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The Coming "Open Monopoly"

Ramsed writes: "On cnet Petr Hrebejk and Tim Boudreau wrote an article claiming that the current Microsoft Monopoly will be replaced by an 'Open Monopoly'; a monopoly of Open Source. They are explaining why big companies like IBM support this. In their view, it's inevitable this 'Open Monopoly' will win in the end, and that apart from the current monopolist, everyone will be better of, because of lower barriers for participation, software better targeted at its users and lower development costs. Profit should be made with support and consultancy." Update: 10/28 13:42 GMT by J : Little-known fact -- for important stories, slashdot sometimes runs duplicates to see who's still awake on a weekend. Nice work to those of you who caught it. See you next week. *sigh*

171 comments

  1. Been there, done that. by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    That's nice and all but you reported on this already last week.

    Oh, and first :)

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
    1. Re:Been there, done that. by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 0, Troll
      That's nice and all but you reported on this already last week.

      But this is 'open monopoly', where you can loop, ride the parsing railroad, enjoy free parking (telecommute), take chances, still deal with monopoly utilites such as water and electric, pay rent, and hopefully avoid jail.

      Please pay me $200.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  2. Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you already posted this fluff.

    It will never happen. You socialists don't know how to compete in the free market system. Eventually, your developers will get bored, or hungry because they are broke, and development will cease to exist.

  3. According to esr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this thing should have been about over a year ago. Somehow I have a feeling in 2010 everyone will still be saying: "I think those companies are going down for good shortly, this time for real!!!"

  4. monopoly? how about co-operation? by callinan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I kind of dislike the phrase "open-source monopoly", and I don't believe that the total infastructure for the internet (or any other platform) will be totally open source. ALthough the use of OSS will continue to expand, I hope it can co-exist with commercial closed source also. I can't believe all companies will adopt OSS or just fall by the wayside.

    --
    "UNIX is an operating system, OS/2 is half an operating system, Windows is a shell, and DOS is a boot partition virus."
    1. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      This viewpoint is quite naive. There is no reason for closed source software (and in fact no way for it to survive) in a world that has fully embraced an infrastructure of free open code. Unfortunately, some people are still deluded by the notion that software has to be produced by a software company. Bullcrap. Read the article again until you see the point: the USERS are the developers. If you are a programmer for a closed source company, don't worry. You'll have plenty of jobs in the future helping to produce pieces of much higher quality software that people need. On the other hand, if you're the owner of a closed source based company, I'm afraid you're SOL. I suggest you start thinking of ways to adapt before you go the way of the Dodo in the next 5 years. Survival of the fittest doesn't play favorites to the underdog.

    2. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by tim_maroney · · Score: 2

      There is no reason for closed source software (and in fact no way for it to survive) in a world that has fully embraced an infrastructure of free open code.

      I'm not sure if that's meant to be a tautology, but in any case, it won't happen. Open source software has not yet achieved parity with closed source software in key areas like usability and support, and it may never do so. Unless it does, the world will never embrace it.

      Unfortunately, some people are still deluded by the notion that software has to be produced by a software company. Bullcrap.

      All major open source projects have been financed for many years by software companies, who do most of the development themselves. The idea that open source is largely a volunteer movement is not accurate and has not been for some years.

      Read the article again until you see the point: the USERS are the developers.

      Which is great, as long as your target users are computer programmers. It doesn't work so well for the more general case.

      On the other hand, if you're the owner of a closed source based company, I'm afraid you're SOL. I suggest you start thinking of ways to adapt before you go the way of the Dodo in the next 5 years. Survival of the fittest doesn't play favorites to the underdog.

      Pardon me while I snort derisively. There is not a single major software market category where open source software has achieved the levels of user adoption currently enjoyed by closed source software. Predicting the death of an opponent that you have barely begun to even scratch suggests some kind of religious zealotry or Messiah complex. It is delusional.

      Tim

    3. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dislike the term 'monopoly' in general. A monopoly implies a single source, where as there are all sorts of choices in the microcomputer market (from Sparcs running Solaris, IBMs running AIX and Apples running Mac OS to x86 PCs running Windows, Linux, etc.). I currently use Windows on x86 PCs, but for years I used Macs and UNIX (Sun and x86) exclusively. I only converted to (NT-based) Windows when I became convinced it had fully eclipsed both of them (in terms of usability, stability, flexibility, etc.). If I were to change that opinion, I'd rethink my current position (which is very much Windows-related) and choices. Mac OS X is the only thing out there that has come close to swaying me (IMHO, Linux doesn't come close to commercial OSes), but it isn't good enough, and neither is the PowerPC (especially at Apple's prices).

      All in all, this article looks more like a reflection of what the author would like to see happen than any sort of rational prediction of what will happen. It's based almost entirely on pseudo-economic 'theories', and nebulous claims of superiority, without any evidence provided in support of either.

      There is currently a battle for dominance between Windows and UNIX/Linux, and even though it's pretty clear that Windows is winning, that doesn't mean it's a 'monopoly', or that UNIX/Linux will go away. The desktop market is basically flat, with Windows dominant, and Windows and Linux are the only operating systems gaining market share in the server market. (Funny that the 'natural monopolies' of Novell and UNIX didn't protect them from NT and Linux, and that the magical elixir of open source didn't catapult Apple into a leading position on the desktop.)

      On the whole, this article is just a rant, not any sort of reasoned analysis. The author may have guessed right, but I doubt it. A lot of the commercial investment which drove open source into the mainstream was funded by VC which has now dried up (since the anticipated profits never came), and I think the political movement called 'open source' has peaked. The Internet made distributed development of software (by students, volunteers and/or commercial developers) a reality, and I don't think that will go away (if anything, the reverse), but this bizarre notion that an 'open source revolution' is going to topple Tsar Bill, and establish a GNU Free Software Republic is just ridiculous.

    4. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by Electrum · · Score: 1

      There is not a single major software market category where open source software has achieved the levels of user adoption currently enjoyed by closed source software. Predicting the death of an opponent that you have barely begun to even scratch suggests some kind of religious zealotry or Messiah complex. It is delusional.

      If you believe the Netcraft reports, then Apache would be one such example of an open source product beating closed source products. Apache has over fifty percent market share. It is also an interesting example. Apache could be compared with Windows in many ways. It's design is poor, compared to Zeus, which is in every way a better web server. The decision to continue with multi process/threaded web server is flawed, in my opinion. While the arguments on the mailing lists might have some valid points, they don't hold any water in light of the fact that there is already a web server that does everything that is "too hard" for Apache to do. Many people use Apache, just like many people use Windows, but that doesn't make it the best at what it does.

    5. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One problem there is that in the world of commercial software it's monetary value, not units in use, that matters. Last time I looked at Netcraft's data, Windows was dominant in the SSL market, which is where the money is.

      So I suppose the question is, is Apache beating the commercial web servers if it's only winning in a market they don't much care about?

      Also, with respect to the Windows 9x design, even though it was technically deficient compared to NT, UNIX, etc., it was arguably the best for the job, which was to provide a platform for migration from DOS to a modern OS API (the NT/Win32 API). The easy route would have been to have introduced the modern OS once the hardware was there, and to simply have dropped support for the old one. It isn't Microsoft's style to risk losing customers for the sake of pushing what it believes to be the future, however, which is why DOS and Win16 held out after Xenix and OS/2 (both of which were architecturally superior) had fallen by the wayside. From a strategic perspective, it makes more sense to play it safe, hold on to the existing user base and let users move at their own pace.

      Incidentally, the reason there was a need for this migration wasn't that DOS was designed by stupid people, but that it was written for a toy CPU (the 8086). The 386 was a modern CPU, so operating systems designed for the x86 after its release didn't face the problems earlier ones had.

      By any standard, the NT architecture is among the best of any operating systems design in widespread use, which is why I've assumed you were referring to Windows 9x, not NT (which is the core of Windows 2000 and Windows XP).

    6. Re:monopoly? how about co-operation? by tim_maroney · · Score: 2

      I was referring to end-user-oriented software, not server-side stuff targeted at programmers and sysadmins. With respect to Apache you are correct. It is possible that within the small market segment of programmer and syadmin software, open source could become dominant.

      Tim

  5. Already ran this article by blixel · · Score: 0, Redundant
  6. Am I stilll dreaming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or is it last week?

  7. Use the search, Timothy by lunenburg · · Score: 0, Redundant

    This article is only four days old!

  8. Nice, but don't forget the beast. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be the ideal situation, but Microsoft will see to it that it surely doesn't happen.

    While that is in the best interest of society, it is not in the best interest of their cash flow.

  9. Re:Does anyone know a good hangover cure? by callinan · · Score: 1

    Goody's Headache Powder

    --
    "UNIX is an operating system, OS/2 is half an operating system, Windows is a shell, and DOS is a boot partition virus."
  10. Clocks reset... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I thought we set our clocks back 1 hour, not 4 days...

  11. The world... (of software) by geggibus · · Score: 0, Troll

    is it Open, closed or flat? and where does the dark matter come in?

    /K

    1. Re:The world... (of software) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (dark matter) is right next to "white" holes... make a left in the RPG section of your local bookstore... great game! ;)

  12. So why is the topic Linux Mandrake? by ckimyt · · Score: 0, Offtopic


    Nothing further to add, your honor.

    --

    Putting the sig back into +1, Insightful since 1995!
    1. Re:So why is the topic Linux Mandrake? by ckimyt · · Score: 1
      No, really, it wasn't off-topic. Unless you're trying to be funny, whoever moderated me.

      The little icon says the topic is "Linux Mandrake", but the story is about the Open Source movement.

      I don't think Linux Mandrake has a monopoly on Open Source.

      --

      Putting the sig back into +1, Insightful since 1995!
  13. dang by Ryandav · · Score: 2

    i hope Jim Allchin's out looking for a new job.

    Cause this article makes him sound like the worst sort of MS mouthpiece available. And a chump to boot.

    The sad thing of it is, though, he likely makes a bazillion times more money than I do and has more job security than God. And he is where he is, because he is willing to make such statements on behalf of The Company. I have no doubt he probably believes those things he is quoted as saying, deep down in his heart. So the only conclusion is what? That he's saying something obviously braindead that CIO's out there will hear and believe? It may be. Or not.

    go, Consumer!

    --
    Check my Go-related blog for beginners: DGD
    1. Re:dang by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad thing of it is, though, he likely makes a bazillion times more money than I do and has more job security than God.


      Hint: He's more intelligent than you to an amazing degree. Maybe not a "bazillion" times smarter, but you come off as a retard compared to him. If you're looking for a company which pays people a lot to bumble their way through life, VA Linux will be a better fit for you.

    2. Re:dang by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been clarified that Jim Allchin was referring to software distributed under the GNU GPL, not all software distributed with source code ('open source' is often difficult to pin down, with different people claiming it refers to different things). The GPL is quite obviously an intellectual-property destroyer; the stated aim of the Free Software Foundation is to do away with intellectual property, so it goes without saying their licence tries to do that.

