kind of people who get a flat tire and call the autoclub cause you cant figure out how to use a tire iron. We're not asking you to make design decisions here, just learn how to read code and change that one specific bit that is broken (or doesn't do exactly what you think it should). If you understood what freedoms you were giving up by using proprietory software you would not be so willing to hand them over to billy boy. But no, you're happy being pissed off every day because you forgot that you had to click the print preview button and wait 30 seconds before you could press the print button that doesn't use anything from the print preview view. You're happy having no way of stopping those annoying javascript windows popping up or dismissing a dialog box only to get that same dialog box back in an infinite loop and having to go to the task manager that cant figure out that you want it to have a higher time slice (well fucking duh!) and killing the app that is taking up 99.9% of your processor and causing insufferible locks. You're happy to live with all this shit as long as you dont have to learn anything and risk the possibility of becoming a "geek".

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:Yeah, applications, ok... shut up. by cfish · · Score: 2

      Right on! If we charged money for the code, then the users would have been the customers. But no, that's not how it works. In open source, the users are peers and freeloaders. We write what we need when the situation bugs us enough to do so. We don't owe anyone the customer service.

      "but I paid $70 for Red Hat!." Well, did you pay for the office apps you want? No? quit whining. Yes? Whine to Red Hat.

      Telling the programmers that thier FREE code isn't good enough is sort of like our showing you our new born baby and you say, "What an ugly baby. If I pay MS $x then I can get a beautiful baby." It hurts. It doesn't help anyone and we get pissed off.

      Many "users" tend to believe that they are the customers and demand things. They don't realize that they are actually "freeloading" the contributors. Customers, by definition, PAYS. Open source programmers are not taking a penny and therefore not responsible for whatever the user's complaint is. So there's no good free office software? You can either buy one or write one but you cannot whine because we don't owe you nothin'. If MS has a office suit that you like, go for it. We will let you know when we make a good one. Wierd, when I tell people to go for MS product, they think I have attitude problems and I am trying to be leet.

      Open Source applications take time. When they aren't ready, they aren't ready; you cannot pressure us into making something. The user base doesn't want to give us time and the user base doesn't want to help. IBM says they will invest 1 billion in Linux, but doing PR stuffs instead of writing us a good office suite, so even IBM (the big customer?) have no right to whine about the office suite. And luckily, they don't. I am almost sure that if they did try to write office it will bomb, too. What makes you think other people have the right to pressure the programmers? You are giving the same "suggestions" again and again and again and again. That does not help. So either start coding or throw some money at office application sellers, now quit bugging us, OK?

  24. SO-5.2 was almost a KDE app [Re:Is Gnome next?] by Forge · · Score: 1

    when you install Star Office on KDE it gets placed into the menue structure. At least SO 5.x did on KDE 1.x

    This is what a desktop is about. It's just that back then Gnome didn't have a clear enogh set of standards for them to try and comply. I sospect the next version will integrate with both or perhaps tow the company line and be Gnome only.

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    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  25. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Forge · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I wasn't clear.

    1. You don't have to use QT to make a closed source application.

    2. You don't have to use QT to make a closed source KDE application.

    3. Any app that isn't going to easily make $1200 ( 100 copies at $20 each minus media costs ) should be given away in source form so it can be brought up to the standard of viable shareware.

    4. If you want to sell a closed source product for profit then pay for the privilege.

    4b. It's pure hypocrisy to demand free stuff when you won't give anything away.

    5. I think the Linux desktop will be better off if we can stall for another year or 2 the arrival of lots of crummy little binary only shareware.

    Have you been to tocows lately? The freeware generally has better quality in most categories.

    6. In any case the point is mute because no matter what is decided on Slashdot, Gnome will continue to exist and grow for years to come. If it falters that will be because the developers loose interest, not because a few companies fail or even KDE widening the gap (the latter would deepen there resolve actually)

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  26. What about Gnome closed apps? [Re:Good riddance] by Forge · · Score: 1

    1. Point one existed only as a prelude to point 2. However look no further than the thousands of closed apps on every OS to see why QT isn't special there.

    2. No. I mean you can use Motif or GTK. KDE is mostly compatible with both. I.e. drag and drop etc... Icons and menus are simply about puting a script and a .xpm graphic in the correct place. Install Star Office 5.2 on a system running KDE 1.x. See what happens.

    3. What's your point? You don't need professional tools to build the stuff nobody wants. Talk to the authors of every piece of shareware you have EVER paid for. Tell me which of them was built using free tools only. Tell me which wasn't spending $1200 per week per programer and would be happy to shave a month off the development time if it could be done at that cost.

    4. Did you talk to Corel about this?

    4b. I love when people bring up BSD when talking about how to make Linux more popular. Advise people on stuff you do better than them. I.e. The Open BSD teem can teach the Linux teem about security. Free/open/net BSD can't teach Linux about marketing.

    5. WinZip isn't crummy. It's a professional tool that was developed by professionals who spent a lot of money buying development tools.

    Linux doesn't count as freeware. Don't confuse freeware with Free Software. I was talking about the stuff built using Visual *** and other expensive tools and given away in binary form for free.

    Finally. There are actual closed source KDE applications on the market or in beta right now. kISDN-Pro and a couple of the products from theKompany.com for instance.

    What about Gnome closed apps?

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  27. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Forge · · Score: 2

    For the record you don't have to pay for QT until you actually start selling your product. This means that you can design and build it for free and then if it looks viable you pay Troll and put it on the market.

    If you aren't going to make $1,200 (the full list price of QT) in very short order you probably have a dud product that's not commercially viable. You know something of the caliber of Linux-0.0.2 and which should be treated in a similar manner.

    As for those pore students and struggling commercial developers on Windows, guess what? If the development environment didn't cost them over $1,200 then they are using just the GNU tools etc... If they are using simplified GUI toolkits or an IDE for less it means pirated software.

    Finally. KDE has clearly defined standards, UI requirements and communications protocols. You can build a full KDE application without actually using the KDE or QT libs. Star Office came very close in the last couple versions.

    In short if Gnome was to disappear it wouldn't make QT a monopoly. An advantage perhaps but not a monopoly.

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    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  28. Re:Good luck andy by richieb · · Score: 1
    That's because my background comes from VAX systems in the late 60s (when I was still a senile old man).

    My grandfather told me (;-)) that the first VAX came out in '78. But what does he know....

    ...richie

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
  29. Why use C and not C++? by richieb · · Score: 1
    Because it is much easier to interface C with other languages. Look at the GTK+ bindings for other languages: Perl, Python, etc. Are there similar bindings for the KDE tool kit?

    Not everyone likes to program in C++. For example I prefer Eiffel.

    ...richie

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    1. Re:Why use C and not C++? by puetzk · · Score: 1

      yes. there are. Is there more to say than that? Perl/Python are there, java (I think), basically most languages that have enough of an object model to support it. One could do C wrappers (as have been done for some specific parts of the API, like DCOP and artsd, to allow easy interoperability with C apps), but very few platforms have C and no (simple, QT doesn't really stretch new features) C++, so there's really no point in doing a full wrapper. It would be much less clean to code in C with a pseudo-object model than to just use C++.

      --
      The Matrix is going down for reboot now! Stopping reality: OK. The system is halted.
  30. Re:BeOS in the toilet too -- and it ain't free by Squid · · Score: 3

    Be failed because Jean-Louis Gassee didn't WANT to succeed. Read through the Be Newsletters - you can actually WATCH him backpedaling from every success! Every time BeOS came close to being a big hit on any platform, he throttled back - when the BeBox was selling decently well he canned it, when BeOS on Power Mac was popular he committed to an x86-only strategy (and denied he was on such a strategy for two years while making up brain-dead excuses for not porting to the G3), when BeOS PE was a runaway success he decided to refocus the company on "internet appliances". On one hand he'd offer BeOS x86 FREE to any PC vendor willing to preinstall it, and at the same time turned down PPC system vendor Pios (now Metabox) when they wanted to license it (for money) and even offered do the port details themselves! Hell, just COMPARING what JLG said in a newsletter to what the company actually did six months later should be an eye opener - assuming the newsletters are even still available online (somewhere at be.com I'd guess - frankly, I'm too livid at JLG's handling of it all to even visit the site to check!).

    As to BeOS running what people wanted or needed to run, the apps would have come, had Jean-Louis not blown it. I still don't know what he did to piss off Adobe, but one week they were porting Photoshop to it, and the next they weren't.

    BeOS wouldn't have needed to run EVERYTHING - just enough to establish a base. As a dual-boot toy it was beginning to catch on. As a dual-boot work environment with a reasonable spread of applications and SOME amount of file-format compatibility, I think it would have started raking in market share. Indeed, if it had been allowed to actually become what JLG originally said he wanted - a content-creation system, with at least one each of paint programs, 3D modelers, video editors, and music programs - it wouldn't have NEEDED to run Microsoft Word, it would have found its own niche replacing Amigas in multimedia shops and TV studios. (Especially back two years ago when there WERE still Amigas in TV studios.) Instead it never became much more than a proof of concept, and once the company goes away, the source code will probably go down with it.

  31. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by Watts+Martin · · Score: 2

    You're very eloquent, but that doesn't mean you're not speaking nonsense. Like it or not, the learning curve is part of what makes us productive--or fails to make us so.

    Could I use Emacs or vim as a word processor? Absolutely. But sit down two people who had a 'secretary-level' competence with computers, one in front of Emacs or vim--your choice--and the other in front of any good GUI word processor (or even most DOS word processora), and tell them to transcribe a standard, one-page business letter, block letter format, and print it. A standard 12-point Times Roman font.

    This is a ten-to-fifteen minute process for most people in that situation with the GUI program, based on my experience watching customers at Kinko's a few years back. Now, how are you going to do that in Emacs? Remember, you have to set a font and print this. You need a print formatter! Let's teach the secretary LaTeX or groff. That'll go quickly.

    You may think this is a silly example, but it's a real-world example. If we change things to a complex document, the GUI tools don't necessarily start falling behind, either. I'll do a full-page magazine ad layout--headline, line art, text that flows around that line art, that sort of thing--in Quark Xpress, a program I've used for about 10 minutes. You use whatever non-GUI tools you're an expert in. Mine will be finished and printed before yours. Guaranteed. There are things TeX does better than Quark, sure, but there are things Quark does better than TeX. This isn't GUI snobbery, it's reality.

    I'm often a Unix nerd myself, but I've used enough GUIs to not have a knee-jerk reaction to them. Ease of use often does help people to be more productive. Don't knock it until you've tried it.

  32. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by johnnyb · · Score: 2

    Actually, they can do it with gnome, because the gnome libraries are mostly LGPL, which allows proprietary programs.

  33. Re:Standard X desktop? by johnnyb · · Score: 2

    Actually, Ximian _is_ making money. HP (and Sun, I think) are paying them to give their hardware first-class ports of GNOME. Why? Because it makes their hardware more valuable.

    Ximian does have an income flow. However, I don't believe it is currently at a level that makes it profitable. But at least they do have income, and plans on how to make more.

  34. Re:The Emperor's New Clothes by johnnyb · · Score: 2

    It didn't lack consideration. They, like many companies, planned on having a second round of funding. That was a part of the plan. The dot-com bust prevented that second round. It happens. It's not the way I would run a business, but it's probably on better footing than a lot of other businesses in the last few years.

  35. RIP by paul.dunne · · Score: 2

    OK, so no more Eazel. Maybe now IBM will finally wise up and implement a version of OS/2's Workplace Shell for Linux. It's hard to believe: I was using this superior GUI in 1994, and 7 years later everyone is still enthusing about the possibilities of making Linux into a "like Windows only not as good" system.

  36. Nautilus is not a web browser! by Coverfire · · Score: 1

    Just to clarify, Nautilus is not a web browser nor was it ever designed to be one. BTW: Nautilus 1.0.3 fixes everything that was annoying about Nautilus and makes substantial speed improvements. It is a trule amazing piece of software.

  37. Re:trolling... by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1
    Anyway, I'm noticing a lot of KDE trolling going on here... It may just be me, I'm not sure, but it really seems to me that a lot of KDE users like to cut on Gnome really badly. I don't see the same thing coming from Gnome users, I wonder why this is, I'm not inferring anything, I'm honestly curious.

    Trolling indeed, the GNOME camp would never cut on KDE badly for certain licensing issues. Which is fine by me, each to his or her own, but claiming it's a one way street is nonsense. Where two fight, two are guilty.

    Take a look at Konqueror, it has the UGLIEST interface I've seen since I stopped using motif apps. Look at the buttons, they're hideous! And they way they are dithered when they are inactive, it's God awfully hideous looking!

    Some of the people who replied here claimed they could create nicer buttons in their sleep, so why don't they and create a theme or have someone put them in kdeartwork?

    Even better.. both GNOME and KDE has similar components: it shouldn't be that hard to create a theme archive which works with both. Both need a back and forth button in a browser. Icons are just icons. We've got cooperation on drag and drop, desktop files, why not themes? Sure, there would be some GNOME/KDE specific config files in such a theme archive, but the icons can be the same..

    Control Center -> Icons -> Advanced -> Toolbar (set Effect for Disabled to Gray, not semi-transparent)

    I *HATE* panels that stretch across the whole bottom/top/side of the screen.

    Good for you, the panel in KDE 2.2 can be configured with a maximum width.

    I hope I don't start a flame fest, that's not my intention...

    Except for the trolling start, I think you succeeded even though I think "ugly" is a weak argument because it would take only one talented artist to change all that.

  38. Re:Standard X desktop? by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1
    Did cddb had the intention to screw everyone ?
    Did AT&T had the intention to screw UNIX ?

    In the end, apparently so.

  39. Re:Standard X desktop? by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 1
    Ahh rewriting history. Many people did work on Harmony. The problem was, the main KDE developers worked for TrollTech and refused to even consider using Harmony for *anything*, even if it turned out better than Qt.

    Harmony was supposed to be a drop-in replacement, much like Lesstif is for Motif. So even if KDE recommended Free Qt, it would not have been necessary and you could have used GPLed KDE with (L?)GPLed Harmony and be merry.

    It became clear that Harmony had little future because of the control TrollTech had over the KDE project.

    The only influence from Trolltech came from the KDE developers there. At the time they felt that the Free Qt license was sufficient for KDE largely based on the good cooperation between KDE and Troll.

    As soon as the KDE community grew and the license was no longer sufficient Qt was released under the QPL. Community pressure continued and Qt was released under the GPL as well.

    (from another post)
    Not sure. Qt licensing changed *because* of pressure from the community. So was it well-placed trust or just luck ?

    If a company changes its license twice because of community pressure than I think trust in that company was well-placed.

  40. Re:Standard X desktop? by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 2
    To me that just says they're naive. Look at the history of BSD if you want to know why trusting someone who could negatively affect your work is a bad thing.

    No, it's naive to trust everything and everyone. It's paranoia to trust noone at all, ever.

    It's perfectly normal to trust a few, based on the situation, which is what the KDE team did.

    Besides, alienating yourself from people who you distrust is not the way to go. Had everyone who distrusted the Trolls worked on the free Qt replacement (Harmony) instead of GNOME, we would have had one desktop now and less flamewars.

  41. Re:Standard X desktop? by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 5
    But it was just wrong for KDE to pick the poisoned apple no matter how tempting, and the fact they still don't seem to understand why is a problem.

    That, or you could admit that the trust the KDE team placed in Trolltech was just.

    • On June 22, 1998 they KDE and Trolltech created a foundation to ensure Trolltech couldn't lock Qt away
    • meanwhile other KDE developers worked on a free Qt version
    • Quite a few KDE developers work for Trolltech (some at key positions) so the relationship is quite good and there is a good understanding within the Trolls of the needs of KDE
    • Trolltech developed the QPL almost specifically because of KDE issues
    • Trolltech released Qt under the GPL, again to benefit KDE

    Over the course of 5 years (1997-2001), Trolltech has never had the intention to screw up KDE or free software. Trolltech always accepted patches and even gave official permission for some alternate distributions.

    The KDE team trusted the Trolls. I can understand why you were wary of KDE for doing so, but in the end it looks to me like that trust was just well-placed.

  42. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2
    Compiling GNOME takes about 90 minutes on hardware I bought six months ago, including Nautilus and Gnumeric. I'm not sure where this two days business came from. I think my Multia could compile GNOME in 2 days. You are also ignoring that you don't always have to compile from scratch. A major part of the compile time is gtk+ and gnome-libs, but these come out with relative infrequency.

    Anyway it isn't as if you have to just look at your xterm while it compiles. Just run a compile script and get on with your life.

  43. Re:Standard X desktop? by Mr.+Frilly · · Score: 1

    I'll second you there. When I choose to write my app in Gnome/GTK+ rather than KDE/Qt, it really came done to just the C/C++ issue. If KDE/Qt was in C, and Gnome was the one written in C++, I would have gone the other way.

  44. Does it matter? by enterfornone · · Score: 3

    I don't think you can really say that Eazel died because Nautilus sucked. The software is independant of their business model.

    Sure Eazel were the people who created Nautilus, but it doesn't just disapear now that they are gone. All that goes is a bunch services that no one used anyway.

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    enterfornone - logging in for a change
  45. KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by FFFish · · Score: 5

    Daft buggers, all of you.

    It doesn't matter what you hacker geeks think is the better windows manager, whether you prefer C or C++, whether Qt is evile or saviour, etc.

    What matters is what the majority of end users prefer.

    And at some point, the majority are going to be people like me: people who use the computer as a tool, and choose our software not for geek-karma, but for how productive it can make us.

    I don't give two short strokes whatthefuck OS or general GUI I'm using. I spend so little time with either, that they're both irrelevent.

    What's important to me are my bread-and-butter applications and how they make me work faster or better. Yes, their GUI component is a factor, but these days, all GUIs are pretty darn similar once they hit application level.

    So is it gonna be KDE or GNOME or what that wins? Answer: it's gonna be whichever one gets the killer "office" applications first.

    And given that there's a dearth of killer Linux "office" apps right now -- yah, sure, StarOffice and Applix and Corel and shite, but none of the are primo and complete -- it's probably all moot.


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    Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    1. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by nebby · · Score: 1

      Show me a document that you've created using vi that has all the formatting features of Word. Don't tell me to use LaTeX, because that's a pain in the ass and is "inefficient."

      The "productivity" tools you speak of that are used by geeks are intended for coding and system administration. Office apps and things of the sort are used for the creation of documents to be exchanged in a business environment.

      When I buy a car, I don't want to have to give a fuck about how the engine works or the steering system or the breaks or anything. I can get by and use the car for driving without knowing these things. However, there is a substantial advantage to understanding the inner workings of the car.. though far from necessary. You are the equivalent of a mechanic preaching about how everyone should be required to understand the operation of an intake manifold before they are allowed to purchace a car.. since they'll be "wasting their life" if it breaks down.

      Nice try, troll.

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    2. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by Compuser · · Score: 1

      If you need to RTFM to use something then it is
      effectively unusable for most people. Most people
      have trouble understanding the difference between
      "Save" and "Save As" options, so why do you
      think they'd be able to learn the difference
      between ":q", ":q!", and ":x". Do you know what
      happens when average people are shown a terminal
      runnign vi? The can't understand why no letters
      show up on screen and the thing beeps every time
      they press the keyboard. Some stumble on the "i"
      key and are puzzled why the behavior has changed
      when all they did was press another letter.
      I have personally spent FIVE hours trying to
      teach someone what the "INSERT" key on the
      keyboard does (in DOS). I failed. Miserably.
      I suggest you try to teach your grandmother this
      very fact. Then write back if you hadn't had an
      epiphany.
      Oh, and imagine you are a company trying to teach
      your middle-school-dropout secretaries how to use
      vi (let's be generous and say vim). Suddenly the
      cost becomes tangible, measured in real dough.
      To extend your proposal, it would be nice if you
      could admin your own machine. This would save you
      time. If all secretaries in a big company had
      basic sysadmin's skills you wouldn't need tech
      support. Imagine the savings. Yet noone does this.
      Why? Because your ninja sysadmin secretaries
      would have too many skills, would command higher
      salaries and most importantly, would cost waaay
      too much to train.
      Bottom line, most people will find RTFMing a
      prohibitive cost of entry, so that without
      GUI they will not be productive at all.

    3. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by PhiRatE · · Score: 3

      I find this comment highly amusing. Your office suite makes you so productive? your GUI file managers and your bloated "word processors" and your pretty point-and-drool email clients make you productive?

      I utterly disagree.

      The only advantage to these shiny toys is the extremely low level of time needed to learn how to use them. Thats it, right there.

      For email productivity, watch a "hacker geek" use mutt, for editing, vi or emacs or joe, for file management, a command-line, the find command, for statistics and analysis, perl, gnuplot, whatever.

