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Could Mono Kill Gnome?

Jrbl writes "NewsForge is running This editorial by Tina Gasperson about the possible implications for GNOME if it gets Mono (which allows patented components.) There's also a reference to this article at The Register in which Miguel de Icaza raves about Microsoft."

103 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. It may not kill a Gnome... by b0r0din · · Score: 2, Funny

    But Mono would probably keep one sick for quite a while...

  2. Sure Intel could! by NWT · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You say Intel wouldn't do that to Mono, one of the Open Source answers to Microsoft's .NET technology.
    Intel could do it ... they're fine with MS, and I'm sure MS puts Intel under a lot of pressure. Intel won't resist because it's (again) all about the money ...

    Just a opinion among others.

    --
    Life sucks.
    1. Re:Sure Intel could! by geekoid · · Score: 2

      so? Whats MS going to do? no longer compile for x86 chip set?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  3. I predict... by Hatter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    some forty jokes about mononucleosis and how it will just make you sick, probably not kill you. Yada, yada, yada.

  4. Gnome can't die by jdavidb · · Score: 5, Informative

    We saw those comments from Miguel a long time ago. He's not raving about Microsoft. He just likes .NET. So do a lot of us, and I'm a free software raving lunatic. Some of us even like Java. :) Representing those comments as "raving about Microsoft" is a deliberate misrepresentation.

    If you don't want Gnome to be .NET, then fine. Stay with what you've got, and if it ever moves toward .NET, fork. No one will blame you, but you may find that Gnome/.NET outperforms what you've got.

    1. Re:Gnome can't die by JordoCrouse · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you get a map showing you how to get to Grandma's house faster (but it happens to go by the wolf's den), do you follow it without caution, or do you grab a shotgun first?

      I don't think that the question here is if the .NET architecture is a good idea (it is), and if we should implement it (we should).

      The point of the editorial (and of the /. post), is to wonder if we are setting ourselves up to be eaten by Microsoft (or indeed, anyone who may lay claim to the Mono libraries). It has become clear that Gnome could be effectively taken out through the current licencing. Microsoft would love to beat us at our own game - and use its influence on other companies to pull rank on Gnome and kill it, especially if Gnome/Mono does becomes a huge success.

      Too much money is at stake in the next round of operating systems to leave anything to chance. Microsoft (and Intel for that matter) is setting themselves up for a free shot at Gnome if it ever starts threating the status quo. Thats scary to me.

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
    2. Re:Gnome can't die by ADRA · · Score: 2

      Ok, Mark me, I am nto totally sure of what the author was tryignt o get at, but it seems liek they are saying, The community releases software, intel changes a line of code, all of a sudden they patent the libraries and their process, so that the open source development community cannot use the libraries.

      Am I missing something here? The open source library is still fully usable, and the patent void, because of prior art, I mean it was released to them through that avenue ;-) Or, if they extend a particular feature of the library, and patent that part of the library, well yeah, they have fair use rights to do what they want with it, and block the community from using whatever process that entails, but that is how iot always has been witrh software, so why are they crying now that .NET is in the equation? I mean, they are cloning the JDK libraries right now. Are you saying we should revolt against the GNU classpath group?

      --
      Bye!
    3. Re:Gnome can't die by Steveftoth · · Score: 3, Informative

      If Mono/.NET actually proves to be a viable technology that speeds up the development of code for GNOME, then we will all be singing the praise of .NET. Otherwise I'll stick with Java/C/C++ for my development.

      C# is an interisting language, I've read parts of the spec, and it seems to not totatly contridict itself.
      In the CLR I'm not too sure how they can trust code, and then not trust code. It seems like the security model is not as strong as everyone seems to say it is. If you compile code to a native level then it seems to be much more dificult to check for security. One advantage doing all interpreted code is that the runtime knows what is being executed better. We'll see how they tackle security. I think that'll be one of the last features to work correctly, on any platform. The only people who seem at all truely concerned with security are Java and Web browser people.
      it is amazing to me how many security flaws have been programmed into Mozilla, Netscape and IE over the years. Compare that to the number of security flaws that other 'file browsers' have had.

    4. Re:Gnome can't die by Rupert · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Intel sends you a cease & desist. They also tell your ISP that you're violating their patents, and your ISP pulls the plug. So yes, there's prior art, but until your case gets to court (k$s and years later) Intel still has a patent. FSF may be able to fight that, but I can't.

      That's why this is a bad scenario.

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
    5. Re:Gnome can't die by MindStalker · · Score: 2

      Yes, but there is a difference between a quote and someone summarizing what he said. I'll go back and find the text later, but what he said was that he likes the .NET security protocols (not MS's security model as a whole). He tends to live slightly in the sky though in thinking that MS won't try to embrase extend. But anyways the summary is a bit misleading

    6. Re:Gnome can't die by 4of12 · · Score: 2

      [Let me preface this by saying I don't know the difference between .NET and AVaporWareMarketingPloy.]

      But it seems like there really are some good ideas in .NET somewhere, my free software zealotry notwithstanding.

      Can .NET provide the kind of common platform that is needed for a good interobject bridge between the current Gtk and Qt widgets?
      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    7. Re:Gnome can't die by lak3rs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The GPL and LGPL contain language with the goal that "any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all", while the MIT license does not contain similar language.

      Consider the following scenario. Intel (they asked for the license change so they get to be the bad guys in this hypothetical example) extends the Mono framework to support a new image compression algorithm and releases their code under the MIT license. GNOME uses this new compression algorithm in their next release. Intel then discloses that they have a patent on the compression method and demands royalty payments. What happens to GNOME?

    8. Re:Gnome can't die by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      Well, you can read the docs (somewhere on MS's site; I'm not going to search for it), or you can go check out the mono project, or you can go check out dotGNU, which is somewhat larger in scope than mono but also implementing a .NET runtime, or you can go read O'Reilly's books on the subject, some of which are already in their second editions.

    9. Re:Gnome can't die by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      Actually, that would be comparable to what has happened with Ghostscript. Aladdin has an almost open-source license for Ghostscript, but there is also a GPL'ed version from GNU. GNU Ghostscript trailed Aladdin's for a long time, although I think it has somewhat caught up now.

      I guarantee you that if someone tries any funny business, Gnome will fork. RMS will yell. I'll yell with him. But we won't yell long, because we'll just move our efforts from www.gnome.org to www.gnu.org/software/gnome/gnome.html . Remember, the GPL is an irrevocable license. Even if the copyright holder later comes out with a proprietary version, you have a perpetual right to freely modify and redistribute the GPL'ed versions. And I doubt the copyright holder can keep up with several thousand testers, debuggers, and coders who aren't interested in contributing to their proprietary product but are interested in contributing to something that is free.

    10. Re:Gnome can't die by blakestah · · Score: 2

      We saw those comments from Miguel a long time ago. He's not raving about Microsoft. He just likes .NET.


      Right.

      And pre-GNOME, when he was grabbing the torch, he wasn't raving about Microsoft either. No, he sure wasn't. He was just caught up in how cool DCOM was, and was all fired up on how to implement it appropriately in GNOME.

      AFAIKT, it is still pretty useless. But it is conceptually "the Microsoft way".