      Most of us consider the protection of IP to be a good thing. For instance, when I look at the vast pool of talented engineers in Russia, where IP protection is virtually non-existent, and contrast that with the paucity of software coming out of that country, I'm ever so grateful I don't live in the sort of utopia Richard Stallman and his ilk dream of.

  14. It'll get there, but not via any expected path by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    The article is written at a very high level of abstraction. One huge unconsidered factor is the XBox, a sub-300$ computer whose effects on the market will be negligible (doubt it) or catastrophic. We'll see in a couple of years.

    OTOH, between my RedHat 7.1 disks, the KDE 2/Qt Bible, and some downloads, I am still finding installing KDevelop an ...educational... experience. 'T'sall good, I'll figure it out, but what a prolonged tooth extraction. C++ Builder under 'Doze this is not.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  15. /. is in reruns again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tsia

  16. Do the editors sleep all day Sunday? by Aztech · · Score: 2

    Looks like the same monopoly we read about just a couple of days ago on /.

    1. Re:Do the editors sleep all day Sunday? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Funny


      > Looks like the same [slashdot.org] monopoly we read about just a couple of days ago on /.

      But how can it be a monopoly if there are two of them!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  17. I hear this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    idea about making money on services and support rather than the software. How many software compaines are managing to survive like this? Seems to me it is a red herring thrown to the masses by Stallman et al to make their communistic views more palatable to big business.

  18. The Coming AI Monopoly by Mentifex · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It cannot be reiterated enough, friends, cyborgs, countrymen: Not only will the Open Source monopoly replace the Microsoft Monopoly, but an even greater change looms enchantedly when the public-domain Global AI Monopoly of the people and the cyborgs replaces the corporate power structure.

    To see the approach of Technological Singularity, wander around in the AI history section of the Encyclopedia Cybernetica that is written expressly for robots and AI Minds.

    Now there may be some messages from some anklebiters who post as anonymous cowards....

  19. Let us see and vote on the submit queue by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

    Nice work to those of you who caught it.

    ... let us see and vote on the submission queue and we will catch it even earlier next time.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  20. Duplicate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you intended to run this article again on purpose, don't you think it would have been wise to say that in the original message?

    1. Re:Duplicate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, I think he was joking.

  21. This should not be called monopolly! by bogado · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In the open source fields that are almost no monopoly, witch is good. Think about it, there's two or more for everything :

    OS : BSD, LINUX, HURD?
    DESKTOP: Gnome, KDE, Enlightenment
    Browser: mozila, konqueror, lynkx?
    Text Editor: vi, emacs
    Office suite: Star Office, Koffice, gnome-office

    If everyone turned into open source tomorrow we wouldn't end up in a monopoly, people would have choices.

    --
    []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

    ^[:wq

    1. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and, given the examples you post, all their choices would suck.

      OS: XP
      Desktop: XP
      Browser: IE6
      Text Editor: depends on the text
      Office suite: Office

      Note that none of these suck.

    2. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by thefogger · · Score: 1

      You forgot:
      Web server: Apache, Apache, Apache.

      --


      Um... I didn't do it!
    3. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by webcrafter · · Score: 1

      and then, there is also roxxen, aolwebserver...

    4. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by WoofLu · · Score: 1

      Webserver: apache, Zope, asmutils httpd, khttpd; need more? :)

      --

    5. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ugh. Most of those webservers are special-case webservers and, thus, not in competition with each other.

      Try again.

    6. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are all nice choices, but I still think emacs/xemacs is the text editor of choice. I download it for Windows 2000. The Corel Office Suite if mighty fine too.

    7. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by HoldmyCauls · · Score: 1

      The above poster is right, mod them up. The best part of all these open source tools is that they do exactly what they're meant to (not 100% of the time, but what does?), but more importantly, they generally do little if anything more than they need to. Not to mention they all provide the same services anywhere, so that what one programmer does with his RedHat/GNOME/Emacs station, he can send to his friend with her Debian/KDE/vi desktop, and expect nothing to change in between.

      --
      Emacs: for people who just never know when to :q!
    8. Re:This should not be called monopolly! by Tsujigiri · · Score: 2

      Not sure if you're trolling or just missinterpreting the point of the article.

      The point here is that a new "open monopoly" is meant to be a monopoly of ideology.

      The monopoly is, that all software of the future will be based on open source technology and tools and that proprietry software will be a disadvantaged outsider, not that there will be a single set of software tools/apps that happen to be open sourced. It would mean that in order to join the software market, aligning with open source aligns you with the majority, giving you an advantage over those who choose to stay proprietry.

      And I'd have to say that if that did happen, I would not be all that upset. :)

      --

      "I'll take the red pill. No! Blue! AAAaaaahhhhhhhhh"
      - Monty Python meets the Matrix

  22. Inevitable? by Kasreyn · · Score: 2

    Look, I don't care how much you guys believe in capitalism, Adam Smith, and market forces. As long as big companies can buy laws to support their monopolies, they can legislate their way out of any situation where normal capitalist forces would stop them.

    I'm just wondering how in hell the "Open Monopoly" intends to survive laws like the SSSCA (they WILL try again). I hardly think sitting around and patting yourselves on the back is a good way to bring Linux or whatever to market dominance. I'm all in favor of Linux winning out here, but we are not living in some perfect, pure capitalist economist's vision, where the best product wins out every time.

    -Kasreyn

    --
    Kasreyn: Cheerfully playing the part of Devil's Advocate to hairtrigger /. flamers since 1999.
    1. Re:Inevitable? by KM1 · · Score: 1

      "As long as big companies can buy laws to support their monopolies, they can legislate their way out of any situation where normal capitalist forces would stop them."

      Well one thing working against this is that now some of the big companies are begining to use their money and influence to favour open software. IBM, SGI...

    2. Re:Inevitable? by fferreres · · Score: 1

      This is a true post. Most notably, IBM and so other big companies can't make a real difference. They can provide some "branding" and some funding but that's all.

      The real power is at the people and companies fingertips. We just need to fund the projects ourselves. And this "ourselves" means millions of people making small contribution to develop the free quality software we need done ASAP (photoshop killer, Office killer, IE killer...[add what you need to the list]).

      95% of the people can't code and most of them can only contribute money. Right now it's too unbalanced. We are asking some guys to sacrifice themselves for us all. Of course, they gain recognition but that doesn't feed their children.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    3. Re:Inevitable? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      I'm all in favor of Linux winning out here, but we are not living in some perfect, pure capitalist economist's vision, where the best product wins out every time.

      You've hit on the biggest thing that Linux zealots need to learn: The best product has ALREADY won.

      The rub is in the definition of "best". To the typical Linux zealot, "best" means "most flexible", "source code available", "free", "Unix-like", etc. To the rest of the world, "best" means "the operating system that let's me run the applications I want to run".

      Windows is BY FAR the best operating system for the majority of people. That's because it runs all the software that they want to run, wrinkles and all.

      When Linux zealots realize that they technical superiority is worthless if it doesn't have the applications you want, then we might see some progress. The problem is that the people who work on Linux have much different priorities than 98% of the rest of the world.

      Market forces are working exactly the way the should have. The market picked exactly the product it should have picked: the one that gets work done, because work is done by applications, not operating systems.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    4. Re:Inevitable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suggest you upgrade from RedHat 5.1 or whatever the heck ancient Linux distribution you've tried. Linux and relavent OSS meets all of my (techie) needs, all of my parent's needs, all of my employer's needs, all of my non-tech colleage's needs.

    5. Re:Inevitable? by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      What I dont get is why he calls it a "natural monopoly". There is nothing natural about it, its based upon information property (IP), and the way IP is defined in laws is not natural at all. With out copyrights and/or patents microsoft would be a lot smaller, people would have already reversed engineered and made a competing product that is open source.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    6. Re:Inevitable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An original Volkswagen beetle will meet the needs of most people who commute by car, but that doesn't mean it's the best car available.

      For the vast majority of users, Windows XP (or even Windows 98) is much better than any version of Linux.

    7. Re:Inevitable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without IP laws, it's doubtful Microsoft would exist at all, and the state of the industry would probably be significantly less advanced as well, with hardware firms (which would probably also provide the software) focussing on obfuscating their meagre innovations as much as possible, to keep them from their competitors for as long as possible.

      I think the author of this article called Microsoft a 'natural monopoly' because he's heard economists use the term, and, although he doesn't know what it means, most people reading his article won't either, so it will improve his credibility with them, because they'll be deceived into believing he knows more about economics than they do.

    8. Re:Inevitable? by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      > Without IP laws, it's doubtful Microsoft would exist at all,

      I would go farther and say if they did exist they would not be the same company they are today, and that is something we would probably both agree on. If microsoft were to try to do what they do today they would more then likely not exist.

      > and the state of the industry would probably be significantly less advanced as well, with hardware firms (which would probably also provide the software) focussing on obfuscating their meagre innovations as much as possible, to keep them from their competitors for as long as possible.

      Well that is a possibility for several reasons (some which you dont list) but a possibility I hold to be the least likely. If it were the case people would have diffrent values and diffrent strategies, if you apply the strategies of today to such a situation then yeah it would more likely be what you describe, but you can only do that in theory (apply what you know today on what could have been), it is more likely as I said, that people would have diffrent business models and diffrent strategies, that doesnt necesarily mean obfiscation as that could very well be a waste of time and resources and no business could withstand that in the end. So more likely businesses would have some other strategy, maybe even similar to open source. Competition would be fierce (if your competitors could duplicate what you are doing then you need to come up with something inovative) and brand loyalty as well, but also there would be more parallel in standards as there will be less deviation and where there is deviation it could be easily found and fixed or added to another. So anyway dont assume that there is no alternatives to IP laws that would work the same or better. And dont forget, Microsoft didnt create DOS, Adobe didnt create Photoshop or GoLive, Macromedia didnt create flash, etc. Inovations and creation come from individuals either at universities or hobbiests who want to make money from their own research, which they do for interest, recognition, and potential to make money, corporations are probably best at refining.

      > I think the author of this article called Microsoft a 'natural monopoly' because he's heard economists use the term, and, although he doesn't know what it means, most people reading his article won't either, so it will improve his credibility with them, because they'll be deceived into believing he knows more about economics than they do.

      That does sound like the most likely scenerio, although I would like to know what economist call an "unnatural monopoly"....hmmm...

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    9. Re:Inevitable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's possible, of course, but what goes against it is all the evidence of countries with weak IP laws (e.g. Russia, China), which tend to have very weak industries in IP-related fields (e.g. software). In contrast, the countries with the strongest IP laws (esp. W Europe, USA) have the strongest IP-producing industries, which fits the expectated result, according to the theory behind IP laws.

      The old Marxist argument to explain away the inability of the Soviet Union to compete with Western Europe and North America was to claim that for Marxism to work properly, the whole world would have to be run on Marxist lines, and that the existence of the capitalist West was itself the source of the problem. I suppose IP opponents could say the same thing to explain away the evidence vindicating IP laws, but I doubt I should find them any more convincing than the Marxists.

