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Microsoft Targeting Indian Developers

Pranjal writes "An Indian Business magazine, Business World is reporting that in it's war against Linux, Microsoft is taking the battle to the Indian developers. The logic is simple. India has 10% of the developer population of the world. If a significant number of these developers commit to work on MS platforms then the number of developers working on Linux platforms can decrease significantly and thus the number of applications. As Dilip Mistry, a director at Microsoft India's Bangalore office puts it, "This country can affect our (Microsoft's) destiny." [Quote From article] Local linux user groups are trying to counter this threat by targetting school and university students and increasing the awareness about development on a linux platform. Read the full story here. [Nice cover don't you think?]"

405 comments

  1. Overseas by Prizm · · Score: 1

    Overseas (Indian and Asian markets) have always been one of Linux's strongest points. Hopefully this won't have a large effect on it.

    1. Re:Overseas by Dionysus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Really? That's not the impression I got. I went there 2 years ago, work related, and all of the engineers knew Windows, none had used Linux (or UNIX is general).

      I find Indians to be very pragmatic. Windows is the most popular OS, so that's what they learn and use.

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
    2. Re:Overseas by sbrown123 · · Score: 1

      I find Indians to be very pragmatic. Windows is the most popular OS, so that's what they learn and use.


      Yes, I agree that this is a product of many schools in India: go with whats most popular. It makes sense to a degree. Why, logically, go with what is not doing the best in the market? There are more jobs out there for Microsoft products than there is for Linux. If you had students and you wanted them to get jobs in the extreme job markets which exists in Asia what would you go with?

      Having a mass number of people does not mean more inginuity oddly enough. If so China would run the computer software industry. Asian programmers, IMOH, are less likely to take the chances thier North American or Europeans counterparts would take. There is good and bad with that. Its all a matter of opinion.

    3. Re:Overseas by Dionysus · · Score: 1

      Asian programmers, IMOH, are less likely to take the chances thier North American or Europeans counterparts would take.

      I would agree with this. I'm Asian, but went to school in Europe and US. Education wasn't about learning the tools, as much about learning the fundamentals. The knowledge I gained from programming in UNIX in college, could be applied to programming in Windows. I don't think the reverse is necessary true. An Asians are a very conservative bunch of people.

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
    4. Re:Overseas by Vendekkai · · Score: 1

      I manage a team of about 80 coders. The entire team works on Linux. All our products, carrier-grade critical systems for telcos, run Linux. What's more, Indian telcos (and our customers in APAC and the Indian Ocean Rim) like Linux.

      Linux penetration in India is growing dramatically.

  2. Is Cowboy Neal against the Indians? by Cap'n+Canuck · · Score: 0

    Oh, sorry, wrong continent.

  3. Nice cover indeed... by The_Guv'na · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...but which one's the penguin??

    Ali

    1. Re:Nice cover indeed... by sglane81 · · Score: 1

      Nice cover indeed...
      ...but which one's the penguin??


      The one with the spine ;)

      --
      This is the Internet. You can say "fuck" here. - AC
    2. Re:Nice cover indeed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't know... perhaps you should "talk to the hand"

  4. Already happened. by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's already the case that most of the programming shops in Bangalore specialize in Windows.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    1. Re:Already happened. by cheezedawg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Guess what? Most of the programming shops in the US specialize in Windows too.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    2. Re:Already happened. by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      Sure, but this story is about India, as if India was already a hotbed of Linux dwellers. I offer as proof of an absence of any significant number of Indian Linux developers the total lack of any Indian-themed Tuxes. Ever seen a tux wearing a dhoti?? I didn't think so.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    3. Re:Already happened. by cheezedawg · · Score: 2

      Yes- I think this whole story is dumb anyway. What is Microsoft supposed to do- encourage people in India to develop for Linux?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    4. Re:Already happened. by Vendekkai · · Score: 1

      Idiot. I can't think of a single Indian coder I know who wears a dhoti as a rule. You have either the corporate types who insist on formal western wear daily, or the casual, western, jeans & tee shops.

      Most coders wouldn't know how to wear a dhoti.

    5. Re:Already happened. by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      Some of the Indian coders of my acquaintance wear saris (and not just the cross-dressers). My point is that a dhoti is unmistakably an Indian garment, therefore someone wanting to make an Indian Tux would reasonably put him in one. And yet ... nobody has.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    6. Re:Already happened. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the ignorance about india never ceases to astound me.
      you have to realize that we are all either coders with dhotis, maharajas or snake charmers.
      these are the only 3 professions in india.

      ignoramuses abound !!

  5. Oh, Indian by binaryDigit · · Score: 5, Funny

    I first read it as Endian. I thought they were going after former 68000 developers.

    1. Re:Oh, Indian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't share your reading problems with us.

    2. Re:Oh, Indian by scotch · · Score: 2
      I second that e-motion.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    3. Re:Oh, Indian by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      LOL, I think they have already tried that...

      A good start is by popularising file formats that don't align dwords on dword boundaries (hehehe "alignment exception")...

  6. Re:Damn right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well he did! Read the F#*&ing papers!

  7. Re:Damn right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Stealing our fucking jobs and women.

    Just because you are unable to get either of them isn't the fault of the indians. It's because you're a loser.

  8. In Related News... by gmajor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In related news, Bill Gates is visiting India and gave $100 million to fight AIDS in India. Although I geniuinely believe Bill Gates to be a humane person (really), _perhaps_ this action has something to do with leveraging Microsoft position in the Indian government?

    1. Re:In Related News... by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well you know what the say around Microsoft. "A happy developer is one without AIDS". Yep, that's what they say.

    2. Re:In Related News... by donutello · · Score: 2

      Why would Bill Gates give $100 million of his own money to help promote Microsoft? Why wouldn't that be a donation from Microsoft? The Lord knows MS can certainly afford it.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    3. Re:In Related News... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the article:

      Gates, on his third Indian visit in five years, is also expected to announce that Microsoft is stepping up its Indian software involvement, a source close to the company told Reuters.

      Some 20% of Microsoft's engineers are of Indian origin and Gates said in a recent interview the company took a special interest in the country because of that.

    4. Re:In Related News... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's a bribe if Microsoft does it, it's humanitarian if Bill does it. The DoJ can't investigate if it's personal. The link is weaker.

  9. Re:Damn right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Congratulations on your most glorious FP, Sahib.

  10. Re:I don't like Indians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    those were Mexicans, you fuckwit

  11. Re:did billy forget something? by rmadmin · · Score: 1

    Tux actually looks pretty mean in that cover! Why can't he ever look that mean in the picture of the BSD Demon ass raping him? ITS JUST NOT FAIR!! :-(

  12. Donation? by gpinzone · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Makes you wonder if the $100 million he donated to India is really going to be used to fight AIDS.

    1. Re:Donation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course not. It's going to fight cancer.

    2. Re:Donation? by gpinzone · · Score: 2

      Let's see... Donate $100 million and he gets a tax write off, gets some positive press, makes Indian developers and their countrymen happy, promote use of products from a company he owns a boat-load of stock in... What was your question again?

  13. New strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, it used to be that third-world countries would get loans from the
    United States and Europe and then never pay them back. Now they seem to have
    shifted more toward trying to earn the money they would have thus stolen
    decades ago. That development strategy probably has a better chance of
    success.

  14. Targeting for Piracy and Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I first thought when I read targeting Indian Developers it was for the use of pirate software, not to woo them to use more pirated MS software.

    Also, what about price. I don't think the average Indian developer has $1000US for software licenses, it is more likely that the $1000US will be used to feed the family, etc.

    As far as Western countries loosing jobs, yes that is a possibility, but there is enough racism at least in North America that will prevent massive job losses. Think "Made in America", and also how many taxi drivers were doctors in their homelands.

    It seems that programmers are one of the few occupations that are treated nearly equal. In some ways this sucks for us, but at least these people have a chance and their education is respected...

    1. Re:Targeting for Piracy and Price by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      > there is enough racism at least in North America ... Think "Made in America".

      Typical socialist troll. There's nothing racist about wanting to support your own countries economy.

      When you see "Made by Whites" labels, then you can cry racism.

      The "FUBU" company doesn't count, though. Racism is apparently something only whites practice.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Targeting for Piracy and Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I didn't see anything socialist about that troll!

      Typical libertarian troll.

  15. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  16. bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by avi33 · · Score: 1

    in other news ...I'd hate to think such a benevolent gift has its roots in corporate strategy, but he didn't become the world's richest man by simply giving away his money...

    1. Re:bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      A little PR value doesn't hurt. There's nothing evil about it, just one way that the system works indirectly. Besides, it's not like an investment, per se. Think tax writeoff.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by ceejayoz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gates has a history of philanthropy... just do a Google search for the Gates Foundation.

      I suppose he's trying to follow Andrew Carnegie's example - be a ruthless businessman, but do some good with the money you earn.

    3. Re:bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Yes, he has a history of philanthropy. Just like Carnegie. I have heard that the Carnegie foundation was created after he was responsible for an industrial accident so devastating that the government was about to shut him down. So he decided to build public approval. I wonder just how similar they are?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    4. Re:bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How similar? I don't think they're different at all... score one for the parent.

    5. Re:bill's $100 MM gift to combat AIDS in india by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 2

      If anyone remembers how charitable Bill was before he was married (would not give a penny of his to a starving group of nuns) -- has to realize that it is his wife who has the kind heart.....Bill most likely grits his teeth as she peels of the checks.

      --
      (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
  17. Huge donation from Bill by davinciII · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Also noteworthy is that Bill Gates just donated $100 million to fight AIDS in India (and that 20% of Microsoft's developers are Indian).

    1. Re:Huge donation from Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also noteworthy is that Bill Gates just donated $100 million to fight AIDS in India

      Thanks for pointing that out. Nobody has mentioned that yet in this entire thread.

    2. Re:Huge donation from Bill by llamaluvr · · Score: 1

      While we're restating the obvious...

      Microsoft is a software corporation based in Redmond, Washington. They are well known for their popular Windows operating system and their Office software.

      --
      Insightful: 76, Off-Topic: 379, Flamebait: 24, Funny: 152, Interesting: 201, Underrated: 55, Troll: 9, Total: 896
  18. Linux Journal by TheJZA · · Score: 1

    Interesting hearing this news, since the new Linux Journal has a cover precisely targeting the internationalization of linux and how Indian, Chineese and other less supported languages are growing more in steeply in Linux than in any other OS. And how developers are building an internationalization of not just language but also CODE.

    --
    The JZA
  19. Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by abhikhurana · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think MS will suceed in this war. The linux groups in India are all small and pretty restricted in terms of their activities. And Bill is doing his level best to woo the India programmers. There is a place in Delhi where you can buy any pirated MS software. Everyone knows about that. But there are hardly any raids there. I think MS is knowingly encouraging pirated software in India, so that they can get more developers.
    Another thing is that software industry in India is mostly a services business, as in they sell services to other companies. They dont make any software products. Now its easy to guess what work do they get more, linux related or Windows related.

    1. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 2

      There is a place in Delhi where you can buy any pirated MS software. Everyone knows about that. But there are hardly any raids there.

      That makes sence, since the cost of MS software in most countries is like trying to save up for a car.

    2. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Funny

      Judging by that cover, I disagree. An angry 6' tall penguin should be able to gut Bill in seconds, not to mention swim at speeds in excess of 80 MPH.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    3. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by scotch · · Score: 2
      That makes sence ....

      That doesn't.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    4. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by mbvgp · · Score: 1

      If MS priced Windows according to the country then they wouldnt have so much piracy. A copy of Windows cost around 6000 Bucks there. You can probably feed a whole family very good food for a week(or maybe more) over there with that money. Why would anyone want to throw that much on a stupid copy of Windoze??!! If MS is getting developers for cheap from a certain place they should make sure they sell the product at a comparable rate in that country.

    5. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by Shamashmuddamiq · · Score: 1
      Depending on what you're implying, I choose to either not agree or to propose that it simply doesn't matter...

      Microsoft just doesn't get it. They've already got good developers (although their collective, relative developer talent is often overrated). The products that they make are always going to be fundamentally inferior to the open source projects because of other factors. As an evil capitalist monopoly that's interested in only money, they've figured out that the best way to get that money is to promise a lot, give very little, and screw their most loyal (and most likely, their most ignorant) customers.

      This doesn't have anything to do with their development efforts. They don't seem to understand that they can't put the linux community "out of business" by driving down their "profits". See, they can't even speak the same language! Until something better comes along, Linux will always be a thorn in Microsoft's side.