      Then there was email. Miguel cloned Outlook in Evolution. Microsoft KNEW how to make a good email app, so Miguel was going to make one too, "the Microsoft way".

      There is no person I can think of in Free Software development that likes "the Microsoft way" more than Miguel. No one. In fact, at this point I am beginning to wonder if he is on their payroll. First he was fired up to replicate DCOM under GNOME, then he was fired up to replicate Outlook, and now it is .NET.

      GNOME should support .NET. .NET apps should run by mapping function calls onto GNOME. Just like SAMBA should run on linux. But it has to end there.

    11. Re:Gnome can't die by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      Maybe you're right. But I often think about what would happen if there were a concerted effort to render Microsoft irrelevant -- by producing 100% compatible free-software clones of everything they do. Yeah, I wouldn't want to use it (I was a Mac user before I came to Linux. Still am, a little, since my email is all trapped in, you guessed it, Outlook Express for Mac.), but plenty of people would look at "Hmmm... MS's products, or something identical to MS's products for free," and make a decision that didn't include MS.

      RMS set out to duplicate UNIX, even though it wasn't his favorite system. He knew technical improvements to the platform would happen along the way, and it wouldn't be exactly the same when he finished. Sure enough, it's not. And we're starting to see the final effects, as one commercial UNIX after another starts selling Linux (IBM, and now Sun!).

      One thing to remember is that Microsoft is the enemy because they are a proprietary company. If (impossible though it may be) Microsoft jumped up tomorrow and released all their code under the GPL and started making their money like RedHat, they wouldn't be the enemy any more. Some of us might even like (parts) of their system and bring it into Linux and/or vice versa.

    12. Re:Gnome can't die by blakestah · · Score: 2

      One thing to remember is that Microsoft is the enemy because they are a proprietary company.

      I would have ZERO problems with a proprietary company that ATTEMPTED to use well-featured standard formats for exchanging DATA. Data can be interpreted as any format that is displayable only. Like, sound, video, streaming versions, documents, text email, PDF...

      I use linux. Other companies will make and sell software, and I just want to be able to interact with them reasonably.

      When a proprietary company makes data available to me only in formats for which they control the displayers, I don't like it so much anymore. When they additionally make NO effort to use interchangeable formats that are well-featured, I recognize that company doesn't care if its users can interact with any users of other software. There is no excuse for that - it is plain anti-competitive for ANY software maker not to make his data displayable using anyone else's software.

      This becomes really clear in Microsoft's case, because other people's formats are so widely read in the rest of the world. No one in the linux world has a horrible time reading pdfs (acroread, xpdf, ghostscript), or email, or word processing documents that are not in a Microsoft format.

      However, try to read a WMV/ASF file, or a WMA file, or a DOC file, or read a web page served by IIS, and there are LOTS of problems with accurate reading.

    13. Re:Gnome can't die by kubrick · · Score: 2

      The open source library is still fully usable, and the patent void, because of prior art, I mean it was released to them through that avenue ;-)

      The prior art provision won't help you if the paent filing was made before the release of the library as OSS. It would depend on the license as to whether undeclared patents may later be exercised, and I'm unaware whether the strength of any anti-patent provisions in the (L)GPL have yet been tested in court.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    14. Re:Gnome can't die by alext · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Mono is worthwhile developing even if it doesn't have full compatibility with MS dotNet Framework"

      This assertion is just as vacuous this time as the last ~20 times it's been thown into Dotnet discussions.

      Funny how no Mono proponents will go so far as producing a concrete list of requirements that cloning Dotnet (specifically and uniquely) will satisfy, presumably because they either don't exist or they can't guarantee to deliver them.

      The fact is that there is precisely zero benefit in cloning Dotnet unless it offers real portability for real applications. All other requirements can better be delivered using existing or emerging platforms.

    15. Re:Gnome can't die by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      Pet peave of mine. It's Perl, not PERL.

      And actually, to be honest, I'll go on programming in Perl (which is what I spend most of my time doing) and will probably never touch .NET or Gnome programming.

      If you're looking for a virtual machine, I hear you'll really like Perl 6!

    16. Re:Gnome can't die by blakestah · · Score: 2

      Why should GNOME support Dotnet?

      GNOME is free software. If someone wants it to run .NET and can program it, GNOME will support .NET. This is a gain for GNOME users - more programs for the platform.

      You can still CHOOSE not to use them, too. And then for you nothing will have changed.

  5. Sick of this topic already ..... by reaper20 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    /me thinks we've spent too much effort arguing about this.

    Ximian is going to develop Mono - that much is clear. It doesn't matter what anyone says, they're going to use it.

    Wether 'official' Gnome uses it or not doesn't matter. Enough people hate the idea that that probably won't happen. And if it does happen, they'll either be a fork, or massive exodus away from Gnome.

    Let Ximian do what they want to do. Gnome is GPL - what's everyone so scared about? We've got bigger fish to fry.

    All this does is provide - "Linux Community divided over .NET/Mono", "Linux desktop struggles" and "GNOME in Trouble" sensationalism for ZDNet headlines, and that's not going to help our cause one bit.

    1. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by zeno_2 · · Score: 3, Funny
      Wether 'official' Gnome uses it or not doesn't matter.

      wether Pronunciation Key (wthr)
      n.
      A castrated ram.

      Wether

      Boy, I was suprised when I heard they were going to use .net, but involving castrated rams is just going way too far!

    2. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by Uruk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ximian is going to develop Mono - that much is clear. It doesn't matter what anyone says, they're going to use it.

      The second part of that is wrong - they're a company, and they don't have the luxury like non-paid independent free software hackers of not caring what other people think of their project. Since they're going to be using it eventually to either drive revenue, or support something that will drive revenue, they do care what other people think.

      It seems that you're saying that they're going to do what they're going to do, so there's no sense complaining about it. I'm not sure I necessarily agree with everything in this article that was posted, but if there are dangers, it DEFINATELY makes sense to complain about it, because ximian CAN be swayed. (They're a company - companies tend to listen to large portions of their customer bases when they have to)

      Gnome is GPL - what's everyone so scared about?

      Aggregation of software! Your package foo might be GPL'd, and might be a part of GNOME, but if you base it on Mono and components written by Intel that have patent problems, you could quickly find yourself unable to distribute your application depending on what Intel wants to do with their patents.

      If a GPL'd application links to a library, or in some other way uses software that's encumbered, problems can spill over. So it's not necessarily safe to say that since Gnome is GPL'd, we'll never have any problems.

      The perfect way to avoid problems is to link GPL'd software only with GPL'd software that isn't covered by patents. That's *not* what Ximian is doing, and not what they have in mind for GNOME.

      --
      -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    3. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by curunir · · Score: 4, Funny

      involving castrated rams is just going way too far!

      Actually, considering the gnu logo and the dire predictions in the editorial, it seems strangely appropriate.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    4. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by geekoid · · Score: 2

      yes, but we should keep the discussion alive so people, and other companies, know that mono is not free, and may have strings attached.
      anytime anything has a negative impact in free software, it will reflect back to Linux bacause people don't understand that Linux is not the desk top. Like it or not,but Linux has become the Free software/ Open Source flagship.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by JoeBuck · · Score: 2

      You write as though Mono were the only software component that could be threatened by patent problems. Any piece of Gnome, or KDE, or whatever, can be so threatened, forcing you to stop distributing code.