      The simple fact is that the "majority" you stand there and speak of is the lazy majority, those who don't use the computer as a tool, they use the computer as a shiny toy. Check this out! I can pick up my shiny toy and play with it for 10 minutes and end up with a sandcastle! joy!

      Wanna build a house? take yonder "tools", the hammer, the nail, the pieces of wood. Simple aren't they? Can you build a house? don't be stupid, you could try, it'd take you ages and it'll most like fall down unless you're a builder.

      Being productive, fast, effective, this requires learning, it requires an investment of time in understanding the physics of wood placement, in gaining the experience to know how much wood you need, what to hit, where, when, why.

      Sure everyone and their kid sister can write a document using Word. Yay. But don't for an instant believe that these shiny toys designed specifically to allow you and your kid sister to write a document without having to invest much time is in any way "efficient".

      All that code, all that bulk, all those buttons and threads, and GUIs and windows and context sensitive helpbars, are there because you need it.

      You are directly responsible for the inefficiency of the software you use.

      Think what this really means. It means that instead of suffering a high initial startup cost, in learning an effective and efficient method of communication with your computer, you are forever stuck with a higher-cost interface.

      You cannot control your computer effectively, you cannot make it work for you as it should. If you were only going to touch your computer 10 times in your life, this would be no big deal, but the fact is that everyone is moving to computers, everything is moving to computers. You wanna do anything in an office today? you're most likely going to use a computer.

      Every moment that you stand there waiting for a GUI to load, every second that you spend recovering from Windows crashing, every idle tap of the mouse that goes by as you wait for Word to load so you can send out a memo, is your wasted life.

      You're dying of fear. You fear you'll break it, you fear the unknown, you fear that somehow you don't have the time to learn all that you need to learn.

      You don't have a second to lose. Learn, now, quick, before you lose another second of your life to your "productivity" software.

      --
      You can't win a fight.
    4. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by geekster · · Score: 1

      and why should the geeks care about what the end users prefer?

    5. Re:KDE vs GNOME vs KDE by archen · · Score: 1

      Well there is the converse of this also. Sure Word can make you productive in some respects; certainly in a work enviornment where you want to do "X" where Microsoft has a template for "X", but how many times have I seen people screw with Word for 5 to 10 minutes trying to do something where Word decides it knows what they're doing and screws everything up. I've seen it a LOT. I mean it seems fairly messed up when someone has to fight repeatedly with a word processor just to get it to do something that they want, and that you THINK would be easy to do, but they can't because the word processor thinks otherwise.

      Being efficent on a word processor is one thing, but remember that there are times when the word processor itself inhibits productivity - much of the time due to its "ease of use".

  46. Finnish operating system? by Paladeen · · Score: 1

    Oh, I get it!

    So all of a sudden ALL the huge number of programmers that have contributed to Linux come from Finland, do they?

  47. Re:Compilation of large packages has to be supervi by Knuckles · · Score: 1
    Compilation of large packages has to be supervised

    Of course you could also let the script play a mp3 when the compile dies

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  48. Re:Standard X desktop? by landley · · Score: 5
    The problem is a lot of people don't trust the KDE team's judgement.

    This is residue from when QT was a "source under glass" library. Yes, that has now been fixed, but back when that was the case, THE KDE PEOPLE DID NOT HAVE A PROBLEM WITH IT.

    Anybody remember Unix? Everyone blissfully ignoring AT&T's unenforced copyright for fifteen years, then out of the blue "oh, by the way, all your bases are belonging to us". That kind of thing leaves a scar on a community.

    More recently, the reason 90% of the Java development momentum drained away into Linux in 1998 was that everyone realised that Sun was never going to release Java to the ISO. We all remember how Microsoft was all sweetness and light compared to IBM, at first. And how IBM's commodity PC was saving the world from (pick one: Apple, Digital Equipment Corporation, IBM's own mainframes, Somebody Else. Until the PS/2, anyway). But Sun wouldn't even port the JDK to Linux (which annoyed people who had never even HEARD of Linux). If they support that, what else wouldn't they allow?

    Nobody ever REALLY trusts a "benevolent dictator", they're only happy if they know they have a way out. They may never really believe they'll need to use it, but people get claustrophobic otherwise. Even the best of the lot, Linus or Guido Van Rossom or Larry Wall, COULD BE REPLACED. If necessary. Everyone's sanity depends on it. If any of them came down with a brain infection and started going after people with an axe, a new leader would be ready and the community would go on. It ISN'T currently necessary, and we're happy that's so. But we couldn't sleep at night otherwise.

    The KDE people -ARE- happy inserting proprietary technology into the fundamental infrastructure upon which we're all trying to build shared code. And that ALWAYS winds up causing a problem, it's just a question of how long it takes to snowball. But they don't SEE it.

    The fact that this instance of the problem has been fixed doesn't mean the Gnome folks have started to trust the KDE people's judgement, because they WON'T ADMIT THEY MADE A MISTAKE!

    Nothing against TrollTech. Nice people who simply didn't understand the benefits of dual licensing, and their code IS now GPL. But it was just wrong for KDE to pick the poisoned apple no matter how tempting, and the fact they still don't seem to understand why is a problem.

    Rob

  49. Re:Nautilus Bashing by deeny · · Score: 2
    Big Projects take a large amount of time to become stable, and also to become mature.

    Based on the code size, a project I shipped of the same approximate size and complexity took four coders a year (three person years really) -- approximately, with overhead and marketing $1mil. Double that for Silicon Valley and double it again to be generous and that's still only 40% of what Eazel spent.

    _Deirdre

  50. Re:What Eazel really did.... by deeny · · Score: 2
    Well, some of us have been through more than one recession in the industry. I was told by a recruiter the other day that coders with 2-3 years experience were still trying to bill $100 an hour as Java people -- and not getting any work. One wonders why. ::cough::

    There will be boom-and-bust cycles with "the next best thing" (a few years ago, it was biotech) but, by the time they become hyped, it's almost always too late to start one. Look at the Linux companies doing well: they were all around *before* Linux became a household buzzword.

    And, really, I didn't say anything bad. The way the whole venture capital thing works is very simple: they invest in you because they expect to get their money back -- plus some extra. Then they take that and invest it somewhere else. And so on. It's like the classic "don't break the chain" chain letter thing -- and Eazel broke the chain.

    _Deirdre

  51. Re:Nautilus Bashing by deeny · · Score: 2
    Actually, It was not all that big # of coders-wise

    Oh? Let's see:

    First version of Aldus Persuasion: written by one person. First version of PageMaker: written by two people. First version of Internet Explorer for the Mac: written by four contractors. The original Macintosh Finder? Written by four people. OmniWeb, a great web browser? Written by two people -- part-time.

    It's only when you get to feature bloat that you need a lot of coders.

    The commercial apps I've worked on and shipped were all written between one and four people.

    I *know* Eazel had more coders than that.

    The question remains: how many QA staff did they have? Afaik, zero.

    What the smart venture capitalist might now be saying is: if it costs a couple mil to launch a proprietary app AND its sales will produce some sort of revenue stream, and our experience with open source shows that it costs more and we don't have the revenue stream, maybe we should invest in proprietary software companies instead.

    I suggest that anyone else considering getting funding for their company seriously consider how they will make revenue rather than burn this bridge for everyone.

    _Deirdre

  52. What Eazel really did.... by deeny · · Score: 3
    What Eazel really did was dry up venture capital for Linux software businesses in the future that might *have* a viable revenue model. So, while there's a rough version of Nautilus out there (on the basis of a proposed revenue stream on *another* product that wasn't designed or implemented), that development was funded by people who wanted their money back.

    So, for those people who think it's "cool" that Eazel "gave" Nautilus to the Linux community, realize that they did so solely and only to buy your trust -- and they bought it with other people's money.

    Money that, had it not been blown on the biggest self-indulgent hackfest in the open source community's history, might fund your job next year or two years hence. But now it won't.

    _Deirdre

    1. Re:What Eazel really did.... by Feign+Ram · · Score: 1

      You know Deirdre, views like yours are unpopular among "testosterone-driven-twenty somethings". I have tried pointing out the business aspects of OSS only to find that they are not very well received. Noone wants to hear anything bad - everyone ,despite all the dot-bombs are behaving like dopists on a high. I guess it will take a couple of more Eazel's to bring people down to earth. I can't help wondering what Ximian's state of finances is , at a great risk to my personal safety ;-). Anyway , Deeny thanks for your comments - they are always a very refreshing break from the run of the mill stuff. Why don't you put down your thoughts on your web page ? Regards

  53. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by DV · · Score: 2

    My point is that saying "project XYZ is dead stop hacking on it" is detrimental to everybody. First it won't bring the hackers from XYZ into another project (well I doubt it !) so others won't benefit from it, and second asking to stop a project also mean that another project won't benefit from the code which could have been generated would the authors have continued working on it.

    It's very hard to tell in advance what within a large set of code would survive in the long term. The same kind of arguments have been done when linux started ("use BSD instead" , or "improve Minix" were similar messages one was getting in 92-94).

    My point is really that any message calling to stop working on a free software project is unlikely to bring anything good as a result.

    I would far prefer hearing messages about reuse of code and cooperation/exchanges between projects (and not just between KDE and Gnome) than what I have heard in the original message.

    Daniel Veillard

  54. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by DV · · Score: 3

    It's time to move on. KDE is cranking, GNOME is press releasing.

    Hum, I appreciate this SOOOOO MUCH

    After all I coded 95% of the XML and XSLT Gnome libraries. And who's using them now ? I'm all about reuse, I like it, but I hate your attitude.

    Let's face it, I appreciate working with the KDE guys involved in the reuse. But I'm fucking tired of hearing this kind of stupid rants.

    Yes I'm part of the Gnome fundation, mind you I was elected, and we all collectively believe in this project. Go code on your side, but don't come to piss people off on public fora.

    Daniel Veillard

  55. Re:Good luck andy by RAruler · · Score: 2

    wow, thats quite impressive. I only hope I can still be a l33t h4x0r when I get to your mightily impressive age. Granted, I want to live forever.. but thats another story..

    ---

    --

    --
    Insert Witty Sig Here
  56. Re:Standard X desktop? by Graymalkin · · Score: 1

    The KDE folk have made a mistake from your point of view but are you some sort of moral dictator? No you're not. KDE can do whatever the fuck they want to do. They inserted proprietary technology into their products because they were trying to one up Motif/CDE which is still considered a standard today. TrollTech provided that in a time when there weren't many options for people who said they wanted to give away their code. Qt was made available for them to use without paying beaucoup royalties, that ought to have been good enough. However GPL/RMS hardliners such as yourself have a hard time digesting the concept. You ought to look a little deeper into the dogma of your source code religion, you'll sacrifice functionality over licensing issues. You've been too pampered with computer systems that are fast and inexpensive. Functionality should remain important; if functionality was still key above all else programming science would be at a level far above what it is today.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  57. Re:It has to be said... by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

    Way back when everyone used CDE, mwm, and Motif widgets for all their desktop applications. That was back in the days though. Motif for a long time wasn't open so all the free Unix distros and whatnot said hey we'll do our own thing. For the same reason they dropped CDE. Of course with the free software folk everyone had to use something different. Now you've got people writing shit for half a dozen different desktop libraries and communication schemas. Maybe if you'd been using the various commercial unicies years hence you would have had the common desktop you want.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  58. Re:BeOS in the toilet too -- and it ain't free by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

    Be was founded when? 1992? That puts its founding outside the era classified as the internet bubble by economists. They failed because they didn't market a superior product correctly. Windows98 wasn't popular for being a good product, it ran all the shit people wanted or needed to run. Had Be run all the shit people wanted or needed to run and let the world know it had that stuff it would be in a different position today. Conventional business models are not inherently superior to anything. Every business needs to sell their product to somebody in some form to survive. Your product can be service or goods but you need to create a demand and then meet that demand. Both Eazel and Be have failed to create and meet the needed demand.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  59. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Quikah · · Score: 1

    GTK is LGPL. ie it can be linked into proprietary programs. This is a bit friendlier for developers of commercial software.

    --
    Q.
  60. Blaming the Victim by HiThere · · Score: 2

    The general phenomenon is called blaming the victim. True, this particular case is more complex (it always is). If you make what happened to them "fair" and "reasonable", then you feel safer. And people like to feel safer. They like it so much, that they ignore whether or not they actually are any safer.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  61. Planning for the future by HiThere · · Score: 2

    No, it didn't become a problem. It won't become a problem. But if it hadn't been fixed, if probably would have become a problem.

    Planning for the future requires "theoretical arguement". The future isn't here yet, and one doesn't know just what shape it will take. To minimize damage, one must take into account the possibilities, not just what one wants to have happen. And with the license as it was, QT could have forbid anyone else to develop it, and changed the license. That possibility needed to be avoided. That really was a strong threat to the community, even if it wasn't an immediate one. Proper steps were taken, and the threat was avoided, but calling it a silly argument shows, at best, lack of judgement.

    Please remember. QT is a business, subject to the pressures and legal constraints that businesses experience. If they ever went public they would be legally required to act in what they saw as their shareholders best interests. A change in management, and who can tell what decision would be made as to what those were. Nobody in this universe can tell, because in this universe, the GPL protects non-commercial use of the code (well, and commercial use, in a strange way, but that's beside its purpose). And this means that there are some decisions that they can't make.

    P.S.: I am very fond of the GPL and think it well founded legally, but under this doctrine espoused here, I am quite glad that there are a multiplicity of Open Source licenses. That way if one falls, everything is not lost.

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  62. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by platypus · · Score: 2

    But in this situation the obvious choice would be MSVC and MFC platform considering the windows user share.

    Hmm,I know at least two (relativly big) companies which use QT on windows just because the think it's better than MFC.
    Portability was never an argument for them, just quality of the libs and ease of development.

  63. Truly sad, however... by PenguinX · · Score: 2

    Perhaps Eazel will not make it, which is truly a sad event. However the legacy can live on in its entirety. For instance Ximian can easily obtain the source, perhaps even some of the developers and continue the product line into their own.

  64. Re:Nautilus is open source already... by PenguinX · · Score: 2

    This is true, however in the corporate mindset once a company goes under all the IP and work tends to go with it. In an open source business model this is not the case. It wasn't so much of a fundamental statement of who will support the source for Nautilus but more of a retort to what has been said throught the past few weeks (open source doesn't work, GPL doesn't work, etc. for business) and months from companies such as Microsoft.

  65. luser rant by ovidus+naso · · Score: 1
    I'm an old fart. I was raised in a family with paper terminals, REAL VT100's and such. I didn't gave a d.... about computers. Then came January 1984 and my father came back home from work with issue 1 of MacWorld (how a DEC field engineer got a Macintosh magazine at work is still bugging me). At the time, I was studying classics. I didn't gave a fart about computers. Sure I had a spiffy TI99/4A. Sure I had access to PDP/15's and Vaxen and I could play ADVENT as much as I could care. But computers were so remote to me.

    But once I had a Mac, and a functional GUI, I could use those computers to my benefits. I could create special fonts to denote prosody in Latin poetry. I could do fancy layout for translating ancient french text. I could use HyperCard to manage my bank of text references.

    Now about Eazel, Kde and Gnome...

    First, KDE. Yes, it's the most stable desktop on Linux. But the GUI sucks so BAD. Typography is all out of whack (as in Gnome). What's the use of building a desktop manager if it gives headaches to its users. Is their idea of a GUI a ripoff of another ripoff of another ripoff? (PARC begets Mac begets Win begets KDE). The operative words here are blatant emulation. Where is the creativity? What do I gain as a user. An ersatz? Sure, "it's linux", but is that an excuse for that sorry mockup of a bad gui? I DO appreciate the stability though. But if I want the original, I might as well stick with Win2K with its own idiosyncrasies.... (I'm being the devil's advocate here. But you have to put yourself in the mindset of the user sometimes.)

    Then there was Gnome. And the licensing debate. Gnome is the most promising effort. But I fear that it is succombing to bloatware syndrome. Plus installing the latest Ximian branded version leaves a very bitter redmond aftertaste in my mouth (ooops, no more kde apps and redhat apps in your menus after installation, no questions asked. Oh and by the way, there is no uninstall and all your rpm's are belong to us). And yes, I COULD build the friggin' thing myself. But spending two day resolving libraries dependencies is not my cup of tea.

    And then there was Eazel. Yes they spent more on branding than on coding. Yes their business plan sucked. Yes they had a way of giving a workout to my VM subsystem. BUT THEY at least were trying to think outside the box. Like GNOME, they suffered from corporate branding syndrome. But,if you know how to traverse a hash of arrays or if you grok LISP, I'm afraid you won't get this: Us users, yes those miserable, mediocre l00sEr3 want something that will make our day. Easel, though buggy and as agile as dbase IV (meaning an elephant) was at least a step in the good direction.

    So as a user, this day in one of mourning. Linux is still the best developement and server platform (with those nice BSD's distros). But this is a step backwards in my book.

    --
    ---------- ovidius naso
    1. Re:luser rant by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      hangeron. You get what you're given. Now even Jobs is fucking you up the arse with that lame OS 10 shit.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  66. Why KDE won't be on the standard X desktop. by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 2

    There is one main reason that KDE won't become the "standard X desktop" (meaning running on Linux, Solaris, etc etc etc).

    Once again it's licencing. You can't develop proprietary software with QT without paying Trolltech for a licence. With the central bits of both GNOME and GTK available under the LGPL rather than the GPL, GNOME and GTK are much more appealing to the existing big players in the Unix world who will want to continue to produce proprietary products, along with their open contributions.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    1. Re:Why KDE won't be on the standard X desktop. by Isldeur · · Score: 2

      You know, I think is is kind of funny. The big problem with QT is that it won't allow you (without purchasing a liscense) to develop commercial, closed-source software. But GTK does allow this.

      But, oh, by the way, commercial software is bad and we should shy away from it.

    2. Re:Why KDE won't be on the standard X desktop. by infiniti99 · · Score: 1

      A commerical Qt license is really not that expensive. Did you know some companies even use Qt for Windows-only development, simply because they find Qt to be better than MFC, even though Qt costs much more?

      Have a look at Trolltech's page (www.trolltech.com) and browse around. Many large companies use it, and there is a page full of praise from customers. Obviously you know that Trolltech is selling licenses as we speak, right? It's not like Qt is a new product that came out yesterday. So, yes, companies are developing software _right now_ with Qt. The licensing costs are well within reason.

      It's better this way. If Qt were LGPL it would suffer from the same problems as BSD licensed software: companies would take without giving back. With Qt as GPL, companies that want to develop closed-source must put money into Trolltech, and this is spent towards making Qt better. It's perfect.

      -Justin

    3. Re:Why KDE won't be on the standard X desktop. by MSBob · · Score: 2
      There is one main reason that MS-Windows won't become the "standard user desktop" (meaning running on everyone's computer).

      Once again it's licencing. You can't develop proprietary software with MS-Windwos without paying Microsoft for a licence. With the central bits of both OS/2 and Rexx available under the IBM licence rather than the Microsoft licence it is much more appealing to the existing big players in the PC world who will want to continue to produce proprietary products, along with their open contributions.

      --
      Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
  67. Re:On Men and Casettes by Johnny+O · · Score: 1

    And blang, remember:
    Your environment/variables would be saved with the program data on that cassette. How convenient!
    Loved that Sinclair - But mine was the Timex 1000
    :-)
    Forever Geezing,
    Johnny O

  68. Re: More than can be chewed by 5foot2 · · Score: 1

    It was a god DAMN file manager. What a load of crap your chewing on.

  69. Re:Is Gnome next? by 5foot2 · · Score: 1

    Oh Please. You get the same crap from the Gnome/Helix/Ximian crowd.

  70. Re:Is Gnome next? by 5foot2 · · Score: 1

    An hour? Really? Hey I have an Idea. When you install something, read the docs that come with it. They're like magic, they hold all sorts of great info. Like how to start the thing.

  71. Re:Is Gnome next? by 5foot2 · · Score: 1

    Wrong! They do pop up on the screen in the case of the StarOffice install. There is a nice pretty windows like window that pops up and tell you of two different ways to install the program (Single user and a network install). Then the same doc goes on to tell you how to start the program. Remember to RTFM.

  72. back-to-KDE wtf!!! by rullskidor · · Score: 1

    Whats whith all this bullshit flying around here?
    GNOME and nautilus is GPL or LGPL so no matter how bad eazel might be doing the source is out there and will stay that way. Who could be so stupid to abandon his desktop enviroment just because company x is doing y? The desktop enviorment won't go away no matter what. How the *** can you say GNOME would be so dependent on a company that happened to give it a FileManager. GNOME or Nautilus won't go away if eazel does, thank GNU for that. Something must be seriously wrong whith your logic if you relly belive everything bad for GNOME is something good for KDE, not true. You ever thought about the possibility to have both installed at the same time, the possibility to run neither of them? Possible symbioses?