      --
      ...just my 2 gil.
    6. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by Pranjal · · Score: 1

      I think MS will suceed in this war. The linux groups in India are all small and pretty restricted in terms of their activities. And Bill is doing his level best to woo the India programmers

      I would second that. As a computer science student I have seen numerous seminars by MS promoting MS technoligies like .NET but I'm yet to see a single Linux seminar promoting development on linux platforms. The only way students in India get to know about Linux is thru the internet or if their profs initiate them into it.

      There is a place in Delhi where you can buy any pirated MS software. Everyone knows about that. But there are hardly any raids there. I think MS is knowingly encouraging pirated software in India, so that they can get more developers.

      ... and the biggest factor supporting this theory is Microsoft's India headquaters is bang in the middle of this marketplace selling pirated stuff!! How's thats?!

    7. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by slashdot_bites · · Score: 1
      I think he was trying to say that in indian currency, it's like 6000 units of currency. Sure, after conversion it's 6bux US...

      Moron. Get over yourself.

    8. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by slashdot_bites · · Score: 1

      ... and the biggest factor supporting this theory is Microsoft's India headquaters is bang in the middle of this marketplace selling pirated stuff!! How's thats?!

      Ummmm.... coincidence? :P Maybe the chute from the M$ garbage comes down close to that store?

    9. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by Suhas · · Score: 0

      I am an Indian developer....The place you refer to is Nehru Place in New Delhi and it is now the World's largest gray market for computer software. You can buy not only MS but ANY software that you want over there. Hell, I know of a guy who even sells SAP Modules in Nehru Place. Piracy in India is impartial to MS. The pirates pirate all software....

    10. Re:Bill doesnt have much of cometition in India by toolz · · Score: 1

      The linux groups in India are all small and pretty restricted in terms of their activities.

      Wo-AH! the "small" Linux User group *I* belong to (http://linux-bangalore.org) would take major offence at that statement, as would those in Mumbai, Delhi, Goa, Cochin, Trivandrum, Chennai, Calcutta, Pune, Indore, etc. etc. etc., that represent thousands and thousands of Linux/OpenSource users in India, and each of these LUGs results in more and more Linux/OSS adoption in its area.

      Any of the LUGs I have mentioned above are far more than simple "tech" groups. Very few LUGs across the world are as active (and more importantly - successful) as the ones in India, because unlike in the rest of the world, they actually have a "pretty fertile field to sow their crops in" (to spin an outrageously corny phrase based on India's agricultural heritage).

      If you doubt that, head here - http://linux-bangalore.org/2002 - and watch what is happening. Watch as this event develops, gains momentum over the next few weeks, gets support from industry giants and LUGs.

      Did you *really* think that Bill Gates is in Bangalore tomorrow morning because it is "business as usual"?

      --
      You aren't remembered for doing what is expected of you
  20. MS ins't the only ones doing this... by burnsy · · Score: 5, Informative
  21. Can we get a ... by RebelTycoon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    R'okey Dokey!!!

    Bernie num num!

  22. interesting by tps12 · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's fascinating to see these kinds of trans-ethnic business practices becoming a reality. To think that only a few hundred years ago, we were all in our separate continents, living in dull homogeneity. Now we've been thrust together, shaken up, and hung out to dry by the Information Age, and we have to adapt to a whole new set of rules.

    I'll come clean. I'm white. While I wouldn't want to lose my job to an Indian, I don't think that white folks have any more of a right to their jobs than Indians, or anyone else. If anything, the Indians are slightly more deserving, after we have gone back on so many treaties with them. I imagine I'd stoop to using Microsoft instead of Linux, if it meant I could stop working as a blackjack dealer. So please, try and offer a little understanding before ranting about how you lost your job to someone who happens to have darker skin. We're all people, too.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If anything, the Indians are slightly more deserving, after we have gone back on so many treaties with them.

      You fucktard, the article is talking about Indians from India, not Native Americans!

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

      Well I'm not white, neither am I brown, but it's just basic economics for most employers to hire the cheapest people, esp, when u can get 5 Indian programmers for the cost of a U.S one.
      Sure the majority of the ones educated in Indian are, well, dodgey technically to say the least, but most employers (PHB - pointed hair boss) don't seem to care. They think throw enough people at a problem and it gets solved.

      The nature of the IT industry is changing, it's like the manufacturing industry maybe 25-30 years ago. Back then a majority of goods were made in the U.S, now because of lower production costs they go overseas. Same with software development, even a monkey can write code these days (not good code mind you but code nevertheless); economically there's no reason not to put it offshore, technically yes, but unfortunately technies don't run the business world.

  23. Liar, liar? by og_sh0x · · Score: 1

    On that cover it looks to me like Gates is saying "Oh, no. It's The Claw. You're scared of The Claw."

  24. I want that cover... by wowbagger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I want that cover, either in printed form or as a hi-res JPG or as vector Postscript.

    Thinkgeek, are you listening?

    1. Re:I want that cover... by tunah · · Score: 5, Funny
      A vector postscript of Bill Gates's face?

      Who ever said microsoft wasn't scalable?

      (ducks) :)

      --
      Free Java games for your phone: Tontie, Sokoban
    2. Re:I want that cover... by bizitch · · Score: 1

      Actually - I was thinking we could clip that cover and use it to update the "Bill as the Borg" logo used for slashdot articles on M$!

      --
      ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
  25. You MUST be joking... by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This article (or at least its description) makes it seem as if Microsoft is hiring developers in India just because it wants to cut Linux's momentum. Excuse me? Would the quality of Indian developers have nothing to do with it? I know I am generalizing, but 90% of Indian developers who have worked with me are excellent professionals, and I think that anyone who is doing IT recruitement of a respectable size will eventually go to India...

    This article's arguments are as valid as if it were saying "Microsoft is sabotaging the open source movement by recruiting the best minds at the best Universities. Give me a break...

    --
    Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    1. Re:You MUST be joking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but 90% of Indian developers who have worked with me are excellent professionals,"

      And I guess the other 10% of them just stunk up the place?

    2. Re:You MUST be joking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You've had a very different experience to mine.

      I've worked for a company that shall remain namless but is a major employer of programmers. In recent years, they've both outsourced to India and shipped Indian programmers over to work with us. In all that time, I can think of maybe three individuals who were actually *worth* employing. Most of them had apparently bought "paper" degrees, based on their actual knowledge of the subject and quality of code output.

      There were at least two projects that we dumped the code submitted and just started over with a different team.

      They were cheap but, IMHO, they weren't worth what we were paying.

      Note that this isn't intended as racism or a flame; simply stating the facts as I've seen them.

    3. Re:You MUST be joking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I too have been unimpressed with the majority of Indian programmers my company has brought in--two of them to take over my job while I got shipped to the software gulag. And it's not because they're not smart guys--every one of them that I've met has been razor-sharp and so earnest it makes my teeth ache. Brains and motivation aren't the problems--it's experience. Never have I seen so many brainy dudes with almost no clue what they were supposed to be doing. Makes me sad, and not just because they took my job.

  26. Other MS/Gates & India News by primetyme · · Score: 1, Redundant
    The Gates foundation also just donated $100 million to India to help out with HIV/AIDS prevention and treatement in the country.

    I'm not trying to suggest anything devious here BTW, only pointing out that India is continuing to get a larger amount attention in the international spotlight..

  27. That cover image as a download? Full-size... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would be nice if someone could arrange for a free download of the full-size original of the cover image with the permission of the magazine, of course.

  28. Bill's Goodwill Tour? by burgburgburg · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    The NYTimes reported today that Bill is donating $100 Million to help fight AIDS in India.

    Goodwill? Being magnanimous? What does the article say:

    He said he worried that India's enormous progress in information technology -- the country has the only Microsoft software development center outside the United States -- would be thwarted by AIDS.

    Ohhh. Okay.

    He also wore a "tika" (the deep red mark on the forehead). Anybody have actual pictures (as opposed to your 5 minute Photoshop efforts).

    1. Re:Bill's Goodwill Tour? by The+Cydonian · · Score: 2
      He also wore a "tika" (the deep red mark on the forehead). Anybody have actual pictures (as opposed to your 5 minute Photoshop efforts).

      Blatant karma-whoring, but since you've asked for it, here you go.

      Nothing to it methinks, except for being a blatant attempt at positive Indian PR.

    2. Re:Bill's Goodwill Tour? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, here you go....

      http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articlelist.a sp ?xml=0&catkey=27953625&right=0&left=0&daysactive=3 30

    3. Re:Bill's Goodwill Tour? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, here it is.
      http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articlelis t.asp ?xml=0&catkey=27953625&right=0&left=0&daysactive=3 30

    4. Re:Bill's Goodwill Tour? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tika means that you are starting a new challenge or project. I would assume that a 100 Million dollar investment in the health of people could qualify. But apparently on this site it doesn't.

  29. Can we expect new variable names? by McFly69 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Instead of usign the standard variable names like "foo", "bar", "blah", and "temp", can we expect new ones to take their place? Like "mohawk", "how", "red_skin" and "white_man_bad" ?

    --



    NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
  30. Not a new thing by Moridineas · · Score: 4, Informative


    This is not a new thing at all. I was in India about 2 years ago, and even then I found the contrasts great. A slum to your left and right, yet hundreds of signs advertising C# training (Java training too) .. all kinds of computer skills (though I noticed a ton of C# in particular, this was in Bombay (Mumbai)).

    I would say one thing in addition--many of the indian developers aren't exactly leading Silicon Valley hot shot developer lifestyles. As such, they will learn what they need to learn to get jobs and get money--ideology has no place here.

  31. Here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow Bill is here in the US? Thanks to Clinton we have 5 foreign programmers for every 1 US programmer working. (He took the cap off his last day of office). Overnight the US ended up exporting over 10 billion dollars of labor dollars to forign markets with the programmers earning less than 50% of what their US counterparts "were" earning. 5 billion alone went to India. Too bad that is 10 billion dollars that US employees aren't getting. We in the IT field were sold out to cheap foriegn labor. I am the only english speaker in the programming department and guess what I just got today?

    1. Re:Here? by RabidOverYou · · Score: 1

      > guess what I just got today?

      Told you're an unproductive simp, pack your bags, get out?

    2. Re:Here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >We in the IT field were sold out to cheap foriegn labor.

      Now the world can get this software cheaper. Or the company can get higher margins. You lose, the world's other six billion people win.

    3. Re:Here? by Pranjal · · Score: 1

      That's capitalism for you...survival of the fittest. Stop whining!

  32. Consequences? by Wild+Bill+Hickock · · Score: 1

    I would think that india is already taken from Microsoft. Most of the students from India in my university are usually found to be using windows machines rather than solaris or linux or apple that are available in the labs. Also isn't it known that Microsoft already has a campus in India? The salaries there are so much less than the United States that many companies have people developing for them in India. I guess i fail to see how this move from microsoft changes anything.

  33. Bill Gates and India... by curtis · · Score: 2, Troll

    In light of the information contained in this story, the donation Bill Gates gave to
    India to fight AIDS recently makes a little more sense. I mean, I know that Mr. Gates is heavy into the cause of fighting global diseases but wouldn't it have made more sense to donate to the #1 country (Africa) dealing with an AIDS epidemic than #2 (India)? I suppose if there are more developers in India that you want on your side, then it makes more sense from a business stand point...

    1. Re:Bill Gates and India... by RedWolves2 · · Score: 4, Funny

      How can he fight biological viruses when he can't even keep viruses out of his software?

    2. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      but wouldn't it have made more sense to donate to the #1 country (Africa) dealing with an AIDS epidemic than #2 (India)?

      Africa's a country ? Yeah, the president said it, so it must be true!

    3. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I mean, I know that Mr. Gates is heavy into the cause of fighting global diseases but wouldn't it have made more sense to donate to the #1 country (Africa) dealing with an AIDS epidemic than #2 (India)?

      Sheesh, what make you think they aren't? Here's a clue: type "gates foundation aids africa" into Google. OH MY GOD! Look what pops up: A whole section devotes to Africa.

      But it's probably all about those African software developers, right?

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    4. Re:Bill Gates and India... by sql*kitten · · Score: 3, Funny

      wouldn't it have made more sense to donate to the #1 country (Africa) dealing with an AIDS epidemic than #2 (India)?

      Silly American, don't you even know that Africa is a continent, not a country? What makes you think you are qualified to comment on anything outside of Iowa?