      If Microsoft asserts a patent covering part of .Net, that may or may not affect Mono. Mono might have to rip out a piece of functionality, but it would not kill the project as a whole, because there is nothing patentable about the basic concept .

    6. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
      Ximian is going to develop Mono - that much is clear. It doesn't matter what anyone says, they're going to use it.
      If just Ximian develops Mono, then it won't matter whether Mono is good or bad -- it will never go anywhere. Mono's success depends on a larger group of people developing it, and it is pointless unless there is another group that develops apps on it.

      This sort of public discussion is how the larger community makes the decision whether to get behind Mono. And that makes all the difference. If it weren't for something like this around KDE issues, Gnome wouldn't exist (and Qt wouldn't be GPLed either).

    7. Re:Sick of this topic already ..... by plaa · · Score: 2

      And if it does happen, they'll either be a fork, or massive exodus away from Gnome. -- Gnome is GPL - what's everyone so scared about? We've got bigger fish to fry.

      Isn't there enough competition already over free software developers between GNOME/KDE? Do we really need another fork of GNOME in the competition? The discussion may be boring, but radical changes (like Mono) in the desktop must be made by consensus. That's what the discussion is striving at. Or at least that's what it should be striving at.

      --

      I doubt, therefore I may be.
  6. SlashFUD by Apostata · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm getting pretty tired of the trend of Slashdot to post stories that are not only based on very shaky and highly-speculative evidence, but are backed-up by old articles that have since been refuted/proven dead-wrong.

    It's one thing to accuse Microsoft of FUD, it's another to do their job for them by fragmenting the open-source/FSF/Linux community by posting this type of crap.

    --

    This wasn't just plain terrible, this was fancy terrible. This was terrible with raisins in it. - Dorothy Parker
  7. Could it? by swordboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Could Mono kill Gnome

    I sure as hell don't know but I'm pretty sick of watching the redundancy in Linux. Sure, most of it has a purpose but I might be able to use the damn software if people made sacrifices for the sake of getting a desktop product out. I'm not trying to start a flame war about whether it is good enough for *your* desktop or not so please don't start.

    What I would love to see is everyone who is working on anything remotely redundant to drop what they are doing, put their collective heads together and come up with a real competitor for Microsoft in something *other* than the server market. I don't care if it is a desktop product or an TV/entertainment product.

    There are too many unfinished products and not enough of One Good Thing.

    BTW - I mentioned the TV thing because I am currently building a home theater PC that has caused me much grief. I see that both Microsoft and the Linux community are addressing the market.

    10 to 1 odds that Microsoft finishes a product that everyone buys and bitches about while the Linux product stays in beta stage for years to come.

    Sigh...

    This message has been brought to you by the department of the redundancy department.

    --

    Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    1. Re:Could it? by steveha · · Score: 2

      What I would love to see is everyone who is working on anything remotely redundant to drop what they are doing, put their collective heads together and come up with a real competitor for Microsoft

      To some extent, redundant projects are a good thing. If two projects are competing, they can spur each other on to better results. Look at GNOME and KDE, for example.

      Also, when there are two projects, the potential downside is reduced for trying something new. If GNOME bets on Mono, and KDE steers clear of it, then if Mono turns out to be a bad idea, we can all switch to KDE. (But note that it might be easier just to fork GNOME and switch to the non-mono fork, especially for those of us already using GNOME.)

      But it's moot anyway. People work on whatever they want to work on. I think the world has enough text editors, but no one cares what I think; if some guy wants to write a text editor, he's going to do it. Free software, freedom. Nothing you can do about it, so why worry about it?

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    2. Re:Could it? by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      What I would love to see is everyone who is working on anything remotely redundant to drop what they are doing, put their collective heads together and come up with a real competitor for Microsoft in something *other* than the server market.

      You know, RedHat 7.1 converted me away from Mac OS. And that was before Sun's Gnome usability study. I'm looking forward to reaping the benefits of the work that's happened since then.

      If they're winning Mac users, how long do you think it'll be before the Microsoft exodus begins? (Hint, consider software license fee structures in your answer. :) )

      I'm optimistic. It's coming.

      I know the redundancy pains a lot of people, but it has given us competition that enables us to pick the best solutions. Sometimes there's more than one best and we hit a stable point with multiple alternatives instead of a monopoly. And that's (mostly) a good thing.

    3. Re:Could it? by ADRA · · Score: 2

      Not so much on the side of redundancy, since redundancy -can- be a good thing, but what is really important here is that everyone and their dog work on their own projects, and if all being the same are not nearly as good as they could be if they had a consolidated market, one being theoretically the best.

      If I, and everyone else wasted thier time making their own text editors just to use my new keyboard layout, or variable color scheme, or minimal memory requirement, or whatever, you overlap in projects by 90% of the work. That work could have come together to make a truly innovative project instead of just a half assed attempt to clone the existing norm.

      We need something like SourceForge on steroids, which seriously needs enhanced collaboration tools which will encourage outsider lone codes to work together. One of the things I hate the most about sourceforge is the lack of collaboration tools, which I think in Open source, that is one of the most important tools, that, direction, and standards.

      --
      Bye!
    4. Re:Could it? by Arker · · Score: 2

      If that's what you want, feel free to work on it, or to pay someone to work on it. Don't feel free to tell volunteers where they can and cannot put their time and effort. It's rude and stupid.


      Don't like a product? Don't use it. Simple as that.


      Trying to tell someone that doesn't give a crap about "Desktops" that they must work on one only works when you are willing to pay them a salary.


      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    5. Re:Could it? by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      If that's what you want, feel free to work on it, or to pay someone to work on it. Don't feel free to tell volunteers where they can and cannot put their time and effort. It's rude and stupid.

      "Volunteers" happen to care about what is being said about their ideas -- after all the whole project is supposed to be implemented by a large number of people, one that express their negative opinion included.

      Don't like a product? Don't use it. Simple as that.

      If Gnome just was a closed system and a product of some company that was developing it with its own resources, it would be reasonable. If it tries to be a framework that many people already use, they have a right to demand that carpet will not be pulled from under them in mid-development. Many people will have to make a decision if their programs will be made based on or compatible with Gnome, and it will be only fair to warn Miguel and other how their decisions would affect that. For example, if Gnome would require JVM or a even a single DLL that must be compiled with Microsoft tools, or will demand some hideously convoluted "OO framework", such as COM, XPCOM, DCOM and especially .NET support from applications just to perform their basic functionality and configuration, or any of that bullshit in session manager or mandatory pieces of its framework, I promise to never develop anything for it, never use it again, and delete it from all my computers despite the fact that now I am using it exclusively.

      And I certainly feel that I have a right to tell that to Miguel now instead of doing it later.

      Trying to tell someone that doesn't give a crap about "Desktops" that they must work on one only works when you are willing to pay them a salary.

      And probably no one should tell anything to politicians unless with regularly scheduled bribes? Gnome would be an unremarkable piece of shit if it wasn't a project supported by a large community. Look at CDE -- that's your "Gnome" made by a bunch of shit-headed companies (including such "intellectual giants" as HP) over, I think, decades of hard work. That's what you get when you proudly work in a vacuum, and all your developers care so little about what others think about their code that they probably write that code while sitting in Exceed or possibly even in Devstudio. That's what you get when "screw all the users!" is an acceptable attitude. This is what happen when the only recouces are 1. to beat up the developers and 2. start your own project.