    GNOME is not eazel.
    Nautilus is not eazel
    GNOME is not KDE and not GNOME is not KDE.

    --
    De lyckliga slavarna är frihetens bittraste fiender, legalisera!!!
  73. Nice piece of trolling there! by GauteL · · Score: 2

    "It was slow on my P3-500/256MB of RAM, and excruciatingly slow on my Dual P-Pro 200/96MB RAM machine"

    When did you try it last? The latest releases of Nautilus is pretty snappy on my Celeron 400/128MB. It actually starts just as fast as Konqueror from WindowMaker, which mean that neither has had the chance to preload their libraries.

    Nautilus 1.x was never intended to be a full feature web-browser, and if you don't need it to be a webbrowser, then don't USE IT AS SUCH. There is nobody stopping you from not installing nautilus-mozilla (the package that lets nautilus browse the web) at all.

    The giant "eazel"-throbber is just part of the theme. Switch theme!

    Btw, Nautilus DOES use GTK-themes. Look at the toolbar and at the dialogs. It just recognizes that the GTK-themes doesn't cover all the stuff that Nautilus needs to be good-looking.

    Font antialiasing could be better, but you can turn it off, and buy yourself some extra speed as well.

    There is plenty of good things about nautilus. It is a functional and intuitive file manager, much more so than gmc. It has good looks, it can preview text, sound and images. It even has the ability to eazily extend the functionality with scripting.

    It may not be revolutionary yet, but the design and idea behind it has an awesome amount of potential, if you'd ever care to check. It has the potential to provide a specialized view for all kinds of folders (like music, document or image-folders), and to put a much easier abstract layer above the Unix file-hiearchy.
    It has the potential to be the easiest to use of all desktop-managers ever.

  74. Don't agree by GauteL · · Score: 2

    The way of using specialized displays for different types of directories is rather revolutionary. It is currently only used for displaying mp3-directories like a playlist, but should be used for different types of directories later on. F.eks. having more image-functionality for image-directories.

  75. Re: More than can be chewed by msaavedra · · Score: 2
    When was the last time you saw one that easily let you keep notes, scan images, text files, and look pudry

    Why would anyone need a file manager that does these things? I thought a file manager was for managing files.

    That said, I think that Nautilus really aims to be more of a file browser than a file manager. By that I mean that it seems to be for looking around at stuff using as much eye candy as possible. Actually doing any sort of filesystem maintenance is really a hassle with nautilus, especially when you are dealing with lots of files and directories.

    Don't get me wrong, I like GNOME quite a bit, but I don't think nautilus is really a project that the community needs, at least not the long-term members of the community. Judging by discussions on Gnotices and the mailing lists, nautilus hasn't been very well received by the community. Maybe Nautilus will help out the newbies, but I think GNOME really needs a lightweight, highly functional file manager that still "looks purdy".


    --------------------------
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --Henry David Thoreau
  76. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if you actually have any experience with commercial or shareware development, but £1000 for an unlimited commercial use license is actually quite cheap. Look up how much Motif used to cost way back when.

    In fact, you could argue that QT being GPL not LGPL is *good* for the open source community. It ensures that there is a small barrier to entry for people thinking of making shareware programs. The last thing we need is to get the same shareware scene in UNIX as has existed in Windows.

  77. Re:trolling... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

    (we don't seem to have had a decent KDE/GNOME flamewar for a little while -- guess it was about time for another one :).

    It's very odd when you can get so worked up about a couple of buttons. They're all just pixmaps, you know -- if you really wanted, I'm sure you could change them over to look very similar to the Gnome ones in a couple of days. They're always on the lookout for graphic artists.

    Of course, there are problems with the themability of KDE. It's not that KDE can't be themed as much as Gnome (it is just as flexible) -- but that theming Gnome is much easier for the end user. This is being worked on. Bother usability and design are more important than looks. That said, personally, I think KDE 2 looks *so* much better than KDE 1 (and 2.1 more polished than 2) that I don't really mind them taking their time about it.

    You're right about corner panels -- I always thought you *could* convert the thing to a corner panel, but I guess not (there is Kasbar though). Submit a wishlist bug report and see what they say.

    Also, I think you are overstating a little. you don't *hate* things, you *dislike* them. If you were tied to a computer and forced to use KDE, you could survive. Lighten up a little.

    The world is a better place for having both GNOME and KDE in it. (although I still just use FVWM + xterms at work :).

  78. Re:Who said Gnome is dead too? Why GNOME is doomed by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

    (this is a response to an AC for those of you browsing at >=+1).

    You're being a little unfair in a couple of different ways.

    The state of Gnome development at the moment is a little like KDE's was between the releases of 1.1.2 and 2.0. They decided to completely restructure the design of the environment. This is very interesting as a core development, but means very little visible progress from the user perspective. At the moment, Gnome are nailing down exactly what they want in 2.0 -- and, as always, documentation lags behind (the perrenial problem of software development). The gnome.org website could be improved, but don't judge an entire project by the state of their website!

    On your second point -- it is not necessarily stupid to write an object based system in C. The advantage of C is that you get full and complete control over your system. The disadvantage, of course, is that you get full and complete control over your system :) C++ also, is not the ideal language to write an object based system in. It's the PL/1 or ADA of the modern world (on an offtopic note, I have the ANSI reference manuals for ADA-1983, PL/1-1983 and FORTRAN-1978 on my home bookshelf next to me. All good for a browse when bored. ADA doesn't seem that bad - why does everyone hate it?).

    Finally, don't be 'pro-GNOME' or 'pro-KDE'. (or for that matter 'pro-XFCE' - one man's attempt to write a better-CDE-than-CDE). Support all of them.

  79. the real reason by htmlboy · · Score: 1

    My guess is that Eazel really wasn't out to make money with nautilus. Free software for free software doesn't net much money.

    The REAL plot was to take all the venture capital they got with buzzwords and invest that...make money with that. It's just too bad they invested most of it in the XFL.

    chris

    (note: none of the above accusations are based on truth)

  80. Re:Is Gnome next? by Znork · · Score: 1

    Because C++ is an unstandardized language that gives you no end of portability problems, including, but not limited to, code only compilable on a certain compiler, version of compiler or platform. Virtually every language can do calls to C, and language bindings to C libs are common, while C++ toolkits like Qt have very few bindings.

    C++ in general causes far more problems than it solves, and with the way things are going I suspect it wont get worked out for the next decade.

  81. Re:Standard X desktop? by Znork · · Score: 1

    Search the KDE mailing list archives, you will likely find several of the old debates.

  82. Re:Standard X desktop? by Znork · · Score: 2

    And those who compromise and tread on dubious ground have been faced, time after time after time after time, with all their work having the rug pulled out from under them. It's not about dogma, it is about experience with the reality of the buisness world. Functionality is important, but you have to be able to trust that the functionality will remain there in a decade or a century, otherwise the appearance of functionality is just a tempting mirage.

  83. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by rking · · Score: 1

    Hmm lets see now...We develop the greatest filemanager ever and give it away for free, then we make tons of money on providing support services and whatnot for Nautilus.

    They don't seem to have had much of a business plan to put it mildly, but it's dificult to see that selling a proprietary file manager would have done much to recoup their $11 million either. I don't think free software versus proprietary software is really the issue here, they had no real plan to make money, at least not in the term that they needed it - they spent their 11 million before their file manager was even finished. They didn't have a chance to make money out of either proprietary software sales or services.

  84. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by rking · · Score: 1

    Ok, now I'm even more confused.

    I'll try to help :)

    RMS bitches about Qt-GPL, even though using it forces your program to be GPL.

    But he pushes GTK, which lets you write as much closed-source software as you want.

    Isn't closed-source software exactly what RMS is against.

    I think an apology is in order. :-)*


    I think your confusion stems from your imagining him bitching about QT under the GPL. Whilst he was certainly critical of it prior to that I'm not aware of him making any complaints about it being under the GPL. In fact I think he's very pleased that it is. Hope that helps.

  85. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by rking · · Score: 1

    Actually, maybe religion is the issue here. (Note how my post two levels up from here was moderated down from 2 to 0 simply because it suggested that the GPL might not have been the best way to go!)

    Right. And how exactly did you determine that that was the reason? Other posts have suggested that the GPL wasn't the best way to go, in fact they've used much less flattering language than that. They haven't been moderated down; some have even been moderated up.

    But yours was modded down. Well of course, you know how eloquent your use of language is, how diplomatic your choice of words, how reasonable your every claim, it can't be that they could find any fault in your posts. There can be no reason but that you "suggested that the GPL might not have been the best way to go!". Zealots!

    Seriously, you seem like a reasonably intelligent (albeit rather obsessive) person. Try actually reading your posts. Maybe leave it a few days and come back to it with a clear head. Look at what you say and more importantly (for this purpose) how you say it. You're not just disagreeing with people, you're being antagonistic. If that's how you want to come across then fine, just don't be surprised if people do moderate you down, however unjust that might seem.

  86. Free speech doesn't have to mean free beer by leereyno · · Score: 2

    Why any company would think that they can break even, let alone make a profit, from software that, after they spent the time and money developing it, they would be forced to give away.

    If you can't charge money for your services you won't be able to provide those services for long. Non-profit entities that have actually managed to stick around learned that lesson a long time ago. Some seek public funding, others charge a nominal fees for their services. In either case it is known and understood that you've got to make money to spend that money to further your cause or achieve your goal.

    Why anyone with a lick of sense thought they could base a for-profit company off a model that won't even work for a non-profit firm is something I'll never understand.

    When are people going to realize that free as in speech doesn't necessarily have to mean free as in beer? If Easel has been able to create their own license, such that while anyone can use Easel for free, and anyone can do what they want with the source for free, anyone who wanted to bundle it for sale within a larger package would have to pay for the privilege. In other words when you bought a copy of RedHat, or Caldera, or you name it, part of the money you spent would be going to Easel to further finance their work.

    The inextricable binding of free speech to free beer is the surest way to introduce a free rider scenario that I've heard of in a long time.

    Lee Reynolds

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  87. Re:Is Gnome next? by Voxol · · Score: 1

    The LDP should (if it hasn't already) provide a standard location (or a variable to specify the location) for a 'Start Menu'-type directory.

    I'm sick of editing rc files all the damn time.

    You could have a bunch of shell script in there that invoke the program. In addition to the program you could have additional information in there like a name for the program and locations for icons, etc. These would reside in shell comments (after #).

    Course the great thing about standards is there are so many to choose from.

  88. Best post ever! by fuckface · · Score: 1

    I've been trying to say exactly that for the longest time. I've never even coded a GUI app but as a free software user I felt stung by the original QT license as well as KDE's decision to use it regardless. I still don't run it. And get upset when I hit some random K based app on my system and it launches 5 or 6 daemons that don't go away even tho I never wanted them.

  89. Re:Austrian cycle theory in action again by briggers · · Score: 1

    >AYN RAND AYN RAND AYN RAND AYN RAND AYN RAND

    >...Someone had to say it.

    Come on mate, no need to get all worked up just because someone makes mildly non-left-liberal comments... Austrian economics have nothing to do with Rand (I have no time for Randroids myself).

    --
    -- briggers Remove blinkers to email me.
  90. Austrian cycle theory in action again by briggers · · Score: 2
    We should not be pondering the circumstances surrounding Eazel's demise - these facts are more or less irrelevant. The big questions are:

    (a) Whose bright idea was it to give them venture capital?
    (b) Where did the credit to fund ridiculous indulgences like Eazel come from?

    The Austrian theory of the business cycle - as expounded by Ludwig von Mises, F.A. Hayek et al states that the expansionary policies of the central bank (ie. low interest rates and the general printing of money during the Dot Com Boom) create a cluster of investments in higher-order capital industries which are later revealed to be erroneous. Eazel is simply one of many of these 'business errors'. How many more companies riding the Linux bandwagon are revealed to be similarly hopeless? (Almost all of them, most likely).

    It may be that Free Software is a noble aim. However, the notion that it is possible to base any kind of business model around it - apart from vanilla software contracting - is not a reality, unfortunately. (And don't come up with the usual half-dozen 'examples' with which to counter this notion - I will bet you that the majority of their revenue comes from other sources).

    So how long before Helix / Ximian chews up its VC? Six weeks at the most?

    --
    -- briggers Remove blinkers to email me.
  91. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by jfunk · · Score: 2
    GTK is LGPL. ie it can be linked into proprietary programs. This is a bit friendlier for developers of commercial software.


    Ok, now I'm even more confused.

    RMS bitches about Qt-GPL, even though using it forces your program to be GPL.

    But he pushes GTK, which lets you write as much closed-source software as you want.

    Isn't closed-source software exactly what RMS is against.

    I think an apology is in order. :-)*
  92. Re:Standard X desktop? by jfunk · · Score: 2

    Y'know, I hated C++ until I started playing with Qt. By simply doing the tutorial and going through the class docs, I had an epiphany. I would no longer ever imagine doing something large in C. I saw exactly how C++ can be used in the real world to make large projects very easy to do.

    I have to thank Qt for teaching me that.

    Streams are still evil, though.

  93. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by jfunk · · Score: 2
    Whilst he was certainly critical of it prior to that I'm not aware of him making any complaints about it being under the GPL.


    He demanded an "apology" from everyone who used Qt, specifically, the KDE guys.

    He later realised that he was pushing it way too far and abandoned ranting about it.
  94. Re:Standard X desktop? by Shelrem · · Score: 1

    Umm, okay, there was an ideological difference when GNOME started. Yeah, I can see why there might be some tension there, but...

    Apparently TrollTech agreed with the GNOME developers, or at least made the concession to make Qt Free. I don't see how there can still be ill feelings between KDE and GNOME since the one difference that really seperated them was voluntarilly rectified. It seems that some of the outspoken KDE advocates are still angry at GNOME, but why not also be angry at TrollTech? Or did the people who started GNOME have a point (whether or not you think that it was worth starting another desktop enviroment is a different story)?

    Oh well. I don't use either, anyway, as most of the stuff is fluff, in my oppinion, but to each his own.

    -ben.c

  95. Who said Gnome is dead too? by didjit · · Score: 2

    I don't know why all the KDE marks want to claim Gnome will inevitably die because of this. Eazel made a decent product. Ximian's is still good. Not to mention that Gnome was around (and open sourced) long before Eazel, Ximian/Helixcode, or even the Gnome Foundation existed. Not to mention the fact that one of main players in the whole situation, Miguel de Icaza, helped work on Gnome for a long time before any of these organizations, and if they were to fold, I'm pretty sure he would continue to work on Gnome. Why would he give up on a project he's spent so much time on and which has blossomed into one of the better GUI's available and one of the best pieces of graphical software for linux. And if you want to involve yourself in petty kde vs gnome flame-wars, just go back and read the hall of fame article about kde vs gnome. I'm sure you'll find plenty of interesting comments there without wasting the time of people reading this thread. If you want to use KDE, then fine, its pretty good. But so is Gnome, and I'll continue using it as long as I think its a great product, which it is.

  96. Just as it was getting good too by collar · · Score: 1

    I have been using nautilis since I downloaded ximian gnome 1.4 and I must say I have been impressed. Sure, there are improvements that could be made, and some of the features are a little gimmicky, but its customisable enough to make that not so much of an issue.


    <p>It is disapionting that one of the projects linux desperately needs (for mainstream use anyway) is a good graphical file manager. I wonder if Eazel does go under, if an indapendant group would be able to take over. One of the things needed for a good user interface is consistancy of vision which is always hard when dealing with a multitude of developers. We can only hope</p>
    <p>RIP Eazel, I have no idea how you ever though you could make any money, but so long and thanks for the file manager.</P>
    1. Re:Just as it was getting good too by collar · · Score: 1

      Yeah Yeah, I know, I forgot to select HTML and didnt use preview ;)

  97. LOL.. dotcomscoop.com by yomahz · · Score: 1

    It's great seeing dotcomscoop.com (which is a faction of Stile Project ) being sponsered by Save the Children!!!!

    It makes my heart just a little warmer.

    --
    "A mind is a terrible thing to taste."
  98. OT: LaTeX by pq · · Score: 1
    Show me a document that you've created using vi that has all the formatting features of Word.
    Don't tell me to use LaTeX, because that's a pain in the ass and is "inefficient."

    Oh man, you need to get a clue.
    Do you realize that most scientific journals out there (definitely all in the physical sciences) require submissions in TeX? Yes, it's not the best tool for writing letters to Grandma, but for anything that needs correct formatting, it is simply incomparable. And as a bonus, it looks gorgeous too - none of those nasty inter-word spaces or poor hyphenations or kludged equations that Word serves up, and a completely transparent format to boot (check out latex2html, for instance).

    I suggest looking at LyX if you're interested in: I hear they are doing good work combining WYSIWYG with TeX. For me, Emacs works just fine ...

    --
    "I will take the Ring," he said, "though I do not know the way."
  99. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 2
    QT is not the best way to go for some people. QT is GPL on Linux doesn't make it the preferable platform. Poor people want to develop commercial products and sell them. They can't do it with QT, and not everybody is willing to spend their liife writing GPL programs.

    They can't do it with Gnome, because Gnome is GPL and only GPL, and stuff you develop using GPL licensed libraries has to be GPL. They can do it with QT, because the nice people at Trolltech will happily sell them a commercial license.

    Or are you one of the people who think you should be able to take the Trolltech people's work and make money out of it, without giving any of the money back?

    --
    I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
  100. Re:Is Gnome next? by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 3
    This sort of thing is exactly why I've decided I don't want to be part of the KDE Community (should that be Kommunity?). The pro-KDE stuff I can live with, but the GNOME bashing seems to be getting worse all the time and it puts me off. Maybe it's because KDE seems to be gaining support and the more people that use it the more vocal advocates there are.

    Look, get real here. I'm not a member of either camp - I program in Java. I happen to use KDE as a desktop because it's stable and functional and looks good and works for me. But I've been using Linux since before either of these projects started and I do remember my history. Gnome was founded purely and simply as an ideological KDE bashing exercise, and it's gone on being more offensively political ever since (such as when Ximian bought 'KDE' as a keyword on Google, so that anyone who did a search for KDE would get an advert for Gnome).

    Yes, some KDE 'supporters' have bashed back against the persistent KDE bashing from senior members of the Gnome camp, and it would have been better if they hadn't.

    But to claim that KDE are the ones guilty of bashing in this saga is a weird distortion of history.

    Let's face it, there's always been room for several window managers. There's plenty of room for more than one desktop environment. Linux is not forced into a homogenous straight-jacket, and thank $DEITY for that.

    If you like Gnome, use Gnome. If (like me) you prefer KDE, use KDE. But for heaven's sake stop bashing!

    --
    I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
  101. Re:Standard X desktop? by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 3
    However GPL/RMS hardliners such as yourself have a hard time digesting the concept. You ought to look a little deeper into the dogma of your source code religion, you'll sacrifice functionality over licensing issues

    To be honest, I don't believe (and have never believed) that the KDE/Gnome row had much to do with licences. I think it is fundamentally about geography. The KDE team started in Germany and is still largely European; the Gnome team is largely based in the American continent. I think what we're seeing is American users of a Finnish operating system geting flustered because these upstart Europeans think they can build a desktop. People are very odd...

    --
    I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
  102. Re:trolling... by clahey · · Score: 1

    This is useful, but one of the cool features of corner panels is that it doesn't require you to set the width. It sizes your panel to be the width that is needed for the set of panel applets you put there.
    Chris

  103. Re:The Emperor's New Clothes by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    and they never got far enough because they spend $13 million on fsckin' file manager!

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  104. Re:On Men and Casettes by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    Our dataset cable was busted, we used to count the number of folds of paper you had to put under it to hold the contacts in touch with the pc board. IK+ is loading, no-one move. Just when the game was about to switch to the decompressor by brother would jump off the couch and bam, another 30 minutes to load. sigh.

    oh yes, ....and we liked it!

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  105. Re:Qt being GPL is troublesome for me as a develop by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    Seeing 99% of us think there is nothing proprietory we cant write for ourselves, yer, I think we're doin' ok.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  106. Re:Ideological Quest or Product? by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    No. You missed the point entirely. I dont expect non programmers to learn to develop their own software. I except them to learn how to fix their own bugs and hack their own features, or, I expect them to shut the fuck up. They're not "customers" because they dont pay me, and I dont want their business. I have a guy I wrote some software for a few years ago constantly sending me emails asking me to get some stupid feature to do something different. It is almost always a 3 second fix (like enabling an ifdef) but he refuses to look at the code. Seems kind of pointless to of given him the source, and what's more, he wont even go and find another programmer to do his annoying maintenance. As for an "ideological quest", that's exactly what it is! You dont understand because you dont excersize the freedoms that are taken away from us when we use proprietory software. So as I said, if you want to use lame shit written by the morons at Redmond, you go right ahead, just dont bitch to us.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  107. Re:Standard X desktop? by QuantumG · · Score: 2

    will you PLEASE learn to USE italics or STOP talking like Capt'n Kirk!

