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Joel On The Economics of Open Source

Stephen writes "The ever-incisive Joel Spolsky discusses the economics of open source software in his latest Joel on Software column. Why do so many large companies want to develop open source software? It's not because they have suddenly converted to Stallmanism."

2 of 369 comments (clear)

  1. Inch time foot gem by jcsehak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There's this zen koan:

    A lord asked Takuan, a Zen teacher, to suggest how he might pass the time. He felt his days very long attending his office and sitting stiffly to receive the homage of others. Takuan wrote eight Chinese characters and gave them to the man:

    Not twice this day
    Inch time foot gem.

    The day in which you coded that software you gave away for free will not come again. A small bit of your time is more valuable than the largest diamond. It's limited and you can never buy more. Never put a price on your time. It cheapens it.

    (BTW, if anyone knows exactly which characters Takuan wrote down, I'd be eternally grateful if you told/showed me, email is jcsehak.at.yahoo.com)

    --

    c-hack.com |
  2. Software as a commodity by javilon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I most like of this theory is that hardware is a commodity today. If open source can turn software into a commodity, the real value will be in the people putting systems together (as the IBM example shows).

    Most of the slashdot crowd are technical heads so I would say that it is in the best interest of most of us to get GPL'd stuff working, with the possible exception of packaged closed software developers, about 5% of all developers.

    This way the money will go to us, instead of CEOs or marketing departments.

    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."