      Gnome is one of the projects that started exactly because of this (and Trolls showing just a little bit of similar attitude at the time, but this is unimportant). So unless someone wants to repeat the history again, it's better to express the displeasure at Miguel's ideological decisions now than to have to fork the project, driving Ximian out of business in the process.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  8. MS advertising on ./ by RampagingSimian · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Hrmm...(offtopic?)

    There's a Visual Studio .Net banner ad atop the front page at 4:59 pm Eastern.

    Shall we expect more open and Slashdot now? :D

    [Granted, it is served through Double-Click. Does MS outsource advertising?]

  9. .NET Framework and WINE by rlowe69 · · Score: 2

    Most people are scared that if GNOME adopts the .NET framework, Microsoft will change and break things and general anarchy will ensue. I ask you this: how does this differ from the WINE project? Why do people seem to care so much about the .NET Framework?

    And it's been said a million times, but GNOME has not decided to incorporate Mono. Mono could very well stand on its own legs in any "desktop environment". It could fail miserably (doubtful). Why do people care about it suceeding? Because the Open Source and Free Software communities will be pawns to big business? But I thought we couldn't be controlled or coerced ....? Can someone set the extreme-pessimistic record straight, because I can't see any other reason to hate the .NET framework besides the fact that Microsoft is behind it. But even that reason seems a little petty to me - if you don't like the technology, just ignore it.

    --
    ----- rL
    1. Re:.NET Framework and WINE by fanatic · · Score: 2

      Most people are scared that if GNOME adopts the .NET framework, Microsoft will change and break things and general anarchy will ensue. I ask you this: how does this differ from the WINE project?

      In that respect it's not. I've long considered WINE a non-starter for that reason.

      --
      "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
  10. So don't use it by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article is very hard to read, as it seems to confuse patents and copyright in ways that are imiscable. I will try to lay out the timeline that I think she's assuming when she says "Intel, having gleefully taken advantage of the MIT licensing on Mono's class libraries, enforces its patents against every entity making use of its modifications, including the Gnome project, effectively shutting it down."

    1 Mono exists
    2 Gnome adopts Mono (a reach, but ok)
    3 Intel writes proprietary (non-MIT-licensed) components for Mono
    4 Intel enforces patentson those components and shuts down Gnome!

    Ok... so we come to the obvious solution. Assuming that #2 happens (no pun intended), #4 can only happen if #3 is followed by:

    3.4 Gnome adopts Intel proprietary components via Mono

    Um... *WHY*?!

    Of course, if Gnome implements these features using Bonobo and Orbit guess what Intel can do? That's right... enforce their patents!

    This is, AFAIKT, junk reporting. If I'm wrong, please show me specifically what timeline you see occuring.

    1. Re:So don't use it by Keith+Russell · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think what she's trying to say, in a rather roundabout, "let me adjust my tin foil hat" sort of way, is that there's no legal precedent for this situation. Is there an implicit patent license when patented material is contributed to an Open Source project by the patent holder? Look at it this way:

      1. Ximian adopts X11 license for parts of Mono
      2. Intel contributes to X11-licensed parts, including Intel-patented code
      3. Gnome 4.0 is converted completely to Mono
      4. Gnome acheives World Domination
      5. Intel calls in its marker on Ximian and Gnome, demanding royalties for that Intel-patented code
      6. Everyone gets dragged into court
      7. Miguel stands up in court and says, "Of course, there's Intel-patented code in Mono. Intel put it there in the first place!"
      8. Intel responds, "Yep. We did."
      So what happens now? Will the judge have a sudden flash of common sense and tell Intel where to stick it's legal briefs? Or will Intel's high-priced landsharks invoke some strange combination of DMCA, SSSCA, the Patriot Act, and a rider on some farm subsidy legislation to swing the case their way?

      It is a valid concern, and I would hate to see projects as significant as Mono and Gnome be taken down by it. But I think Tina is being a bit too alarmist.

      OT: This is what Slashdot's email auto-obfuscator generated for my email address:

      krussell@ mEEEsa.com minus threevowels
      Hey, Taco! I do not work for Jar-Jar Binks! :-)
      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    2. Re:So don't use it by gnovos · · Score: 2

      Intel calls in its marker on Ximian and Gnome, demanding royalties for that Intel-patented code

      Sure thing Intel, will give you 99% royalties on all the profits we get from these gnome binaries we sell. Here you go, here's your 99% of nothing... Aw what the heck, we'll even double that since we like you so much.

      --
      "Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
    3. Re:So don't use it by ajs · · Score: 2

      Your concern is valid, but ill placed.

      1. If Intel writes code for Mono that infringes on a patent or Richard Stallman writes the code for CORBA that infringes on a patent, it's still patent infringing.

      2. Once Intel notifies you that you're infringing, if you strip that functionality, you're not infringing. If you can't strip it, and have Mono still work, then I suggest to you that CORBA won't work either. In that case, the idea of an open source component model is pretty much dead until the patent expires or is contributed to the public.

      3. When you own a patent, you can license it any way you wish. If you choose to write reference code and distribute it under the GPL, that's a very valid option. Intel would be free to change the license, but anyone with their hands on previous, GPL-licensed code would... well, have a license. It really is that simple (IANAL). Could this be a test for the GPL? Sure, and that's a seperate topic, but one I'm not too concerned about. Why? Because it's in the direction that the GPL is strongest. The GPL is weakest in defending the code owner (potentially) not the user.

      4. I think she was not so much concerned about Intel contributing code as writing components that were proprietary and patented. Again, if they did this, we should all carefully avoid using Intel's proprietary components. Again, this comes down to sloppy reporting.

      I think this whole thing is a no-brainer.

  11. Rather paranoid by autopr0n · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally, I'd say this is a pretty paranoid article. Sure, M$ must have some sway with Intel, but Intel has been pretty active in the open source world themselves, going so far as to invest in RedHat and VA even. Linux on the server is big, and so is the money. Nothing Microsoft could do to Intel (rather then OEMs who license their software) could cause them to kill GNOME.

    Also, sun is never going to develop software that requres .net. It's just not going to happen.

    Other then that, what exactly about the MIT license makes it more prone to patent problems? Is it that MIT'd code can be patented or what? How is it that an official GNU project (as GNOME is) not use the GPL or LGPL?

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  12. Managed software by Latent+Heat · · Score: 5, Informative
    Having tried C#/.NET at the command line, the performance hit over C++ is maybe 2-3 (18 months of Moore) instead of 5-10 (about 5 years).

    Given that performance is not a show-stopper anymore and given that Managed Software (class library at OS level, GC, runtime checks) is the Next Thing (hey, there was a time when we though C was too much a layer over assembly language), your choices are Java or CLI/CLR.

    Java has some nice stuff to it -- friendly documentation at the Sun site compared to that gibberish that passes for documentation at MS, a nice software-engineered feel instead of that steaming pile of stuff that makes up an MS API (I develop for MS API's). But Java is Java and Sun is Sun, and you have to take the whole thing or leave it.