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  108. Despite Eazel/Nautilus, GNOME is thriving... by Uri · · Score: 1

    And this is best seen by one of the few truly innovative Free Software projects: Galeon. In a very short time span it has moved from being just a lightweight replacement for Mozilla to what is IMO the best web browser available under any platform.

    Consider a few of its features:

    1. Hybrid Tabbed/Windowed Mode: Browse in a combination of multiple windows (with DnD) and a tabbed notebook format (very useful for opening lots of messagess, or for popups to appear in). Fullscreen mode is also available.
    2. Advanced Filtering: per-site image blocking (for ads), popup disabling, advanced cookie management, and stopping JavaScript from writing annoying stuff in the status bar - to name a few.
    3. Advanced Bookmark Management: smart bookmarks (bookmarks with parameters - e.g. a google search box), ability to create multiple bookmark toolbars and attach bookmarks to right-click context menu, bookmark nicks, temporary bookmarks (for quick access), autobookmarks (generated from browsing history), dynamically generated portal site containing all your bookmarks (with a customizable style sheet), windows bookmark icon support, great bookmark editor...
    4. Advanced Session Support: session save and crash recovery, powerful searchable History dock (or window)
    5. Other Browsing Improvements: searches for regular expressions, up button to browse directory structure, easy font size control (size spinner, or wheelmouse), ...
    6. Great UI: quick access to useful features on a per-site basis (use own fonts, disable animated images, block images/cookies...), full keyboard support, customizable and unintrusive interface.
    Add this to the huge number of other thriving GNOME/GTK+ applications (Evolution, GIMP, XMMS, Gnumeric, AbiWord, Dia, Guppi, gPhoto, Gnapster, Grip, X-Chat, Pan, Gabber, Gaim, and so on...), the continually improving user interface (task grouping in the task list, task control in the menu panel...), and the increasing number of well-designed bonobo components (very efficient embedded images, postscripts, pdfs, man pages, and so on...), and I think it's safe to say that rumours of GNOME's death are greatly exagerated.
  109. Re:trolling... by nitehorse · · Score: 2

    You do know that you can configure the width of your panel in the little "Preferences..." dialog, right?

  110. Why do we need corporations? Why do we care? by Mr.+Gus · · Score: 1

    Really... Yes, Nautilus is GPL'd. Yay. Nobody defends Eazel's business plan. Gotcha. But why do we care (well, some of us don't and really seem to love the oppertunity to say, "I told you so" whether or not we actually did) about corporate sponsership?

    I realize I'm not remotely intelligent on these matters, but here's my opinion:

    The GPL is not a business model, and nobody makes money giving stuff away, so we instead have open-source-loving companies that want to make money doing X so that they can fund their bread and butter which makes absolutely no profit, which is GPL'd software Y. What the hell is that? If the point of a group is to develop Y and Y will not produce a profit, one shouldn't start a company.

    Everybody seems to agree about the flaws of Eazel's business model, but that's not the point. What if they had come up with a (probably still somewhat flawed) business model that would at least have kept them going a bit longer? Wouldn't it make more sense for them to just focus on service X rather than product Y? Otherwise, the existance of the company is completely pointless.

    I'm not arguing against any crusade for open-source, free-as-in-whatever-you-like software, but why is it at all important or convenient or desirable that there should be a company behind any given piece of free sotware? We always seem so happy when stuff like Eazel starts up-- "Wow! A Linux-related business! Cool!"... The flawed business model isn't so much of a problem as the fact that they had to think of one in the first place.

    If you really want to do Y, but it won't make any money so you have to also do X which you will do to fund Y that will continue to not make any money, well, why did you want to start a company in the first place _EVEN_IF_ X's business model is sound. You then devote time and resources on something that really isn't in your interest, your heart isn't into it, and, well, wouldn't it be easier, safer, and honestly more fulfilling to just get a job somewhere else and work on Y in your spare time? You don't care much about what your employer does and you don't care much about X, really, so doing X just makes you have to think and plan more about things you really souldn't be overly concerned with.

    Even looking at it exclusively from the perspective of "We programmers want to get paid to do this full time" (as opposed to "Companies: Good, Legitimate", or something), it really isn't any different than working on the project in one's spare time. One way or the other, you'd be really making money doing something other than your pet project. It comes out the same, the slight difference being, perhaps, the distribution of work. Get a few people to do the X and you yourself work exclusively on Y and that's fine (aside from the potential for the "screwing over your fellow man" factor).

    So in short, I've rambled so much I've forgotten what I was talking about, except it has something to do with X. It takes too long to compile. Damn it to hell.

  111. Nautilus was crap anyway by ikekrull · · Score: 3

    Maybe it's just me, but i thought Nautilus was an extremely poor example of a desktop app. It was slow on my P3-500/256MB of RAM, and excruciatingly slow on my Dual P-Pro 200/96MB RAM machine. It was unusable as a web browser because it took so long a) to render the page and the b) to render the buttons which gave you the option to view the page in other browsers. It took too long to bring up a folder listing, even in list view, and even with few files in the folder. It makes a worse file manager than gmc - at least gmc seems fairly fast, and doesn't hog resource, nor go into 'D' uninterruptible sleep on the 2.4.3 kernel. It was plain ugly - this 'the web browser is the OS' paradigm is wasteful of screen real-estate and looks stupid. the giant 'Eazel' throbber was unnecessary, and pointless. Its root window integration is abysmally poor - shutting out all other apps which also use the root window. It had yet another theme layer, meaning it can't use GTK, KDE or Mozilla themes, instead providing its own themes. Font antialiasing was bad. Text was just blurry, not 'antialiased' - whatd they do, run a gaussian blur filter over each of the glyphs in the font? Frankly, there was nothing good about Eazel accept the ability to thumbnail images, which isn't a capability i'd choose to label a 'revolution in desktop functionality' Does it really surprise anyone that a company shipping a half-assed product like Nautilus goes straight down the drain? If i tried to sell a similar product for Windows or the MacOS, i doubt i'd make a dollar either.

    --
    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long
  112. The death of Linux app developers. by pipeb0mb · · Score: 1

    Wow...what a spring this has been.
    Chilliware, then that Linux game machine company (too lazy to look it up), and now Eazel. Who's next?
    Can you say OSDN boys and girls?*


    *I knew you could.

    1. Re:The death of Linux app developers. by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      And unfortunately, in the frenzy of 'success' in the past year or so, all the free projects have been consolidated under the 'big tents' like OSDN and hAndover. When the big ship goes down, it'll take everything else with it.

      Really sad. But the Debian community will offer a refuge for some.

  113. Re:Good try by be-fan · · Score: 2

    Hey, they have this great new invention called a sentence. Should I submit this on Slashdot? Its "News Nerds Could Use."

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  114. treis stoogi by bubbha · · Score: 1

    Anybody else aware of the 3 stooges ramifications of this article's title... or am I all alone here?

    --
    I want to be alone with the sandwich
  115. Re:Selective clippings? by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

    Probably because everyone's at the party mentioned in the dotcomscoop article.
    Commisserating with your soon-to-be-ex-coworkers is more important then releasing bad-news on a Friday afternoon.

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  116. Nautilus Bashing by Hillie · · Score: 2

    I think all of you should remember that Nautilus is in mere infancy.

    I agree that it is somewhat bloated and buggy. I also agree that they jumped the gun at releasing v1.0 .. That shouldn't have happened for a long time.

    However, those who are just bashing it saying that it's a bloated buggy and crappy file manager and that X filemanager which has been around for ages is better. That's a bit short-sighted if you ask me.

    Look at Mozilla. I started using it at Milestone 5. It was complete crap back then, I used it for like two seconds and had to switch back to Netscape because I couldn't use it as my main browser.. From then I would download each new Mozilla version, and each time I would go back to Netscape, because Mozilla was slow and buggy, it would trash web forms, and it was unstable.

    This trend continued up until the new version 0.9, that's right! Mozilla 0.9 is actually the first time that I'm pretty sure I can say goodbye to Netscape once and for all. Mozilla 0.8 was close, but it was too slow. The speed increase in 0.9 shows promise, but it's still not perfect. With this in mind, I must say I've never seen anyone bashing Mozilla on here. Maybe the Mozilla developers will have to go bankrupt before that happens.

    Big Projects take a large amount of time to become stable, and also to become mature.

    To compare something like Nautilus to KDE's Konqueror is obsurd, and unfair.

    I agree that some of Eazel's ideas about doing things are way off-base. If the rumour is true, I can only hope that Nautilus is continued by either Ximian or the Gnome people (which they are basically the same people anyway); I have confidence that eventually it will lead Nautilus into success.

    I use Nautilus because I hate GMC. Basically I think Nautilus is a good product.. They just need to speed it up, just like they [still (IMO)] need to do with Mozilla, and they also need to get rid of that silly-ass backgorund management, but I have confidence in Gnome developers.

    It's funny how everyone's always trashing Gnome, usually with references that KDE is better. Gnome hasn't been around as long sa KDE, but Gnome suits my needs... although my gnome-session is pretty tweaked out, with just a small panel and Blackbox. It does the job for me.

    --
    - Alex
    1. Re:Nautilus Bashing by Feign+Ram · · Score: 1

      Actually, It was not all that big # of coders-wise( jus' the # people who actually wrote the code ). Way 2 much money was spent on other areas . It did introduce some new areas like SVG in file managers which has not seen daylight even on Windows. Overall it did indicate some tasteful design - something sorely required in the Linux desktop world.

  117. Can't use a TK with a lang it wasn't written in? by Nailer · · Score: 2

    GTK was written in C. Qt was written in C++.

    That said, there each has, AFAIK, bindings to C, C++, Python, and more. There's no reason why a developer couldn't use either. IIRC, most OS use a single toolkit or multiple toolkits with a massive amount of fucntionality in a common layer, and developers see no reason to create new toolkits because they don't liek the language the regular toolkit was written in.

    Sigh.

  118. Re:Well, I guess it didn't work out as I had hoped by Nailer · · Score: 2

    Linux does need a top-notch file manager - and Nautilus showed promise (but from reports I've heard it wasn't quite there yet).

    I could have sworn Linux already had a top notch file manager - Konqueror. And the last time I checked, user didn't care about tooolkits as long as their apps behaved consistently (something which definitely needs work, but is OT).

  119. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by Nailer · · Score: 2

    After all, the GPL is intended to cause software companies to fail, and while some are more robust than others they will all eventually fail if they do embrace it. (This isn't a religious argument -- just basic business principles. If you can't charge for your products, you fold.)

    There's a serious flaw in your logic. You assume one can't charge for GPLed products? Red Hat made money every quarter until they started doing the Venture Capital thing, have repeatedly exceeded analysts expectations when announcing their results, and are generally thought to be in the black very soon. I've never purchased a boxed copy of their OS. I have however, paid $Au2000 to sit and RHCE, and asked a company I work for to purcahse a Dell system with the OS preinstalled and a support arrangement. True, not everyone does this, but Red Hat's results will speak for themselves.

    --Mike MacCana

  120. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by Nailer · · Score: 2

    RedHat don't make money on GPL'd products. They make money on services, training and stuffed penguins.

    Ie, thay make money from their GPLed products, but not directly. The basis for the consulting and the training and the OEM deals and the support calls is the GPLed product. How many times have you ever paid directly for commercial television?

  121. Good riddance to yet another bad business model! by burtonator · · Score: 4


    I can't say I will ever miss Eazel. They had a terrible business model, and a terrible product,

    VC: Let me get this straight. You want to build a company that makes a "really awesome" desktop.

    Eazel: Yes. It will be awesome!

    VC: How will you make money?

    Eazel: We will integrate out technology and sell our backend services.

    VC: So what makes you different than all the other companies that sell backend services?

    Eazel: We will use the very hyped Open Source model and run on top of Linux. BTW. The founders are "geniuses" that wrote the original Apple UI.

    VC: Wow... here is 11 million!

    .... 1 year later and 11 million down the drain they only come up with bloated, and buggy file manager. What a waste of money. I could have done this myself for only $5 million :)

    If I remember correctly KDE was developed with $0 and Konqueror is much nicer and faster than Nautilus.

    Eazel was founded on Hype. OSS hype, Linux hype, services hype, and the hype that it's founders were geniuses. (obviously they are not)

    The Internet hype that has been going on needs to die if we are going to move forward. As Internet professionals we need to prove that what we are creating is real! We need to prove that we aren't getting VC money based on hype but on a real idea which is economically responsible.

    I think this is another nail in GNOME's coffin. When Qt was proprietary I was gung ho for GNOME to succeed. Now that Qt is Free Software and GNOME is technically inferior to KDE, the GNOME developers should start to move over to KDE.

    Obviously this should be a responsible step by step sequence which keeps the GNOME code base but starts to migrate it into KDE. If not GNOME will just die because KDE has a superior code base and is moving much faster IMO.

    I can't imagine that Nautilus will have the same level of support that it had when Eazel was a company with funding. I would imagine that only a percentage of the developers will continue working on Nautilus. This gives the GNOME
    project the burden of supporting a thick code base (Nautilus).

    KDE/Konqueror does not have this problem. I really see that this will allow them to leap-frog over GNOME by one generation.

    Kevin

  122. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by dimator · · Score: 2

    I have no idea what your argument is. You state that QT being GPL is a bad thing for people wanting to develop commercial products and sell them. If they want to do that, they can spend $2k on the license, and do what the hell they want, closed, open, whatever; windows, *nix, and (soon) mac. I think that's a strength of QT.

    Can they do that with GTK? Isn't GTK GPL-only? Isnt that equally bad for "people who want to develop commercial products and sell them"?

    My brain's parser fails on your last paragraph...


    --

    --
    python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
  123. you're right! by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1

    I don't HATE KDE, I just dislike the look and feel somewhat. I was just exaggerating.

    I completely agree with you taht the world is a better place for having BOTH desktops. I have used and enjoyed both, as well as Enlightenment.

    I actually dislike the way QT feels more than anything else about KDE, I find GTK to be much more pleasant. I'm sure they'll both keep improving until they reach perfection, or close to it ; )

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  124. trolling... by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 3

    Wow, this is really a shame. I have to say I'm not surprised at all though, their business modem really didn't seem to make sense. I didn't get what their services were supposed to be all about, how can you add services into a file manager that are strong enough to base a business on?

    Anyway, I'm noticing a lot of KDE trolling going on here... It may just be me, I'm not sure, but it really seems to me that a lot of KDE users like to cut on Gnome really badly. I don't see the same thing coming from Gnome users, I wonder why this is, I'm not inferring anything, I'm honestly curious.

    In any case, since there seem to be so many people trolling for KDE, I figure I'll just become the first Gnome troll, so, here it goes...

    I like Gnome because...

    1. It's pretty
    2. It's pretty
    3. It's pretty
    4. It works pretty well
    5. Corner panels ROCK!

    Things I would really like for Gnome

    1. An icon box type thing exactly like in Enlightenment.
    2. Nautilus, completed... bugs fixed, performance enhanced, theming features complete. Hopefully someone will continue developing it.

    Things I absolutely *HATE* about KDE

    1. It's ugly
    2. It's ugly
    3. It's ugly
    4. Let me explain ugly, when I say ugly, I mean that it just doesn't feel right... at all. To me, it just looks/feels like it's trying to be an exact ripoff of windows while at the same time adding eye candy. Now, that's not entirely bad, but it just falls way short. The look and feel is just slightly off which is extremely irritating. The eye candy just doesn't work either. Take a look at Konqueror, it has the UGLIEST interface I've seen since I stopped using motif apps. Look at the buttons, they're hideous! And they way they are dithered when they are inactive, it's God awfully hideous looking!
    5. I *HATE* panels that stretch across the whole bottom/top/side of the screen. I don't need that many buttons, please, corner panels just save so much screen real estate.

    To be fair... things I like about KDE.
    1. It works
    2. There are some great apps
    3. Everything is integrated a little better than in Gnome, especially the WM.

    Anyway, back on topic... Nautilus was a great step up for Gnome, I really hope development is continued, it really completes the Gnome desktop.

    I hope I don't start a flame fest, that's not my intention...

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  125. Failed business model? by redpants · · Score: 1

    There has already been a large number of posts here about how Eazel didn't stand a chance from the start. Posts to this affect: How the hell could anyone make money off of GPL software? You obviously can't since Eazel failed. You can't make money off of services alone in the software world.

    Eazel didn't get a chance to even try it's business model. If Eazel would have not GPLed their software, they'd still be gone now. It's truely sad to not see Eazel's ambitions come into affect, they could of had quite an impact and that can be seen by the quality and innovation that is nautilus. And they could have proven this free software/pay services software model.

  126. Free Software Companies that have Gone Under by Greyfox · · Score: 2
    Our "death toll" is still well under that of companies that developed for DOS/Windows until Microsoft killed them.

    I dont think Ballmer would dare use that line anytime soon

    --

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

  127. I've programmed in Gtk-- by Greyfox · · Score: 2
    Gtk-- provides C++ bindings for Gtk and is quite nice to work with. And its signal system is very slick and does not require a pre-processor.

    I never did see the use of file browsers. All they ever do is allow your newbies to screw up their filesystems more quickly. I simply cannot fathom how one could spend $11 Million on one. Ahh well...

    --

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

  128. Gnome looks good :-) by Greyfox · · Score: 2
    Got a screenshot here. I hope the guys at Square have a good sense of humor and don't take me into court...

    Having a good looking desktop is one of the best things you can do to advocate Linux. I get a lot of Windows users asking me, "What the hell is THAT? How can I make my system look like THAT?" Of course, a lot of Linux users ask me that too ;-)

    --

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

  129. It has to be said... by jacobcaz · · Score: 2

    What Linux (and the unix world in general) needs is *not* another file manager or window manager.

    What Linux (and the other unix flavors) needs is a BETTER windowing environment.

    I have played with X windows off and on for a long time and I have played with tons of window managers (from vanilla to gee-whiz). There is just to much out there; to many choices.

    Because of this my FreeBSD and Linux boxes are regulated to standard CLI duty. "Comon' boys, let's run some services, but no GUI for you!" is my unix motto.

    It's sad, but the standardized "no choice" operating systems do more and allow *me* to do more.

    I use some flavor of Windows for games and MacOS for *real* work. Is it because of "marketing hype?"

    Nope. It's because those simply work better for me. I imagine they do for quite a few slashdotters as well.

    When I have a single, well implemented and standard GUI that I can *USE* to be as productive under unix I will. That pancea isn't here yet, and I would wager that's what keeping Linux/FreeBSD/your-flavor-OpenOS-here from really taking off and being a major player in the office and home desktop market.

    -----

    1. Re:It has to be said... by binford2k · · Score: 1
      You are right .. standards are good in a way. You dont have to think about all the options, and can just concentrate on the standard. The command line interfaces (bash, csh, ksh etc.) are pretty standard.

      Is that so? Think again.

      And terminal programs dont have to care about 10 different toolkits, 50 different window managers, different sizes of fonts etc.

      You aren't a programmer are you? There's curses, ncurses, newt, dialog, even twin! There may even be more choices for console apps than gui ones!

      In Linux/*BSD you have just too many options. That may be a good thing, but I hope someday there will be a standard GUI environment for Linux. Now there seems to be two major players, Gnome and KDE. If you want to program GUI apps, you have to either choose other, or make two versions of your GUIs. That just sucks. And I dont personally like to use KDE and Gnome apps mixed, because it just does'nt feel right. Maybe I will switch to Mac OS X someday ..

      A common monkey point of view. Don't you understand? Choice is good. What if I told you that based on your family size the only car you were allowed to own by federal regulations was a midnight blue Ford Taurus . . . just like every one of your neighbors? And don't even think about putting a new stereo in it, because not only is that illegal, but the car won't start.

      But its all for the better, see. Choices are bad for you. They force you to think, and we all know monkeys don't like this.

      Go read Fahrenheit 451. Then switch to MacOSX if you still want. You'd fit in great there.

      -b

    2. Re:It has to be said... by sakari · · Score: 1
      You are right .. standards are good in a way. You dont have to think about all the options, and can just concentrate on the standard. The command line interfaces (bash, csh, ksh etc.) are pretty standard. And terminal programs dont have to care about 10 different toolkits, 50 different window managers, different sizes of fonts etc.

      In Linux/*BSD you have just too many options. That may be a good thing, but I hope someday there will be a standard GUI environment for Linux. Now there seems to be two major players, Gnome and KDE. If you want to program GUI apps, you have to either choose other, or make two versions of your GUIs. That just sucks. And I dont personally like to use KDE and Gnome apps mixed, because it just does'nt feel right. Maybe I will switch to Mac OS X someday ..

