'Shared Source' .NET Overview
Lisa writes: "As part of Microsoft's Shared Source initiative, the company announced Tuesday the public availability of more than 1 million lines
of Windows and Microsoft .NET source code--aimed primarily at universities. I guess Microsoft hopes to slow down academic support for the open-source Linux OS. Don't know why they expect this to work, but Brian Jepson has a nice overview of this shared source release."
Microsoft have released source code for years. For example the MFC Class library has the source provided with Visual Studio which helps for debugging.
> If you want to do real open source,
> do not look at the poison.
Eben Moglen, General Counsel to the Free Software Foundation, told the DotGNU project that programmers will not be tainted by reading the source, so long as they don't copy any of the code.
- Brian
Excuse me for asking - but I have to disagree with the author here. What does this have to do with trying to slow down the Linux OS?
.Net framework libraries, as well as a version of the C# compiler.
The source code that Microsoft has released (as Shared Source) is source code for the common language runtime and quite a few of the
This really has nothing to do with the MS/Linux "battle" (which really doesn't exist anyway, in my opinion - at least not officially).
Henning Same Shit (TM)