    Since MS has flopped this "CLR/CLI/.NET" standard out there, it really there for the implementing. Oh, the Borg we hear, we are about to get assimilated into the Collective.

    My understanding is that the effort is not simply to try to clone .NET but to implement an Open Source managed software thingy, and if it forks from MS, who cares. MS can have all the proprietary extensions it wants and we can have our own extensions. Why not clone Java? Sun won't let you. Why not invent our own managed software thingy? We could, but there is one already out there.

    1. Re:Managed software by Ooblek · · Score: 2
      I think he meant performance in terms of how much of an impact the CLR is having vs. a native runtime. Obviously there will always be applications for native code and there will obviously be the need for optimal algorithms. Also the mixture of CLR based thin clients to more robust applications (i.e. RDBMS of your choice) can probably be grouped into a set of apps where performance on the thin client isn't a show stopper.

      Now we can talk about performance and real-time stuff where performance is always a show stopper. However, I doubt you'll see a CLR type architecture used in an RTOS any time soon. (But, hey, I don't do RT stuff, so what do I know?)

    2. Re:Managed software by Pengo · · Score: 2


      no kidding, if I could write native code in a java like language for Gnome it would be great. The closest thing I feel the community has to a really good operating framework is kde. The libraries are all good and consistent, as where my brief stint with gnome was enough to make me not want to touch it again from a programming level. Maybe Miquel knows this and doesn't want to rewrite base gnome in C++. If there is a solid set of working high level libs that become the standard for the movement forward, who cares what MS does on their platform. We will have a kickass java-like language that we can write with against the base libraries.

      I personally just find learning a new API is too risk to put on something like gtk+ or other wrapper libraries.. if I am going to learn something, I would like to learn the source. And learning something that could help me in the event I had to write code for .NET is a bonus, it's reusable knowledge of a semi-standard (we hope) api. Regardless, like Java, it should be easy to bounce back and forth between microsoft and mono even if their is a virtual fork. (think java 1 / 2)

  13. Been here done this.. by agrounds · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Haven't we already seen enough on this drama by now? I mean, sometimes it's like a damn soap opera around here with the "he said/she said".. Let's see, Miguel makes some statements about the idea of .Net and Mono, RMS is taken out of context and made to look confrontational (OK! *More* confrontational) about it. Both of them bend over backwards to explain themselves and repair the appearance of any breach, Miguel comes back with a *very* lengthy explanation about what he meant and what 'The Register' had taken out of context for whatever reason, and yet we find ourselves looking at the same tired issues, yet again..

    Hrmmm.. I wonder what's on Jerry Springer...

  14. Why can't people see what MS is really up to? by Reylas · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Maybe I am missing something, but I don't think that MS cares whether or not there is an Open Source version of dotNet.

    Follow me on this.

    Operating System wars are over. Linux is making headway, and the courts are ruling that you have to open the source code. Microsoft has seen that revenue is not going to increase with the rapid OS upgrades. They want a month to month revenue stream. So they *invent* software renting. But this is not 'hey I am going to check out MS Office for a couple hours at 19.95 an hour', it is more like this as I read it. I need a new resume, so I start a wizard in Windows 2002 that helps me write one. So while the wizard is going through each part (like spellcheck, cover letter) the wizard automagically downloads the proper .Net pieces to handle each. All the while, your passport account is getting billed a small amout for each use of each different function. So instead of paying $200 for Office, you pay a small amount (say .10) for each use of the spell checker. So maybe this month, your passport bill is 19.00 for use of .Net services. Instant revenue stream.

    When upgrades happen, then you automagically download the latest version of the .Net function.

    Everything I have read is that Microsoft want to push this everywhere. They want this on every computer, every PDA, even right down to your cell phone. So I do not believe that they care that it is on Gnome. If the passport stuff is in there, then it just adds to the revenue stream. That is what they are really after.

    Plus, I see Gnome trying to implement the .Net Development part, not the .Net Framework. And, why would MS be porting it to FreeBSD if they did not want Linux to have it as well.

    The only interesting thing is if MS wants the passport/hailstorm added in. Then things could get interesting.

    Mono only wants to do the software development side, and there are a lot of nice things in there. It is the passport side that makes us cringe.

    1. Re:Why can't people see what MS is really up to? by Junta · · Score: 2

      Interesting point, but where in the hell do you see courts ordering open source code? Yes, they order it in drastic cases and the party reviewiong the code is really constrained in what they are allowed to do, you make it sound like courts are mandating Open Source projects for companies.

      Secondly, as far as OS Wars being over, nothing has really changed that much. The market changes the same way it did a few years ago. Systems come and go, just because MS is dominant on the desktop doesn't mean there is little change in the market. If you would qualify the market before as a war, it still is, but I would say any supposed OS "war" is a misnomer in any time..

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    2. Re:Why can't people see what MS is really up to? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2

      And, why would MS be porting it to FreeBSD if they did not want Linux to have it as well.
      Maybe because they like (and have used) code released under the BSD license, with it's permission to steal open source code and embed it in proprietary code, while they fear/loath/hate code released under the GPL, with it's viral clause that forces you to open up any proprietary code you embed it in? That's just my guess.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  15. Re:You are an idiot by Apostata · · Score: 2, Funny

    Dad, leave me alone!

    --

    This wasn't just plain terrible, this was fancy terrible. This was terrible with raisins in it. - Dorothy Parker
  16. Why we should not support closed standarts by senfman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My co-worker once told me, that OS/2 died because its windows emulation was too good.
    I think something like this might happen to every Linux Software. Therefore it is unwise to support closed standarts.

  17. The real danger by Ogerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    OK, my turn to play pundit. (-;

    It's one thing to support what could eventually be a necessary "embrace and extend" standard, but to focus everything on .Net seems dangerous for GNOME. Imagine that Microsoft really does let other people play in the .Net game. Consider the ramifications to the Open Source movement if proprietary software like MS Office or Photoshop could be used more-or-less 'natively' in Linux using the .Net API provided by Mono. Would laziness set in, slowing projects like OpenOffice and Gimp? Would people still use the free software or would they just give in and use what is more familiar? Without .Net support, people will continue to be forced to use Free Software in many areas, thereby causing them to learn new tools and break ties with proprietary ones.

    So it seems to me that supporting .NET is supporting the future of proprietary software simply by enabling it. Another sign of this would be GNOME/Mono moving away from GPL to a "less defensive" license. Microsoft knows that Windows could be doomed in the near future. They also know the power of the Open Source movement and that it has the power to obsolete their entire proprietary business model. IMO, they're using .NET to try to hook people into hybrid free/non-free software so that they'll still have a strong foothold no matter where the market evolves. And if the patent issues get ugly, we could end up paying Microsoft for software that *we* wrote. Sure, GNOME itself could still be free, but if half the Open Source software for it requires .NET modules from Microsoft, licensed at a cost, we'd be shooting ourselves in the foot. A similar analogy would be the DVD crypto mess. You can buy the media, you can write the free software to play it, but you can't legally use them together in the US.

    Let me re-emphasize: We do NOT need ANY proprietary software. We do NOT need Microsoft or ANY of their products. All we need is a stable user-developer community. In a word: consultants. That is the future of Open Source in the business world. And it is a good future both for business and free software developers.