    3. Re:It has to be said... by MwtrV · · Score: 1


      To say X Windows isn't useful and needs to go is really complete disregard of the facts at hand. Look at the 4.0.x branch. It runs games, is very fast, and is gaining ground in terms of video card support. I remember when I first got ahold of 4.0.0 and owned an S3 Virge -- even with that card the speed improvement was stupendous. It is quite a revolutionary step from the 3.3.x branch. If your card isn't supported, too bad. You should have checked into it before you went out and purchased. Before you point out that's too operating system specific I think it's obvious kernel developers haven't expended the time and energy to add support for DRI in some of the other operating systems -- X Window developers would likely be very willing to help (and there has been work done with FreeBSD DRI. It is last time I checked agknowledgably very difficult to track down; this will likely change when FreeBSD-5.x goes stable/release.

      Second, where are the other windowing projects? Berlin seems rather incomplete. They aren't around because no one has demanded otherwise. You are in the minority with your opinion. There are lots of people who use some of the more obscure "academic" aspects of the X Windows system. For the embedded systems the argument all the extra isn't needed may hold -- and we are seeing use of modified toolkits working with the frame buffer -- but for most modern non-scribble-pad systems that do useful stuff it doesn't hold.

      Lastly, you say a standard should be settled upon for the GUI. That would mean all developers would have to agree to develop for this specific toolkit. That sounds like taking away freedom of choice which is undisputably one of the major reasons people work with UNIX/LINUX in the first place. Even then if a strict standard was to be proposed it would only be that, a strict standard proposed -- you can't exactly FORCE it, X Windows in its current incanation doesn't dissapear and the X/MOTIF apps people use would still be X/MOTIF apps until the companies would rewrite them (which I don't think is likely. If something ain't broke...)

      I don't think this opinion is insightful at all and is very tired and redundant as we have heard it far too many times.

      --
      mwtr / THIS SIG HAS BEEN PRAYED OVER AND MAY BE USED AS A POINT OF CONTACT (ACTS 19:12)
    4. Re:It has to be said... by sakusha · · Score: 1
      What Linux (and the unix world in general) needs is *not* another file manager or window manager. What Linux (and the other unix flavors) needs is a BETTER windowing environment.
      Yeah, I'm running that right now. It's called Aqua. MacOS X is BSD plus Nextstep plus Nautilus. The Finder app in MacOS X does about 98% of what Nautilus tried and failed to achieve.
  130. Re:Standard X desktop? by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 3

    I don't mean this to sound like a flame, but you must be trippin! Nautilus is Open Source(GPL'd even). Unless Eazel's code REALLY blows, I see the GNOME project taking this over, and hopefully improving it. Then again, this all depends on the source and what it looks like. Heck the Eazel developers may still end up working on it.Unfortunately, noone will know until the Eazel speaks!

    --

    Gorkman

  131. An accident? by rweir · · Score: 4
    Here's my semi-conspiracy theory for the day:
    Imagine that you want to make Linux more user friendly, easier for people familiar with Windows or MacOS to switch to. You decide that you the solution is to build a new file manager and release it as Free Software, but you need money to bay for programmers, computers, bandwitdt, etc. What could be the solution?

    Maybe you could start your own company, and get venture capital to pay for it all. With all the Linux hype at the time, it's probably not too hard to find. You come up with some vague but plausible sounding plans for making money at some point in the future with 'backend services' or 'web integration' or whatever buzzwords you can come up with. Now, you're going to release your file manager under the GPL, so you code away for a year or two, and then reach a v1.0 release. All of a sudden, you announce that you have no money left, and no chance of making any soon. You go bust, the venture capital company loses a bit of cash, and the community gets an outstanding piece of software FOR FREE. That's right, you just got a venture capital company to pay for it, and now the source is out there, Free for the taking, with source code!
    Doesn't this sound like the ultimate investment hack?

  132. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by Brett+Glass · · Score: 1
    There's a serious flaw in your logic. You assume one can't charge for GPLed products?
    No, you can't. One can charge for creating copies, but not for the code itself. It's a common mistake to confuse this.... James Thurber, in a classic and very funny essay, called it "[mistaking] the thing contained for the container."

    Remember, the recipient of GPLed code has the ability to give it away to anyone for free (not just via disks but by posting it on the Net for all to download). Yes, you can make a little money working as a disk copier, stamping out disks for those who do not wish to (or can't) download. But you're not making money as a programmer; you're making money as a CD stamper. And as high bandwidth connections to the Net become ubiquitous, who will buy CD-ROMs? Downloads will not only be cheaper but the code will be fresher. (The code on most CDs is obsolete by the time they are delivered.)

    Programmers should not be forced to attempt to make money only from activities other than programming. Forcing them to live like ramoras -- scavengers that cling to a shark and get only the table scraps from its meals -- is unfair and demeaning. A good programmer should be able to license his work and be compensated for that work, rather than trying to make a tiny profit stamping out plastic with obsolte bits on it.

    You write:

    Red Hat made money every quarter until they started doing the Venture Capital thing,
    This is not correct. According to its financial statements, which are catalogued on the SEC's Edgar site, Red Hat has turned a profite during only one quarter in its entire history -- and that was before the Linux craze.

    I am not sure why people find it so hard to accept that the GPL was designed to hurt businesses and programmers. Richard Stallman said so when he wrote the license. See his essay The GNU Manifesto for more.

    --Brett Glass

  133. I am Phaedrus, modded down for speaking the truth. by Brett+Glass · · Score: 1

    Would you believe that the posting above, which was not inflammatory and contained useful information, was modded down from 2 to 0 -- clearly out of religious zealotry? This really does suggest that one of the problems Eazel might have had was that it was blinded by religion.

  134. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by Brett+Glass · · Score: 2
    I don't think free software versus proprietary software is really the issue here, they had no real plan to make money, at leastnot in the term that they needed it - they spent their 11 million before their file manager was even finished.
    Actually, maybe religion is the issue here. (Note how my post two levels up from here was moderated down from 2 to 0 simply because it suggested that the GPL might not have been the best way to go!) My personal impression, after talking to them, is that Andy & Company were so swept away by ideology that they were blinded to the fact that they did not have a business plan.

    --Brett

  135. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by bero-rh · · Score: 2

    They built their project on a proprietary library

    While writing a free replacement

    they were told about it, refused to change it

    So how would you change it when the free replacement isn't ready yet?

    and eventually had to be forced into changes

    Umm... By who? Nobody forced Trolltech to GPL Qt, yet they did.

    TrollTech extracts a developer tax on KDE apps

    on proprietary KDE apps, that is. And that's fair - what's the problem?
    Everyone can contribute - if someone decides not to contribute with his code, why shouldn't he be forced to contribute by paying the people who work on the library?

    People writing proprietary software do it for the money. There's no reason they shouldn't share their profit with those who made it possible.

    --
    This message is provided under the terms outlined at http://www.bero.org/terms.html
  136. Re:Standard X desktop? by bero-rh · · Score: 2

    It's also pretty much a C vs. C++ thing - most people who prefer Gnome also hate C++.

    Coincidentally, many Americans I know hate C++, while many Europeans I know like it.

    --
    This message is provided under the terms outlined at http://www.bero.org/terms.html
  137. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by bero-rh · · Score: 3

    So that's how the history books are being rewritten now

    Not quite - it's been that way. Ok, not everyone backed Harmony (the free Qt rewrite), but it did get to a point where it was nearly usable.

    KDE never switched over to it simply because it wasn't completed (and eventually discontinued when Qt was open sourced).

    How about not basing it on a proprietary toolkit in the first place

    KDE didn't start as a "Hey, my OS lacks a decent interface for beginners, let's write one!" project, but as a "I've had a look at Qt, it seems to be possible to do this quickly..." project.
    There was no specific plan or development group involved.

    Besides, waiting for a decent free toolkit would have delayed the process for quite a while. Or can you name a usable toolkit that existed at that time?

    IMO, making use of a proprietary library is OK if it's a temporary thing. Especially when that library is semi-open (you could always port it to your favorite OS and stuff).

    The KDE project was dead meat with the original Qt license

    If that is so, please explain why Caldera and Corel didn't include Gnome even when Qt was not fully open source. There must have been at least a number of people who disagree with you. (I agree with you though, unless we can assume Harmony would have been finished in Qt's license hadn't changed (and I think so)).

    So you are ok with all libraries used in Linux being GPL?

    If you have the option to buy different licensing at a reasonable price, yes. I don't see a problem with everyone having to contribute - if someone doesn't want to release his code, have them contribute in other ways.

    --
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  138. Re:Standard X desktop? by bero-rh · · Score: 5

    You probably didn't follow KDE development at that time closely enough.

    Many KDE developers have always had a problem with the Qt 1.x license, to the point of starting the Harmony project, which was basically a free rewrite of Qt. The project was dumped after TrollTech's announcement that Qt would fall under the BSD license if they stopped developing it (meaning no new release in 6 months), and that Qt 2.0 would be truly Open Source.

    The KDE people -ARE- happy inserting proprietary technology into the fundamental infrastucture

    Not true (at least not anymore). Even for Qt 1.x, a free replacement was underway.

    --
    This message is provided under the terms outlined at http://www.bero.org/terms.html
  139. Thank goodness it's 1.0 by steveha · · Score: 2
    Thank goodness Nautilus has already hit the 1.0 level. Even if this story is true and Eazel is gone, we get to keep Nautilus.

    Mozilla took ages to get rolling because the initial source release was such a mess. (It didn't even build when first released.) One of the lessons of open source development: it goes better when the source actually works. It's easier to take something that works and make it work a little bit better, than to take a mess and make it work.

    Eazel, thanks for Nautilus.

    steveha

    --
    lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
  140. Re: More than can be chewed by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

    > This project was a daunting task

    The project was crap! Not to be a troll, but it didn't bring anything new to the table. Nautilus was the same (and just as crappy as) all of the other options at the table.


    --
    Max V.

    --
    There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
    Max V.
    NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
  141. It was a matter of interpretation.,, by alexhmit01 · · Score: 5

    It was NEVER illegal to distribute KDE, OR QT. It was questionable whether you could SHIP KDE already compiled with QT. It was a theoretical arguement, and a silly one. More importantly, it was a dispute. The KDE team maintained that the GPL did NOT prohibit what they did. RMS maintained that it did. RMS wrote the thing, but that doesn't mean that he is correct. I think that the KDE camp likely was correct, because in the unlikely scenario that someone would press the charge, I think that KDE (and whoever distributed it) would prevail.

    Go to xemacs.com and read about the RMS tirade. RMS's licensing views ARE NOT appeased by making everything GPL'd. He is on a political movement and the politics are what matter to him, not the quality of code.

    Linux allows closed source binary modules in the Linux kernel, should everyone here boycott Linux? He is allowing the core of the OS to be dependant on proprietary components, let's throw a temper tantrum.

    TrollTech wasn't misguided, they DISAGREED with RMS's theory of a derivate product. The maintained that linking against QT didn't make you a derivative. They have since decided to accept the community's theory (not really tested) and release under the GPL.

    TrollTech is making money on their commercial contracts, and they are happy to let KDE build off of it. They even GPL'd QT to help KDE's adoption. Does QT benefit from KDE dominating, yes. But note that QT includes an IDE, and now KDE has one that competes with it (for free). At this point, the ONLY reason to buy QT is a commercial product OR a QT-based product without KDE.

    KDE offered us a useful GUI for a while, and busted ass. GNOME started to spite KDE, and RMS used it as a soapbox.

    I TOTALLY respect RMS's works and I respect his views, but sometimes we need to ask ourselves the goal.

    UNLESS you buy 100% into his philosophy on free software, then you NEED to REALLY evaluate this. If you are not a TOTAL Free Software diehard, then ask yourself if TOTALLY Free (GNU's GPL in fact) desktop with great code is good enough, or you need to be pissed off about a resolved licensing dispute.

    It's time to move on. KDE is cranking, GNOME is press releasing.

    Alex

    1. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by codingOgre · · Score: 1

      Umm... how about not basing it on a proprietary toolkit in the first place. It was hardly a work of genius to see the problem... or perhaps they did, but ignored it on purpose for "other reasons."

      Yeah, like the total lack of a well documented C++ GUI toolkit for Linux at the time!

      --
      Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
    2. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by codingOgre · · Score: 1

      As this excuses the use of a proprietary base library how, exactly?

      I'm sorry why do I have to justify my choice for a GUI toolkit again?

      ...let's just use one that makes our software illegal

      Strictly an opinion and not one that is based on fact. In order to find out if anything was illegal a court case would have to be created. You see there were(I say were because QT is now GPL) two interpretations of the license and both parties thought that they were right. No illegal actions were ever proven, it is just that the whole issue was dropped due to QT being GPLed.

      --
      Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
    3. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by codingOgre · · Score: 1

      only KDE hairsplitters could hide behind the "not proven" idea

      Actually I use GNOME.
      --
      Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
    4. Re:It was a matter of interpretation.,, by Gsus2 · · Score: 1

      KDE wasn't all GPL. Some parts of it was LGPL. QT was linked to the LGPLed parts of KDE.

      RMS's intentions with the LGPL was to allow properiary code on a GPL system. Trolltech used LPGP to write GPL software on a properiary toolkit. IANAL, but I think this is legal.

      RMS claimed this violated the GPL licence, but it only violated his intentions.
      Besides, he was afraid that the GNU/Linux desktop would be based on a non-Free licence.

      I don't think RMS cares much for the legal meaning of GPL. He only uses it as an vehicle for his holy cause.

  142. copyright assignment by martinflack · · Score: 1

    So who gets the copyright assignment to Nautilus?

    The GPL operates as a license to copy. If nobody owns the copyright then who will initiate the lawsuits against people misusing the Nautilus code? (e.g. adding custom improvements and then distributing binaries but refusing to release the source code of those improvements)

    They should assign it to FSF before they disolve, or something.

  143. Upsetting by Satai · · Score: 2

    Eazel was always the company I was glad to look at and say, you know, these guys might make it. They had a great staff - hell, they had the ultimate staff - some great ideas, even good funding.

    Then Nautilus was released. It was good, even great. I like it - even though it does more than I really want, I recognize that it's the file manager for new users. And now Eazel is dead, or will be soon.

    However, there is a bright side. The GPL is here to save the day again. We, the community, have been given the code - we have the assurance that the code will never go away.

    I bet within the next, oh, month or so, an article will show up on Slashdot proclaiming that Eazel development has been moved to sourceforge, that a dedicated group of volunteers has taken hold, and that soon enough OpenNautilus will be on its way toward becoming a reality.

    (OpenNautilus being a farcical term, since the code is already open.)

    Companies come and go - but code remains forever.

    1. Re:Upsetting by Genyin · · Score: 1

      Companies come and go - but code remains forever
      Companies come and go - but code remains until the MPAA deems it content control circumvention.

  144. Good innovations (Re: Nautilus was crap anyway) by tftp · · Score: 1
    I tried Nautilus many times, in many revisions starting from earliest betas. Most of my boxen @work are 400-450 MHz K6-II and K6-III, so we are talking about 1000 BogoMIPS here. Nautilus was always very slow. I managed to upgrade to latest GNOME a week ago, it contained released Nautilus and felt a bit faster. But it is still too slow, compared to gmc and to practically anything else.

    I haven't looked at the code yet but it appears that developers managed to make more than one performance-impeding mistake. If the code gets moved to SF then it will be even beneficial to the project - because more people will be able to contribute and to make changes.

    Some ideas of Nautilus I really like, some I don't care about and some I do not like.

    I like selection shading - it is much nicer than traditional dashed line. I like MP3 preview (when it worked). I like thumbnailing of images - when I want it. I like the idea of pluggable viewers and document handlers, though not many are available yet. Resizable icons are of no value to me, too time-consuming to resize an icon; easier just to open the file. Text inside of icons is totally useless - who works with text files today to start with, and even who does (sysadmins) how much they will learn from few lines of the content?

    I don't particularly care about services. That part of their business plan was surely shaky. Companies like X-Drive offered some disk space year(s) ago. But who would even want some 25 MB (good for 5-7 mp3 files or 10 Word documents) over slow Internet link?

    I absolutely hate Nautilus's performance. It is unacceptable for normal people. Geeks understand what's going on inside and may be inclined to tolerate slow operation. Non-geeks (like my boss) ask "what's going on, I already clicked here!" - or even worse, click again and again (or move objects again and again), with likely disastrous results.

    Themes are one of problems indeed. I tried several and haven't found a single one that I would like. They are either too dark, or too hard to render, or hard to understand. Antialiased fonts are unusable (too blurred), and probably this piece of code better be removed in favor of native support of antialiasing in X.

    Medusa and emblems are very weird. They needed to extend the filesystem to hold extra attributes of each file, so they decided to drop a dot-file in every directory. However this approach works only inside of Nautilus; commands that do not know about that magic file won't copy these "attributes". It is very portable though. But Medusa runs too aggressively and consumes too much CPU and disk activity. Eazel said that Medusa is required for good search - what search? I don't think I ever used that feature.

    Builtin browser (piece of Mozilla) is unusable. It is not a complete Mozilla but just a restricted version, with very little customization. I do not understand why I (or anyone else) would want browser without decent controls if the full, complete browser is also installed (and even requred). I'd rather run Mozilla instead. This embedded browser business is not needed.

    But generally Nautilus is an interesting, significant development. It needs many usability fixes, speed and good default theme being probably most important. After that it may be released onto unsuspecting users.

  145. Re:Is Gnome next? by Woko · · Score: 2

    Before you badmouth GTK+, write a fully object oriented library in vanilla C.

    But why would I when there's C++ available?


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    Silence is consent.
  146. Re:Who said Gnome is dead too? Why GNOME is doomed by biohazard99 · · Score: 1

    I don't know, US Department of Defense seems to like it, maybe a core of people who were used to programing in a other languages ran a sucessful FUD campaign against it in another era, the results are still visible. I look forward to a similar situation in C vs. C++ and C++ vs. Java over the next 20 years, with other battles such as perl vs. any other scripting langauges (Python, CSH, Ruby, C#, et al)

  147. KDE's flagship product is a file manager too by salimma · · Score: 1

    Lest you forget, Nautilus' appeal is exactly the same as Konqueror's. A universal browser extensible using components.

    This is not a flame - I do use KDE-based programs (kMail, licq + kde plugin, konqueror for web browsing) and KDE is at the present moment ahead. GNOME is ahead in the 'pretty icons' department at least, though. And Pango looks great.

    --
    Michel
    Fedora Project Contribut
  148. I agree by salimma · · Score: 1

    That's why I use Ximian GNOME as my desktop (purrty icons) but rely on several key KDE programs. Adopting the Enlightenment philosophy, the desktop != the apps :)

    --
    Michel
    Fedora Project Contribut
  149. Re:Standard X desktop? by nullity · · Score: 5

    Your post is based on the (rather poor) assumption that the demise of Eazel is a step in the ultimate degredation of the GNOME project. Even as an (ex) Eazel employee I think you underestimate the resilience of the GNOME project. For one thing, many of us who worked on Nautilus as Eazel employees will continue to work on Nautilus. The reason Nautilus appears to have relatively few volunteer contributors is it tended to hire people who made significant contributions! I'm sure most of us who started that way will continue to hack on Nautilus.

    It saddens me greatly to see so many in the free software community scrambling to exploit the fate of their brothers. Do KDE users truly enjoy seeing their fellow project suffer setbacks, or is it the out-spoken minority? Though I can't speak for other GNOME developers, I personally feel more of an affinity than dislike for the KDE project. We're doing the same thing. We're working for the same goal. Doesn't that make us comrades rather than enemies?!?

    "but KDE would be the only desktop environment / component framework"

    I might remark snidely that KDE does not yet have a component framework. It has a method for inter-program embedding (KParts), but this is not the same as a component framework. poke, poke. This is a great example of how it is *still* beneficial to both projects to have the other around. True, there is some duplicated effort, but my hope is that Bonobo and OAF will prompt the KDE project to strengthen KParts to the extent that it is a full component framework. Similarly, there are ways where we (the GNOME project) are lifting useful features from KDE. Lots of people seem to pay lip-service to competition but get squeemish when they see it at work.

    "This really sucks for the GNOME users and developers. But what can you do?"

    The same thing we have always done: Write code. Fix bugs. Write documentation. Translate. Polish. Add features. Keep improving. What do you do?

    -Seth (seth@eazel.com)

  150. Yes, it's tougher for them to get any play by afflatus_com · · Score: 1
    They are indeed putting out less, this is well-known. Here is an excerpt of the most relevant research.

    ...The scene outside the offices of Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers, home to the legendary VC John Doerr, illustrates the sad story. Day and night, groups of eager dot-com executives, male and female, loiter near the entrance. They are waiting for a prospective backer, what they've come to call a "John Doerr." Whenever one of the venture partners walks by, the soliciting begins:

    "Hey, money boy, you want No. 1 clicky-clicky?"