      Fortunately, Gates does.

    5. Re:Bill Gates and India... by curtis · · Score: 2
      Pardon the slip of words while in between compiles...

      Yes, Africa is the continent but South Africa is the #1 AIDS country in the world.

      Secondly, I hardly think that:

      $25 million to #1

      $100 million to #2

      Is parity.

    6. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Zathrus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes, it's all a horrible and evil conspiracy, with the Gates foundation existing as nothing more than an extention of the Evil Empire.

      Get real.

      wouldn't it have made more sense to donate to the #1 country (Africa) dealing with an AIDS epidemic than #2 (India)?

      Ok, first off, Africa is not a country. You've failed 3rd grade Geography. Perhaps you should apply for some of the $1.6B that the Gates Foundation has given out for global education.

      That said - $5.9M over 5 years for research in Uganda, $10M over 3 years for African Children, $1M for 1 year for African First Ladies against AIDS, $25M over 5 years to fight AIDS in Nigeria, $7M for South Africa, another $1M for children with AIDS in Africa, and, finally, $50M for fighting AIDS in Botswana.

      Obviously the $50M for Botswana was to insure they wouldn't go start using Linux either. Good business strategy there Bill!

      Of course, that excludes the other $450M or so that has been donated to other countries or groups specifically for fighting HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis. It also excludes the $2 Billion for other health programs. Which, overall, is roughly half of the $5.5B donated on behalf of the Gates foundation for charitable causes around the world.

      Sorry, I hate Microsoft too, but this foaming-at-the-mouth, ad-hominum attacks on the Gates Foundation proves just how shallow and thoughtless a lot of the Linux fans are. Frankly, it's disgusting.

    7. Re:Bill Gates and India... by MaximumBob · · Score: 2

      25 million to #1, which contains 43,647,658 people is 57.3 cents per person.

      $100 million to #2, which contains 1,045,845,226 people (over a billion more than South Africa) is 9.6 cents per person.

      I would argue that there's some parity here. To say nothing of the whole "An ounce of prevention" argument - the goal is to keep India's situation from becoming another South African situation.

    8. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but there're many reasons to suspect that he's trying to purchase respectability here. It's an ages-old practice. (See the earlier posting about Andrew Carnegie.)

      I don't think it's reasonable to merely put *good* and *bad* on a balance. If *bad* is bad enough, no amount of good can erase it.

    9. Re:Bill Gates and India... by nagora · · Score: 2
      Yes, it's all a horrible and evil conspiracy, with the Gates foundation existing as nothing more than an extention of the Evil Empire.

      Correct. If you haven't spotted that then you are ill-equipped for the modern (ie post 1700's) world.

      Gates fights on a global battlefield, every donation buys influence at least in the form of a chat with the local PM, King, Dictator etc.

      ad-hominum attacks on the Gates Foundation

      Leaving aside the question of whether it is possible to have an ad-hominum attack on an organisation, Gates and his "wife" (what is the word for sleeping with someone for money?) are engaged in the never-ending quest to keep Bill at the top of the heap. Why? Because that's the way he likes it. Having built himself up from a state of great wealth (thanks, granddad!) to the leader of a company which is untouchable by the law or governments he is still trying to get more. Bill couldn't give two fucks about AIDS; he probably doesn't even know what it stands for.

      What he does know is that there are some saps out there that will cut him some slack because he donated six day's interest from his own pocket (minus tax-relief). Then after the handshakes and photocalls it's off to spread some company money around India's ministers to make sure they know what side their bread is buttered on and it's home to have a laugh about who he'l put out of business next (Adobe, perhaps? Maybe you, maybe me).

      History is littered with Bill Gates and they all had fans that said they were the second coming.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    10. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Zathrus · · Score: 2

      I don't think it's reasonable to merely put *good* and *bad* on a balance. If *bad* is bad enough, no amount of good can erase it.

      Who said anything about balance?

      The problem is the attempt to assert a connection between what Microsoft does and what the Gates Foundation does. There isn't one.

    11. Re:Bill Gates and India... by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      At last count, he hasn't been a biologist for not quite as long as he hasn't been a developer. However, for all that time that he hasn't been either of those two professions, he HAS been the guy who can pay the bills for those who are.

  34. Gates personally donated 100 million to combat by Real+World+Stuff · · Score: 0, Redundant

    AIDS in that country.

    Quite a formidable marketing move.

    --
    If we don't fight for ourselves no one will.
  35. What are we going to do today Bill? by twoslice · · Score: 2

    What we do every day Pinky, try to take over the world...

    http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/default.asp

    --

    From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
    1. Re:What are we going to do today Bill? by Valluvan · · Score: 1

      Lay eggs..? that's how the bulbs looked at first...

      --

      Science as a way of life.
  36. Hey guess what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gates donated $100Mil for Aids in India. It's getting redundant already isn't it. It has been mention on this page at least 30 times.

  37. Coincidence is sometimes scary... by Jon-1 · · Score: 1

    I was just perusing the NYTimes site and their article about the Gates Foundation donating $100 million towards India's plight of AIDS. This is the largest ever sum donated by the foundation. Then I stop by /. and read this.

    Scary I tell you.

  38. $$$ Talks by dnoyeb · · Score: 2

    Get real. This has nothing to do with Linux. My company is also seeking programmers in India. They are simply cheaper (at least while they are still IN India.) and are appearantly not inferior intellitually.

    Linux, puhleez. FUD

    1. Re:$$$ Talks by LordNimon · · Score: 1
      My company is also seeking programmers in India.

      So after you fire all your American programmers, who's going to have the money to buy your products? Where do you think the money you spend on American programmers goes? It goes into the American economy, which buys your products. Do you think the underpaid Indian programmers can afford them?

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    2. Re:$$$ Talks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if you're a representative, I'd surely be worried about their poor spelling and writing ability.

      But appearently that doosn't mater much, I gues.

    3. Re:$$$ Talks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "So after you fire all your American programmers, who's going to have the money to buy your products? Where do you think the money you spend on American programmers goes? It goes into the American economy, which buys your products. Do you think the underpaid Indian programmers can afford them?"
      Corporate CEOs are interested in fattening the wallets of themselves and the stockholders, not the nationality of their employees. Software developers are becoming a commodity, and if you really love the profession, expect to be doing more work for less money in the future. If it's the money that motivates you, be the CEO. As Mel Brooks wisely observed, it's good to be the king!

    4. Re:$$$ Talks by dnoyeb · · Score: 2

      Sorry. In America when one says "my company" he is typically referring to the one he works for, not the one he owns :D

      Of course I do not support the shipping of jobs that are currently American, overseas.

  39. Wasted effort? by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    What if Indian computer scientists in their effort to get the Hell out of India?

  40. who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the 'real' work is being done in China.

  41. Uh yea, thats the ticket by PalmKiller · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Most of the development on Linux is done by individuals that do it for their own pleasure or need, it is not done by sweatshops like you find in India for profit. MS is just going their to cut their costs and get rid of some of their high paid workers here, IMHO.

  42. Rediffusion by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Rediffmail.com is India's largest email server and it runs entirely on Linux.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  43. Re:In Related News... (scaremongering?) by gosand · · Score: 2
    Check out this story at The Register , which basically says that "Indian Health Minister Shatrughan Sinha has lashed out at both Gates and US Ambassador Robert Blackwill, accusing them of spreading AIDS panic." Not that AIDS isn't a problem, just that they are predicting the the number of AIDS cases in 2010 as a part of scaremongering that serves no real purpose.

    I am not sure I see the real point of this article though. I don't think that Gates' donation and visit would have anything to do with gaining popularity in India, but the fact that I even considered it a possibility is scary. Have I become that paranoid of the Evil Empire?

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  44. Better yet by Raul654 · · Score: 3, Funny

    What if tux sported a bindi?

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Better yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. Cavorting around naked in beaches is a better Idea.

  45. whats good for bill is good for the .... by chef_raekwon · · Score: 1

    Personal Tax Right-off.

    It helps m$ in the long run anyway, which means it replaces said money in a year or two.

    --
    We're like rats, in some experiment! -- George Costanza
    1. Re:whats good for bill is good for the .... by ceejayoz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A year or two? Gates has more than a billion shares - if their stock goes up 10 cents he makes the money back.

    2. Re:whats good for bill is good for the .... by donutello · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Geez. He has about $30 billion in stock options. Typically, when he makes a donation, he donates stock. The only tax write-off he gets is equivalent to the value of the stock he gave up - so it's as if he never cashed out those options.

      You're a cynical fool if you believe he's getting a tax advantage out of donating money to charity. Read some of his comments on the subject of charity. He is worth about $43 Billion. He realizes he's never going to be able to spend that money - that's why he's giving it away - and having the stock price go up doesn't help him because it's still too much money for him to ever be able to use.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    3. Re:whats good for bill is good for the .... by chef_raekwon · · Score: 1

      you're a cynical fool if you don't believe he has a personal accountant, advising him in the management of his money.

      --
      We're like rats, in some experiment! -- George Costanza
    4. Re:whats good for bill is good for the .... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      He has about $30 billion in stock options.

      You know, I'm pretty sure that he's got stock, not options.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    5. Re:whats good for bill is good for the .... by jpmorgan · · Score: 2
      If you look at the Gates Foundation, you'll see that he's already donated about $30 billion dollars to its capital fund already. I'd say he's well on track towards his stated goal of giving away his entire net worth by the time he dies.

      So he's not just giving the money out directly, but setting up an income investment fund to ensure that the charity can continue to operate for long, long after his death, bankrupcy, etc...

      What have you done for charity lately?

  46. Yes, but... by Kip+Diamond · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They only specialize in Windows because Windows is pracitically free over there. In the Indian IT world, no copy protection laws are ever respected, and the Windows XP devils0wn edition runs on every computer.

    If Microsoft began enforcing copyrights strictly for Indian IT companies, then you would see quite a switch to Linux over there -- and quite possibly a boost to the hiring of American programmers with Windows skills, if the H1B training mills are shut down because of it.

    --
    --- YEAH I SAW SPARKS FLY!! FROM THE CORNER OF MY EEEYYYEEE!!!
    1. Re:Yes, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Microsoft began enforcing copyrights strictly for Indian IT companies, then you would see quite a switch to Linux over there

      [sarcasm]
      Yeah- because we have seen such a switch in areas where Microsoft has been enforcing copyrights. Linux has gone from, what, about 4% market share to 4.01%?
      [/sarcasm]

    2. Re:Yes, but... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      So, did anyone call the Business Software Alliance about the suspected 50,000,000 illegal copies of Windows scattered about the Indian sub-continent? After all, they are the Microsoft License Enforcement Division, right?

    3. Re:Yes, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me, but that's just more uninformed bullcrap.

      Most of the PCs the software houses use have Billy Boy's crapware pre-loaded complete with the hologram. The guys using "free Windows" aren't likely to come over and take away American jobs.

  47. Nope MS, you got it all wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple already won the war there, everybody know that Asia is the biggest exporter of Carbon apps.

  48. Not gonna work.. by xchino · · Score: 0

    This may increase the number of apps made to work with Microsoft, but by no means will decrease the apps made for Linux. Microsoft's oppressive EULA's and overpriced licensing fee's simply don't make sense in a country with such a technological seperation of classes. After making such strides to bridge this gap, why would any moral developer commit to widen this gap by developing software that only runs on an operating system a majority of the population can't afford.

    --
    Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
  49. Maybe MS will make APU the spokesperson by zerofoo · · Score: 5, Funny

    After all, he does have a computer science degree....

    -ted

    1. Re:Maybe MS will make APU the spokesperson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > After all, he does have a computer science degree....

      Yes but his experience is with punch cards. Imagine trying to load windows into your computer if you have no hard disk and all you have is punch cards?

      Let's not forget what'll happen once Windows needs to start swapping?

    2. Re:Maybe MS will make APU the spokesperson by Cryptnotic · · Score: 2

      Computer Science has nothing to do with punch cards or SDRAM or hard disks or video cards or big endian or little endian or any of that hardware stuff. That's all computer hardware enginnering. Computer Science is all about formal languages and Turing machines and mathematical proofs of complexity and computability. Real hardware is often considered vulgar by the elite Computer Science people.

      --
      My other first post is car post.
  50. It's, its by grytpype · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    > in it's war against Linux

    its war against Linux!

    its: possessive of "it"

    it's: contraction of "it is"

    --

    - Have a picture

  51. Re:In Related News... (scaremongering?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just cause your paranoid doesnt mean they arent out take over the worl.