  18. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  19. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  20. Utter rubbish by Colin+Smith · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Redundancy is good. Having diversity is a good thing, it's the sign of a thriving community.

    What will you be suggesting next? That humanity should take up wholesale cloning?

    Monocultures are evolutionary dead ends. Inevitably something comes along that devastates everything in the monoculture because it's all based on the same code. If you want to be taken down when that devastation is unleashed, be my guest. I'll take the other path.

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Utter rubbish by I_redwolf · · Score: 2

      Maybe you should learn the X command for cut and paste?? Because it works..

    2. Re:Utter rubbish by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Why would anyone want to do such a thing? It's like trying to "copy" AutoCAD drawing into Photoshop -- sure, one may implement it, and maybe AutoCAD already does that, however applications that use drastically different ways to represent their data must somehow force naive user to tell them how the data is supposed to be converted instead of frustrating everyone else with idiotic defaults.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    3. Re:Utter rubbish by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      You EXPORT it. Into a file. With all the options that you need. Then you switch to another program and insert that file into its document. Same functionality, one more click, much more flexibility.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    4. Re:Utter rubbish by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      You have a vulnerabilities in a spreadsheet and have graphs and averages in it? Where does the data come from, does the spreadsheet by itself try to exploit your boxes? And if not so, can't you just re-generate everything automatically when making a document, using whatever source that stores the data -- and make graphs suitable for the document, what unlikely to be the same as what you have in a spreadsheet?

      Or is it that you actually use spreadsheet to keep all the data (data collection) _and_ do all the graphs (presentation), _and_ keep all the descriptions (secure long-term "write-only" storage)? That's a poor handling of information, and the behavior of the mouse is the least of your problems. Personally I would just write a simple script in perl or php, and keep data where it belongs -- in databases, with properly assigned permissions, and presentation where it belongs -- in HTML, handled by few simple scripts.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    5. Re:Utter rubbish by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      could easily just use exported data - but I really like having the data linked live. While working on the report the charts are updated in near realtime from the original SQL queries. That means when I print that report in 1200 dpi color glory the data is within five minutes of being accurate. Is this the best way? Well, probably not. I had some nice little scripts that produced raw stats and dumped them to a text file, but you know how management is - they want charts and colors and exploding pie pieces.

      If you can get a data from a database, you DEFINITELY can immediately generate those graphs. This would be so far superior to copying graphs from a spreadsheet, it's not even funny.

      In the Windows world, I can switch between any number of apps that handle my data rather well (though I admit its far from perfect). Exporting to flat files, then re-importing will indeed work, but its far from real-time and its far from flexible in certain cases.

      If you have data in the database you don't even have to export it -- there are a lot of tools that will do that directly from the datbase on the fly, and they are easier to use than to make your spreadsheet. In your "Windows world" you simply follow one rule -- to do everything by a small set of huge overbloated programs by tinkering with their endless "features", even if it doesn't make any sense, and requires constant repeating of simple but time-consuming procedures. Unix users don't follow this philosophy -- they would rather get a proper tool, and make things work once and for all, so every report can be generated by just clicking on a button in a web form -- then your boss wouldn't even have to ask you for those reports, if this is the goal, or you can email him a link to the automatically generated report about whatever you wish him to look at. But no, in "Windows world" it's all about documents being pushed between desks, be it through paper, email or telepathy if one will be invented -- the idea is that amount of busywork is more important than the result or even convenience -- the more amount of mouse-clicking is involved, the better, and the only alternative the user sees is "exporting to text" that he is trained to be afraid of.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  21. /. pattern by ambrosius27 · · Score: 3, Informative
    GNOME has become a lovely *political* (rather than technical) topic for slashdot during the past few months. See below:

    The Mono controversy (with some RMS thrown in): RMS controversy (apart from Mono): GNOME is behind or dying or a slave of corporate masters (see also Mono controversy):

    Etc. Almost half of the past 30 news posts on GNOME involve a political controversy. Is this news-site bias or simply GNOME's ability to stir controversy?
    --

    ~~~~~~~~~
    dissertus scribendo latine videri volo.
    1. Re:/. pattern by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you kidding? GNOME is the most controversial project in the history of Linux because it was basically launched, at least at first, to kill KDE (which is the second most controversial project in the history of Linux).

      GNOME's GPL-ness and RMS-ness have been the subject of attacks and discussion and "I'm taking my ball and going home" for years now. Only KDE, with its former questionable-GPL-ness and non-RMS-ness comes close in terms of controversy.

      I would suggest that there has never been either a GNOME or KDE story on Slashdot or most any other site that did not start a flame war on the related forum. It's the nature of GNOME and KDE... because they are the "desktops of Linux" people have the perception that whichever eventually becomes more popular will essentially be Linux (for the average user) for the rest of time... that kind of perception of finality brings out all the GPL-crazies, anti-GPL-crazies, make-Linux-like-Windows-for-the-user crazies and I-am-anti-Windows-don't-do-it crazies.

      (Meanwhile, WindowMaker on the desktop has been silently winning in terms of actual usability almost since its inception.)

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  22. Dude... by arnoroefs2000 · · Score: 2


    ...even Jar-Jar could kill a Gnome.

  23. Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by SerpentMage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let me tell you of a little "problem". I am writing a shareware application. And in this shareware application I am saving data to the users directory. Since this application is going to be cross-platform I decided to write it in wxWindows. All is ok.

    But then I saw that the wxWindows call to get the users home directory was not working. So I investigated. It turned out that Microsoft "added" a new call to get the users home directory. Only this shell call will get the right directory. So I had to #ifdef WIN32 to get the right directory.

    What is the moral of the story? Without this shell call I cannot write a good app. Since Windows XP requires that I save my data in the user directory. I do not want Win32 approved, I just want my app to work properly. Now imagine this one call was patented or hidden or whatever. At that point mono is left without a single call. What does Mono do? Invent a new call? What happens then? I am back to C++ programming with #ifdef's. To be frank I would rather go back to C++ then start anew to be confronted with that problem yet again.

    Sorry folks Miguel has not learned from history and he is doomed to repeat it. Except he may pull down the entire GNOME project. Oh well c'est la vie that is why we have KDE!!!

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  24. More rubbish by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    I cut and paste between Gnome/KDE and X11 apps all the time.

    Kword -> Gnumeric -> Whatever.

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:More rubbish by Patrik+Nordebo · · Score: 2

      Start Mozilla. Start konqueror. Go to a page with a link in it in konqueror. Right click on the link, select copy link location, middle click somewhere in mozilla window. Result: mozilla opens that location pointed to by the link. Do the same in mozilla (except there it's "Copy link address"), middle click in konqueror. Result: konqueror opens the location pointed to.
      Drag and drop between them doesn't work, though.

  25. Re:Well, it's certainly limiting applicability... by Graymalkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why do people keep bringing up DirectX as a competitor to OpenGL? DirectX came about because developers were tired of having to reinvent the wheel whenever they wanted to do something more complex than merely tell GDI to write out a couple of bitmaps to form a window. Read the DX developer books (the Microsoft Press ones) they give a good deal of insight into the original ideas behind DX. DirectX was never intended for people to use instead of OpenGL, if that were the case Microsoft could have kept Windows from properly using OpenGL libraries. DirectX is not a fucking product they sell, noone fucking sells OpenGL. Don't compare oranges to bricks man.