    10. Re:Inevitable? by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      > It's possible, of course, but what goes against it is all the evidence of countries with weak IP laws (e.g. Russia, China), which tend to have very weak industries in IP-related fields (e.g. software).

      But again, we have always done better because we were capitalist. Copyrights are not capitalist in their nature, they are more closer to communism/socialism. Russia and China are obviously communism, and dont have respect for IP but also have records of not promoting things like freedom of speach and private industry, and even controled information more so then our government. As a matter of a fact, Russia was sitting on a huge amount of IP, that didnt flurish (in a good way) until the end of the USSR, the Sokho SU-37 is the top flanker and most manuverable jet in our current times, using vector thrust technology that our own industrys thought impossible and didnt waste money researching it, and instead now is paying to get a hold of that technology (I heard some anouncement reguarding Lockheed some time ago). Its just when government gets more and more involved in our private industries that can hamper competition and at the same time reduce inovation. Copyrights are much the same thing, they are the government getting involved and even interfering in the IP industry. If we have a strong industry its because of freedom, capitalism is about less government regulation and interference in competition. Most of us today are sitting on a lot of valuable information today that we could sale copies of to others and make money but we dont because of law, so instead some people rather give it away for free (as if the information is worthless) on the internet and that is not healthy in my opinion, not healthy in any environment whether that environment is copyright or its capitalist oposite.

      I dont necesarly think its bad that we are currently in the midst of copyrights. Now and in the past may not have be good times to get rid of copyrights, but reduction should be considered in the future (as oposed to the current considerations of more control). Just thinking that most governments started off with no freedoms for the people it ruled, but I would hope that such freedom does not have to come about through revolution, and simply progress as evolution.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
  23. Open source vs. Open $ource by ascii-kekkonen · · Score: 1

    Profit should be made with support and consultancy.

    Does this not imply that you should make your software as hard to use as possible, without seeming obviously too difficult?

    I think a better idea would be to make the software free for non-commercial use. If you make money with it, it's only fair that you pay the author.

    If you make free software, it's free for you to use. This way you would have freedom to write whatever "free as in beer" software that you want.

    1. Re:Open source vs. Open $ource by webcrafter · · Score: 1

      So, suppose I write a full development toolchain. Then, you use it to make some software. Are you making a commercial use of my kit? Should I only see money if your users are making money with your software?

    2. Re:Open source vs. Open $ource by fferreres · · Score: 1

      I have this idea that charging for support cannot be a good idea, except for big companies. Charging for services and products may be. But charging for support? What are they talking about? Either the software is well supported or it is unsupported. If it is well supported you don't need extra support. What you need is the next key technology developed!

      We need to find a suitable extra motivation for Open Source (and free) projects. People can contribute money. I could contribute money. I use forware at work so i could easily pay money. I can't code. Mostly ANYONE can donate work. Mostly anyone can benefit from Open Source software and open standards.

      We just need a kickstart. The code is as mature as it can be. It's usable, we can start from what we've got now, replace every Windows and fund the godam development in a speedy fashion.

      If, for example, Microsoft manages to get 70% of the people to use the .Net actively and Apache can't serve it. What should my company do? Run out of business or install the stupid libraries and ditch Mozilla?

      We should all be supporting the Mono project right now. Not some venture capitalist or 2 single companies that can "sell their souls" anytime for some (big or small) bucks...

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    3. Re:Open source vs. Open $ource by ascii-kekkonen · · Score: 1

      If I don't get paid, neither will you. If I get paid, so will you.

      When you create the software and I use it to make some software, either I give it away for free or expect payment. If I get paid, I've used it commercially and therefore have to pay you...

      Or at least something like that was my train of thought.

    4. Re:Open source vs. Open $ource by webcrafter · · Score: 1

      But if you release it expecting to get paid, you are making a commercial use of it, even if you don't see a penny. Or at least, that is my train.

    5. Re:Open source vs. Open $ource by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's up to you. You could say, for instance, that if I sell a product made with your software (rather than giving it away), I have to pay you (a) a fixed, one-time fee, (b) a fixed fee per unit sold, (c) a percentage of the revenue, (d) a percentage of the gross profit, (d) an amount based on something else.

      The nice thing about intellectual property laws is you're free to decide how you let people use what you create.

  24. Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The worst terrorist attack in recorded history occurred last month, and now we're involved in a WAR and you people have the gall to be running a duplicate story of the upcoming Open Source Monopoly???? My *god*, people, GET SOME PRIORITIES!

    The bodies of the thousands of innocent civilians who died (and will die) in these unprecedented events could give a good god damn about duplicate Slashdot stories, your childish Lego models, your nerf toy guns and whining about the lack of a "fun" workplace, your Everquest/Diablo/D&D fixation, the latest Cowboy Bebop rerun, or any of the other ways you are "getting on with your life" (here's a hint: watching Cowboy Bebop in your jammies and eating a bowl of Shreddies is *not* "getting on with your life"). The souls of the victims are watching in horror as you people squander your finite, precious time on this earth playing video games!

    You people disgust me!

    1. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did it! Why do you think the WTC was knocked down; they hate capitalism. This article proves it.

    2. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In these trying time when people may live an die on a daily basis, I'm primarily concerned with inseminating hot women on a daily basis.

      I may die, but my genetic legacy will live on in all orifaces of human females.

    3. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My *GOD* man, I commend you for finding appropriate priorities.

      Now, for the rest of you, GROW THE FUCK UP!

  25. These guys are smoking crack by Kayode · · Score: 1

    I for one like getting paid for writting code. How long do you think that will last if profits only come from support and consultancy? I thought the communist threat was vanquished but now I see we have another battle to be fought, at home. Remember 'free' is anti-american. If you think that our system of capitalism needs to be reworked just remember that although ignorant people complain, there's a mcdonalds and kfc in every country in the world (execpt afganistan) for a reason, captialism kicks social reform's ass.

    1. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      umm... If open-source wins, it will win in a free marketplace, competing against closed-source software.


      Not only is this not anti-capitalistic, it is in fact an appropriate free-market response to commercial software. Building a better mousetrap, and all...


      If it doesn't succeed on its own merits, then it will go away. Why is this so confusing and threatening?

    2. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2
      "How long do you think that will last if profits only come from support and consultancy"



      What kind of software do you write? Every programmer I know of writes software for bussinesses and not for a software company. There can be no opensource replacement for customized software solutions, website development and database apps for the enterprise. If you work for Borland or Microsoft then I can understand your concern. The programmers who actually work for software companies make up only a small portion of the overall job market for coders. I am more bothered by the huge over saturuation of the IT job market by the dot-com fall-out and H1 Visa's. THey have taken all the jobs away. Unless you have a mseters degree in computer science its impossible to get any IT job outside of help desk. The only way I can show an employer that I can code is by opensource. I don't believe opensource = socialism. It equals freedom much like artists sometime work for free to show off there work. They do it because they like it and want to make a difference. Also if a monopoly owns a whole market then its not truly capitalism. Capitalism means competition. Buying laws to prevent competition equals a dictatorship more then a free market. I believe more jobs will be created if Microsoft is ever replaced by open standards. I doubt this will happen anytime soon but who knows. When netscape introduced the www the IT market exploded. Java was customized to bring servlets and applets, html became a hot langauge, intranet apps replaced costly client server apps and enabled mobility, xml is coming out. The list goes on and on. When something is new in the IT market the demand for coders goes up. I support this new open monopoly then the old "do as the license agreement says" one we have to suffer through today. Maybe new innovations will prop up as a result.

    3. Re:These guys are smoking crack by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      no no no... your post was good, but i think people were questioning your sarcasm, some may have thought that you actually _liked_ america, heres how its done:

      [begin example]
      Yeah!!!! go capitalism!!! down with the commies!!!

      I wish i lived in america, so i could to pledge alegence to the fag of the united states... Long live Microsoft and McDonalds, let my money go into the 'Bill and Melinda Gates Bribe the Supreme Court Fund" Bush rules, kill those Afgans, ('accidently') Cruise missile their villages, Cluster bomb their fields, drop food on mines (comment on my spelling). Freedom for allllllllll.....
      [end example]

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    4. Re:These guys are smoking crack by speederaser · · Score: 1
      I for one like getting paid for writting code.

      Code will always need to be written. Companies will always pay to have it written. Some of it will always be proprietary. Under the Open Source monopoly, the only difference is more of the code being written will be open source.

      When IBM says they're investing $1 billion in Linux, where do you think that money is going? A BIG chunk of it is going to programmers to write open source software!

      That same calculus is going on in every company threatened by Microsoft. Open source is the only weapon they have to fight Microsoft's anti-competitive behavior. Some have jumped on board in time (IBM, HP), some were too late (Corel). Eventually everyone but Microsoft will be on board, and in the battle of Microsoft vs. the world Microsoft will lose.

      In the Open Source monopoly, you'll be writing code for someone. It just won't be Microsoft.

    5. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A BIG chunk of it is going to programmers to write open source software!"

      Hehe, no, it certainly will not! IBM likes the free labour that the open source community is.

    6. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only little problem is that you haven't read Adam Smith you faggot. You just confuse free software with free cars, which is not the case. Anyway i am not going to lose 1 second of my breath to explain you fuckhead how things work. There is plenty of material in even the crappies libraries of the world.

    7. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Slur · · Score: 1

      Billy Gates wrote:
      Every programmer I know of writes software for businesses and not for a software company. There can be no opensource replacement for customized software solutions, website development and database apps for the enterprise.

      I wouldn't say "never." It's amazing what kinds of things are being written as open source projects: spreadsheets, chemical analysis, sales tracking, all kinds of "niche" applications. Nevertheless I don't think it matters if the *whole kaboodle* comes out of an open source effort or not. The open source foundation for our development efforts (languages, databases, GUIs) is enough to establish its inevitable dominance.

      In my job writing proprietary solutions for my company's various clients I use open source tools and open source code all the time. It's not so much the customized proprietary bits that matter here, but the fact that I have a skein of time-tested code already available that carries 90% of the load. Open source saves our department enormous piles of time and effort. After building a dozen sites for various clients I wouldn't use anything *but* open source. It's the kind of monopoly I don't mind supporting.

      --
      -- thinkyhead software and media
    8. Re:These guys are smoking crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whatever you say Osamamama

  26. Dayam! by Nijika · · Score: 1

    And I thought this was going to be a "more on" thread. I think the Open Monopoly needs more time in the light of day anyhow.

    --
    Luck favors the prepared, darling.
  27. Spin Doctor by Judas96' · · Score: 2, Funny

    " Update: 10/28 13:42 GMT by J: Little-known fact -- for important stories, slashdot sometimes runs duplicates to see who's still awake on a weekend. Nice work to those of you who caught it. See you next week. *sigh* "
    So what you are essentially saying is: it isn't a bug; it's a feature?