  52. pass the chutney on the left hand side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The richest man in the world in one of the poorest countries in the world.

    "Oh look Rajiv, there is Bill Gates! Look at how plump he looks! Get the sharp sticks, we're having vindaloo tonight ..."

  53. Let it not be said by RealTimeFreeAgent · · Score: 1

    that slashdotters can't see that every silver lining has a gray cloud. I imagine in a story "Bill Gates Donates Kidney to Complete Stranger," you'll have a dozen posters saying that "M$" will go to any lengths to keep people from migrating to Windows.

    --
    "You get what you pay for after all." --
  54. Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by malakai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Jesus, this is low for even slashdot.

    The guy and his wife are pledging 100x what most countries gave to the African AIDS epidemic (Italy: 1.3million). And somehow you have to tie this to some sort of anti-linux campaign.

    Get real. The linux community over values itself if it thinks gates is going about eroding linux support by saving lives and preventing epidemics.

    You think the $250+ million he dumped into Africa was to squash the burgeoning Linux user groups starting to take hold in Kenya?

    Learn to draw the line guys. From early on the Gates Foundation has been doing about 50% of its donations to Global Health. So far that's like 2.7 billion. You don't have to like him, but you certainly don't have to belittle his philanthropic work.

    -malakai

    1. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Malcontent · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "but you certainly don't have to belittle his philanthropic work. "

      Why not? If he calls charitable work by open source developers "communist" and "cancer" why should he be immune from the same kind of criticism? Besides he is the richest man in the world what the fuck does he care what anybody on slashdot says about him?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    2. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda of an odd conincidence though, I read the story about Bill's donation and thought "That's kind of odd, I am sure there are other countries in Africa that could use $100 million a lot more on an already bad crisis, as opposed to preventative measures in a country that does not have a crisis". Then I read this story and I have to wonder. That's not low, that's just good PR

    3. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by dj28 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Why not? If he calls charitable work by open source developers "communist" and "cancer" why should he be immune from the same kind of criticism?"

      Um, because what he does actually saves starving people and other individuals dying of AIDS. Are you trying to draw a parallel between open source code and truly massive amounts of money given to charitable causes? I sure hope you don't speak for the majority of slashdot. And to whomever modded this up: shame on you.

    4. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by spectecjr · · Score: 0, Troll

      "but you certainly don't have to belittle his philanthropic work. "

      Why not? If he calls charitable work by open source developers "communist" and "cancer" why should he be immune from the same kind of criticism? Besides he is the richest man in the world what the fuck does he care what anybody on slashdot says about him?


      When was the last time someone didn't starve because someone else wrote a new text editor and gave it away with the proviso that if anyone else does anything with it, they have to give away their work for free too?

      Get a sense of perspective you fucking muppet.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    5. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by thoolihan · · Score: 0, Troll

      Um, because what he does actually saves starving people and other...

      But what do they do when the money runs out? Free information doesn't run out.

      Paraphrasing: ...give a person a fish and they'll be full for today, teach them to fish and they'll be full for a lifetime...

      --
      http://unmoldable.com W:"No one of consequence" I:"I must know" W:"Get used to disappointment"
    6. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by malakai · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I wish to read where Bill Gates called "charitable work by open source developers" "communist" and "cancer". Please provide a reference to the quote so I can better understand your point of view.

      Besides he is the richest man in the world what the fuck does he care what anybody on slashdot says about him?

      He doesn't. I do. I have this code of conduct, or morality, that seems hard to get rid of. I by default attempt to stick up for people being attacked. I try to lay out facts when I see someone being smeared by unqualified "truts".

      I try to do this in such a way as to create a glass box around the situation and allow others to decide how they feel based on open accepted facts.

      Call me the open source debater. This witch hunt mentality of "he's evil, because he's evil" is simple to propagate, and will net you karma points in the /. world, but overall _is_ a cancer to our society.

      -malakai
    7. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by spectecjr · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      But what do they do when the money runs out? Free information doesn't run out.

      Paraphrasing: ...give a person a fish and they'll be full for today, teach them to fish and they'll be full for a lifetime...


      GPL'd computer software has fuck all to do with medicine, dickwad. Or are you proposing a GPL'd drug system?

      Get a fucking clue. Software is not important in the large scheme of things.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    8. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      " I wish to read where Bill Gates called "charitable work by open source developers" "communist" and "cancer". Please provide a reference to the quote so I can better understand your point of view."

      Isn't most work being done on open source products (that make it back to the community) charitable work?

    9. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by incuo · · Score: 1

      I believe he's `humane', surely. Yes, he has the look of a `nice guy'. Sure.

      I also believe he's also a thief/monopolist/good businessman/etc. You know the stories about DOS, Mac, etc.

      So, every Gates Foundation donation I believe carries both sides of the Gates coin: its humane side, and its `dark' side.

      Let's be honest.

      Everything he does must be taken with a little bit of suspicion at least.

    10. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering that he did not donate prior to Melinda (his market-oriented wife), I am not surprised to see ppl complain about it. In the past, he said that after he died, that contributions would start. For some reason, he changed his mind.
      Personally, I do not care. It is his money and if he is using it to buy his way, that is his choice.

    11. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll troll troll. When was the last time someone selling bottled water starved because someone else was practically giving away for free?

    12. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Umnh... I'll make a wild guess. Yesterday.

      When you reduce the cost of the tools that a craftsman uses to earn his livlihood, you increase the number of people who are able to earn their livlihood that way. That's why professional associaltions commonly make it more expensive to become a member of the profession (by decreasing the number of people who can be professionals, they can raise their prices).

      OTOH, it also makes it quite difficult for one to earn a living selling text editors. Though some people still do.

      This is kind of like the "teach a man to fish" argument. If you give a man $100, and he needs $1 a day to live on, that will last him less than a year. But if you teach him an employable skill, and give him access to the tools, then he can earn his living as long as he can. So which is more generous?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    13. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Informative

      But what do they do when the money runs out?

      The foundation has around 21 BILLION dollars. Invested properly, they will never run out of money.

      Free information doesn't run out.

      But that doesn't mean most information is valuable. And almost no information is valuable without resources to use it.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    14. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by thoolihan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your colorful langauage adds a lot to the logic of your argument. Try following this...

      Free software --> Ability for poor countries to develop programmers --> Jobs --> Better Economy --> money for hospitals, doctors, medicine, HMO's

      Free software opens up job opportunities to all, not just those who can afford m$ software. And if you don't think a countries economy can be tied to the health care of a citizens, then you write at the same age-level you think.

      --
      http://unmoldable.com W:"No one of consequence" I:"I must know" W:"Get used to disappointment"
    15. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by nicodaemos · · Score: 2, Funny
      From the Bay Area article:


      [Gates] said he worried that India's enormous progress in information technology - the country has the only Microsoft software development center outside the United States - would be thwarted by AIDS.


      Researchers have yet to prove that the AIDS virus is not spread through Microsoft Outlook.

      India is using and developing MS products.

      Bill realizes that unless drastic steps are taken, enough Indian programmers may not live long enough to create the next version of clippy.

    16. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's kind of difficult for a child to "learn to immunize himself", which is where most of the Gates Foundation's funds go it.

      But beyond that, you might look at how much of the foundation's money goes to education.

      You might read through the the Foundation's Web Site sometime. Gates agrees with you -- he invests his money in things that have long-term payouts, not single day handouts.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    17. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by zapfie · · Score: 2

      It's futile trying to convince him. Obviously money is useless and we should eat and live in free information instead.

      To parent's parent post: Free information is all well and good, but it's not an solution to the worlds problems. Try going naked into the desert and living off of "free information" for a month.

      --
      slashdot!=valid HTML
    18. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by ScottKin · · Score: 0
      "Why not? If he calls charitable work by open source developers "communist" and "cancer" why should he be immune from the same kind of criticism? Besides he is the richest man in the world what the f__k does he care what anybody on slashdot says about him?"

      It's the brand of bovine fertilizer pushed by "Malcontent" that continues to errode any sense of reasonablility of the Linux/Open Source Community. They belittle someone because he happens to be the richest man in the world and that he got their by selling something that's been in the market longer than the product they're making, regardless if he GIVES HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF HIS MONEY AWAY. How much has Linus or RMS given away to charities in comparison to what Bill & Melinda Gates donate to charity?

      Anyone who even TRIES to connect the MILLIONS OF DOLLARS that they give-away to charity to some obscene connection to Microsoft sales needs to be either taken out and LYNCHED or HAVE THEIR HEAD EXAMINED!

      PATHETIC PUTZES!!! SCREW YOUR CYNICISM!

      ScottKin

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
    19. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      his market-oriented wife

      What's a "market-oriented" wife??

      In the past, he said that after he died, that contributions would start. For some reason, he changed his mind.

      No, in the past he said that he wasn't going to invest his money until later in life, not after life. His point at the time was that he just didn't know what to do with the money. He could have just done what a lot of people do and just dump money into holes that don't do anything, but I give him big props for actually thinking about the problem before just spraying money everywhere.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    20. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      1 second ago. Linux and OSS is making possible technology everywhere. See the problem in developing countries is not ease of use, but one of cost. It cost money to buy hardware, software, and run them. Hardware is actually quite cheap right now. Unfortunatly, the MS/Apple Software cost is outragous and literally killing ppl (that is money that could go to developing there own internal businesses).

      BTW, the Intel/AMD line of chips use exhorbarant amounts of energy which in a developing world is still very costly to buy and horribly dirty (pollution from plants are equal to USA's plants from the 50's - the Bush League is very proud). Many of the chips that Linux/BSD run on, are quite a bit more energy conscious.

    21. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by ScottKin · · Score: 0

      Not unless you're getting hard dollars from some charitable source for support of your project. What the Open Source community does is, quite simply, "volunteerism" - which is a very noble cause in and of itself.

      If more people were involved in some sort of "volunteer" activities (whether it be Open Source coding, The Red Cross/Red Crescent, or community shelters) there would be a whole bunch of people who would be less miserable in this world.

      It's just too sad that some "Open Source Advocates" are so lacking in interpersonal skills and tact, and are filled with mis-guided venom and anger towards Microsoft and Bill Gates; their vitriol, if allowed to run un-checked will be the death-knell for Open Source as a viable option.

      ScottKin

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
    22. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think he meant marketting, as in PR. Not really a valid point, but fuckwits will be fuckwits.

    23. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      te he, try living naked in the desert with only greenbacks for a month, information allows you to know what to do, money, well it doesn't even burn good, though better than information, and it get pretty damn cold at night in the desert.

    24. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "...You think the $250+ million he dumped into Africa was to squash the burgeoning Linux user groups starting to take hold in Kenya?..."
      Any Kenyans here? I rest my case!

      [Seriously, I agree... while I despise Microsoft's business practices, one cannot deny that the Gates Foundation isn't doing a great deal of good.]
    25. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Cheese+Cracker · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      he does actually saves starving people and other individuals dying of AIDS.

      Since when is there a cure for AIDS? And on another note... If Saddam Hussein donated some millions to the starving kids in Africa, does that make him a good person?

    26. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's just typical robber-baron guilt kicking in. He has to give some money away so he can sleep at night.

    27. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by El · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's what I've been telling people... 100 years from now Gates won't be remembered as the founder of Microsoft... He'll be remembered as the founder of the Gates Foundation, and revered for what that foundation has accomplished (which hopefully will include stamping out AIDS). Basically he's following the Andrew Carnegie model... Hmm, will we someday see a Gates Unverisity?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    28. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So you would like all of us to believe that software has no place in a clinic or a hospital? You would have us believe that medical facilities do not have any use for computer hardware nor for potentially expensive commercial software? You would also have us believe that there is no place for embedded process control software in a hospital?

      Less money spent on computing is more money that can be spent on other things. There is information to be processed by the medical sector of an economy whether you seem to be aware of it or not.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    29. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 2

      If Saddam Hussein donated some millions to the starving kids in Africa

      Yes

    30. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you rape, pillage and plunder in order to amass a fortune, it doesn't really matter much that you've decided to be a nice guy afterwards. The economic and social cost of previous misdeeds remain.

      The Robber Baron still remains a thief.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    31. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      The most common chips that Linux/BSD run on are x86's (Intel/AMD).

    32. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      Their lifetime might be pretty damn short if they catch nasty diseases -- which "free software" doesn't do anything to prevent.