    You seem to think .NET is an API like DX or OpenGL, some portions are indeed APIs but most portions of it are just communication specifications. This whole todo about Mono and thus GNOME being Microsoft's bitch is so retarded. It is much better to have software that can talk to a wide range of software as opposed to only being compatible with a narrow range of software. It allows for vendor independence as well as forward and backwards compatibility. If a bunch of vendors produce software that does FOO and are all using specified guidelines for FOO communication you can pick any one of those vendors (or write your own software) that does FOO and you aren't locked into using software from a single vendor. Using Mono and supporting .NET communication schemes GNOME software can talk to closed source software using the same schemes. A great example is GDict, it is only going to work with dictionary services that it knows how to use. A SOAP version though could query a server to see if it is running a service and once it finds out if it is it can figure out how to query it as to get the results it is looking for.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  26. Re:People in the know don't trust .net by I_redwolf · · Score: 2

    Again that's optimistic bullshit, YOU don't decide how this pans out; Miguel doesn't decide how this pans out either. It's Microsoft who will decide the future of Mono, it will either work with Windows systems or it will not. In the case that it does work, trust me; it'll be limited simply because Microsoft is a business they won't just let their desktop market get sliced into.. especially since they can have their cake and eat it too. If it doesn't Mono is Java with some extra functionality bolted in. Java is coming along, I don't even like java but in small doses it isn't so bad. There are many other languages etc etc Gnome could use for the desktop.

    Again, you try to spread an optimistic viewpoint about how Mono WILL BE; not how it is and you tend to neglect what we here at slashdot and the internet community in general already know about Microsoft, including the DOJ and just about anyone that reads a paper.

  27. Re:Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by ADRA · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, when you submit standards, you generally don't leave out a single system call to screw people over. The one way that I could see CLI screwing people over is the same way that java can, by tieing through the VM into the OS, making specific calls that are runtime determined, and cannot be pre-determined. So, yeah, it -is- possible to to screw over the 100% platform compatibility issue, but even without it, you still have a cross platform language to develop software from in an open source environment if you want to. Whatever Microsoft changes down the road could hurt portability, but it can never break GNOME as they have said here.

    As long as the currently submitted spec of CLI is patent free, there is no fear of loss, death, destriction, or the rule of microsoft.

    CLI will make it to Linux from Microsoft if you like it or not, but the question reamins, would you rather have it open or closed.

    --
    Bye!
  28. patents are unrelated to Mono/Gnome by markj02 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Yes, software patents can kill free software. That's a real, dangerous, ever-present possibility. However, that has nothing to do with how Gnome or Mono are licensed. If Intel has patents that cover technology implemented in Gnome or Mono, they can threaten or possibly kill the projects with those patents.

    The only time anything changes with respect to Intel and patents is if Intel explicitly signs their rights away. I believe that if you distribute your software under a GNU license, that means you give others the right to use your patented invention. That's a nice safeguard, to be sure, but it is neither necessary nor sufficient to protect Mono or Gnome from Intel.

    If Intel were duplicitous enough to contribute a patented invention under an X11-style copyright and then, two years later, turn around, mention that they have a patent, and sue for infringement, Mono and Gnome might have to stop using that part of the software, but I seriously doubt any judge would award damages. And the affected parts of the software could be easily replaced, since patents are not like copyrights or trade secrets--there is no risk of "contamination".

    Altogether, the article strikes me as being as the grumblings of someone who is just overly zealous about GNU-style licenses. Yes, GNU-style licenses are nice, but the sky isn't falling if something is distributed under some other license. The X11 license is perfectly fine for open source software and has been used for many projects (including X11 itself) that are a much more dangerous minefield of patents than a 1970's style object oriented language.

    1. Re:patents are unrelated to Mono/Gnome by markj02 · · Score: 2

      Intel could only pull this off for code they themselves contribute (if someone else uses their patented inventions, that's not Intel's responsibility), and that's the only code you'd have to rewrite. Therefore, you'd only have to replace Intel's contribute code, and you'd be no worse off than if you had written the stuff yourself from scrach. In fact, I think you'd be better off since a working module helps a lot during development, even if you have to reimplement it later.

    2. Re:patents are unrelated to Mono/Gnome by vidarh · · Score: 2
      If anyone write code that would be covered by any of Intels patents and submit it to the Mono project, or any other open source project, then Intel can sue. Which makes the point of the article completely moot unless Intel specifically contributes code it knows is covered by its patents without granting a license for the patents at the same time.

      You'd have to replace any code that violate patent rights if the patent holder goes after you, and that is true regardless of whether the patent holder have contributed any code or not. In fact it would most likely be worse if the patent holder was not the contributor, as if the patent holder actually did contributed code covered by one of their patents without disclosing that it would be very hard for them to try to get damages.

      But I agree with you that it's most liekly no big deal. Most likely the worst case you have to reimplement a module. That of course doesn't mean that people shouldn't look out for patents that may pose a problem.

    3. Re:patents are unrelated to Mono/Gnome by markj02 · · Score: 2

      You are repeating my point: the only way the license makes any difference if Intel tries to engage in some complex game of deception, and that seems just absurd.

    4. Re:patents are unrelated to Mono/Gnome by vidarh · · Score: 2

      No, my point is that the license doesn't make any difference at all. If Intel wanted to engage in a game of deception they could just as well have done so with Mono under another license.

  29. Re:Platform independence by I_redwolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Now one of the biggest obstacles to Linux that I see is the lack of interoperabiity with other OSes, especially Windows."

    I call bullshit on that. Linux works on more archs than windows does, linux is inteoperable with just about close to everything out there, we even try to read NTFS partitions.

    The biggest obstacle to Linux is nothing.. an obstacle that this community has been trying to get over however, has been inteoperability with Windows(tm) by Microsoft. THEY are the ones that don't want interoperability. Now that ties are seemingly broken as projects like Samba and Wine come along (because of Microsoft these projects exist, my deepest gratitude to the developers of these projects) here this .NET shit comes along and we have to try and be inteoperable with that?? I say, No. I'm tired of being yolked around by Microsoft. The Linux community, the free software and opensource movement is at a point now where we need and CAN start defining our OWN standards. It's funny people will believe that a company that has fought, extended and want's it's own standards so they work with nothing else all of a sudden want's .NET everywhere on everything. They submit some specs (not all) to a standards body and all of a sudden they are nice and want interoperability. I swear it's almost as if they have mind control over people.

  30. One Windows to rule them all. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    That's the MS mantra and just look at the devastation that any muppet who knows 10 lines of VB can unleash on *everyone* who buys into the Windows + Outlook + IIS + IE + Office monoculture that they sell.

    Monocultures *do* have lower costs, they can reproduce with less effort, but WTF do you think that sexual reproduction evolved? It happened because species without diversity get *wiped out* very easily. You show me an environment where all the code is the same and I'll show you an environment that can be taken out in one fell swoop.

    Just look at the world around you, all the interesting life forms use sexual reproduction to increase diversity. Life tells me that monocultures are the wrong way to go.

    Got it?