    1. Re:Spin Doctor by Meepr · · Score: 1

      Ah, you see, you are right. It is definately a "feature" and if it was out by Microshaft, it would be an "Exciting New Feature!".

      --
      Neam fsck Meep. Meep fsck Neam.
    2. Re:Spin Doctor by Flower · · Score: 1
      Why not? Considering if I catch the original story late anything I want to say is drowned out in a sea of posts. With a redundant story a person has a chance to be heard.

      Personally I don't have any problem with redundant stories be they a few days apart so the weekend readers can get a shot or even having one creep up a couple of months after the original. The window of opprotunity to comment and get involved in any meaningful dialog is a matter of a few hours. The exact opposite extreme you see in newsgroups where threads can last for weeks.

      Redunant stories mitigate that problem at the cost of some obligatory anal-retentive whining by people who could have just skipped the story they have seen before.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  28. Re:Dot Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I hope you all will be happy flying a passanger jet with "Open Source" fly-by-wire software some long-haired amateur hippy coded.

    I guess those must be GNU/SmartBombs you're using to blow women and children to bits with in Afghanistan, then. How many UN /Red Cross establishments can there be left in the country? So good you gotta bomb them twice...

    Seriously, it's hard to take the US military seriously when they're so fucking stupid. Apart from congenital incompetence, don't they realise they're creating wannabe martyrs faster than Redmond can sell copies of XP? I'm glad I'm not in the British Army, the idea of entering the same theatre as American troops would scare me witless (if they were "on my side", that is.)

  29. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a slashdot specification update.

  30. Weekend Readers by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    Little-known fact -- for important stories, slashdot sometimes runs duplicates to see who's still awake on a weekend. Nice work to those of you who caught it. See you next week. *sigh*

    Strange.

    I thought this was for the benefit of those people who only read Slash Dot on the weekends. You know, those people who have it banned at work (with a lot of other sites) during the week.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Weekend Readers by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > > slashdot sometimes runs duplicates to see who's still awake on a weekend.

      > I thought this was for the benefit of those people who only read Slash Dot on the weekends.

      I thought it was for the benefit of editors who don't read Slashdot at all!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  31. Jeeesus! by blkros · · Score: 1

    Two weekends in a row?

    --
    Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
  32. Huh? WTF does mandrake have to do with this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is this story posted under the mandrake
    topic? Did you just post this to bug me?

  33. Self fulfilling prophency ... by LL · · Score: 1

    ... there's been some rather interesting work being done on analysing markets based on assymetric and incomplete information (in fact I beleive this years Nobel prize in economics was on precise that ... selling used cars as lemons). The problem with software (especially closed) is that there is zero information about the quality of a *new* piece of software. Until you get to use it (and discover + avoid things which BSOD it), it basically has zero utility.

    So how do software companies actually generate cash-flow? They have to "prove" their fitness in other ways (ie signal to the potential buyers that their code solves your future needs). Whether it is giving out a first freebie (QUAKE) or carpet bombing the user base (AOL), somehow the vendor needs to demonstrate that they provide something worth the "value" others place on it.

    Now, the curious thing is should open source be such a signal? It might not be the "monopoly" in the traditional sense, but more a meritopoly ... ie through the school of hard knocks, it has demonstrated that it is the "best" at a particular niche (given economic constraints) and which case it is better non competiting against it. Look at stuff such as Aladin ghostscript, or the publishing templates DocBook.

    To actually get bigger than a sustainable niche, you basically have to bullshit like crazy ... (cough*intel*cough with claims that its high-speed chips were essential for the internet ignoring the minor issue of bandwidth/latency). Unfotunately marketing is a sunk cost ... once you've spent your advertising budget, you can't recover it. Hence for firms who suddenly find they've overspent, the only way they can make back their money is to either eliminate competitors or else or cut back on the quality/support. And guess what, if you're the only solution, then you automagically create a self-fufilling prophency that your product is the "best" in its category and therefore all the technology followers (ie conservative foggies who don't trust anything less that v3.0) are forced to purchase it irregardless of the absolute quality (stability, security, mtbf, etc).

    However, with open source this approach doesn't work as you cannot eliminate a competitor that cannot be bought off. As such, a rational player would instantly quit the market segment as soon as they can tell the open-source version exceeds their market share. Hence by definition, OpenSource becomes the new monopoly ...

    LL

  34. gee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess VA Linux thought this propoganda was so juicy that they posted it twice.

  35. Admin Lameness filter? by evilviper · · Score: 2

    You know, every time I type a little too quickly I hit a lameness filter... Every time I have a lot to say, lameness filter. Every time slashdot gets a little slow and I click submit more than once, lameness filter.

    All the annoyance the users must go through to prevent spam, crap flooding, trolls, and duplicate submissions, and there's nothing for the Admins.

    What do you say we have the VERY well trusted users (those past the karma cap, etc) moderate the front page stories before they are posted. This would end dups, dead links, speelling problems ;-), and would give some slashdotters a chance to create mirrors of slow sites as well.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    1. Re:Admin Lameness filter? by 1010011010 · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Sounds good to me. Perhaps the slash code could, minimally, search slashdot stories for links that are in the current item, in order to display possible duplicate stories for the editors.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    2. Re:Admin Lameness filter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      give them a break, nobody is perfect

    3. Re:Admin Lameness filter? by Zico · · Score: 1

      give them a break, nobody is perfect


      Yep, and Slashdot editors manage to prove it
      just about every hour of every day. :)


  36. back to OSS as a business model by underpaidISPtech · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Given that the people most likely to participate in an open-source project are also users of the application being worked on, what would happen if the customers for a software product actually participated in its design and creation?

    Umm, I for one would not want to pay a large corp. for the privilege of using software I helped to create, and watch the money go to them. Exactly what would I be paying for?

    Perhaps I misunderstand, as this would work in a corporate environment, where staff helped out, but surely not for a commercial product?

    I think open-source is great and all, but if your programmers are all coding away, and the code is released freely, revenue and profit is generated by service contracts and support, then a) how are your coders paid? Surely not the salaries and recognition of the present day. Will coding be reduced to a more mundane role? Lots of CS grads these days. Hell I don't even have to be a CS grad to throw something up on the net b) what about your competition? They will be able to put out a duplicate or improved product lickety-split.

    -- By the way , these questions are not intended to address the morality of OSS ( I don't want to get into that), but the financial aspects, which are what will take down MS, as only a viable business solution ala IBM will be able to provide the infrastructure to maintain that sort of venture.--

    mod away

    1. Re:back to OSS as a business model by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      > Umm, I for one would not want to pay a large corp. for the privilege of using software I helped to create, and watch the money go to them. Exactly what would I be paying for?

      I can see where you are coming from but there is an equilibrium. For example you may depend on some software, and if you help the company better design their software for your needs, then you benefit your self. But that depends on if they are listening to your needs and ideas. I've tried that with microsoft several times, but microsoft does not have a tendancy to listen to its customers or even politely respond, rather they usually dont respond at all, even when you are telling them about a security hole in their software.

      > Perhaps I misunderstand, as this would work in a corporate environment, where staff helped out, but surely not for a commercial product?

      Not really, in this case you would need a pretty great and diverse staff that feels comfortable with communicating with each other rather then the typical competitive corporate environment (typical in large businesses).

      > I think open-source is great and all, but if your programmers are all coding away, and the code is released freely

      Ah, there in lies part of the problem, open-source does not necesarily mean "released freely". Even the GPL does not require that the software be given away for free, merely that it include its source code. I would expect that as OSS starts to out due the quality of commercial software that they start charging for the initial distribution releases in order to make money for the programmers, as well as technical support. But once its been distributed to a point that eventually it will find itself on the net downloadable for free. The competition could rerelease lickety-split, but your competition would also have to pay for the software in that way they help fund you, I would also expect initial releases to be expensive, and falling in price as its distributed, your competition would have to buy at a high price and sell at a lower price making it more difficult as you have the initial release and they are just mimicing, but if your competition has a legitamately good product they would make a lot of money and you can charge more for initial releases.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
  37. Re:Dot Bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't fucking care (see, I can use "fuck" too. Aren't you a clever idiot?)

    Because I don't mind killing the wbole "fucking" middle east. I don't mind killing them one at a time or a country at a time.

    These people barely qualify as human. The middle east sub-human sub-species is the most self-absorbed lot of people in life. Its like the whole region has an IQ of 85. High enough to feed themselves, but low enough that they barely know which end of a gun to hold.

    The sooner the earth is rid of them the better.

  38. natural monopoly by underpaidISPtech · · Score: 1

    Microsoft enjoys what economists call a "natural monopoly."

    Natural hmm?
    Article Warning: Delusional understatement imminent.

  39. wow wow wow by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    Profit should be made with support and consultancy

    As a developper I suck at support and consultancy. How am I supposed to get money then?

    1. Re:wow wow wow by haeger · · Score: 1

      Hi.
      I honestly don't think you suck at support and consultancy.
      If you've written the software then you are more than qualified to answer questions about it, right.
      And when someone who use the software wants it modified a bit, who should they call? You!

      That's where you get money.
      And besides, if you are a good developer then you can probably modify other OpenSource products too, with minimal effort.

      You will get the money, you just won't get the money from selling the software.

      Regards

      //Haeger

      --
      You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. -- Harlan Ellison
    2. Re:wow wow wow by WildBeast · · Score: 1

      hey, I don't like dealing with people much. Besides, I don't wanna spend most of my time doing support and consultancy.

    3. Re:wow wow wow by sadr · · Score: 1

      So go work for a company that does consultancy.

      You can have some marketing guys deal with finding the work, and billing the customer, and you hack the code the way they tell you to.

      Or else you go work on custom business applications, and use open source as a foundation. Since the company has no intention of ever selling the software, they don't care if it's under the GNU license. And you can make software better / faster / easier by using the off-the-shelf free libraries than you can by writing everything from scratch.

      In the end, open source just makes everything that is a commodity (filesystems, kernels, TCP/IP stacks) "free", and requires software engineers to work on non-commodity products.

      Besides, how many times should the TCP/IP stack be re-implemented from scratch? That's not a good use of the limited developer resources in the world.

  40. Re:Does anyone know a good hangover cure? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not what you want to hear, but the scientifically proven hangover cure is to drink as much water as possible. I.E. Alcohol dehydrates you, drink enough and you'll feel fine.

    In other words, there IS NO magic cure.

  41. Shame on you..... by oncee · · Score: 1

    Lame. You could at least run a story that Apple fixed it's security problem in OS X last week. You like to report problems but it appears you don't like to report the problem has been fixed. There are all kind of stories out there that deserve Slashdot coverage. I find this practice sophomoric.