      Hmmm... health care such as vaccinations and AIDS treatment, or free software. I think the former is /far/ more important right now.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    33. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Stonehand · · Score: 3

      Knowledge is useless without tools.

      Please inject yourself with a bubonic plague virus, and lock yourself in a room for a week with nothing but a book on epidemology. Have fun curing yourself with nothing but knowledge.

      Gates's foundation, on the other hand, contributes solutions instead of saying "Here's some code, and if you don't like what it does, you can rewrite it yourself and even give it away."

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    34. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      How much has Linus or RMS given away to charities in comparison to what Bill & Melinda Gates donate to charity?

      Leave Melinda out of this, ok? She didn't give squat to charity, she just wants to look 'generous'. She just spends her time buying new clothes and jewelry with Bill's money.

    35. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most common does not equate to only used. Linux/BSD are capable of (and do) running on many other cpus.

    36. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      LOL!!! Mod up :-)

    37. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by fault0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      1. India has an impending crisis that could potentially balloon to having more AIDS victims than all AIDS victims in Africa _combined_
      2. The Gates Foundation already gave $250 mil to countries in Africa, with more donations coming up. Please don't tell me that this is to combat the growing amount of open source developers in Timbuktu.

    38. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by utarif · · Score: 1

      "If Saddam Hussein donated some millions to the starving kids in Africa, does that make him a good person? "

      why not?

    39. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "Are you trying to draw a parallel between open source code and truly massive amounts of money given to charitable causes?"

      Why yes I am. Open source saves (or at least has the potential to save) billions of dollars for poor third world countries. Those countries can use the money they saved on MS products and spend them on feeding their people and to educate their young.

      Not only that but open source also fights to preserve your freedom of thought and communication while MS is the foremost proponent of restricting your right to freely exchange information.

      Considering that the only thing that separates you from the animals is your ability communicate and preserve information for your progeny I say that open source is pretty damned important.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    40. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Malcontent · · Score: 3

      If the US caused massive starvation and disease by bombing critical infrastucture like water treatment plants, roads, bridges and power generation plants does that make us evil?

      If Saddam then rebuilt all those facilities so that his people could live is he good?

      If we bomb them again ten years later are we even more evil?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    41. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Interesting

      " I wish to read where Bill Gates called "charitable work by open source developers" "communist" and "cancer". Please provide a reference to the quote so I can better understand your point of view."

      He himself did not but other top level executives at MS have. I know you have read about them and a simple search on google would find you the resources you are looking for.

      I gather what you are implying is that Bill Gates has no responsibility for anything his footsoldiers do or say. If that is your point then I disagree completely. Bill Gates and the head of MS, the most visible part of MS, the founder of MS, and the richest man in the world has to carry the responsiblity for what his corporation does and anything his top level executives say or print. I can understand if some low level joe said those things but it wasn't some low level programmer it was people holding VP level titles. The fact that Bill never punished them or even publicly rebuked them can only means that he agrees fully or that he put those words in their mouths.

      "He doesn't. I do. I have this code of conduct, or morality, that seems hard to get rid of. I by default attempt to stick up for people being attacked. I try to lay out facts when I see someone being smeared by unqualified "truts". "

      Really? Let me check to see if you defended open source developers when they are attacked by MS. Let me see if you defended any company when some MS FUD campaign was launched against them. If in fact you tried to defend people being smeared by unqualified truths you'd spend your entire like reading MS press releases, bought benchmarks and such and working hard to point out all their lies. Also you would hang out at ZDNET and gotdotnet to try and counter all the MS FUD there.

      Why do I suspect that you haven't done any of the above?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    42. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "one cannot deny that the Gates Foundation isn't doing a great deal of good."

      see, when you write pompous stuff like that
      you just end up tripping yourself up.
      I can't say that I couldn't be sure that I didn't understand what you wanted to say that one can't deny is true.

    43. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by g4dget · · Score: 2
      Um, because what he does actually saves starving people and other individuals dying of AIDS.

      He does? Any evidence for that? I don't think the NGOs he gives to are accountable to the people they supposedly help.

      Gates's donations are effective publicity, as your naive endorsement shows. They are, however, not obviously good public policy.

    44. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by rm+-f+DMCA · · Score: 1

      Not sure what you meant by that, but same with Windows...

      --
    45. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knowledge is more important than charity. With knowledge, you don't NEED charity.
      Maybe yes maybe no... but for the tinfoil hat types out there there is no conspiricy out there.
      Bill and Linda were taking a "tax" vacation they needed to spend some of their $ on something that allows them a tax deduction to offset some of their (ill-gotten, someone else's opinion) gains.

      Gawd how I wish I could take a vacation let alone a deductabable vacation. Hell I would tend to believe that Bill probably tips people more than I make in a year. (I work in the meat industry so you know that my wages are very very good.)

      Do we really care how Bill spends his money hell why don't we all start comparing how we spend our hard earned paychecks and start a database (using MySQL of course) of how much we spend on charity,housing,food and more importantly our computer toys.

      Lets get a life before we start judging others.

    46. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      GPL'd computer software has fuck all to do with medicine, dickwad. Or are you proposing a GPL'd drug system? /me grins. You really don't have any idea how dependent upon huge amounts of software the medical and pharmaceutical fields are, do you?

    47. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by toopc · · Score: 1
      Free software --> Ability for poor countries to develop programmers --> Jobs --> Better Economy --> money for hospitals, doctors, medicine, HMO's

      And during the 20 years or so while this plan of yours possibly pans out, should we just let the hungry and diseased starve and die? Or would you be okay if in the meantime Bill Gates give a few billion here and there to help those unable to currently help themselves?

      Which do you think is more important to a kid at high risk of contracting meningitis. A vaccination, or a laptop with Linux? I'm thinking a vaccination, because Windows and Linux both suck when you're dead.

    48. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open source IS the tools. Read the guy's argument. He prefers putting solutions into place over patching the problem. Give people good software they can use as they wish, modify to suit their needs, and they will solve their own problems - permanently.

      Why don't YOU inject yourself with Black Plague and see if Bill comes to help you - HINT: Not unless you're the president of a country that's considering switching to linux. Then he's your bestest buddy, yessiree.

    49. Re:Damned if he does, damned if he doesnt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Exactly. Why doesn't he give millions to Ethiopia or Somalia, who really need it?

      __BECAUSE THEY DON'T HAVE ENOUGH MONEY TO REPAY HIM BY BUYING COMPUTERS__.

      If it's not going to help him somehow financially, he won't do it. That's been his trademark uber-capitalist attitude for 20 years. Duh.

      btw, you don't deserve a -1. Post anonymously if you're going to say something the paid M$ schills will disagree with. And __there are paid schills__. On my site, I check the logs daily, and when an argument pops up, the "grassroots" defenders of M$ are very often from Redmond and thereabouts - within 50 miles. Too many coincidences....
  55. Re:I don't like Indians by MadLibs · · Score: 1
    that's ok --- they like you... and so does Jesus.

    and.. back on topic --- if the statistics given in the story are true, without those programmers, you juuuuuuuuuuust might be sans computer.

    just a thought.

  56. Nice cover don't you think? by KidSock · · Score: 2

    Bill (the one on the left) even has his tuxedo on :~)

  57. That's Insulting by mithras+the+prophet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Parent comment is total flamebait, as far as I'm concerned.

    Bill Gates, via his foundation, has given more money, and more earnest attention, to public health issues like AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccination, that any living human. He does this out of what I regard as a genuine thoughtful concern for the best way to make his enormous wealth do good in the world.

    He doesn't have to do this - he could be like Larry Ellison and just dick around with his money. To say he's fighting AIDS in India solely to make a market for Microsoft products is rude and inaccurate.

    But no, I haven't dug up any photos of him with the tika. I'd pay to see it, though.

    --
    four nine eighteen twenty-7 thirty-nine forty-7 fiftyeight sixty-nine seventy-9 eighty-8 one-hundred-and-nine one-twenty
    1. Re:That's Insulting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to see things for what they are. If a person spends 99% of their time and money doing good and 1% clubbing baby harp seals or contributing money to that practice, do we say they're "OK" because of the 99:1 good:bad ratio? No, right?

      Our guy is most likely trying to purchase respectability here.

  58. Targeting by motox · · Score: 1

    Then maybe linux / unix should target people who decides the purchases outside india so there will be no demand for indian windows programmers ? I doubt the demand for their work is just in india.

  59. Re:In Related News... (scaremongering?) by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

    That sounds like what China said up until last year - "We don't have an AIDS problem". Turns out they do, about 25 million cases worth. I imagine it'll be the same for India :-(

    The Indian government is unwilling to admit the vastness of the AIDS problem... and that's just going to screw over the entire country.

  60. Haven't seen any articles on Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    complaining about Linux in schools as opposed to MSFT...

  61. Interesting developer numbers. by BeBoxer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Estimates put the present size of India's developer population at anywhere between 450,000 and 600,000. That's about 10% of the world's developer population.

    So by these numbers, there are between 4 and 6 million software developers in the world. According to the Microsoft(tm) Annual Report, they have about 50,000 employees. So what percentage of the worlds developers need to be working on core open source projects before the open source developers outnumber the Windows developers? Looks like the answer is less than 1%!

    And that's why I think Microsoft is doomed in the long run. Open Source already has most of the functionality of Microsoft's offerings. And it only takes a small fraction of the world's developers to completely outstrip the amount of effort Microsoft can throw at the problem. Hell, if 10% of the developers spent 10% of their time on core OSS projects it would be more than enough to provide a nice stable feature-rich desktop and server environment. Interesting.

    1. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, I guess you're missing the many multitudes of Windows programmers that don't work for Microsoft. They're not refering to kernel hackers. They're refering to applications programmers. Applications make the platform, and Microsoft simply has the bulk of the world's programmers in it's pocket.

    2. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by fizban · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Uh, microsoft empoyees are not the only microsoft developers in the world. In fact, a large number of open source developers (including myself) use Windows platforms to do their development.

      Having tasted a variety of development environments, I do have to say that Visual Studio is one of my favorites. And with the newer versions becoming 99% standards compliant (C/C++), I doubt I'll be moving off it anytime soon. There's just no competition in the open source world for that kind of integrated development environment. Sorry, but emacs doesn't cut it. Open Source does _NOT_ have most of the functionality of Microsoft's offerings. And if your comparison is stability, I will just say one thing: Windows 2000. In fact, applications on my windows 2000 machine crash far less frequently than applications on my new red hat 8 machine.

      Microsoft is nowhere near failing and anyone who thinks otherwise is kidding themselves. Co-existence is the name of the game, ladies and gents. OSS is here to stay. It has great qualities, but it's not the end-all be-all of software development.

      --

      +1 Insightful, -1 Troll. What can I say, I'm an Insightful Troll.

    3. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by BeBoxer · · Score: 2

      Uh, microsoft empoyees are not the only microsoft developers in the world. In fact, a large number of open source developers (including myself) use Windows platforms to do their development.

      Quite true. But I'm talking about developers actually working on developing and improving the core tools. I.e., the developers working on the kernel, desktop environment, compiler, etc. Microsoft excludes their customers from directly improving or working otherwise developing those tools. OSS does not, and in fact encourages it. My point being that I think in the long run OSS tools and platforms will eventually outstrip anything Microsoft (or any other commercial company) can produce. I'm not saying it's going to happen this year. But it'll happen eventually.

    4. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by fizban · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, I think OSS will eventually lead, but not by itself. I think commercial companies using OSS methods to develop their software will be the end-all be-all. In fact, all Microsoft has to do to lead the pack and wipe Linux off the face of the earth would be to switch to this joint development methodology. Protect their IP with sensible IP laws, yet allow developers to improve upon existing code or provide new functionality to works in progress. Benefits provided, of course (such as free software, or employment for the most active and best contributors).

      All software development is best done by small teams of developers. Even open source is best when led by a small team of devoted people. The benefits of commercial companies is obviously money. The developers can rely on stable income to support them while they devote all their time to the projects they work on. The benefits of OSS is obviously lots of eyes looking at the code. By combining the two, you provide the ability to create extraordinary products by funding the core development team, but allowing outside parties to contribute their ideas as well.

      --

      +1 Insightful, -1 Troll. What can I say, I'm an Insightful Troll.

    5. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by mangu · · Score: 2
      I do have to say that Visual Studio is one of my favorites


      I used to say that, too, until I met Kdevelop. There's a degreee of "clarity and purpose" in Qt/KDE that MFC totally misses. If MFC isn't "in" anymore, forgive me and substitute whatever is the current must for MS applications development. I used to follow the MS alphabet soup, from DDE until ActiveX, but then I lost count of the acronyms.