    "Say baby, you've got the seed I need!"

    The partners usually ignore these crass come-ons, and for most hopefuls, the day ends at around 11 p.m. Then they are picked up in a van driven by their "management consultant," usually the head of a Net incubator that has several companies it's trying to get funded..."

    Full story at www.satirewire.com/features/prostidots.shtml

    ---
    "And the beast shall be made legion. Its numbers shall be increased a thousand thousand fold."

    --

    -----
    Cast a Cold Eye
    On Life, on Death
    Horseman, pass by
    --W.B. Yeats' gravestone
  151. Re:Is Gnome next? by autechre · · Score: 1


    That's what the debian menu system does. Every window manager package, by default, uses the Debian menus, which contain every X application you've installed (and are, of course, updated when you install new ones.). This is one of the many benefits of having all packages follow a strict set of guidelines.

    Sotto la panca, la capra crepa

    --
    WMBC freeform/independent online radio.
  152. A new perspective? by oudeis · · Score: 1

    I dunno. Instead of the chorus of "we told you so's." Why don't we put this in a new light (assuming it's true). Some people with more money than they needed funded a project that benefits the world at large. Sort of like what academic research is all about. People working not simply for their own narrow selfish interests but for the advance of knowledge and technology. 13 million dollars later the linux community has a nice looking file manager that we can use to sell this operating system to the microsuck infatuated world at large. It's sorta like state "asshole taxes." You know like vanity license plates. People pay 50 bucks in order to get something stupid on their license plate and that $50 bucks can get spent on useful for the rest of us. :) I'm sure it sucks if it is your company, but the rest of us have a sweet looking interface to seduce potential linux users with. Thanks Eazel! (Oh and you V-C people too).

  153. Likewise with Qt by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Likewise, you can use a pirated copy of Qt and develop on a pirated copy of Solaris. There's no band of clowns running around demanding 'show us the source' because you won't show them proof that you paid for your copy of Qt. It's very unlikely that Trolltech themselves will be bugging you(unless you become a big success, and in that case you just buy a Trolltech shrinkwrapped box after the fact). It's far easier and cheaper to put out a Shareware title for *n?x for reasons like this. There isn't a big $2000 startup cost before you can sell the first copy. And Trolltech doesn't have as many bands of zealots out there forcing you to 'open the source' if you don't have a Qt recipt. (they do if you're a big enterprise, but here we're talking about small groups/individuals churning out closed-source shareware).

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  154. Compilation of large packages has to be supervised by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Just run a compile script and get on with your life.

    And come back after dinner and a movie to see that the compile stopped with an error three minutes after you had left. Compilation of large packages has to be supervised.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  155. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Nerds · · Score: 2

    Well, the point hasn't really said anything, so it's also mute...

    --
    My other .sig is 'The Art of Computer Programming'
  156. All these names.... by xjerky · · Score: 1

    ....are confusing me, especially since theyare associated with each other. Can anyone explain the significance and differences between the following names: gnome, ximian, nautilus, and eazel?

    --
    A sentence you'll never see on an Internet discussion board: "You know what? You're right."
  157. Programming smarts != business smarts by Gogo+Dodo · · Score: 2
    Eazel was founded on Hype. OSS hype, Linux hype, services hype, and the hype that it's founders were geniuses. (obviously they are not)

    The founders are probably quite intelligent. However, one has to have a different level of intelligence than software programming intelligence to be business smart.

  158. Re:Standard X desktop? by dan_bethe · · Score: 1
    No kidding! That post helped me to just realize why I've always had a subtle aversion to the idea of using KDE, even now. It was one of those subtle but obvious ideas that I didn't totally realize. I couldn't explain it until I saw this post.

    I sort of understood that I didn't really trust the KDE project's background, and that I have always had to remind myself that QPL is now an open source license every time I thought about it. The reason I didn't fully realize it, was because I always try so hard to be open minded, compassionate, and empathetic; I could understand Troll Tech's misimplemented intentions, and I assumed that the KDE developers probably believed that a licensing solution would eventually arise.

    I now see that my mistrust was because I didn't know whether they thought it was a problem at all, or what they intended to do about it.

    Does anyone have a link to any rhetoric from the KDE leaders which discussed the non-open source QPL back then?

    Thanks.

    ===

  159. Re:Bud Tribble by dan_bethe · · Score: 1

    You faxed him, eh? Neat.

    ===

  160. Re:Shame.... by cliffiecee · · Score: 5

    Yea, my boss helped me reduced my commute time to zero.

  161. VCs == prude? by coolgeek · · Score: 3
    From the news.com article: ...said rumor control professional Diane Carlini...But investments at this point in time are a little trickier because the VCs are not putting out as much as they were six months ago.

    VCs not putting out? Seems to me like they're having a field day fucking people lately...

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    cat /dev/null >sig
  162. Give me a break, troll! by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1
    So your point is that we can't trust KDE developers because some of them actually thought it was moral to work on KDE even before QT became fully open-sourced... That is just dumb, I'm sorry. If you had any evidence that KDE people "-ARE- happy inserting proprietary technology ..." then someone might take what you wrote as more than a troll. A project that at one point picked usability over ideology but is now MUCH CLEANER ideologically than gnome can never escape its past. And don't the ends show that they DID NOT make a mistake? What is there to apologize for? Why don't you think that this was exactly their plan? Not only did they code the most usable desktop environment that UNIX has ever seen, but in the process lured a competent company to GPL what is arguably the most versatile toolkit on any platform--two incredible benefits for open source.

    But here is a troll to match yours, only more in touch with reality, I think: It is the judgement of GNOME's leaders that endangers the freedom of our software. It is not KDE people who will hop in bed with some self-serving companies at the drop of a hat. Eazel was a perfect example, thought they obviously didn't pull this off -- but they tried: You can write GPL code that is as good as closed-source: make it so ugly, twisted and convoluted that in effect the company responsible for it are the only ones who can maintain it (let's take bets on nautilus). Then intergrate some features that benefit the company. They'll stay in as long as it's too much of a pain to maintain a fork without the crap (ugly code helps) and then you've got a company basically in controll of your supposedly free system. It's not that they can't be opposed, but they de-facto won't be. OK, so Eazel failed, but what do you think Ximian is after? What do you think Sun's motivations are for Gnomifying StarOffice? They know they can cram it down our throats with whatever features suit THEM; no one will bother compiling them out (certainly not RedHat!). Corporations are turning Gnome into nothing more than bait for us to do what they want us to, and still kiss their feet for their generosity. Yeah, I bet this is what you would call the ideological high road...

    At this point I'd use KDE even if it weren't better. At least it's not a whore of the corporations, filled with their jizz.

  163. Harmony by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

    Well, like you said, Harmony was almost far enough along when QT was freed to be usable as the core of KDE. So why do you also say "The KDE team would had to have rewritten Qt from the ground up"? They would not have needed to start on the ground--they would have finished the remaining 20% of Harmony and gone on. I just don't see what you people find so scary about this. Besides, the original "code under glass" license said that there will always be a gratis and up-to-date QT and if anything happens to TT to prevent this then the code gets released under a BSD license. This on its own prevented the "microsoft purchase" scenario.

  164. I hope you hate GTK and the Gimp (troll below) by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

    I was never able to trust the authors of the Gimp because it originally needed Motif to compile. Now granted, now it needs only GPLed software but I remember my history... You have to question the authors' commitment to free software if they were willing to use such an unfree toolkit to write their program. The very same people are responsible for GTK which is the core of Gnome--so I ask you, how can you trust the code of people who have obviously shown a willingness to compile against closed-source software?

    1. Re:I hope you hate GTK and the Gimp (troll below) by kalifa · · Score: 2

      Simply because the gimp people decided themselves to dump Motif and write a free toolkit as a replacement.

      Phase 1: Motif-based Gimp.

      Phase 2: Uh, we're stupid, Motif sucks, Lesstif does not seem to come along nicely, we've made a mistake. Let's write our own libre toolkit and replace Motif.

      All this without being forced by an external influence and external criticisms.

      Don't tell me you cannot see the difference with KDE's early days.

  165. Ideological Quest or Product? by reallocate · · Score: 1
    Sheesh...such noise! Someone dare speaks heresy and the True Believers resort to empty rhetoric and insults.

    The problem with GUI's -- on any OS -- is that no one seems to have hade a new idea since Xerox rolled theirs out. Every GUI I've used is derivative of another. But then, so what? Why is that such a big problem?

    BTW, learning to code -- and to code well -- isn't easy or quick. Whining at "users" to "get over it and write their own code" is about as realistic as telling "drivers" to "get over it and add two extra cylinders to that puny 4-cylinder you're complaining about..."

    People have lots of stuff going on in their lives, most of it considerably more important that deciding what OS to use. So, maybe it is time to stop thinking about the rest of the world as "users" and start thinking about them as "customers", i.e., someone who will use the product that is Linux. And, of course, that means deciding that Linux, etc., are, in fact, products, not an ideological quest.

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  166. Re: More than can be chewed by Jebediah21 · · Score: 1

    This project was a daunting task. I think it would have lasted longer had it not come at such a bad time for funding. Look at how long it has taken for Mozilla to become something that many use as the default browser on Linux. M18 was totally unuseable for me on my Pentium II 300, and now Mozilla .9 works great. I can only wonder what would have happened in Eazel used a method similar to Mozilla development. Nautilus was pretty rough in some areas, but then again, so was Mozilla.

    In any case I wish the best to Andy as well.

    --

    Everytime you look at porn a devil gets their horns.
  167. Re: More than can be chewed by Jebediah21 · · Score: 1

    Mozilla is a god DAMN web browser. What a load of crap you are chewing on.

    Nautilus was trying to put a lot into their file manager. When was the last time you saw one that easily let you keep notes, scan images, text files, and look pudry. You haven't.

    By the way, learn to use contractions.

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    Everytime you look at porn a devil gets their horns.
  168. Re: Advanced File Manager by Jebediah21 · · Score: 1

    You are correct in saying that Nautilus was not well received by everybody. I don't even use it as my main file manager, instead preferring GMC for a few different reasons.

    I also believe it is bloated and tries to do too much. The same could be said of many other programs. My hope is that Nautilus can be refined to be more stable and lightweight, while still retaining eye candy features for those who want it. I think there were good and bad parts to the project. Personally I liked the notes feature, but hated how it handled desktop appearance and the integration of Mozilla.

    The whole Nautilus project seemed pretty beta to me, and with good reason. This was a pretty big step up on Linux from something like GMC. There are lots of refinements and slimming that can be done. For a project as big as Nautilus I think the Mozilla model of development would be better suited for it.

    Personally, I tend to do filesystem maintenance from the shell, or GMC if it strikes my fancy. YMMV.

    Thanks for not trolling btw.

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    Everytime you look at porn a devil gets their horns.
  169. Re:The Emperor's New Clothes by Drone-X · · Score: 2

    I'm not going to debate here if services will work but I think it's important to note that Eazel didn't fail because they didn't work but because they never got far enough to test their business plan.

  170. Re:Sad to see people lose jobs, but otherwise... by Drone-X · · Score: 2
    I didn't like Nautilus. I've tried to get used to it, it's ALWAYS slower than command line for me, and I've only been using CLI for about 9 months.
    Perhaps you're just not the target audience. This is not a shame (hey, I like the CLUE too) but you should consider that before you start complaining.
    I didn't like Eazel's attitude about distros other than Red Hat, especially early on when I was trying to get into the project. For the longest time during the preview phase, only RH6.2 binaries were available. It took a lot of effort to compile early Nautilus on non-RH systems.
    True, although I did manage to install it fine on my SuSE distro at the time. Now that I use Debian I trust on Kitame to build and install it.
    I didn't like the totally half-hearted feel of everything in Nautilus. The .desktop issue, rejection of the Cut/Copy/Paste idea without any substitute, glitchy themes, millions (exaggerating) of processes, the "My Documents" wannabe folder, services that NEVER EVER worked on any of my systems (I didn't spent more than ~30minutes trying to get them to work, but why should I have to try?), few file managing tools (lots of sugary file browsing tools...).
    The .desktop issue was indeed a mistake, but this has been fixed by Ximian and merged into the official Nautilus tree. Cut/Copy/Paste is now available, drag 'n' drop was always there as a substitute. The millions of processes are just threads and Bonobo things AFAIK, what's wrong with that? I have no idea what the "My Documents" wannabe folder is actually. The services worked fine until recently. And what file managing tools did you miss?
    I dunno. I can't claim to have produced much useful software myself. I do lots of bug reports and I give lots of feature feedback.
    Same here for now :-).
    I sort of think that Nautilus became such a mixed up, inconsistant, gnarled project because it was so corporate and so under the gun. So many pieces of Nautilus seem like they're just self-justification of Eazel's existance. There are some decent features in Nautilus, I don't feel it's crap. There were SO MANY boneheaded problems along the way, though! It's just so sad to see something that could've been good, but was just planned so poorly and executed so hurriedly.
    I don't agree, the issues I did have with it were slowly being solved over time.
    Anyway, I just hope people don't get the idea that Nautilus is the example of the rest of GNOME, and than the rest of GNOME is somehow gonna break down because they lost their newer file manager... there's PLENTY of great app development happening in GNOME, it'll become more apparent as GNOME gets closer to 2.0 and the piece's really start to come together.
    Yes, like those KDE trolls that think GNOME is dead because Eazel isn't here anymore. That's just BS.
  171. Re:Standard X desktop? by e_n_d_o · · Score: 4

    Eazel is in no way an important piece of Gnome.

    Nautilus *IS* an important piece of Gnome, and the only concern is whether development of Nautilus can continue without its developers being funded by this now defunct company. We'll have to wait and see who will stop development on Nautilus, and who will take over for them. The product might die, or it might reach goals that it never could have under the direct control of a for-profit company.

    The loss of Eazel's services infrastructure won't be a blow to the Gnome community. Ximian offers many of the same services, as does Red Hat, and other distributions.

    Regardless of what happens, thank you, Eazel, for GIVING us Nautilus. While born prematurely and still needing much work, this file manager has the most potential of any I've seen. If development continues and Nautilus is pushed to be the best at what it was always meant to be (just a really nice file manager), I think it may someday be hands down the best product of its kind.
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  172. Re:Standard X desktop? by tpv · · Score: 1
    Look at the history of BSD if you want to know why trusting someone who could negatively affect your work is a bad thing.

    And look at all the code that has "GPL version 2.0 or greater" on it, to see that nothing has changed.

    Everyone who does that is trusting that the FSF won't put out a GPL 3.0 that takes control of all your code.

    I don't think there's a much chance of that happening, but if the KDE guys weren't supposed to trust TT, then we shouldn't trust the FSF with this.
    Linus doesn't and nor do I.

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  173. Re:The Emperor's New Clothes by tpv · · Score: 1
    they never got far enough to test their business plan.

    The business plan starts the day the business starts.

    If their plan lacked any consideration of the first year(s), or if didn't carry them through to profitability, then the plan was a failure.

    In this case, it failed. Miserably.
    Which is not to say the founders were "wrong/stupid", but that the plan didn't work out. Conditions weren't favourable, the market didn't eventuate, whatever.

    The Eazel plan failed, that doesn't mean services are a bad plan.

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  174. Re:Sux, by tpv · · Score: 1
    Then here comes Eazel, which thinks it has the time and money to both make a free product and sell the value- added services. Does anyone else see anything wrong with this business model?

    As was pointed out on a TV show I saw recently, most of the "New economy" businesses, (in which I include Eazel), worked in a similar, stupid way.

    They would have two products/services.
    One of them, they would excel at, but give away free.
    The other, they were (sometimes) OK at, and charged for.

    It's a model that can work sometimes, but not often.

    Take Deja for example.
    Core competancy: Usenet archives/posting.
    Money making: Crappy web-store on the side.
    Result: Failure.

    Eazel
    Core competancy: Desktop/UI devlopment.
    Money making: Some services on the side.
    Result: Failure.

    The model has some sucess - Yahoo! has done OK so far, but so far it has been an exception not the rule.

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  175. Re:Standard X desktop? by tpv · · Score: 2
    I personally feel more of an affinity than dislike for the KDE project. We're doing the same thing. We're working for the same goal. Doesn't that make us comrades rather than enemies?!?

    Really?
    I guess it depends on who "we" is, since developers on open source projects tend to have varied motivations and goals, but...
    Officially KDE was started to be a better, free-er desktop than CDE.
    GNOME was started to be a better, free-er desktop than KDE.
    Obviously similar goals, but directly opposed.

    Most of the developers may now see each other as fellow-workers in the desktop world, but the creation of GNOME was a direct accusation/insult against KDE. I can't say I would have seen the GNOME team as comrades at that point.

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  176. Re:Well, I guess it didn't work out as I had hoped by tpv · · Score: 2
    Why would anyone buy out Eazel?
    You made it clear yourself:
    it is GPL

    Eazel probably has large debts. If RedHat was to buy them, then they'd have to carry those debts. If they let Eazel go bankrupt, the debts go away, and RedHat can just pick up the code.

    it'd be nice to have the original dedicated developers too
    They still can, if Eazel goes under then these people are out of work. 90% of them are in it because they believe in it, if another company offers them a job working on Nautilus, they'll take it.

    I suspect this is always going to be true for companies producing free software.
    A software company has 3 assets:

    • The software
    • The people
    • The ideas.

    In the free software world most of those are going to be free for the taking after a company goes under.
    • The software is under a free licence, so another company can pick it up free. The only thing that the company still holds is the copyright, and even then, they might not if they accept outside contributions.
    • The people usually care more about the code than the company, and will move onto another company if they get to keep working on it.
    • The ideas are usually in the heads of the people or in the code. The rest of them tend to be quite public anyway.

    The reaulity is, if you're trying to build a company around free sfotware, then you need to remain extra careful to remain solvent, because there's not a lot of reason for someone to bail you out.

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  177. Ugly Bag of Windows by fm6 · · Score: 2
    4. Let me explain ugly, when I say ugly, I mean that it just doesn't feel right... at all. To me, it just looks/feels like it's trying to be an exact ripoff of windows while at the same time adding eye candy. Now, that's not entirely bad, but it just falls way short. The look and feel is just slightly off which is extremely irritating.
    I keep hearing this, and I find this response both interesting and sad. It's true that the KDE people copied features from Windows, and that the default look&feel has a Gatesian deja vu. But this is all highly configurable. Not just KDE itself -- KDE-aware apps can morph themselves in response to the user's global preferences.

    I'm guessing there are two reasons for this attitude:

    1. People don't experiment or explore. You can't find all the cool features and tools that come with a system unless you play with it, and most people seem to lack the necessary curiosity.

    2. The various "free" software initiatives have maxed out the volunteer labor pool, and it's no longer easy to con R&D money out of the VCs with vague promises of "service" profits. So if you want plugins to make KDE act like a Mac, you'll have to pay somebody to write them. But why should you? Easier to buy a Mac.

    I'm not saying Open Source/Free Software is dead. But it's time for a reality check.

    __

  178. Well, I guess it didn't work out as I had hoped. by proxima · · Score: 3

    I was really hoping that Eazel would be bought out for a bargain by some big name - IBM, HP, Red Hat, other another large distro company. Linux does need a top-notch file manager - and Nautilus showed promise (but from reports I've heard it wasn't quite there yet).

    Unfortunately, as others have said, they had insufficient profit-making plans. As I browse through their web site, most desirable software and services are completely free (including free online storage space). This is obviously not the type of company that can survive on its own.

    Instead, this company was creating a potentially essential project to many new and experienced Linux users (those willing to use a GUI at times instead of console). The companies to gain from this software are the Linux distributions themselves, because an excellent file manager is needed to help new *nix users get used to a non-Windows OS. Unfortunately, it would seem that the companies I hoped would take up the Eazel cause at a loss (the gain would be to help the parent project, not to make money as a branch division) did not. I would imagine that Eazel could have sold for quite a bargain - relatively (judging by the VC they used up, $11 million).

    Perhaps this isn't true, or perhaps there's still time for some big company to step in and take up the development (after all, it is GPL, but it'd be nice to have the original dedicated developers too).

    If a company fails to sponser this, it will only be a small amount of time before the open source volunteers take charge. We'll see what happens.

    This is, of course, assuming the information is true.

    --
    "The universe seems neither benign nor hostile, merely indifferent." --Carl Sagan
  179. Better wait... by felipeal · · Score: 1

    ...until next week.
    This kind of news doesn't makes sense in a Friday night (especillay not it being April 1st :)

  180. KDE2, AOL execs by Fervent · · Score: 1
    And yet, there was KDE2 with an equally easy and useful interface. And it was good. And there was much rejoicing.