  42. All very well and good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but how the hell do coders get paid?

    Its also my (crap I suppose!) opinion that while MS for the most part stink, they do provide a kind of standard that the rest of the industry can interface to.
    Without that, you get such superb examples as KDE and Gnome duplicating the same thing (and how the hell is Gnome still alive when KDE is light years better - FUD is alive in Open Source as well!). We can all see the results of standards in other areas, like DVD formats, SACS formats, VHS/Betamax etc etc etc

  43. They tried to legislate the value of pi, remember? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inevitable, yes. Of course, the lawmakers can and will try to change reality through legislation. Unfortunately, it only causes destruction, but they have done it in the past and will do it again in the future. There's a certain mentality that believes that they can demand that reality be a certain way, and that it will be come that way because they wish it. It's this type of mentality that creates, supports, and votes for anti-reality, i.e., anti-free-market, legislation. Once they stray from outlawing stealing in all its various forms, they are into the realm of wishful thinking and central planning.

  44. Re:They tried to legislate the value of pi, rememb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about Socialism? How about workers actually exercising direct democracy to collectively run their company like most Socialists suggest? It is ironic that most capitalist purport to support democracy. No capitalist country can claim to be a democracy, they can claim to be a republic. Socialists are one of the few who believe in real direct democracies on the local level.

  45. You got it all wrong by telstar · · Score: 1

    You're supposed to turn back the clock ... not turn back the articles....

  46. So it's a duplicate.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't mean there isn't more to say. Me, I think people are missing the point, they're trying to attack and destroy Microsoft. That's a hostile approach, and will lead to Microsoft defending itself, and that will include offenses that hurt open source. On the other hand, a cooperative approach is far more likely to work with less harm. Yes, I know people complain about Microsoft's backstabbing, but IMHO, that's more their views of the present distorting the picture of the past than anything else. IBM broke it off with MS with OS/2 and NT, Apple had no more right to the GUI than anyone else(and yes, other companies DID have GUIs in development before windows came out). Bunch of others like that. I'm sure someone can come up with a different perspective on every example, but that would be futile IMHO.

    Besides, what most people are missing is that Microsoft KNOWS the OS market is not going to remain profitable for them, or any company like them. They don't want it so much any more, and probably have an internal timeline to abandon the whole thing. They can't just do it in one day, not only would that be unfeasible from a technical and legal sense, it'd cost them prestige. OTOH, developing into a service provider for everyone, making stupendous revenue, and then saying, "Hey, we don't need to do this OS crap, we're spinning off the non-profit Windows Development Organization with the help of the US dept of Education and the NSA(ok, maybe they'll leave this one off...)" so as to get out of the whole fracas, yet remain unbesmirched.

    Microsoft doesn't want the Hill anymore, the mines just don't have enough gold in them.

  47. Make up your minds! by pvera · · Score: 1

    Lemme get this straight:

    If Microsoft has a monopoly, its evil.

    If anyone else has a monopoly, its good for Open Source.

    Make up your minds. A monopoly by definition is harmful. There are no "good" monopolies.

    The only way this posting would have sounded more retarded could be only if Cmr Taco or Jon Katz had written it.

    --
    Pedro
    ----
    The Insomniac Coder
    1. Re:Make up your minds! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

      If there's ever a "Linux monopoly", and a certain Penguin begins sending shocktroops to my door to make sure I'm fufilling GPL requirements even when they have no reason to suspect I'm not, I'll be the first one picking up the pitchfork of the BSDaemon.

      Monopolies are a bit like governments; they start out nice, then once they hit the top, watch out - they want to stay on top. Of course, we need governments. We don't need commercial/business monopolies. ;)

    2. Re:Make up your minds! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh...

      Monopolies are not by definition harmful. Monopolies which use illegal and harmful tactics, squelching competition and removing choice from the consumer in order to maintain themselves; are harmful.

      What is described as an "open monopoly" in this article is described as promoting cooperation and increasing choice to the consumer. This would be a good thing IMHO.

    3. Re:Make up your minds! by fferreres · · Score: 1

      Oh god you troll i am sure you mean what you say but how come? How can you be such a troll?

      Don't you get it that an Open Source Monopoly it's the same as saying "No Monopoly at all". It's like the peoples monopoly for Elections. Americans have the Monopoly to elect the candidates and no company has or will ever have that right (that can be argued). Voting is free. Anyone can try to get elected as senator or president. And they will all geit paid. Or you rather replace the USA goverment for a privately held one?
      You had a civil war to free yourselves from the UK crown. They had the Monopoly to govern your lifes. Now Microsoft has that right in softwareland. And business run on top of software. And if Microsoft is the only one controling it then they will rule your bussiness. And by nobody can compete is not because everyone else is incompetent. It's because it's a natural monopoly just like goverment is a natural monpoly of the civilian (now) and the tirans (in the past and in some countries as well).

      Don't you get it? Software is not like making cars. It's a building block of the society. An interactive international business system. A means of comunicating. It has no marginal costs. It is radicaly different. Special porpuse software can always be closed source and really expensive, but not the building blocks.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    4. Re:Make up your minds! by pvera · · Score: 1

      How naive...

      Let's allow IBM to spearhead and champion (!) the Open Source movement until they are the heavyweigth. Then let them little by little pollute it until they downright own it. Somebody as big as IBM has the political power and the lobby dollars to pretty much wipe their asses with your o-so-precious GPL.

      Think about it, don't you see this is the same IBM that not so long ago was in the same position as Microsoft these days?

      I can't wait to see you morons 10-15 years down the road praising Microsoft for embracing the "Open Monopoly" and spitting at IBM for being such an anti-competitive monster.

      Those that forget history are bound to repeat its mistakes...

      --
      Pedro
      ----
      The Insomniac Coder
  48. Re:Inevitable? Yep. by Erris · · Score: 1
    As long as big companies can buy laws to support their monopolies, they can legislate their way out of any situation where normal capitalist forces would stop them.

    You know, that's right! In this case, however, the entertianment folks and M$ look like tin horn prawns next to some big boys who are tired of paying through the nose for IT services provided by desktop PCs. Think GE, Westinghouse, Coke, Archer Daniel, and other giants are going to let M$ tell them what backdoored buggy junk they have to run on their thousands of desktops? Not a snowballs chance in hell. Oh yeah, they will suck up all of M$'s punny one billion dollar advert campaign, then stuff them. The owners of CBS and ABC will figure out where their break even point is. As soon as they figure out that free software can not be held over their heads and that it will save them money, security and trouble, M$ will vanish.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  49. Open monopoly by G-funk · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can see it now...

    Geek1: "You've landed on Redhat ave, with 3 houses, that'll be $280"

    Geek2: "Howabout I give you BSD street and $25?"

    Of course the purple ones nobody wants will be named after places in Redmond :-)

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  50. No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The last battleground is the web.

    The "open", standards-based web exists largely because Microsoft allows it to exist. With over 90% of desktops under their control, and over 90% of the browser market under its control, Microsoft could at any time move off to a "extended" web (an online service using proprietary protocols), and in fact, we see that already happening.

    Recently Microsoft has begun shipping XP, IE6, a new Windows Media Player, and the client libs for .Net.

    They have also begun to shun non-IE clients at their web sites.

    Why they are doing this should be obvious - soon, MSN sites will start to accesss client code available only on MS platforms. This will truly allow MS to extend what they have embraced.

    Of course, can you blame them? HTTP and HTML are useful protocols that have become outdated. The stateless, text-oriented model was extremely useful to get early adoption, but at this point there is no doubt that users of every type of platform are ready to move on to more advanced protocols that offer greater functionality. This is why many websites use SSL now as a way of creating a session of any kind. Unfortunately the HTTP-NG protocol has been shelved - it would have provided a great deal of new functionality that could have moved the web in to the next generation.

    So Microsoft is going to get there on their own. You will soon see them exploiting the client libs shipped to 90% of the desktop users out there to radically enhance the browsing experience.

    The standards-based web will soon be relegated to a second-class experience, and its our collective fault for not moving more rapidly to create open standards that provide for a better user experience, and get the tools out there to support them.

    1. Re:No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by fferreres · · Score: 1

      Mod this up guys. That's what WILL happen. You all slashdoters be happy an think that will never happen. But it ain't true. It will happen. It happened to the palmtops ("Windows CE is so cute"). It happened for the games ("Porting not trivial anymore"). It happened to Office Suits firms (Wordperfect, Borland, Lotus).

      Internet is the last chance. It can't be bought. Microsoft arrived late. So what is everybody waiting for? You pay $500 for the newset XP + Office that costs $5 a piece to Microsoft. And with the remaining money they develop their next eggs to fuck your companies or bisiness in the name of future where computers are for everyone.

      In the very end, Microsoft will be the goverment best partner so they will not get divided:

      "Oh, it's nice. Every company has it's accounting on MS .Net ...call the IRS. Let's take a look at who is doing what".

      "Oh, let's prohibit people from making CD copies. Microsoft, can you add a drivers blocking system? Yeah, we are a team right?"

      "Oh, company A doesn't use XP IIS 9A? What a shame they can't use any advanced features of Explorer 12 because only our server can serve them!"

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    2. Re:No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      You forget that:

      1.) dot net is still vaporware and has no installed base, nor even a solid customer base--home user OR business--that wants to downgrade to (eXtermination of Privacy).

      2.) People are satisfied with your so called "second class standards based Internet" and frankly most don't have the bandwidth for anything better even if it *was* an open standard.

      3.) There is plenty time to build our own superior open architecture for any 'enhanced web' that the closed-source dinosaur world may dream up.

    3. Re:No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
      1.) dot net is still vaporware and has no installed base, nor even a solid customer base--home user OR business--that wants to downgrade to (eXtermination of Privacy).

      If XP users don't have it already, they'll get it the next time they do a Windows Update (yes, most people blindly download whatever MS tells them to at update time).

      2.) People are satisfied with your so called "second class standards based Internet"

      People were satisfied with BBSs at 1200 baud...most things MS, Apple, and most any other platform company do are not to satisfy users existing needs but create new needs

    4. Re:No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by Mandelbrute · · Score: 1
      The "open", standards-based web exists largely because Microsoft allows it to exist.
      Somehow, the largest computer company on earth didn't really notice the net until someone else started to make money from it.
      Microsoft could at any time move off to a "extended" web
      Remember that MSN was originally going to be an alternative to the net - something like compuserve but a decade too late.

      Microsoft have not yet taken over the web server market. The only way that such a "takeover" of the net could be enfoced is from the server side. There are always plenty of third-party developers around waiting to fill up the gaps in microsoft's products, so there will be software that supports the current standards even if MS doesn't support those standards.

      The standards-based web will soon be relegated to a second-class experience, and its our collective fault for not moving more rapidly to create open standards that provide for a better user experience, and get the tools out there to support them.
      What extra functionality has non-standard IE browser tags really given us? IE has the ability to display pages containing seriously broken HTML, which would be a virtue if fairly unskilled web page designers would stop using IE to display their pages during testing. Scripting is a different story, but MS is a very long way from getting a monopoly on server side scripting - and doing everything on the client side is the last thing you want to do in a financial transaction.