      Just to give you an example, how do you open a picture using MFC? In Qt you create an object QPixmap pix = QPixmap("cindy.jpg"). Can you do that without poring throug page after page of Eugene Kain's "MFC Answer Book"?

    6. Re:Interesting developer numbers. by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      And if your comparison is stability, I will just say one thing: Windows 2000. In fact, applications on my windows 2000 machine crash far less frequently than applications on my new red hat 8 machine.

      Well, to be a fair comparison shouldn't you compare like with like? RH 8.0 is new, and win2k has had some time to shape up. In my personal experience, my new RH 8.0 is considerably better than my new XP, which worked great for about a month or so, and then started to behave like the windows we know and love, not.

      And no, third party drivers is not the issue here. I only use one third party driver in both cases (Nvidia's graphics driver both for XP and Linux) so the situation should be the same for both systems, and the hardware is no aging (Athlon 900) so that's not the problem either. So far RH 8.0 is ahead by far.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
  62. India specialization in Windows is a boon to Linux by El+Cabri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Here is the reasonning:

    If Indian programming shops are in majority unable to take up Linux-specific programming tasks, this weakness will be an opportunity to slow the leaking of programming jobs outside western countries. The US and European IT pros will, conscienciously or not, move to a configuration more favorable to their job security, and lead an evolution that will increase the value of their more versatile know-how. Hence tend to ditch windows. Already many politicians in Europe are aware that an OSS based infrastructure brings more jobs to their local service industry.

  63. U.S. grip loosening by blueworm · · Score: 1

    Microsoft will not be able to succeed here, the global influence of the United States is weakening and external countries are more likely to choose independent products.

  64. Cynical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I also being cynical when I see BG donating $200M to AIDS research in India

  65. Cheap Labor? by xtremex · · Score: 1

    Could it be they can hire a platoon of Indian Programmers to work around the clock for the price of 3 American programmers? Microsoft is not a US company. Sure, they base their corporation here, but they don't hire Americans.

    --
    If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
    1. Re:Cheap Labor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems urgent for software engineers to start forming some kind of professional orginization(s) such as medical doctors and other professional groups have done lately. Call them guilds, unions or what ever you want, we are in need of come way to protect ourselves and what we do from forces that undermine what computing should be about. We need to be concerned with standards of software quality as well as with political/economic issues such as programming sweatshops in third world countries.

      I's clear that if certain interests get their way we'll all be using shabby software written by underpaid people in third world countries.

    2. Re:Cheap Labor? by Vendekkai · · Score: 1

      Cheap Labor? Gimme a break. Software Developers are among the best paid people IN India. In fact, highly paid software developers in Bangalore have had a major effect on boosting the local economy, because they can afford to spend more.

      Sweat shops? Software companies have the best facilities among any industry in India. Amazing perks, free cafeteria/gym/club facilities, free transport by office buses, soft loans...they just don't end. Infosys has a huge campus that all world politicians visiting Bangalore go to see, to see how things should be in their country.

      Shabby software? Indian programmers are among the best in the world. Microsoft US hires Indian programmers at US salaries, not Indian salaries. You'll find that most Indian programmers in the US work at salaries that equal or better equivalent American developers'. American companies hire Indian programmers because they can't get enough American programmers. As for the currently large number of unemployed American programmers, no economy is so efficient that when a crash occurs, employment patterns are quickly readjusted. You'll see less foreign programmers coming into the US from now on till the American economy gets back to normal.

      Salaries IN India are low COMPARED to salaries in the US, because the US Dollar is much more stronger than the Indian Rupee. That's not a conspiracy - that's just the relative strengths of the two countries economies at work. But in India, software developers are well paid compared to equivalent people in other professions.

      Don't let vague notions of 'stealing jobs' let you degenerate into racist rhetoric or xenophobia. Historically, such emotions arise during economic depressions (Germany, pre-WWII, anyone?) and retarded politicians use them to boost their own popularity. No one usually benefits from the results, though a lot of (innocents) suffer.

    3. Re:Cheap Labor? by Vendekkai · · Score: 1

      And additionally, US companies offloading projects to Indian companies is no different from you comparison shopping on the net. The money that they save from this process, is money earned by shareholders (mostly) in the US. It still goes back into the US economy.

      It is economically illiterate to suggest that companies operate uneconomically out of patriotism. That is what screwed the USSR.

    4. Re:Cheap Labor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shabby software? Indian programmers are among the best in the world.

      Not from what I've seen. Terrible, terrible slap-dash hacks. I sometimes wonder if the people that were coding for us were humanities majors or the like, and were just lying about their degree. And what is up with the coding style? Even if the code works as asked for, naming conventions, upper vs.lowercase, and NO COMMENTS. EVER. And don't get me started on the hard-coding.

      I have had to do my share of re-writes on code from "among the best in the world". The code was THAT bad, and very brittle stuff indeed. Indian programmers put the "K" in kwality.

      You'll see less foreign programmers coming into the US from now on till the American economy gets back to normal.

      Riiiiiiiiiight. I still see jobs where they have H1B sponsorship offered. And some companies are just ramping up their outsourcing even more - so whether they are actually here, or elsewhere, cheap third world citizens are stealing our jobs.

  66. Re:In Related News... (scaremongering?) by malakai · · Score: 2, Offtopic

    Scaremongering my ass.
    India has always tried to cover up their AIDS problem. Go figure, the Health Minister of India telling the world population to "move along, move along, nothing to see here... we're ok... move along". Meanwhile it remains a big taboo in Indian society to discuss aids, the disease, how it's transmitted, and safe sex. The health minister has his proverbial head in the sand. India is posed to a African style outbreak, all the right factors have been identified. The majority of the people with AIDS are travelers and will soon become bridges to bring the bulk majority of the population into high risk.
    It certainly doesn't help that Indian hospital turn away AIDS victims, and pregnant mothers, telling them they should have an abortion.

    It's sad really, to see a country like India go to this great a length to save face. If Gates hadn't visited the country, this would have gotten as much air-time as his 250 million he dumped into Africa. Zero.

  67. Gates donates 100 million and then they campaign? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nice!

    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/international/AP -I ndia-Bill-Gates.html

  68. HIV Donation by [cx] · · Score: 0

    Not to mention Bill Gates DID donate 100 million dollars and he is largely known as a very generous and charitable person when it fits him to be. No doubt his relations with Indian people will be improved, but he has almost stepped on the governments toes in the arena of educated HIV/AIDS research.

    But 100 Million dollars is alot of money anywhere, and Bill Gates knows THEY will always be a few steps ahead, you know since they have a collective mindstate and stuff.

    [cx]

  69. For the love of god, MOD PARENT UP *please*! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really...I hear this comment all the time whenever someone questions Bill Gates and his donations. It seems that even on Slashdot, whever everyone claims to be Microsoft-free, people are afraid to bite the hand that feeds them.

  70. Too Hot for Linux by Gefiltefish11 · · Score: 1


    I wonder what Microsoft's market strategy is in India. Perhaps they're targeting more southerly regions, where it's warmer.

    Once they have a foothold in the south, then they can consider attacking the mountainous northern parts of India, where penguins (ergo Linux) are more apt to make their stronghold.

    1. Re:Too Hot for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Dodo,

      Obviously your knowledge of biology has been largely gleaned from slashdot! Since that hasn't been especially useful, think it's time to consider a different source?

      As a good citizen, I shall point you towards one such - http://www.seaworld.org/infobooks/Penguins/home.ht ml

      __
      Fact-nazi

  71. Fighting over India by Binarybrain · · Score: 1

    I also found this article at Yahoo. Artcle

  72. Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slashdot by rseuhs · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Just look at slashdot.

    The facts:

    Bill Gates himself goes on a trip to a country that has recently started to develop significant Linux precence including cheap Linux devices for the masses. Bill's action can only be interpreted as an act of desperation.

    ... except on Slashdot of course.

    Slashdot (and unfortunately most Linux communities) have been infected by Microsoft FUD, it's no longer funny:

    Fear, Uncertainity, Doubt:

    "Hopefully this won't have a large effect on it." (Translation: Whine, whine, whine, I'm so afraid, uncertain and doubtful.) Just read a few more posts, most contain similar statements. Yes, this is FUD by its finest.

    By now we have even reached a point where it is no longer allowed to have optimistic points of view. It's considered obscene and strange if you do. When Eric S. Raymond said that Linux will gain massively on cheap computers, he was called crazy, a freak and whatever in the accompanying Slashdot-thread. (Of course Walmart and Gericom have already proven that Linux sells on cheaper computers - of course nobody realized that. When announced, everybody was afraid, doubtful and uncertain about the Linux-PC's success. (Would Walmart really sell a losing product for over half a year? Would Walmart extend their commitment twice? - They went from clean PCs to Lindows-preloaded, then later added Mandrake.))

    Currently we live in a situation where almost everybody, even many Linux-supporters spread FUD (in the literal sense: "Fear, Uncertainity, Doubt") about Linux.

    Such massive anti-propaganda would have killed almost any commercial product within only few years. Would anybody buy Windows when Bill Gates would constantly say stuff like: "Hopefully Torvald's speech on Linux-Expo won't have a large effect on our sales"? Of course not.

    The FACT that despite this hostile environment, KDE/Linux is not only surviving but growing - in terms of development as well as in terms of marketshare, is the biggest proof that Linux is here not only to stay but also to become the standard platform on all mainstream computing markets within this decade.

    The sad part is that most slashdotters don't seem to realize what they are doing - that they are spreading anti-Linux FUD.

    Or to put it in another way: The FUD spread by Bill Gates in India (or anywhere else) can't be worse than the FUD spread by Linux-supporters on slashdot (or elsewhere).

  73. I can just hear Apu now by RedWolves2 · · Score: 2

    Thank you! Come again!

  74. Ridiculous!! by Gefiltefish11 · · Score: 2, Funny


    I just can't believe that Microsoft would target Indians.

    Really, when have you ever seen a teepee with Windows??

  75. he is not the richest man in the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry but there are many prince's in the world with far more money then mr. gates

    1. Re:he is not the richest man in the world by hplasm · · Score: 1

      No, he is in fact the richest man in the world- he does have more money than anyone else- even Mr Burns.

      --
      ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
  76. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  77. mmmm.... endian... by DeadSea · · Score: 0

    I have a rather large endianess, especially in the rear. I wouldn't mind being targetted with Microsoft money.

    1. Re:mmmm.... endian... by Dr.+Smeegee · · Score: 0

      Iiiiiiiiiiii
      like Big-Endian's and I cannot lie!
      What you other coder's try to deny!
      When a chip comes to me with an itty-bitty cache
      and a core temp like volcanic ash,
      I get *SPRUNG!* ...etc...

    2. Re:mmmm.... endian... by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      read parent. you can't fake that funk.

    3. Re:mmmm.... endian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, baby, I wanna get SMPs
      And rock it with two of these
      My tech lead tried to warn me
      But that bus width makes me so horny

  78. Pipe down, Mr sanctimonious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After all the unethical behaviour of MSFT, a little cynicism is entirely justified.

  79. Its called taking the high road... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2


    Its so obvious, I can't believe that the parent was moderated so high.

    Unless those mods are really shallow spitfull people.

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    1. Re:Its called taking the high road... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless those mods are really shallow spiteful people

      Or editors. Don't forget "michael's" preternatural Jones against MS, and his unlimited mod points.

    2. Re:Its called taking the high road... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      Some people turn the other cheek when hit other people hit back.

      I believe that the people who turn the other cheek are in the minority and that turning the other cheek simply encourages bullying and predatory behaviour.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

  80. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  81. there's no such thing as bad publicity by bilbobuggins · · Score: 2
    articles like these make me think that MS own crusade against Linux has ironically done more for the Linux/OSS fight against MS than any other factor

    they tried to squash linux before it started, so instead of empire building until they could no longer ignore linux they focused on it before they had to and only succeded in thrusting it into the limelight

  82. Key passage - mindshare and excitement by tz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "We are paranoid someone is going to come along and take away mindshare from developers. We're paranoid something out there is going to be more exciting to developers."

    Lets see, a closed system with low quality, where they use proprietary protocols they don't want you to alter and then they change them, stop support and force upgrades, v.s. an open system of high quality that you can actually make better and costs almost nothing.