    Actually, come to think of it, does anyone else feel a small bit of relief that former AOL execs are moving away from one less project in Linux?

    --

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

  181. Not To Be to harsh. by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 2

    Disclaimer -- I have used Nautilus and it looks very promising....But HELLO maybe next time we can get around to actually having a product on the shelf before the 15 million runs out...I get a kick that all of these "dying" Linux companies are all dying without a viable business or product. Did we think Corel was going to stick around much longer after a smoke and windows Wine port of their office suite. (Hell, the Wine people could have had that done in due time by themselves without beefing up the soup line.) The sad thing is that in the press all you are hearing now days is that "No money to be made in the Linux world" ... that is like me complaining that my 5 year old son has not baught me that house with his pro football earnings. Even though I don't use Redhat anymore -- you have to look at them as a success because I was seeing shrink wrapped boxes in the stores many years ago -- and they are still around.

    --
    (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
  182. Future of Desktop GUIs by juggla · · Score: 1

    I thought Eazel was a step forward not just for *nix GUIs but for Desktop GUIs in general. Sure it had its problems, but no GUI is perfect (especially not Windows which has been designed after millions of dollars worth of "research").

    However, is this the end of Eazel? NO! That's what open source is all about, someone will pick it up, whether it be IBM or some guy living in a basement. Eazel will not die this easily.

    --
    Always encrypt with rot13 TWICE for extra security.
    1. Re:Future of Desktop GUIs by Fat+Casper · · Score: 1
      Eazel does not equal Nautilus. Separate them. If today (oops- yesterday)'s news is solid, then Eazel is dead. Most of the geeks were laid off the day 1.0 was released, and now the rest are gone. A bad company (not in any objective value sense, but in the business sense) is gone. Their source is out there. Nautilus can live.

      If you really liked Nautilus, stop using the word Eazel. If they are remembered 5 years (hell, even 3) from now, it will be as a joke, an illustration of the overvalued stock market from the '90s, the VC/IPO craze and the retards who E-Traded their retirement (or kids' college) savings into the shitter. Nautilus is something you like. I've never tried it, but that's my problem. It's the product you like, not the company. The company is nothing but a bad joke now.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
  183. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by zsa · · Score: 1
    I'm not saying it was a great business plan. Just that if you went and talked to their bizdev people, that's the kind of thing they would tell you. No intention of selling Nautilus.

    I think they were looking at the enterprise and corporate IT, which are beginning to take open source software seriously. There's a ton of money in supporting enterprise systems. Particularly if you can make a desktop product that can compete with microsoft and move Linux from the server-side to the desktop.

    Course, that's a big 'if', and Nautilus is only a part of that solution.

    --
    ---Your karma ran over my dogma
  184. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by zsa · · Score: 2
    If you can't charge for your products, you fold.

    Granted, but Eazel's product was not Nautilus. It was support services and whatnot for Nautilus. They never got to the point of really trying the business model to see if it would work.

    --
    ---Your karma ran over my dogma
  185. Re:Well, I guess it didn't work out as I had hoped by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    really hoping that Eazel would be bought out for a bargain by some big name

    Why would Eazel need to be bought out? Nautilus is GPL (is it not..?). The present developers (bar some draconian employee contracts) can pick up, walk down the street, hang a shingle - "Smeazel" - and start where they left off.

    The failure here is the VC money. Fuck the VCs I say. They have millions of other dollars with which to vacation in Tahiti. A 25% ROI for the vultures requires alot more revenue than an office and salaries for 25-30 people.

    This isnt the end of Nautilus at all.

  186. Nautilus Services? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    Does anyone know how the backend services work? Are the server processes for the BE GPL?

    Because Nautilus is GPL it wont disappear. If the BE is not GPL could it die w/ Eazel? It would be nice to see Nautilus adapted to run offering services to Gnome users from a variety of providers - both from the community and not. If users could add services providers it may end up being a very usefull feature - unless Nautilus is written to only connect to one provider at once, and the BE code dies...

    Has anyone any idea?

  187. Re:Is Gnome next? by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
    The Gnome foundation can drop a lot of names. They've got a so-so toolkit (and before you tell me otherwise, try programming with it) that was based off a Photoshop clone and has had widgets undergo major (ie: developer's nightmare) changes from 1.0 to 1.2 to the proposed 2.0. They've got many divergent projects, no complete Office Suite, and have a FILE MANAGER as their flagship product. They haven't reached their second generation of desktop yet, and while that might be (and probably everyone's going to argue is) because they have a different set of standards, I don't think anybody can sit there and say with a straight face that the Gnome foundation has been pumping out the software in the same volume that KDE has. Furthermore, they keep changing names (Gnome->Helixcode->Ximian->What Next?).
    This sort of thing is exactly why I've decided I don't want to be part of the KDE Community (should that be Kommunity?). The pro-KDE stuff I can live with, but the GNOME bashing seems to be getting worse all the time and it puts me off. Maybe it's because KDE seems to be gaining support and the more people that use it the more vocal advocates there are. I'm not even entirely sure what people are trying to achieve with GNOME bashing. If KDE's so much better than people will use it without that sort of nonsense.
  188. Re:Is Gnome next? by RedWizzard · · Score: 2
    But to claim that KDE are the ones guilty of bashing in this saga is a weird distortion of history.
    I'm not saying that at all. I'm saying that now I see a lot of people bashing GNOME, for example in the news threads at gnome.org, and here. I don't see people bashing KDE anywhere near as much (except in response) on news.kde.org. I don't see journalists comming out with inflammatory anti-KDE articles like the recent anti-GNOME one by Dennis Powell on LinuxPower. Maybe GNOME people are doing it too and I'm just not seeing it.
    If you like Gnome, use Gnome. If (like me) you prefer KDE, use KDE. But for heaven's sake stop bashing!
    That's what I'm saying. I didn't say I won't use KDE, I said don't want to be part of the KDE community. It's not just GNOME and KDE either. I'm sure people have felt the same way about Linux and BSD advocates.
  189. Nautilus is open source already... by Yam-Koo · · Score: 2

    I've got the tar.gz sitting on my work computer... why would Ximian need to obtain the source?

  190. Sad to see people lose jobs, but otherwise... by Yam-Koo · · Score: 4

    ...I'm not really sad about anything else related to this.

    I didn't like Nautilus. I've tried to get used to it, it's ALWAYS slower than command line for me, and I've only been using CLI for about 9 months.

    I didn't like Eazel's attitude about distros other than Red Hat, especially early on when I was trying to get into the project. For the longest time during the preview phase, only RH6.2 binaries were available. It took a lot of effort to compile early Nautilus on non-RH systems.

    I didn't like the totally half-hearted feel of everything in Nautilus. The .desktop issue, rejection of the Cut/Copy/Paste idea without any substitute, glitchy themes, millions (exaggerating) of processes, the "My Documents" wannabe folder, services that NEVER EVER worked on any of my systems (I didn't spent more than ~30minutes trying to get them to work, but why should I have to try?), few file managing tools (lots of sugary file browsing tools...).

    I dunno. I can't claim to have produced much useful software myself. I do lots of bug reports and I give lots of feature feedback.

    I sort of think that Nautilus became such a mixed up, inconsistant, gnarled project because it was so corporate and so under the gun. So many pieces of Nautilus seem like they're just self-justification of Eazel's existance. There are some decent features in Nautilus, I don't feel it's crap. There were SO MANY boneheaded problems along the way, though! It's just so sad to see something that could've been good, but was just planned so poorly and executed so hurriedly.

    Anyway, I just hope people don't get the idea that Nautilus is the example of the rest of GNOME, and than the rest of GNOME is somehow gonna break down because they lost their newer file manager... there's PLENTY of great app development happening in GNOME, it'll become more apparent as GNOME gets closer to 2.0 and the piece's really start to come together.

  191. Good luck andy by jchristopher · · Score: 2
    Andy Hertzfeld is a genius who helped shape the future of personal computing with his work on the Macintosh.

    In this case, I think he may have bitten off more than he can chew.

    It's one thing to build a user friendly GUI from the ground up on a new OS, but it is another thing entirely to bold a friendly GUI onto an admittedly difficult OS such as Linux. Even if their GUI was great, it's hard to make a dent when the rest of the OS is hard to grasp for beginners.

    Best of luck to Andy and his team.

    1. Re:Good luck andy by angry+old+man · · Score: 5
      I agree with this young lad, that it is hard to make a dent on the OS, yet the Nautilus dent is big. I mean, look at me! I'm an 97 year old senile man and I can still use linux with the best of them. That's because my background comes from VAX systems in the late 60s (when I was still a senile old man).

      All you young bucks think that you need a GUI file browser to make your system friendly and easy to use. Bagh! Major leaps in System useability didn't occur with the advent of the file browser. They occured when linefeed printers became Cathode Ray Tubes, and when Reel-to-reel tape drives became Cassettes or CD-Roms.

      I'm angry, and I'm old, and the 2nd half of this post seems to contradict the first half, but that's just the viagra speaking.

      --
      -vax computer, vi, lynx. 'nuf said
  192. [OT}Re:Shame.... by AntiTuX · · Score: 1

    actually, I have. My commute time has been cut down by about a half an hour. It's also a lot easier to get the really good parking spots at work now.. maybe because there's only like 30 people working in my building anymore (netscape employee).

  193. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by milo_Gwalthny · · Score: 2
    I have to ask it. Why are you so riled up about their business model? I assume you weren't an investor, so you've lost nothing and gained the source for half of a halfway decent file manager.

    Seems like a good deal for everyone except the VCs.

    --
    Milo
  194. Whatever!!! by bunhed · · Score: 1

    Yeah, Linux needs another file manager. It could use a few more gui FTP clients as well. And maybe another window manager wouldn't hurt either. All this while there isn't one realiable mail client. WTF is wrong with this picture???
    -=-

    1. Re:Whatever!!! by bunhed · · Score: 1

      Shoot me $11 million and I'd be happy to do it. Hell, I'll do it for $1 million. We pass the savings on to you!! Just let me know when the check is ready.
      -=-

  195. Very sad indeed by myatt · · Score: 1

    Yeah Nautilis isn't perfect, but it has a lot of potential. This product really was innovative, more so that most of Microsoft's products. Maybe someone else should take up this project. I'm sure it could be successful if the business side of things was done properly.

  196. Sux, by angry+old+man · · Score: 3

    Back in my day, we didn't have nice friendly community businesses closing down to the greedy cut-throat ones. I guess it's a sign of the times all you young whipper-snappers.

    --
    -vax computer, vi, lynx. 'nuf said
    1. Re:Sux, by grammar+fascist · · Score: 2

      It has nothing to do with who's community and who's global. It may have something to do with who's generous and who's cut-throat. Certainly, it has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with whose "day" it happened in. It has everything to do with the viability of their business model.

      Linux distribution vendors do not make most of the product they distribute. If they are for-profit, they make money from value-added services. Then here comes Eazel, which thinks it has the time and money to both make a free product and sell the value-added services. Does anyone else see anything wrong with this business model?

      --
      I got my Linux laptop at System76.
    2. Re:Sux, by captaincucumber · · Score: 1
      Here's a thought- things never change. Things weren't better ten years ago or 100 years ago or when ever your "day" was. That's just other-side-of-the-fence mentality.

      Here's another thought- everyone is greedy. (though not everyone is cut-throat) That's why it's such a great accusation to level against a company/person you don't like. That's the beauty of capitalism - harnessing greed for the good of all. (Yeah, I know, it's more complicated than that, we have to seek a balance, Microsoft sucks, etc, etc...) Even the "generous" things people do have an element of greed to them (wanting to feel good about yourself, wanting to belong, wanting people to like you because you're so generous, etc).

      And a final thought- Every problem has a solution. (just to end on a positive note)

  197. Re:Standard X desktop? by aussersterne · · Score: 2

    I don't want to start a flamewar, but I think you're right... KDE is probably going to "win" -- if it was ever about winning at all [and I don't think it was].

    Disclaimer: I have both GNOME 1.2 and KDE 2.1 installed. I switch between them and WindowMaker.
    (Yes, I know that GNOME 1.4 is out, but Ximian no longer supports my distro with binary packages.)

    I think that it's not quite a done deal yet that KDE will become the de-facto desktop for Linux, but it's getting close. Why? Guts. KDE has them, GNOME seems to have far less.

    KDE is undeniably uglier than GNOME and just not as viscerally exciting somehow. But KDE works, and that's what it's all about. KDE has a very nice IDE, a truly remarkable [given the development time] file manager and browser in Konqueror, and things like DCOP are just icing on an already very together functionality cake. I guess KDE is like the Microsoft of the Linux world. People hate the KDE people. They've done things to alienate the open-source guys. They make visually ugly products that are very highly integrated. But KDE and KDE applications are everywhere, and KDE is easy to install, use, and use in very powerful ways. In short, it's "nearly fully cooked" today, as things stand, with KDE 2.1.

    GNOME on the other hand is much more attractive and somehow much more "Linux" but also is lacking a lot of core functionality by comparison. When using the two, KDE honestly feels like the "next step" in Linux desktops, technology-wise -- it just kind of stands alone. It's like GNOME is several years behind and not even gaining any ground because KDE seems to be moving faster.

    I'm not happy that either one "wins" or doesn't. I'm not even sure it's a good thing that one will become the de-facto standard and the other merely the alternative... But it seems inevitable, and right now, especially with Eazel and Ximian appearing to be in serious financial trouble, KDE seems to be nearly running away with it. In the final analysis, most people will use what gets the job done.

    That's why so many of us are still dual-booting into Windows for so many things...

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  198. Re:Is Gnome next? by flimpy · · Score: 1

    >KLinux? Hmmm... That might not be the best name. Sounds a lot like "Kleenex". With the current market in which everyone sues everyone else for no valid reason (see: Roxio) they might want to go with a different name. :) "The Kistribution". :)

    --
    -- My cat, Chairman Meow, would like you to join his political party.
  199. Standard X desktop? by infiniti99 · · Score: 5

    As many posts already have speculated, maybe KDE will become the standard X desktop? Eazel was a very important piece of GNOME, and surely their absence will be quite a blow to the project. This really sucks for the GNOME users and developers. But what can you do?

    Anyway, I know it's depressing for these people, and I don't think the GNOME developers are going to just throw in the towel, but I began pondering what unix would be like if KDE were the only desktop to worry about. Sure, there would be other window managers, but KDE would be the only desktop environment / component framework to deal with. This would solve the problem that commercial developers face when they have to "choose which desktop to develop for."

    In the past there was CDE, and KDE was supposed to be the replacement. It's been quite a history since, and the whole QT licensing fiasco plus GNOME's rise would make an interesting bedtime story. Perhaps it is time for KDE to finally reach its goal?

    -Justin

    1. Re:Standard X desktop? by janpod66 · · Score: 2
      The problem is a lot of people don't trust the KDE team's judgement. This is residue from when QT was a "source under glass" library. Yes, that has now been fixed, [...]

      I don't think it actually has been fixed. Qt is more expensive than an MSDN subscription, and anybody wanting to develop commercial or even non-open GUI software for Linux needs to buy it. It is quite unattractive for Sun or IBM or other companies to throw their weight behind that kind of toolkit.

      I think any GUI toolkit aspiring to become "the standard" on Linux needs to be LGPL or BSD licensed. That is not a question of right or wrong, it's a question of making Linux reasonably acceptable in the real world.

    2. Re:Standard X desktop? by janpod66 · · Score: 2
      As many posts already have speculated, maybe KDE will become the standard X desktop?

      I don't think there will ever be a "standard desktop". KDE is already old technology: a big, complex C++ system with a Windows 95-like interface. It is useful, but the next generation of GUI technology needs to be developed now. And it is being developed. You are always going to see multiple desktops side-by-side on Linux.

      In fact, you also do on Windows, it is simply camouflaged better.

    3. Re:Standard X desktop? by janpod66 · · Score: 2
      Trolltech has never had the intention to screw up KDE or free software. Trolltech always accepted patches and even gave official permission for some alternate distributions.

      Without KDE, Qt would be a poor-tool C++ toolkit with almost no user community, and it would be one among many. The only reason Troll Tech is known at all is KDE. And the only reason Troll Tech has been so accomodating to KDE is because they know that.

      I can understand why you were wary of KDE for doing so, but in the end it looks to me like that trust was just well-placed.

      What I see is an opportunistic company that hasn't given an inch, that has tried to mislead people about licensing issues, and that has tried to shut down the Harmony project with legal threats. I don't trust Troll Tech, and that alone makes Qt software I wouldn't touch.

  200. Open Source software on the desktop by krazo · · Score: 1
    Eazel was an attempt to make a commercial software company that built really cool open source applications for the Linux desktop. It didn't work.

    The sad thing is, if we want linux to succeed on the desktop, we need commercial software companies that do this.

    Open source software is starting to rock the enterprise space because geeks are the ones deciding what software to use. The sysadmin knows open source software is better and he makes sure the webserver runs Apache on Linux.

    But the ones buying the desktops and desktop apps are not geeks. Even in the big companies.

    You need a legitimate company with a marketing division and money to get people to use OSS on the desktop. Plus, when geeks develop software, we develop it for other geeks. That's fine if it's an RDBMS, but if it's a file manager, you better hope to hell there's no config file or command line options. You need idiots to stupid proof your software, and we all know there's no better place to find those than in upper management in a commercial software company.

    The demise of Eazel is sad because they were an actual software company, acting like one, yet developing for linux. As much as it sucks, we need that. And if the Eazel way won't work, we need to come up with a legitimate way for a company to make money building desktop software that's open source. Or else Linux will never be the MicrosoftKilla it yearns to be.

  201. Is Gnome next? by wrinkledshirt · · Score: 3

    Heh, I guess all my karma are belong to your -1, Flamebaits... Please don't take this as a troll, though. I'm genuinely concerned.

    KDE has spent a great deal of time building a GUI desktop suite with little to no corporate involvement. KDE is already up to their second generation desktop, working with a toolkit that's at its third generation, has bragging rights on arguably the most esteemed web browser Linux has right now. They've built their own development IDE based on C++ (arguably the most popular development language for large-scale projects). They've even got mindshare in the annoying but effective branding sense -- nobody's going to mistake any of their projects as being from anybody else, thanks to that K at the beginning of everything.

    The Gnome foundation can drop a lot of names. They've got a so-so toolkit (and before you tell me otherwise, try programming with it) that was based off a Photoshop clone and has had widgets undergo major (ie: developer's nightmare) changes from 1.0 to 1.2 to the proposed 2.0. They've got many divergent projects, no complete Office Suite, and have a FILE MANAGER as their flagship product. They haven't reached their second generation of desktop yet, and while that might be (and probably everyone's going to argue is) because they have a different set of standards, I don't think anybody can sit there and say with a straight face that the Gnome foundation has been pumping out the software in the same volume that KDE has. Furthermore, they keep changing names (Gnome->Helixcode->Ximian->What Next?).

    I hate to say this, but it really looks like the Gnome foundation has been playing open-source politics whereas the folks at KDE have been diligently working on software. I don't want to hear about GUADEC, I don't want to read about Miguel getting political when Linuxplanet criticizes the Foundation, I DO want to see some coding coming out of these boys. They should have a more polished product by now, given the amount of corporate support that they're getting, and it's not like the community hasn't been encouraging.

    And another thought, why don't one of these two (or both) take the chance on rolling its own distribution? That could open up revenue streams that neither really has access to. And that's real revenue (sales, support & service contracts, printed documentation), not just investment- or donation-based. Plus, they could tailor aspects of their distribution to match their GUI desktop, and would probably be able to get a user-friendly distro faster than anybody. KLinux? If buying a copy would support those guys, I might just do it. I don't know if I'd bother buying a Gnome Linux, though. They look like they've secured enough funding for now. Let's just hope that something's left when it runs out.

    --

    --------
    Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...

    1. Re:Is Gnome next? by sumengen · · Score: 1

      >no complete Office Suite, and have
      >a FILE MANAGER as their flagship product.

      Can we please separate the idea of an office suite and desktop GUI. Yes you need a good office suite for linux to successd on the desktop area but gnome doesn't need to have its own office suite to succeed. People can use any OSS office suite, such as star office or Koffice.
      An yes, FILE MANAGER should be a flagship product.

      Of course you also need a better installation skim for software installations and their integration to the gnome menus. Right now I install something like staroffice and then I am lost and I spend next hour to find out how to start up star office. I think by coincidence I discovered that typing soffice on the command line starts up Star office. I found it after trying every combination of the words "star", "office" and "sun".

    2. Re:Is Gnome next? by sumengen · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the new users of linux that came from windows. And I am an electrical engineer and software developer.
      And how would you know where the docs are when you installed something from an RPM. I am not saying that I can't find them, I am just saying that they just don't pop up on the screen.
      Moreover, nobody wants to read the docs if they just want to try out the product. Of course I am spending much more time on my mysql installation.