      HTML is incredibly simple, a lot of the changable information on the net is rendered as text so it will most likely be around for at least another nine years.

      The standards-based web will soon be relegated to a second-class experience
      Why? MS don't actually own any of the current protocols, and have not yet released a significant one of their own (their new java - no sorry C#, isn't out and about yet and .NET is still vapour). Owning the leading web browser is not enough to dictate terms of the shape of the internet.
    5. Re:No, Microsoft will unfortunately rule onward by deepstephen · · Score: 1

      So Microsoft is going to get there on their own. You will soon see them exploiting the client libs shipped to 90% of the desktop users out there to radically enhance the browsing experience.

      This is another example of Microsoft leveraging their desktop monopoly to their advantage. It's precisely the kind of thing that got them into hot water with the DoJ over the bundling of IE into Windows.

      The difference between then and now is that, by bundling IE into Windows, they were able to cut Netscape's supply lines and thereby (very nearly) kill the company.

      This time, there is no company to kill. There are only a series of OSS projects that aren't making money at the moment. So Microsoft can't starve them of money, no matter how hard they try.

      The DoJ, if it has the slightest bit of sense, wil l have to come down on Microsoft like a ton of bricks over this (if it happens) and when the outcome of that trial is decided, OSS will be waiting in the wings.

      --

      --
      Karma: Chameleon (you come and go)
  51. Not likely by xbrownx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as Linux still requires knowledge of console commands (and not just any command-prompt commands, but Unix commands), it is going to be very hard for 90% of computer users out there to use Linux.

    I don't think the mainstream is very interested in editing their operating system.

    1. Re:Not likely by fferreres · · Score: 1

      As long as Microsoft still requires run regedit to access the registry the...ah wait..it's hiddend for the novice!

      You don't need the command like in a "Secretary Enviroment" just as you don't need to edit the registry in normal Windows use.

      The comand line is powerfull and you may learn it, but the normal user should not be forced to use it. He shoul only know what he is trying to acomplish (print a document, search the web, read email, finish that BP and making those invitations for the children birthday)...

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    2. Re:Not likely by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      What kind of dark ages are you living in? Linux is not your father's Unix. We abandoned "Unix" 10 years ago. Ever use KDE or GNOME? I fail to see where ordinary users would require a console, although it may be beneficial to their productivity if they took the small amount of time required to learn a few commands.

    3. Re:Not likely by staeci · · Score: 1

      Why all of a sudden are these people who would have been able to use a DOS commandline based computer 10+ years ago suddenly unable to use a unix shell based one now.

      They have been told that it is hard and old and primitive and not as good as a gui. Told by people who want to sell them a gui shell incidentally.

      A pure KDE distro (which is what we need by the way, koffice rules) would probably never require use of the command line.

      But if you included a printed friendly guide to bash which included nice documentation of all the cl commands and simple explanations of how to do command tasks and scripts and examples of neat things you can do some of these newbie gui only users would pick it up and flick through it and go wow and learn little bits of it.

      The difference is:
      Case one: you have to use the command line to do things, it is not what you are used to but you have to learn it. People will resist, and not learn anything about it.

      Case two: You don't have to use this really powerful and useful command line shell, you can use the gui instead. But here is a guide to the shell, those of you who are interested can have a look and we'll tell you everything you need to know. Some people won't look, but others will and some of them will learn things. And then they will show their friends this cool thing they can do now. And then their friends will want to know about it. And suddenly people will be learning to use the shell because it is useful, not because they have to .

      --
      'Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson...'
    4. Re:Not likely by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1

      Not quite. I've actually witnessed the reaction people have had when explaining that they don't *really* have to use the command line. They usually say something like, "If an operating system even *has* a command line, it's out of date and shouldn't be used." A far better strategy is just to not tell them that there even *is* a command line. That's what MS does, incidentally. You'll find no mention of the "fabulous DOS shell" as a feature of the Windows operating system.

    5. Re:Not likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to jizz in Timmy's mouth. How 'bout you?

    6. Re:Not likely by Tarel · · Score: 1

      I agree, the command line is a powerful tool, I can also see that it has many options that would be hard for people that were brought up on iconised gui interfaces to grasp... like parameter extentions.

      Granted they would still be using them, it's just that they would be dependent on other people to make decisions like this for them.

      Sure you could hide the command line as an alternative, don't even tell the end consumer it exists, but how much of a step away from the current windows like setups is this?

      Until the O/S programmers decide that consumers should have some ability to actually have direct control over their own systems, the quickly released/ slap together-patch up latter hieroglyph oriented downward spiral will continue, until eventually we won't even need the alphabet on our keyboards, we will just have two keys...an 'I LOVE BILL!' key which will be right next to the Windows key.

      And for all you people that being able to have the choice as to wether or not you want to be able to define your own paramaters is a bit much... By all means let's hide the command line, get out our we-come-from-the-future identical uniforms, and lets all sing another chorus of "God save Bill's monopoly"... judging from the number of oxygen thieves I talk to every day people aren't using their brains anyway, let alone the command line.

      --
      -- Why do all the women in my life make 'common' sense seem an 'exceptional' quality?
  52. Mandrake? by Isldeur · · Score: 2

    Does this *really* have something to do with Mandrake that I'm not catching? Why does is it under the Mandrake topic??

  53. Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by FallLine · · Score: 2
    It's not hard to understand why open-source software, such as the Linux operating system and the Apache HTTP server, is growing in popularity among corporate IT departments. When source code is open, any developer is free to read, redistribute and modify it.
    To assert that this is a sufficient reason, or even a significant reason, is simply ridiculous. This view point is quite simply out of touch with the realities of IT. It is the rare IT department that has the time, the resources, the will, and sufficient need to justify spending the time to fix bugs in house (or to hire). Put bluntly, 99.99% of the time it is more cost effective to allow someone else (e.g., the vendor) to fix it or to work around the problem. In a large scale production environment, say, at Google.com, such an argument can be made, but this is not where Linux, Apache, and other Open Source software are making significant inroads. Quite the contrary, it is the lower-end (or as MS might say "back office") type of application where OSS is making its growth.

    The growth of Linux and Apache mainly has to do with the fact that it can be employed more cost effectively in these limited low-end applications than even NT. By cost, I don't mean just the licensing costs, I mean the total setup and upkeep cost: installation, support, actually arranging the licensing, acquiring the necessary hardware, and so on. Linux and Apache get the job done sufficiently well at a minimal of cost.

    Now let's examine one of our other questions: Why would anyone want to develop open-source software? All participation in open source can be traced to self-interest, and participation in open-source software development can be seen as a kind of barter trade. Participants donate the code they've developed in exchange for value: the opportunity to be part of something bigger than their own work, to influence the direction of a project to suit their needs and to achieve some measure of social status among their peers. Result? Both the participant and the open-source project get what they need. One such benefit that all participants and users get from open-source software is robust, modular and stable architectures. The reason for this is that all of the participants need to have their needs met. Modularity both reduces the learning curve required for participation and allows individual participants to concentrate on the functionality that directly serves their needs. And stability is in the interest of everyone.
    This argument misses the point and fails to address the real question. Does it make financial sense to invest in the development of Open Source Software? In other words, do the benefits of Open Source software really exceed the costs? Merely "adding" to your own welfare is insufficient, if it costs you more. The answer is quite simply no when it comes to most software development.

    Let's take the case of the Word processor. Why would a very major companany like, say, General Motors want to spend ALL (or even PART) of the total 30 million dollars and 3 years of development time that it takes to develop a full featured Word processor? It is extremely unlikely that they would increase their workers productivity enough to justify this on a cost vs benefit basis [Especially in light of more real world elements of finance and economics. e.g., Opportunity Cost.]. Proprietary software companies on the other hand, that enjoy intellectual property protections, get LEVERAGE when they make similar efforts. That is to say, that they enjoy not only their own savings but a slice of everyone else's savings (which is where the real money is). Furthermore, companies that are setup purely for the development of software are in many ways in a superior position to develop software more economically.

    To put it bluntly, this kind of Open Source development depends on charitable actions (in a corporate sense, the only real justification for this is that it promotes the company's image) and/or on the rare project where the benefits accrued IN HOUSE are greater than the development cost. None of the above is enough to make the Open Source a major development ENGINE of wide varieties of software. This is especially true for the relatively less-visible but still highly costly applications. e.g., MRP systems, powerful photo editors like photoshop, etc.

    What's more, Open Source software is going to, and does presently, fall victim to the 80/20 rule. That is to say, Open Source can get 80% of the results with 20% of the effort. Even the better regarded Open Source projects are perpetually in this state. It's the remaining 80% of the effort that it the hard hill to climb. Many would argue that not a single Open Source project has yet demonstrated itself capable of the last 80%: seemless installation, tight integration, good UIs, etc.

    Many people less fanatical boosters of Open Source have taken the few words of apparent fear from Microsoft's management as proof that the whole of Microsoft is, and should be, afraid of Open Source. This is just grasping for straws. The fact of the matter is that Open Source can put a significant dent on MS' profitability, and thus provoke such words, without being a threat to the whole of Microsoft, never mind having the potential to go the next step and exceed MS. Open Source software hurts MS by marginalizing some of their highly profitable enterprises, namely: Linux vs NT, Apache vs IIS, etc. Besides the fact that this is almost exclusively confined to servers, the areas where Open Source is taking a bite out of MS is mostly on the lower-end stuff. The kind of stuff that IT will install in a pinch. You need web server to serve some internal documents? Simple, run Apache and Linux. You don't need anything more and you can do it with less of hassle than NT. Although the likes of Apache and Linux will likely continue to succeed in a similar vein, this is hardly proof of Open Source's self-proclaimed greatness.
    1. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a large scale production environment, say, at Google.com, such an argument can be made, but this is not where Linux, Apache, and other Open Source software are making significant inroads.

      since when does an NT implemantation go to large scale envronment. think SUN and IBM mainframe my friend...

    2. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by FallLine · · Score: 2
      since when does an NT implemantation go to large scale envronment. think SUN and IBM mainframe my friend...
      Where did I say it goes to NT? No where. That said, there are many applications where Open Source solutions can't or are less capable of competing with the range of proprietary solutions in the server arena even.
    3. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      It's unbelievable how much you Slashdot FUD artists miss the point. Read my lips: collaboration! Of course General Motors will not spend $30mil and 3 years developing their OWN word processor. Nobody said they should. But if they're going to spend $10 million on MS Word licenses and it would only cost them $1 million to hire a few top programmers to add missing features to an existing 'almost there' Open Source package like OpenOffice or KWord, the best decision is quite obvious even from a purely greedy, hard business analyst's view. True, much of today's OSS was developed by altruistic hackers, but that doesn't mean it's going to STAY that way as the infrastructure solidifies.

    4. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, a low user number actually talking sense about the realities of open source development, instead of spouting platitudes and proclaiming imminent world domination. Refreshing!