    "No, we don't want to tell you how this works, and we don't want you to touch it" is not an attitude that creates mindshare.

    I can see why it might be exciting to use Microsoft, but that type of excitement would reduce mindshare.

  83. An observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one absolutely sick of these "I misread the title as something else" posts in almost every article? Good lord, they're overdone and never funny. It's like all the bad comedians who visit Slashdot had a meeting about a month ago and decided to try to be funny every day, much to the dismay of law-abiding citizens everywhere.

    1. Re:An observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Peanut Gallery: What a relief! When I first read that subject, I thought it said "An op....".

      Audience: SHUT UP!

    2. Re:An observation by offpath3 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Damn, I almost mis-read your _ENTIRE POST_ as "Gee, I'm a stuck-up prick."

    3. Re:An observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also not funny...

  84. Length of focus by jki · · Score: 1

    Excuse me, but in the long run, what makes the case the of India different? Their current relatively poor income per capita might make it easy playground to battle with money in the beginning - but in the long run, why would India be any different? If, as it seems, many of the developed countries prefer open source and Linux - how can anyone believe India would be an isolated island in the future? They will face the problem even if they manage to brainwash a significant percent of the current coder generation

  85. why so long? by snartal · · Score: 1

    The amount of wealth he has collected is pretty damn obscene. Yes, he can have all of that for himself but that doesn't mean he should. He has accumlated an amount beyond all reason, much of it through illegal or at least arguably unethical means, just so he can become the richest man in the world and win that game. If he were generous, he would take what he needed to live really really well and give the rest away. What took him so long to give a teeny bit of what he owns away? -snartal

    1. Re:why so long? by stubear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why don't you atttack leaders like Sadda Husein then? He has an "insane amount on money", palaces all over Iraq, many with swimming pools yet he uses his money to bolster his military weapons programs, provide water for the gradens and pools around his palaces and tests biological and chemical werapons on his own population.

      Oh, I forgot. Since he's the target of a US and UN investigation, he's the underdog and /. loves to cheer for the little guy facing unblievable odds, regardless of the facts.

      You go ahead and belittle Bill Gates donations but don't forget to check you own bank account and learn how little you actually provide to those in need.

    2. Re:why so long? by preraksanghvi · · Score: 1
      Yes, he can have all of that for himself but that doesn't mean he should.

      Wtf! Why not? I'm pretty sure the person who posted this really has a hard time earning money. Don't just say stuff because you're jealous... everything is fair in business... And even if i were to agree that what he's doing is decidedly unethical (which I don't), how many /.ers would actually not exchange places with him, if given a chance. And when that happens, how many do you think will give away everything except "what he needed to live really really well". Wtf! He's earned his money. Why should he give it away?

    3. Re:why so long? by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      You go ahead and belittle Bill Gates donations but don't forget to check you own bank account and learn how little you actually provide to those in need.

      Oh yeah. How could parent poster have forgotten that $20 billion he had sitting around in his/her savings account? How ungenerous they were not to give that to charity!

    4. Re:why so long? by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      If I switched places with Bill Gates, i'd keep $800 million and immediately invest the rest in the charity. Seriously. I'd also automatically funnel any future earnings above $800 mil into the charity.

    5. Re:why so long? by snartal · · Score: 1

      Yes, I only give about 7% of my income away. Truth is, I cannot afford to give away much more as I still have school loans to pay off. Mr. Gates hoards gobs quite uselessly. What percentage of what he have does he give away? How much of that is tax deductable? Oh, Saddam is in the same category. Why you brought him up shows a lack of integrety on your part. That is, in bad faith bringing up an unrelated issue to cloud the real one.

    6. Re:why so long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus dude, are you fucking retarded?

    7. Re:why so long? by snartal · · Score: 1

      Just uncoordinated. The Saddam crack was so weird that it upset my train of thoughts.

    8. Re:why so long? by snartal · · Score: 1
      Can you attack the argument instead of make random hypothesis on my finantial condition? I just can't understand why someone would want so much stuff.

      And really, he didn't do millions of more times of work than the rest of us. That is just absurd to say that he did.

    9. Re:why so long? by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

      First, the "Dessert Storm" whas such a sucess, thas it's unveliable that Iraq after that heavy bombing could have, build or develop weapons of mass destrution. If Iraq indeed does have those weapons, then Cheney, Swarkpoff (sp?), Powell and the top brass of the US millitary sould be put on trial for their incredible incompetence.

      Surelly you know the difference between killing/defeating Sadamm Hussein and killing/bombing an entire country, civilians includded. I have been close to a place bombed (200+ deaths,and that whas nothing compared to a Daisy cutter or a cruise missile) and I can assure you, its a vission that you cannot never forget, that's why I oppose the bombings.

      The iraqui people doesn't deserve the horror of Sadamm, but they don't desserve the more terrifiying horror of american boms raining on them.

      Bombs != peace. Never.

      --
      Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  86. Gates, intentions? by Dark+Fire · · Score: 1

    All robber-barons later in life give money to build schools, museums, theatres, and many other kinds of charity acts. Being a major shareholder and the ceo during the period of which you abused your monopoly pretty much ensures that from history's point of view, Gates is a robber baron. But giving away $$$ to to a charitable cause does not mean it is being done for any other reason than the reason that motivates all robber-barons.

  87. ok ok ok by eddiecore · · Score: 1

    sheesh. is anyone else getting sick of the anti-microsoft news that always makes its way to slashdot? who really cares what ms does in india?

  88. 10% of all developers???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No wonder why I'm not making any f'ing money anymore.

  89. Re:he is not the richest man in the world QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Name one.

    Dude, the guy has 50 BILLION dollars in stock, plus god knows how many billions invested in other companies from stock sales over the years, not to mention the 20 or so billion he gave away to his foundation.

  90. Indian Programing? by trotski · · Score: 1

    So they have libraries for programming slot machines and smokeing salmon? What about carving totem polls?

    --

    "Entropy is the bad-guy, and he is everywhere"
  91. Indian programmers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a joke. Now shut up and get me some more butter chicken and a nan.

  92. LET THEM have India! by President+A.+Lincoln · · Score: 0



    For christ's sake, let Microsoft have India. Indian programmers are known industry wide for having sort of a negative Midas-touch. Everything they handle turns to shit. I'd rather have crappy workmanship applied to Microsoft than my platform, thats for sure.

    Sincerely,
    A. Lincoln

  93. Actually, funny you mention editors - vim by xtal · · Score: 3, Interesting



    When was the last time someone didn't starve because someone else wrote a new text editor and gave it away with the proviso that if anyone else does anything with it, they have to give away their work for free too?



    http://iccf-holland.org/click5.html


    Vim, arguably the worlds best text editor, does exactly that. Bill Gates is worthy of some respect for giving money away, but when compared to his net worth and rate of capital growth (never mind it's a tax deduction), you would be suprised what it's comparable to.

    --
    ..don't panic
  94. I get it... by bullestock · · Score: 1

    Probably some MS exec has heard something about the popularity of Apache...

  95. Some forst hand expreince. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I live in Russia where developer market is similar to one in India. I can tell that we dont need special coaching to switch to any particualt form. The demand for software is compltely external, meaning we just work on whats is outsouced from the States and Western Europe. All the develoepr tools and OS are "free" meaning you can buy the lates V svs studoipn .net enterprise edtion 6 cd set at any software kisook for 15 bucks. Most currently specialise on win soft but its alo possibl;e now to male money doing compltely Linux/FreeBSD shit.

    --
    US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  96. 'Free as in beer' will be unstoppable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "About a quarter of the population is too poor to be able to afford an adequate diet."

    "India has large numbers of well-educated people skilled in English language; India is a major exporter of software services and software workers."

    -CIA

    The invisible hand will force OSS/Linux in India to grow and prosper at Microsoft's expense.

  97. Re:he is not the richest man in the world QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quite probably a few of the drug lords are richer, but I doubt that any royalty is richer

  98. An important time in Indian history by RoshanCat · · Score: 0, Troll

    Now is an important time for India & we will find out that whether Indians are academic smart or business smart. Hopefully they dont listen to idiots (who have their own personal agendas) and jeoperdize the only successful export industry of India

    Indians suck at manufacturing & are hardly innovative in any other field. We dont have rich natural resources(like oil). The only thing we can add value is Intellectual Property in the Information age.

    By taking the open source route we'll kill the only golden goose that'll lead to a spiralling crashing of the Indian economy & increase the number of people below poverty line to an already staggering 700 Million

    The generation of future Indians are at the hands of the developers. Dont drive the only thing which you can produce to a zero value system.

    Cheers,
    Roshan

    1. Re:An important time in Indian history by smagruder · · Score: 2

      OK, so there can't be be enterprise-level Linux apps developed for pay. Huh?

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    2. Re:An important time in Indian history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wrote that while looking at a Window on the main Microsoft Campus.

      It shames me to see you cheapen the Indian people so.

    3. Re:An important time in Indian history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Indians suck at manufacturing & are hardly innovative in any other field

      Really? You seem to have a very low opinion of us. I might mention though, that we have other ideas.
      As for open source route, we don't have to make open source software. We should use it. No need to pay big Bill a Big bill. right?
      (btw, that's called Yamak alankar in Hindi. if you remember any of it, that is.)

      The generation of future Indians are at the hands of the developers. Dont drive the only thing which you can produce to a zero value system.

      Aww, come on. Since when have software developers
      started shaping the future of countries? Most of em' have trouble shaping their own future! Let's not have grandiose visions, shall we?
      Just let us be.

    4. Re:An important time in Indian history by scumdamn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Roshan,
      Indians would be just fine at manufacturing if it weren't for the high tarriffs. When the govt reforms those tarriffs, you may see a huge upswelling in manufacturing, and that would be a damn good thing.

    5. Re:An important time in Indian history by THEbwana · · Score: 1

      So...if I get you straight - India is a great big country consisting of people who suck at innovation and manufacturing and who therefore has but only one hope: to produce custom software for an operating system sold by a american company called Microsoft.

      It's an interesting concept: streamlining an entire country so as to act as a subcontractor to one american company instead of targeting a world wide market. Its moronic, but nevertheless: interesting.

      The best thing India could do to lift those 700 Million people out of poverty is to deregulate trade and privatize publicly owned industries. Is there anyone but the indians who arent surprised that socialism isnt generating wealth for the population?

    6. Re:An important time in Indian history by Compact+Dick · · Score: 1

      Really? You seem to have a very low opinion of us.

      I believe the original poster is of Indian origin [Roshan is an Indian name], plus he adds "We dont have rich natural resources..."]
    7. Re:An important time in Indian history by subzero_ice · · Score: 1

      Just because you suck at anything or everything doesn't mean all Indians are alike.

    8. Re:An important time in Indian history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indians have the best doctors in the world.
      Know that??????????
      Fact is only folks you see here(read US) are in IT
      Ask any english man

    9. Re:An important time in Indian history by JonK · · Score: 1
      The best thing India could do to lift those 700 Million people out of poverty is to deregulate trade and privatize publicly owned industries. Is there anyone but the indians who arent surprised that socialism isnt generating wealth for the population?


      After all, it worked so well for Argentina, right... erm...

      --
      Cheers

      Jon
    10. Re:An important time in Indian history by venkataramiah · · Score: 1

      I'm an ex-desi and I have a comment: First of all :"The generation of future Indians are at the hands of the developers" Good grief! Isnt that (kind of) over-reacting?

      When is the last time you EVER saw Indians doing ONE thing, and only one thing only?

      And Indian do rip software off aiight? Deal with it. So do Venezuelans or Turks, but not as much as India and China.

      Just my $0.02.

    11. Re:An important time in Indian history by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      Do you have any evidence that that is actually what Argentina did?
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    12. Re:An important time in Indian history by JonK · · Score: 1
      Go read the World Bank and IMF reports on the running of the Argentine economy. The World Bank reports dealing with Argentina are here - this one is particularly interesting. The IMF ones are here.

      Will that be all? :-)

      --
      Cheers

      Jon
    13. Re:An important time in Indian history by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      I offer a different analysis.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    14. Re:An important time in Indian history by JonK · · Score: 1
      THEbwana's original thesis was that everything that was wrong in India would be solved by a good healthy dose of neo-liberal free market nostrums, including dropping of tariffs, deregulation of industry and privatisation of much of the functioning of the state.