    3. Re:Is Gnome next? by sumengen · · Score: 1

      No they didn't. Not in my installation.

    4. Re:Is Gnome next? by 22mhz · · Score: 1

      My main personal objection against KDE is... it's boring like hell. They don't aspire to anything really outstanding and pushing boundaries. Well, yeah, a solid Linux desktop with a good old season 1997 design is outstanding. But what next? They didn't dare to implement CORBA for some performance considerations and scratched their own, incompatible component framework (Moore's law, anyone? Do we need to design systems to strictly fit this year's performance limitations? And what did ORBit folks smoke when they were planning their thing?). Konqueror feature-wise is where Netscape 3.x have been years ago. And KDE doesn't have crazy companies on its side, who can use up 11e6 bucks to develop world's most trippy file manager and don't ask money for anything meaningful.

      GNOME folks may be verbose, but they do look as a bunch of illuminati, who deliver to the world rather than "the rock-solid Linux desktop". ORBit, Pango, Bonobo are not GNOME-bound, they're just great new open software! Gnome-VFS, Ximian Setup Tools -- yes, because we're living in friggin' 2001.

      They've built their own development IDE based on C++ (arguably the most popular development language for large-scale projects).
      For large-scale projects where everything is written from scratch, maybe. But for core libraries used by hundreds of applications written in dozen of languages, it's a pain. Name mangling rules change with every other release of a particular compiler, and forget about linking output of different compilers. TrollTech folks have to be cautious to add new virtual methods to base classes, because it breaks binary compatibility.
  202. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    Yes I know and it is very expensive. I specifically mentioned about poor (moneywise) developpers and students trying to develop commercial products. That is why I said that you need VC money to develop a QT based commercial product.

    Why is perl so successful in the commercial area. You can develop commercial software in perl easily without paying anything to anybody.

  203. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    GTK is LGPL. You can use it in commercial products as far as I know. And moreover even your software is not commercial, if you use QT, you need to release it under GPL. That just limits the freedom. How about if I want to release my software under some other licence.

    And my argument was that not everybody can pay 2k on the licence if they want to create a closed source freeware or a shareware maybe.
    If you want these developers to go to wondows instead of linux, then support QT.

  204. Get rid of the browsing part by sumengen · · Score: 1

    One mistake eazel was making was to integrate the browser to the file manager. Just use mozilla or maybe galeon instead of embedding it. Clicking on a url in general should start an internet browser, period. Even that is the case on windows.

  205. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    Yes, those are good theoretical arguments but they don't work in real world. If you are linux with 3-4% desktop share, and if you want to attract developpers, you need to give something back.
    On another note, people might not mind not making money out of their shareware products, but they mind if they pay $2k and not make money.

  206. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    Speak for yourself, don't make general comments.

    >1. You don't have to use QT to make a closed source application.

    Yes that is why I am saying this is one of the reasons why GTK and Gnome shouldn't be discontinued. Remember that the original meesage of this thread wants to get rid of gnome and wants everybody to develop for KDE. And I was sayng this as one of the reasons, not the only reason.

    And I am no talking about toolkits. The platform (gnome) is also important. For example if somebody installs my program, I want it appear on the start menu, drag&drop, etc. etc. So it is a package of easy development.

    >2. You don't have to use QT to make a closed
    >source KDE application.

    Yes, you can even write your own toolkit from scratch. We have seen Atheos developped by just one person in couple of years. How hard it should be to develop better toolkit than QT? No it doesn't work that way, isn't it. Again you are being theoretical, not practical.

    >3. Any app that isn't going to easily make $1200 ( 100 copies at $20 each minus media costs )
    >should be given away in source form so it can be brought up to the standard of viable shareware.

    Again speak for yourself. That is just stupid to say that everybody should release the sourcecode. Is Internet Explorer a shareware, no it is a freeware. Do they release the source code. Do they have to? That choice is not yours, whoever developped the software decides to release the code.

    >4. If you want to sell a closed source product for profit then pay for the privilege.

    In that case, I would be developping for windows. Here we are talking about linux and making it more popular on the desktop.

    >4b. It's pure hypocrisy to demand free stuff when you won't give anything away.

    Yeah right.. How stupid are the BSD guys. On the second note, I am not demanding anything, I am just thinking that it is a good thing for linux, so it is a good thing for free software. So there is demand and supply and no hypocrisy.

    >5. I think the Linux desktop will be better off
    >if we can stall for another year or 2 the
    >arrival of lots of crummy little binary only shareware.

    I love winzip on windows. I wouldn't mind to have a binary only version of it on linux two-three years ago. And why do you care about this small but useful utilities being binary or open source. grow up. It is better to have them than not to have them.
    And on the other side, are you saying that a student from its dorm cannot create a world class software. If so, think twice.

    >Have you been to tocows lately? The freeware generally has better quality in most categories.

    of course, that is why linux dominates in the desktop area.

    Again, I gave one of the reasons why gnome is important for linux to gain popularity in desktop area. Your comments doesn't add up a bit to it or discuss anything I originally stated.

  207. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    exactly my point.
    >It ensures that there is a small barrier to
    >entry for people thinking of making shareware programs.

    Good for linux at the current stage.

    Sorry if I wasn't clear on that.

  208. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 1

    That is true and I am not saying QT is expensive or bad quality. But in this situation the obvious choice would be MSVC and MFC platform considering the windows user share. MSVC comes with a nice environment and quality compiler.
    Even if you buy QT, for windows development you need to buy other stuff you mentioned.
    QT is a good option for big companies to port their products to linux (opera, Borlands'delphi, etc.).

  209. Re:What about Gnome closed apps? [Re:Good riddance by sumengen · · Score: 1

    The whole discussion is funny. I am saying that the earth is round; and then you insist that gravity indeed exists.
    I found it hopeless.

  210. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by sumengen · · Score: 2

    That is stupid. Because investors, in general, have a temporary problem of not investing these days, doesn't give you the right to spread FUD around.

    Konqueror is a windows clone and it is not the best file manager. I respect the developers of konqueror but I like the look of Nautilus more. I want it to succeed. That is my opinion. It is missing several major things but those will be fixed when gnome gets more mature and standardized.

    [quote]
    >>>>>
    [/quote]

    This is so much BS. QT is not the best way to go for some people. QT is GPL on Linux doesn't make it the preferable platform. Poor people want to develop commercial products and sell them. They can't do it with QT, and not everybody is willing to spend their liife writing GPL programs.
    You complain about eazel getting VC money. Making QT monopoly will force every linux software company need VC money. A student can write windows programs and sell them and make money, but not linux programs. GTK is important for linux desktop. QT is also good for big software companies or GPL software development.

  211. Early Eazel Experiences by lwagner · · Score: 5

    Back in early 2000, when I alarmedly learned that Eazel was developing "just" a file manager, I faxed Bud Tribble about the possibility of developing/using something like GNUstep instead because it had roots with NeXTSTEP and MOSX. At that time, it seemed like one could tap into the marketable aspect of similar API's. Apple had just announced the layering of MOSX with Darwin; it seemed like an interesting thing, particularly because Tribble was from NeXT and Andy et al. were from 0ld sk00l Apple.

    Tribble responded intelligently, which showed me that, although the idea was (of course) a pipedream, he actually had heard of the technologies enough to talk about it. For me, I think, that's the difference in my mind between Eazel and the normal dot-com carnage - the Eazelites are geeks who got caught up in the 99-00 goldrush and were burned. We can fault them severely for that, but I think that, collectively in the community, there seems to be a very silent sense of respect for what they tried to do.

  212. I will miss Eazel... :-( by plastercast · · Score: 2

    I for one will miss Eazel. I very much enjoy Nautilus, and use it full time. Too me it seems more polished and just overall more fun. (Whens the last time you described a file manager as fun!) Regardless, I hope that the community that has surrounded the company continues to improve upon Nautilus, I know I will. Anyway, a general thank you to Andy and all the rest from Eazel who took a chance and built a fantastic product.

  213. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by pimpinmonk · · Score: 2

    I was about to write this comment because it reflected on my views of the whole VC-dumping-money-into-OpenSource-startups thing. It was really starting to tick me off. I mean, I read that story about all the .com execs getting their nice new cars towed because the money was all gone. It was a really wrong business model to essentially pay the companies and say "oh, give me some products when you get a chance." You just get $11 million to share among a handful or two of developers, like hell you are going to have the same motivation as a group that is scraping to get by, coding the best they can with the hopes that they can pump out an awesome product that will reward them later. Just look at Croteam, developers of Serious Sam (the game for PC). It's awesome, and was an extremely low-budget game. Now it's a very good seller. Now look at all the .com companies full of people who got money up front. It's pretty hard to be motivated. It's the same as if in school at the beginning of each term they'd say "here's an A, you can give me the work sometime in the future." You really get bitten in the ass come final time, because if you already got the A each term why would you want to do the work? I think that money is a constant in the world. There are winners, and there are losers. People who got loaned money to start .coms really had few tangible, meaningful products that were really truly worth the millions invested in them. Still, these bright minds got paid to perhaps get some work done, perhaps go for a ride in their ferrari, who knows? By no means do I say that all .com people are lazy, because many work hard and it does show (I can't think of any examples off the top of my head, and no, I could never see /. as a real company...) But I think that they should work first and get paid the amount they deserve for what they produce. Ok, I did write alot but I hope I can spark some interesting discussion.
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  214. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Natalie's+Hot+Grits · · Score: 1

    To legally develop and sell a product on the microsoft platform, you must pay $150 for a windows license, and another 900 for the MSVC++ license. this is close to the price of QT for a single developer. To top it off, if you use QT, you can port your application to all the platforms QT supports for the same price, something you cannot do with the lockdown that is known as MS.

    --
    Two infinite things: your stupidity and mine. But I'm not sure about the latter. If my sig offends you, I'm sorry.
  215. You Dolts! by theridersofrohan · · Score: 1
    I'm sorry for the very angry post, but I'm seeing some _so very wrong_ comments here, that I had to reply.

    a) No business model? One word ppl: Microsoft. Microsoft is going to base their profits on subscription to services (be that office etc). I think that we can all admit that Microsoft knows their business management well.
    b) Have any of you actually used nautilus? Nautilus is probably the only filemanager that I _like_ to use. I've tried kfm, konqueror, and win32 explorer, and nautilus is the only one I like. And it's very snappy on my p3-550 (should be too, I realise), but I don't have any performance problems. There are bugs, certainly, but can you all KDE people baching gnome say that KDE/konq hasn't crashed on you ever? I thought so. And it is also beautiful. I'm talking _really_ beautiful
    c) We're talking about a company who really embraced open source and listened to the community, which was usually hostile. Remember the nautilus installfests/bugdays on irc? How many of you actually helped and participated?
    d) I've actually used the eazel services. I find them very nice (personal opinion) with great potential
    e) Hipocrites! Eazel was based on the success of the linux desktop. Eazel helped the gnome and the linux community in general. (you can run nautilus inside say kde or another desktok/wm. Can you run konq inside another environmnent without ending up with about 20 (exagerating) kde processess which don't die even if you kill konq?) When they opened up their paypal subscription (paypal@eazel.com) did any of you help? I send out $30 (best I could afford). And how can linux succeed when you can find the few pure linux games _pirated_ isos at irc channels?
    f) Why are you all trying to bash this poor dying company? This could imply a failure of the open-source businesses. Instead try to help them (paypal@eazel.com). Or hope that Ximian can buy them (pretty cool). Eazel embraced the community; and all they got is flames. They listened to the users and changed aspects of nautilus according to the users demands (anyone running 1.0.3?).

    So please no more flames, no more I don't you so's etc. Especially when everyone was excited/glad/etc when eazel was founded because linux finally gained some very experienced and talented ui designers. And we failed to support them.

    For those of you bashing nautilus without even trying it, try it. Even under KDE. It will blow you away.

    Disclaimer: I've used the command line since 1995 (not too much, I know). I now use gnome (+command line). I used to use KDE. I don't give a fuck what you're using, and don't really get how a 13 yr old moron can say (without any argument) that "kde is technically superior to gnome"/"is kool", or that gnome looks l33t etc.

  216. Why Linux Businesses Fail by CMcTortoise · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, the Linux community has become so infatuated with a single document that will forever exclude it from business: The GNU General Public License. To correct this problem, I have made a website, http://www.magnanimity.org, to promote the Magna Open License. It allows businesses to keep otherwise totally open and unprofitable software closed to free redistribution and "code borrowing," but still open to peer review. And it's so flexible that one can make it freely redistributable if he/she wants! Sounds like a good combo to me. ; ) Please check it out. Because Magnanimity is open source software for the real world.


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  217. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Garen · · Score: 2

    I think this is another nail in GNOME's coffin. When Qt was proprietary I was gung ho for GNOME to succeed. Now that Qt is Free Software and GNOME is technically inferior to KDE, the GNOME developers should start to move over to KDE.

    I think a big reason why that probably won't happen anytime soon is a kind of cultural/technical difference: GNOME in C, KDE in C++. For those not real well versed, comfortable with, or who don't prefer the latter, they aren't really "convertable" to KDE developers.

  218. Re:Last summer, Andy Hertzfeld got a standing ovat by discovercomics · · Score: 1
    ...Eazel's product was not Nautilus. It was support services and whatnot for Nautilus

    Hmm lets see now...We develop the greatest filemanager ever and give it away for free, then we make tons of money on providing support services and whatnot for Nautilus.

  219. The Emperor's New Clothes by Fat+Casper · · Score: 5
    Some time ago Eazel sent two guys on tour, and they came and spoke at our LUG, gave out a few Eazel tote bags, etc. I didn't get it. I really felt like an idiot. I don't work with computers, I've just been playing with them at home forever. I'm not really a part of the culture, and the first I had heard of Eazel or Nautilus was when I walked in the door and read the sign announcing the speakers.

    Everyone was excited that they had come to us, so I figured they were something big and I was just some dolt living in a cave or something. I listened raptly and watched while they navigated and tweaked on the overhead, looking for what I was missing. I understood that the browser was free, and what they were selling was a subscription sercice. The only problem is that I don't need another browser (although I do like my file manager and web browser to be different apps) and I can't see Linux types being suckered into a subscription service.

    I walked out of the meeting very confused. Everyone was happy with the presentation and I couldn't see through the hype. Rather I thought I was failing to see through the hype. It didn't occur to me that there was nothing to see beyond it. Open Source types (even the .com flops that give the movement a bad name in the business world) not being on my list of people to whom I bear ill will, I'm still relieved to see Eazel go. I feel sorry for the workers, I even kind of feel sorry for the founders. I don't feel sorry for the funders. What I really feel is closure. I can say no, it's not just me. Good luck in all your future endeavors, guys, but please think them through.

    --
    I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
  220. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by janpod66 · · Score: 2
    If you think that KDE/Qt is going to survive any better, you are kidding yourself. Qt's license makes it uninteresting for adoption by companies like Sun and IBM, and Qt's development is proprietary. Furthermore, big, messy C++ programs aren't much easier to maintain than big, messy C programs.

    In fact, I think it's silly to think that any of the current desktops, whether Windows, MacOS, Gnome, or KDE, are going to be around for more than a few years. Enjoy Gnome and KDE as they are for now (I am), but don't expect them to be any kind of long-term solutions.

  221. Good try by Fa65*BFh · · Score: 1

    Linux has become a powerfull and stable OS, there are hundred feautures you cant find in any other OS, and if you do they are only from 3rd party companys and usually slow down the system. Not like linux who is always fast and nice. I have been using KDE since long time and havent tested Eazel by myself, but, as long as i know, the idea was great, the power Linux has is almost imposible to be used by a Standard User (I mean, i know ppl who thinks windows is... DIFFICULT!!!), and Eazel was becoming a nice, easy and good looking file managger, something Standard Users need. Looks like no geek cares about this, they always are developing more powerfull and advanced systems without giving a shit about the easy to use, and thats great, thats why Linux is so powerfull, but if you want to continue developing you will need some money, and without standar customers there wont be cash flow, im not talking about geting rich with Linux, im talking on geting enough to continue, linux needs to steal Windows and Mac users, and the only way to do it is with a eye candy-easy to use UI (Eazel).

  222. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Tech187 · · Score: 2

    Nope.

    That's just plain wrong.

    You can use a pirated copy of MSVC++ and develop on a pirated copy of W2K. There's no band of clowns running around demanding 'show us the source' because you won't show them proof that you paid for your copy of MSVC++. It's very unlikely that Microsoft themselves will be bugging you(unless you become a big success, and in that case you just buy a MS shrinkwrapped box after the fact). It's far easier and cheaper to put out a Shareware title for Windows for reasons like this. There isn't a big $2000 startup cost before you can sell the first copy. And Microsoft doesn't have bands of zealots out there forcing you to 'open the source' if you don't have a MSVC recipt. (they do if you're a big enterprise, but here we're talking about small groups/individuals churning out closed-source shareware).

  223. Shame.... by Techfocus · · Score: 3

    I thought Eazel was pretty decent, but as with everything internet, it seems that the bloodshed continues without mercy.

    Has anyone else that works in the valley noticed the drop in commute time? I've shaved 15 minutes off in the past 3 months.

    --
    ** The DietCoke of Evil is upon you **
  224. Re:Good riddance to yet another bad business model by Drgnkght · · Score: 1
    As for those pore students and struggling commercial developers on Windows, guess what? If the development environment didn't cost them over $1,200 then they are using just the GNU tools etc... If they are using simplified GUI toolkits or an IDE for less it means pirated software.
    Methinks you know naught of what you speak. Just as an example, Delphi 3 Standard back when it was released cost about $99US. Granted it didn't have all the extras of the higher priced versions, but even Professional version wasn't $1200, and that contained the source code for the included components. Delphi 5 Standard is $99.95. You really need to rethink this statement.
  225. On Men and Casettes by blang · · Score: 3
    Apropos Casettes, while we are cruising on memory lane: I remember back when I was a pimple face and the prowd owner of a 48K ZK Spectrum from Sinclair, back in 1984 or so. The storage medium was casette, and you could save or load files by recording to or playing back from any tape recorder.

    The cool thing was that I could exchange programs with a buddy of mine over the telephone, by cracking open the handset and attaching the speaker/mic wires to the appropriate Spectrum wires. I'd hit Save, my friend hit Load, and in 5 minutes or less we could transfer up to 48K. I had never heard about a modem, BBS, internet, datacomm or anything like that. Seems pretty lame now, but back then I thought we were very clever.

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    -- Another senseless waste of fine bytes.
  226. I think I can explain the shorter commute times by captaincucumber · · Score: 1
    Maybe people are working from home more these days to conserve energy?

    Heh.

    1. Re:I think I can explain the shorter commute times by captaincucumber · · Score: 1

      Since I don't live in California, I don't mind. California functions sort of like a heat sink to my way of thinking

  227. you'd think that by this iteration... by gkuchta · · Score: 1

    Is this a surprise to anyone? I don't mean to be an ass, because there seemed to be good minds over at Eazel, and they seemed to have made a nice product, but.. I don't see how they thought that they'd make any money off of the idea. When you have things likes KDE/Gnome already fairly well entrenched for newbies, and things like blackbox for people who're a little more technically adept, how did they expect to turn a profit? Honestly, I don't know of anyone that would pay for a product that was comperable to already established items which were freely available. It seems like the whole Gnu/Linux vs. Windows thing in reverse.
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    when salmon are outlawed, only outlaws will have salmon
  228. Who inherits the Nautilus code? by perlow · · Score: 1

    The question remains then, after Eazel dies as company, what happens to the code. The obvious answer is "well, the community, you dolt" but that doesnt really answer developmental issues.

    Immediately of course, the GNOME project can host it, but as most of the developers worked at Eazel and are presumably moving on (perhaps to other Linux companies to contribute to Nautilus, hopefully) somebody should be fostering new development, as well as the hosting of the Eazel services.

    It would seem that Ximian should be the heir apparent, since they already package Nautilus with their desktop, and they have a lot of GNOME developers, but bringing this project over may be putting too much on their plate.

    My vote goes to Sun. Why Sun? So far, they are the one 3rd party UNIX company with the most interest in GNOME for desktop use with the release of OpenOffice and porting of GNOME to Solaris, and have people that know how to write for the desktop. Theres no danger of Sun going under either, and they have the cash to hire a good amount of the original developers. They also have the network infrastructure to host Eazel services. This would open up some interesting possibilities, such as the integration of Cobalts way-cool BlueLinQ technology with Nautilus.

    A third possibility is to share the original Eazel developers between 4 of the top Unix companies, perhaps a split among Sun, IBM, and HP and Redhat, and have them throw a certain amount of money into a pile they've already presumably reserved for GNOME Foundation. This would ensure not one single company "takes control" over active development.

    Jason Perlow
    Sr. Technology Editor
    Linux Magazine