    5. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by FallLine · · Score: 2
      It's unbelievable how much you Slashdot FUD artists miss the point. Read my lips: collaboration!
      You act as if somehow this magical collaboration concept dillutes the negative return on investment. Whether you invest 1 dollar or 30 million dollars, in development, the fact remains that you're going to sink more money in development than YOU can get out in the vast majority of cases. If anything, the smaller the investment, the less return you'll get per dollar investment because it's simply inefficient to develop software in a hodge podge fashion like that.

      But if they're going to spend $10 million on MS Word licenses and it would only cost them $1 million to hire a few top programmers to add missing features to an existing 'almost there' Open Source package like OpenOffice or KWord, the best decision is quite obvious even from a purely greedy, hard business analyst's view.
      No, it's not nearly so simple and even your own conclusion is not nearly so obvious.

      First, for any given feature set where there is reasonably high demand amongst other parties, the proprietary vendor can better spread the costs out across the various interested parties. In other words, even if we accept that it only costs 1 million dollars to add feature list A into a software product, if there are say 100 interested parties in that same feature set, then the proprietary software vendor could offer each of those companies that feature set for 10k dollars a piece + profit, much less than the 1 million dollars in your scenario. And if this feature set is so limited as to only be useful for one or two other parties, the contribution is of little worth to the Open Source effort.

      Second, there are few areas where something of significant worth to the rest of the world can be developed cheaper than the pre-existing products.

      Third, in true hardnosed financial terms, not all money is alike. You must take into consideration the amount of risk undertaken and the time that it would take to recoup the investment. In other words, if that feature set takes an extra year to deliver, that's money lost by the company that could have been invested in, say, profit producing assets. Both of these counts really would deter most companies from investing in Open Source.

      Fourth, companies today continue to purchase proprietary software of all types hand over foot without investing in Open Source efforts of the kind described.

      Fifth, OpenOffice and KWord are not "nearly" there in respect to the overall quality of the MS Office Suite. They're still very much in that 80/20 zone, which means they have a very long way to go.

      Sixth, the style of development that you suggest, where each party merely adds in a few "features" here and there, is a recipe for disaster. At best, it's woefully inefficient insofar as it would require a lot of re-work. At worst, it's simply unworkable. Some objectives are mutually exclusive. But even far more troublesome is that the methods of development that each firm employs can preclude the development of other firm's needs. For instance, while it may be required that every firm discloses its modifications under the GPL, the more self-interested firms may find that the extra cost involved in writing maintainable/modular/readable/upgradable code exceeds cost of writing crap.

      True, much of today's OSS was developed by altruistic hackers, but that doesn't mean it's going to STAY that way as the infrastructure solidifies.
      It's still just a theory, one which has many other theories and problems working against it. Open Source may have already demonstrated that people are willing to write code without owning it or being directly compensated, but that is not the same thing as being a superior producer of software of wide range. I, for one, believe Open Source has its place, but it's never going to replace proprietary software en masse.
    6. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, a low user number actually talking sense about the realities of open source development, instead of spouting platitudes and proclaiming imminent world domination. Refreshing!

      Oh yeah.. that's right. Slashdot mentality at its finest. If everyone likes it, it must suck because then it would be trendy. And of course if you are trendy, that means you must be a mindless idiot. So Open Source, even though it goes against the mainstream trend, because it's trendy among geeks, it must suck. Oh yeah, and all religions must suck too because they are popular.. well except for oddball religions. Morons. The only non-conformity is had in trying neither to conform nor diverge. You must view all sides and choose what you believe is right. So when you people are done playing line-hop over the "Open Source" / "Proprietary" line and decide that money matters more than ethics, you can go fritter away your life doing meaningless work making somebody else rich and destroying the freedom of what we now know as computers. Hope you enjoy the world you create.

    7. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The new 32-processor NT/Intel systems from UniSys are getting quite close to the biggest of the Sun and IBM 'big iron'. Intel CPUs are already faster individually than anything Sun or IBM can offer, and Intel, Microsoft and UniSys are putting a lot of effort into making PC hardware scale as well as the ageing RISC competitors (which leaves the 32-bit address space as the major limitation, but NT/Itanium gets past that). If current trends continue, it won't be long before NT does at the high end what it's already done at the small-server level.

    8. Re:Poorly supported conclusion and incorrect... by FallLine · · Score: 2
      Oh yeah.. that's right. Slashdot mentality at its finest. If everyone likes it, it must suck because then it would be trendy. And of course if you are trendy, that means you must be a mindless idiot. So Open Source, even though it goes against the mainstream trend, because it's trendy among geeks, it must suck. Oh yeah, and all religions must suck too because they are popular.. well except for oddball religions. Morons. The only non-conformity is had in trying neither to conform nor diverge.
      While I agree with the basic sentiment that people should learn to think critically and independently, no matter if that conclusion is popular or unpopular, no where did I see the poster mention or allude to conformity, or the lack thereof, for its own sake. His point likely was that the majority of slashdot's readers, especially the more established ones, cannot see the problems with Open Source because they're so emotionally attached to it.

      So when you people are done playing line-hop over the "Open Source" / "Proprietary" line and decide that money matters more than ethics, you can go fritter away your life doing meaningless work making somebody else rich and destroying the freedom of what we now know as computers. Hope you enjoy the world you create.
      The "ethics" of Open Source is pretty much besides the point. When I create an idea, be it code, music, literature, or what have you, it is by definition a CREATIVE act. My choice to create, not create, or to control the distribution of my idea does NOT TAKE from you in any way. If it is unethical for me to retain control over my idea, then it is even more unethical for me to choose not to create to begin with. Shame on Linus Torvalds for not creating Linux when he was 12! This position is simply ridiculous.

      It's also ridiculous to suggest that producing a proprietary product is "meaningless". If people are choosing to PURCHASE the product, it clearly has substantial worth to that individual, otherwise the customer would not have parted with their hard earned money. Many propreitary products are life saving or drastically improve the quality of life of the purchaser. This cannot be called meaningless. Just because money changes hand does even mean the creator is completely self-interested, but rather that he/she must face certain economic realities, such as paying his salary, his employees, providing a reasonable rate of return to shareholders to secure future funding, etc.

      In any event, my fundamental issue with Open Source is that I do NOT believe that it serves the greater good of society given its lack of overall viability. If Open Source can't deliver on its promises or just can't do a good job of delivering, then society is better off in a propreitary world. Most consumers would rather have a significantly better proprietary software package without any source code than a broken open source one with all its broken code. This is, as a matter of fact, what happens day in and day out at software stores all around the country.

      This is not say that I support the destruction or the regulation of Open Source. Quite the contrary, Open Source has its place and can sometimes, though rarely, provide a superior product for specific applications. Given that both systems can co-exist, by and large, it makes sense to allow them both to compete against each other and let the markets (e.g., consumers) decide which serves their particular needs better. I just don't believe that Open Source will be on the winning side very often.
  54. @@@FuCK YoU CoCK SuCKER@@@@ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SToP SuCKING BiLL GaTES OfF!

  55. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you people aware that support contract and consult contracts are shrinking fast? With todays easy software there simply is no big need.

  56. If the best product was the winner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You would be talking about BSD, rather than Linux.

  57. +1 Insightful, Mod this up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yours truly,

    -Bill G.

  58. Problem: a deadline and no material. by oldays · · Score: 1

    Let's say you have a deadline, you need the money, but you just couldn't find any new and interesting (or at least original) material. What DO you do? It's quite simple - you make up a title that doesn't make any sense and therefore sounds original. n 1: (economics) a market in which there are many buyers but only one seller; "a monopoly on silver"; "when you have a monopoly you can ask any price you like" 2: exclusive control or possession of something; "They have no monopoly on intelligence" OS, as we all know here, dictates precisely the opposite - it creates more sellers, and it does away with exclusive control. They could have just as well called it "Closed Open Source" or "Many One Seller" or "Non-exclusive exclusive control". Of course, they didn't go to college for nothing, they know to pick a name that doesn't make them sound like imbeciles to people who don't know what they're talking about - it only makes them sound like imbeciles to people who *do* know what the article is about. Oh, and I won't do the traditional "WHY is it posted here?". I know why it's posted here.

  59. Who and why support for Open Source Monopoly by 3seas · · Score: 1

    Let's see now:
    It's written by two Sun MicroSystem Employees and IBM is supportive of what? Open Source directions?
    Because of why?

    http://www.research.ibm.com/autonomic/

    This Autonomic Computing direction sounds extreamly familiar.
    The core of which contains nine functions or action constants identified here.
    http://www.mindspring.com/~timrue/KNMVIC.html
    (USPTO published as one [#4] of the written responces to given RFC ***)

    This project in the Python Programming Language
    http://www.mindspring.com/~timrue/python/python- IQ .html

    Timothy Rue

    ***
    Issues Related to the Identification of Prior Art During the Examination of a Patent Application
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/pr io rart/prior_art1.doc
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/pr io rart/0714pato.doc
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/pr io rart/comments_book.doc
    #4-> http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/prio rart/comments.doc
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/pr io rart/comments2.doc
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/hearings/pr io rart/comments3.doc

    1. Re:Who and why support for Open Source Monopoly by 3seas · · Score: 1

      damn windows cut and paste....

      in the links of the above post "prio rart" should be "priorart" - so simple remove the space before hitting return in your browser.

      I also forgot to add that it's not going to be an open source monopoly but rather an evolving common and open computing baseline that competition will have to continue to be competitive and innovative in order to stay above this evolving baseline.

    2. Re:Who and why support for Open Source Monopoly by 3seas · · Score: 1

      Another set of links:

      http://www.google.com/search?q=timrue@mindspring .c om+software+patents

      Hmmm, something is screwy with slashdot adding spaces where they don't belong!

      remove any blank spaces slashdot adds to the url

  60. Re:Inevitable? Not how you think by ToasterTester · · Score: 1

    SGI was financial deep sneakers and in worse shape now. Open Source was just a jump on the band wagon move they hoped to saves thier ass. Same with Borland and most of the other large corporation "supporting" open source. Many are just offering lip service and waiting to see if supporting open source will generate sales of other products. IBM is the same thing, but they have very deep pockets and using them to look like they care. But if supporting open source doesn't sell hardware it will go the way of OS/2.

    Bottom line big companies aren't going to use products they can't get support contracts for. When things go wrong, they have to have someone feet to hold to the fire. Also open source doesn't have the facilities for research and testing on enterprise level systems. No, open source is going to be good for international users and companies where costs are prohibitive. It will help smaller companies with tight budgets, but that will be limited when they realize open source cost more over the long run than commericial software. A software support contract is cheaper than the salary for developers and QA staff to support open source. Open source has a place, but not the big place you think.

  61. Alas, it's not a natural monopoly at all... by davecb · · Score: 1
    Messers Hrebejk and Boudreau would like this to be the case, but they're only argued that one **might** occur, not that it must.