    --
    Deleted
  31. Re:Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Standards have never stopped MS before. If their monopoly was threatened they would break the standard in the windows implementation of the CLI. Code then would not be compatible with the unix version and voila they steer the ship back to monopoly land.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  32. Re:Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is the point exactly. MS is playing the standard supporters like a fiddle. They understand what is required to compete against Open Source. And sadly people like Miguel fall into it.

    I look at Apache and PERL and LINUX... What do they do? They make sure they build the best applications there are.

    Take Apache as an example. To be compatible Apache could have said, wow ISAPI is really cool lets build that and do a good job... What did Apache do? They did a rudimentary ISAPI, but kept focus on their API.

    Or take PERL. Sure there are PERL extensions specific to Windows. But the mother ship PERL (Larry Wall) is more concerned about making sure that PERL solves the needs of all its users.

    Maybe GNOME will continue since Ximian != GNOME. But with people like Miguel talking the way he does does not bode well. I am curious to see what Sun will say...

    And remember track record of anyone building a symbiotic relationship with Microsoft is 0!!! Microsoft is a dictator (their right) and there is no way you can change that.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  33. Re:Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    Two points...

    First MS did not leave out that single function call. It was added at a later iteration and hence changed the entire programming model.

    Second MS can and may introduce stuff that works best on their platform. And lets say that Mono does not implement those things. We would then have to write applications like in C++. There would be defines specific to the implementation. To be very frank I thought the point of .NET and this easier programming model was to avoid that in the first place? If I do not have it then why bother going to .NET in the first place? Better to stick to something like C++ and Java.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  34. FUD by Z4rd0Z · · Score: 2

    God damn, that article was complete and total *FUD*. It's either a case of someone not understanding the MIT license or deliberately spreading misinformation. And look at you poor people eating it up...

    --
    You had me at "dicks fuck assholes".
  35. Further Comments from Miguel by erasmus_ · · Score: 2, Informative

    I hope I'm not being redundant, but I did not see anyone else link to further clarifications from Miguel, free from any editing done by The Register. The link is mentioned briefly at the end of the article.

    http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-hackers/2002- February/msg00031.html

    If you're a reasonable and logical person like I hope to be, you reserve judgement until you hear all sides of the case. So, instead of declaring that MS == Evil, perhaps there are reasons why someone who is clearly is an Open Source fan likes .NET Framework.

    I realize his post is long, so if you're not going to read it, I see his key points as being:

    1) Increased productivity for Gnome/Mono development.
    2) Language independence, allowing programmers to continue to use their favorite coding.
    3) Better portability for open-source applications.

    "My experience so far has been positive, and I have first hand experience on the productivity benefits that these technologies bring to the table. For instance, our C# compiler is written in C#. A beautiful piece of code."

    Hands on experience! I think that unless you have had this with this technology, you may not be qualified to judge this decision path. Let's give this a chance, and try to be both passionate and reasonable in creating Windows alternatives.

    --
    Please subscribe to see the more insightful version of th
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  37. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

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  40. Thought I Had Mono For A Whole Year... by Peale · · Score: 2

    ...turned out I was just really bored.

    Schwing!

  41. Dealing with Mono by Dr.+Carl+Jung · · Score: 2, Funny

    as long as the GNOME developers get plenty of fluids and avoid strenuous exercise, they will overcome Mono. Recovery may take anywhere from two weeks to 3 months, though.

    --
    -Linux was for the masses, who spoke, and everything was crystal clear.
    1. Re:Dealing with Mono by scrytch · · Score: 2

      Actually, mono never really goes away. Some believe it's one possible cause of chronic fatigue syndrome. Must be, I for one am really tired all the time of the trolls that masquerade as .NET articles on slashdot...

      --
      I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
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  43. Re:I don't think so! by Jaysyn · · Score: 3, Funny

    Man, if I had a dollar everytime I've heard somebody say that.. :)

    You'd be a broke fucker on /.

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  44. Getting OT by G-funk · · Score: 2

    Here Here!!

    It's "Hear Hear", as in you hear what he's saying....

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  45. Very Bad Mono Joke by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    Could Mono Kill Gnome?

    Gnome should be safe so long as they don't go around kissing too many people. Of course, who has ever heard of somebody dying from Mono, anyway?

    *duck*

  46. Re:Miguel DOES NOT GET IT!!! So young and naive by jdavidb · · Score: 2

    Except he may pull down the entire GNOME project.

    How? Didn't you read the license?

  47. Go join the other team and shut up by cs668 · · Score: 2

    I'm sick of hearing about it.

    Miguel go join the other team so I don't have to read about you anymore!

  48. Have respect for Miguel. by Otis_INF · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm a developer on win32 platforms, so perhaps I shouldn't care, but I find it irritating at best that a person who put in so much effort to give the Open Source community the stuff they wanted, is critizised as if he's the lamest n00b in the world. And why is this? Because he's one of the very FEW on Linux platforms who has realized that today's way of computing is doomed and will be taken over by a new, more distributed way. Miguel took the brave stand to decide to implement a Microsoft based technique.

    Oh brother, now he's true evil...

    Get a life, zealots. If Mono kills Gnome (or better: makes Gnome obsolete), why would that be something bad? If Mono lets you run the applications you need, makes you use your Linuxbox the way you want and the way you need it, would you miss Gnome? I don't think so.

    Mono is a hell of a project to complete, a lot of subprojects of Mono still need completion. If you want Linux to survive in the new era of computing, stop whining and start coding.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
    1. Re:Have respect for Miguel. by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      who has realized that today's way of computing is doomed and will be taken over by a new, more distributed way.

      It was "more distributed" than anything you ever knew on win32 for decades already -- with technologies that have absolutely nothing to do with DCOM and .NET, and especially a lunacy that RPC and SOAP are. As opposed to Microsoft-world where you live, technologies don't appear because an ugly guy and a fat guy give everybody else an API to implement them. Technologies just appear when someone thinks, he can implement them, and distributed computing, done in ways much more flexible and efficient that nearsighted "frameworks" from Microsoft and Sun, is being used right now by many people while Windows monkeys were getting excited every two years after hearing each Microsoft announcement that the happy days of automagically working distributed object framework's days are near, and everybody should better learn COM sooner because this is where they are going to put it.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  49. Re:Platform independence by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

    Java was supposed to be platform-independent, too -- and, as opposed to MS, Sun actually wanted that to happen. http://www.dialpad.com anyone?

    Personally I know only one true cross-platform thing -- properly written C or C++ source.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
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  51. Why do you think the CLI is patent free? by Mr.+Fred+Smoothie · · Score: 2
    ECMA rules don't say that a member must disclose pending patents, only issued ones. And in the case of either, ECMA rules only insist on RAND licensing, which means free software developers can be hit with licensing requirements at a later date.

    This is how we will be screwed; Microsoft submarine patents. And Miguel can claim as much as he wants that "lawyers" have told him that the patent issue can be avoided, but that kind of assumes that one knows about the patents -- which in the case of "submarine" patents is not the case. Even if a future MS patent on this stuff turns out to be invalid due to prior art, WHO IS GOING TO COURT AGAINST M$$$$$ FOR YEARS AND MUCHO $$$$$ TO PROVE IT?

    Abandon hope all ye who enter here...

    --

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