    "Natural" monoplies are those which arise because there cannot be anything else. For example, it's not credible to expect more than one hydro cable to your house, or more than one telephone company: there isn't enough room on the poles for more than one each. Heck, the cable folks often have to sue to get permission to use the other guy's poles... These are existing natural monopolies, along with water, sewers and the like.

    They propose that Bill has a natural monopoly, and that it will be broken and replaced with one where we are the monopolists. Well, natural monopolies are not trivial to overturn, so by arguing the we will overturn Bill, they're (accidentally!) arguing that he doesn't have a natural monopoly.

    They have argued that some of the prerequisites exist, but they've jumped from there to the conclusion that it does exist, without offering proof.

    A cople of references, findable via google: A Glossary of Political Economy Terms, and from http://www1.oecd.org/daf/clp/non-member_activities /dnme10.htm,
    Natural monopoly arises in sectors characterised by declining costs of production so that there is room for only one firm to exploit available economies of scale. Typically, natural monopolies occur in industries characterised by large distribution networks with substantial fixed costs, such as gas, electricity, water and railways. In practice, however, it is as rare to find examples of industry-wide natural monopoly as it is examples of perfect competition. Even if some parts of an industry have natural monopoly characteristics others may be potentially competitive. For example electricity supply consists of natural monopoly in transmission but potential competition in generation and the supply of user equipment. Telecommunications was for a long time considered to be a natural monopoly at least for the basic telephone service, whereas value added services and the equipment market are competitive. The creation of new networks for voice transmission has even eroded the monopoly of the basic service.

    --
    davecb@spamcop.net
  62. In recorded history? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about Hiroshima or Nagasaki? Or do you in some way believe that those people were guilty of anything? Those wer HUDREDS of THOUSANDS of REAL HUMAN BEINGS!!! Fuck your patriotism and get over it. 40 000 CHILDREN die EVERY DAY!!!!

  63. Using Opensource in projects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Open source saves our department enormous piles of time and effort. After building a dozen sites for various clients I wouldn't use anything *but* open source.

    The same here, the web-interfaced applications we put together are all composed of opensource parts, the only part that isnt, is the final layer that makes it *the* clients application. Using opensource also saves a bunch of money that can be invested instead into people and intellectual capital. At the start of a project I work out the cost that it would be if using proprietary solutions, etc Oracle, Application Server etc. I then use that cost to leverage more developer time in the project. Even removing the cost for Oracle on a small system is enough to have an Junior Programmer working on the project for 6 - 12 months.

    In my case using opensource has allowed me to be able to afford more programming hours on a project and still be competitive.

    mocom--

  64. Yeah, right... by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
    • "Update: 10/28 13:42 GMT by J: Little-known fact -- for important stories, slashdot sometimes runs duplicates to see who's still awake on a weekend. Nice work to those of you who caught it. See you next week. *sigh*"

    You have *got* to be kidding!

    More like, who's asleep at /.

    t_t_b

    --
    I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
    1. Re:Yeah, right... by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2

      Umm, they were kidding. Most people get it even if they don't write "nudge nudge, wink wink."

  65. Cost, not technology, will be the disruptive force by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Microsoft is trying to move to a subscription model with XP and .NET, ala AOL, then the future with their products is going to get very expensive, making anything open and free much more attractive to mid-size and smaller companies.

    An controller, what Petr and Tim are calling a monopoly in the sense of one entity setting the standards, is going to happen. And anything but open simply can't compete on price issue alone.

  66. IBMs contridiction by 3seas · · Score: 1

    HTML template patents:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/17/0052 32 &mode=thread

    This poses a big contridiction about IBMs autonomic computing direction.

    IBMs two faces? Open source and patented software?

  67. Re:They tried to legislate the value of pi, rememb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, you soon find out that, despite expectations, hundreds of steel workers and leather tailors know surprisingly little about running a car manufacturing company.

    But hey, who cares, right?

    "I propose that the company gives all the employees a new car for free."
    "I vote that our paychecks should be doubled."

    Is a pattern emerging?

  68. Platform software by Mr.+NetBean · · Score: 2, Informative
    Re the various comments "with an open source monopoly all the jobs would go away": Note that in our article, we were primarily thinking of and talking about platform software. There will always be a niche for software that performs specialized tasks (i.e. if I want a control program for my homemade veeblewhitzer that uses a propriertary protocol using parts of an EEG machine to monitor the my cat's water bowl via passenger pigeon, I'm going to have to either write it or pay someone because it's just not generally useful enough). I think we were clearer about the platform distinction in the original draft of the article than we ended up being in the final, shorter, draft. My bad.

    For things that are useful to a broad spectrum of people, open source just makes sense. For some things it doesn't.

    I posted a more detailed response to some of the issues brought up in the earlier conversation on Slashdot and this one here if anyone's interested.

    (wow, slashdotted twice...I feel special :-)
    -Tim Boudreau

  69. Re:No, Microsoft will rule by OsamaBinLogin · · Score: 1

    > 1.) dot net is still vaporware and has no installed base,...

    no. They claim 160 million users. Izzat more than Linux? Maybe that's Passport. Trojan horsed by the fact that if you want to install XP, want a Hotmail account, want an MSN account, etc, you need your Passport.

    I dunno, I don't think I'd enter my real name if I was in that situation, but that's john Q public.

    >2.) People are satisfied with your so called "second class
    >standards based Internet" and frankly most don't have the...

    Most people will go where Internet Explorer will take them. Now that MSN isn't accepting Netscape, soon IE won't be able to surf to Slashdot. Etc.

    Yes. Get alarmed.

    > 3.) There is plenty time to build our own superior open
    >architecture for any 'enhanced web' that...

    Won't happen. Guess what, Sun is trying this. But do you hear about it on SlashDot? No. Do you hear calls to support Sun's authentication system? No. That's because Unix people are too divisive.

    Linux people say BSD sucks. BSD people say Linux sux. Both say Java sux.

    Solaris and Linux are so "cozy" with each other that when I multiboot between Solaris and Linux, I have to move files to an MS DOS partition to exchange data between them - for this reason alone, Microsoft will never go out of business: it's the only way to get Linux and Solaris to talk.

    Linux CAN mount Solaris UFS partitions - read only. At least they recognize that Solaris UFS is different from BSD UFS. Both Solaris and BSD considers the other one to be broken. Hey, instead of building a "superior enhanced web" how about a "superior file system" that isn't fucking broken all the time? Start with the basics.

    I haven't managed to get FreeBSD on this system - just getting Linux and Solaris to coexist is like walking on eggshells.

    And bill gates laughs all the way to the bank.

    --
    Marketing-driven companies end up over-marketing their products. Engineering-driven companies end up over-engineering
  70. from the redfining-monopoly dept? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Red fining a monopoly, is Timothy suggesting a remedy? That's why he slipped in a -1 Redundant post.

  71. Re:No, Microsoft will rule by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

    Actually, msn now comes up just fine under mozilla .9.5 on my win box at work. It seems that my browser has magically learned the art of displying that page "correctly"...

    --

    Shift happens. Fire it up.
  72. The Power of the Purple by sheetsda · · Score: 1

    Don't underestimate the purple and light blues. Statistically, those are the squares people hit the most. They occur A) before "Go to Jail", B) before many card spaces where you can be skipped over them and C) right after "Go", where players are often skipped to. I'm no Monopoly champion, so this is just my $2*10^-2.

  73. The winner will be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which ever company that has a lot of cash will dictate what's the next corporate standard will be.

  74. Slumlord Strategy by dmaxwell · · Score: 2

    I've won games of Monopoly by snapping up those properties and throwing houses and hotels on them ASAP. Everytime someone passes go, they have to negotiate a minefield that could cost them a hell of a lot more than nine bucks. This income subsidizes buying at least one property from the other color groups so they can't turn around and do it to me. Come to think of it, parallels would be easy to draw between this behaivor and Microsofts.....

  75. Re:They tried to legislate the value of pi, rememb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Employee ownership doesn't obviate the need for trained managers to actually take the decisions, though the previous poster may have implied it does.

    I think a large degree of employee ownership is a good thing for several reasons, including the long-term outlook. The analysts who pick shares for pension funds and whatnot haven't got an oustanding track record, often know little or nothing about the industries they're investing in and more easily panic than people with a direct stake in the companies concerned. Even ultra-capitalist Microsoft, in the ultra-capitalist USA, uses share options to ensure employees have a significant stake in the company (it wouldn't surprise me if a majority of the company, or close to it, is owned by employees).

    Insofar as state intervention is concerned, it seems perfectly reasonable, in my opinion, for the state to take an interest in industrial development. For example, the British and French car industries were both in crisis in the 1980s, and where as the British government basically let the industry fall apart, the French ensured their companies were able to survive. What's left of the British car industry has gone from crisis to crisis, with an ever smaller market share at home, and even less abroad. The French, on the other hand, now produce some of the finest cars in the world, and Renault (the biggest French car firm) recently became the effective owner of Japan's number-two car company, Nissan. There's no doubt in my mind the French took the right approach, and the same goes for their state-owner rail network (the finest in the world), in contrast to the pathetic, privately-owned shambles of what was once British Rail. I could go on to point out that Airbus (based in Tolouse) is now either the number one or number two manufacturer of aircraft (depending on which numbers you believe), but I think the point has already been made.

  76. Open monopoly vs Open standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I know this story has been posted before. Also, I noticed that these guys were from Sun.

    But what interested me is that the current OS wars are similar to the internet protocol battles. The question that open sourcers pose by their very existance is: Should the universal computing standard be in the control of a single corporation (i.e. MS), or in the hands of a bunch of geeks? I generally land on the side of the geeks on this one, as geeks are generally more trustworthy, hard-working, and good folks, whereas MS will do anything to get a buck.

    So what I think these folks are trying to say is that in the utopian future, an open standard such as HURD or Linux benifits all, allowing the customers choice and more power over what goes on in their computers. Contrast that with Gates' idea of the entire world running whatever Bill Gates wants.

  77. "You want fries with that?" by raoulortega · · Score: 1
    Profit should be made with support and consultancy

    Oh, goodie. Software McDonald's-- franchising support with staffing supplied by min-wage comp-sci grads with B- grade averages. I guess the people who actually produce the code that's being supporting are to survive on handouts from (pick one)-- maw and paw, the university, the government , the MacArthur Foundation.

    This is the "open source" attitude that is equivalent to the one that says that developing countries should embrase tourism as their economic salvation. Both always seems to be advocated by those with the most to gain by that arrangement.

  78. Profit by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

    Profit should be made with support and consultancy.

    It's not for you or anyone else to say how or how not profit should be made. The market will decide for itself, as ever. Even now, Microsoft et al are making money... how are Red Hat doing?

  79. Microsoft would find it difficult by James+Youngman · · Score: 1
    ...to embrace and extend the web.

    Too large a proprtion of the webservers on the planet are something other than IIS to make it easy for Microsoft to fundamentally change the protocols. What they would find easier is to embrace and extend HTML. Oh, they already did that.