      My response to this was that this approach (the classical International Monetary Fund/World Bank interventions, as also seen throughout sub-equatorial Africa and much of South America) hadn't worked particularly well, citing Argentina as an example. I further posited that Argentina had been the golden child of the classical, Smithian, "roll-back-the-boundaries-of-the-state" economists found in Washington, as evidenced by the WB/IMF reports I linked, due largely to it's willingness to privatise the state and to open its borders to the free flow of both raw materials, goods and capital in exchange for the largesse of the WB/IMF (and yes, I do believe that conflating these two bodies is valid insofar as they have, for a long time, promulgated a unified viewpoint).

      That the Argentinian economy and, as a result, the Argentinian polity is in tatters is, I assume, taken as read.

      The analysis you proffered had no relevance to the above - it appeared to be merely a statement of the worldview so beloved of those people who put dogma above observation: specifically, if the translation of an idea into practice fails to succeed then the translators weren't sufficiently rigorous in their application.

      [This is, of course, a handy position beloved of social, political and economic theorists: since properly scientific (and I use the word here merely as a convenient shorthand to mean the sort of evidence obtained through rationalist post-Aristolian experimental approaches commonly known as "the scientific method") evidence is, for various reasons, hard to obtain in these fields, the most ridiculous theories can be posited without any need to match them to observed results. cf Dean Swift's 'A Modest Proposal' :-) Absolutist positions have long been a favourite of a) religious zealots, b) neo-liberal fruitcakes and c) Leninist/Trotskyist fruitcakes. Frankly, they're all as ridiculous as each other.] Comments? Or this could sensibly be taken to email before the /. discussion-closure hits.

      --
      Cheers

      Jon
    15. Re:An important time in Indian history by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      You seem to miss my point. What does inflating your currency (which is what Argentina did) have to do with free market policy (which is what you say Argentina did)? Argentina, like Turkey, is in trouble because its government thought that it could pay for everything by printing up money. Any free market liberal will tell you that inflating your currency is the road to rack and ruin. I really don't know if the World Bank told Argentina to inflate its currency. I hope not. In any case, Argentina did inflate (as did Turkey, just to replicate the experiment) and now their economy is in the dumps. Had they consulted even the least capable free-market economist, he would have predicted this future.

      As for whether Economics is a science or not, well, a science makes predictions, and you can judge the scientific value of a theory by whether its predictions come true. Certainly there is a lot of folk-economics and faux-scientific economics. Such economics fails to pan out. You've seen that, I can tell. That doesn't mean that all economics is crap. Here's one prediction that's true: to the extent that it raises people's wages, a minimum wage law creates unemployment.

      One type of economics which fails to suck over the long-term is free-market economics. Why? Because freedom lets everyone solve problems in parallel. You know, .......... like the world's largest Beowulf cluster. I had to say that, sorry. I've written an explanation of why a free market produces better results than centralization. Go read my analysis of the problem.

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  99. s/to/from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nothing to see here, move along

  100. If you think India is something.... by TerryAtWork · · Score: 1

    Wait until the Chinese kick in. They'll kick India's butt all over the place.

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
    1. Re:If you think India is something.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chinese have been trying to do so by sending teams to India every now and then to learn how they can develop their software industry. Honestly, every single day, they send somebody to learn IT or other pharmaceutical stuff. They want to copy and do hard work on it and beat us. But they will never be able to do this because cheating can help in just manufacturing (the design is always produced outside China) not in developing cutting edge technologies. India is, was and will remain way ahead of China in the software field.

    2. Re:If you think India is something.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Same way Indians are kicking yer butt all over the place NOW ?

    3. Re:If you think India is something.... by subzero_ice · · Score: 1

      Keep waiting for the chinese. Indians are too smart for the chinese.

  101. The US used to affect Microsofts Destiny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm, instead of harvesting more brains from the US, thereby giving SOME shekels back to the poor fools who supported MS ubiquity from the start, we are going to rely on India to save this great company. I guess they have admitted to killing the education system in the US and now they have to harevst the rest of the world? Nothing against India, God (all 300,000 of them) bless them, but it would be nice if America could save America once in a while, no?

  102. IBM and Unix by DJ+FirBee · · Score: 1

    --Until now, however, it has always fought and beaten foes with a definite face and form. To put UNIX out of favour with the computing world, it had to beat IBM.--

    When did AIX ever seem much of a threat to Microsoft ?
    They never competed on the desktop where Microsoft is. This article is just more fluff so that people can get their feathers in a bunch. But I suppose if FUD works for Microsoft then Linux advocates should employ it too. I hope that it does not get in the way with engineering a quality OS and good apps.

    If India has 10% of the developers then I am glad I do not live there. That place must be the crummiest place to live, a country of people with arranged marriages to other nerds, and a social caste system, a hierarchy of nerds. They should rename that country 'Nerdland' or 'Oppressive Nerdland, or IndyNerd.

    The food rocks though. Indian people that come to this country are never begging on the street corner. Too many nerds in one population is bad though.

    Somebody should take 5% of the developer nerds in India and move them to the US where they could live in Nerd Unfriendly environments like Texas and Missouri and Nebraska, then they would get more socially adjusted by having to interact with hicks. They could get rusty pickup trucks and mean dogs and have mandatory bar time and the Boars Nest(tm). Then they would be super nerds and they could develop linux and be a good peer group for other nerds.

    This way we could smarten up our hicks and toughen up some nerds at the same time through interbreeding. Also, nerds would get laid.

    The End.

    1. Re:IBM and Unix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      That place must be the crummiest place to live, a country of people with arranged marriages to other nerds, and a social caste system, a hierarchy of nerds. They should rename that country 'Nerdland' or 'Oppressive Nerdland, or IndyNerd.


      Yeah! I guess living in a most hated country where your spouse may leave you tommorrow for your car driver, a place where most people live on credit, a place where you never know when you would be hit by next Al Kaida plane, a place where blacks are discriminated against is a good Idea.

      Go figure.

    2. Re:IBM and Unix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America is hated for her imperial ways of meddling in the affairs of sovereign nations around the world. However, America is also envied by the citizens of these occupied lands because of the stories of dreams fulfilled. In the brave new EU, as well as in India -- socialism seems to thrive all over the place -- wherever government is hailed as the panacea to solve all her citizens' problems, there you will find individuals' ambitions for personal gain thwarted by the oppression of the almighty centralized government. The dream was fun while it lasted here, but it's been dead for a good thirty or forty years. And the irony? We idolize the bastards who stole the dream from us. Good ol' honest Abe and stinkin' FDR. There's a whole slew of other thieves and skanks, but these are my personal favorites. So for now, the US is my home of choice, but if India ever throws off the oppression of her socialist slave masters, I may have to try out the anarcho-capitalistic utopia that springs up in its place!

  103. somewhat offtopic but.. by u19925 · · Score: 2

    BusinessWorld is quite a famous magazine in India. However, I was surprised to see that the entire site didn't have any advertizement. Also the cover shows the retail price to be Re.5 which is equivalent of US 10 cents. Also the article is quite thorough in its coverage and analysis.

    1. Re:somewhat offtopic but.. by Vendekkai · · Score: 1

      FWIW, Business World runs on Windows

      OS, Web Server and Hosting History for www.businessworldindia.com
      OS Server Last changed IP address Netblock Owner
      Windows 2000 Microsoft-IIS/5.0 11-Nov-2002 64.239.18.189 Dialtone Internet
      FreeBSD Apache/1.3.23 8-Apr-2002 216.92.41.183 pair Networks
      FreeBSD Apache/1.3.14 1-Feb-2002 216.92.41.183 pair Networks
      FreeBSD Apache/1.3.3 2-Nov-2000 216.92.41.183 pair Networks

  104. Specious logic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "To parent's parent post: Free information is all well and good, but it's not an solution to the worlds problems. Try going naked into the desert and living off of "free information" for a month."

    Since were paraphrasing:
    'Try going naked into the desert and living off of "proprietary information" for a month."'

    Funny. Makes more sense the other way. How much did you pay for the "information" in your head, and was it a better value than the free information that other people imparted to you? Or are you the sum of all that money can buy?

  105. It's like installing XM radios on all Geo Metros by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At the end who cares? Computing is driven by US and EU programmers. That's where the main battle goes. 20/80 works perfectly. 20 is 15 in US and 4.95 in EU. There rest may rest.

  106. WTG, malakai..!! by krinsh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To the detractors: You know, if you hate businesspeople that much; especially those who try to give back; you need to find a country where you don't need that dollar a day in order to survive. Even communist states aren't that simple.

    I am the first to concede that Microsoft got to the top and then started knocking other people off the top by abusing their power. There is probably NO WAY to tell whether or not other powerhouses like Apple and IBM would have done the same -- on the other hand, there may be - Don Imus was talking about a book by a former IBM CEO the other day (but he was also mentioning that it seemed to be written in a vacuum; with no discernible mention of the worldwide sociopoliticeconmical situation at the time period; which is apparently the early 80s).

    It just so happens, WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT, that Mr. Gates is very very rich. And you know what; even if 98% of what his company does is wrong; getting there was not as wrong as you think. And that man worked hard to get where he is; and deserves an ounce of your respect for that. There are two sides to a coin; and the very fact that he gives back in areas that many others do not or would not donate time or money towards is laudable.

    As far as "the memo" is concerned... you/we/they ARE the competition. Every Pro-Linux gathering has plans to defeat the competition that is Microsoft - or corporate greed or whatever your noble cause du jour is. So do it!

    Give Microsoft competition; give 'closed source' competition; don't just spew mindless immaturities - "Waaaaah, he gots a lollipop and I don't". Remember to ask yourself how you are going to make money giving something away for free - and DAMN you if you make only the first one free because that is the same practice you detest. And before you break out more immaturities; I use them all - Solaris, Windows, Linux - because each one has their uses depending on what or whom I'm working for. If you can get it in front of the multibillion dollar corporation and get them to adopt it as their baseline OS; then that will be my next job. I am less worried about the kind of systems I will be supporting than whether said support position will be funded next year.

    --
    I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
    1. Re:WTG, malakai..!! by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      The thief still remains a thief.

      Your lame, weak excuses won't change that.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:WTG, malakai..!! by JimRay · · Score: 3, Informative

      It just so happens, WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT, that Mr. Gates is very very rich. And you know what; even if 98% of what his company does is wrong; getting there was not as wrong as you think. And that man worked hard to get where he is; and deserves an ounce of your respect for that.

      Please. That man was very, very lucky. When he dropped out of Harvard to start selling software, he had a million dollar trust fund in his back pocket to fall back on. When he started selling DOS (an application he stole, let's not forget) to IBM, it's because his mommy set up the meeting with then-CEO John Opel. Yeah, he's rich, but respect isn't something he deserves from me.

      Read all about it.

      --
      My other computer is your Windows box
    3. Re:WTG, malakai..!! by Shelled · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Trying to paint any questioning of Gates' motives as resentment is pathetic. Are you familiar with the term 'ad hominem'?

      Instead of ranting, I suggest you look at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's financial statements for 2001. It made $1.2 billion in investment gains and $2.2B in contributions. Also take a look at their grant history, at a rough guess half goes towards installing Microsoft product in needy areas. Or not so needy areas, like the huge rollouts in Canadian libraries. Gates isn't withdrawning from his daily savings account with these donations. He should be given due credit for the good his foundation does but that doesn't mean that we should take the founder and driving force behind one of the most ruthless companies in the world at his word on everything related to it.

    4. Re:WTG, malakai..!! by krinsh · · Score: 2

      I'm not making any excuses. I'm looking at the entire picture. Disliking an entire culture for the actions of one person is thoughtless and insensitive; the same as disliking one individual for the actions of an entire group. You think you'd run a multibillion dollar international corporation all by yourself? Decisions are made by committee - which is not a condonement or a criticism of those decisions. My only praise here is his charitable activities.

      Riddle me this: you may not have the cash to donate; but do you volunteer in your community? I provide technology help for the severeley MR classrooms; they never get new computers or a lot of assistance from the school system. For many years I made a special point to volunteer serving meals at Thanksgiving; not that easy to do with a large family of my own now but I'm going again this year because we're having dinner on Friday. Feel free to criticize a concerned donation if you take the time to be charitable yourself.

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
    5. Re:WTG, malakai..!! by krinsh · · Score: 2

      Hmmm. He paid $50 for DOS I seem to recall; and ran with it. You can't tell me if you see something you can make an improvement on and profit from; you're going to go "Hey, I have an idea based on something you're willing to sell to me outright. Why don't you just sell *half* of it too me, or license it, instead of selling me the whole thing, eh?"

      I quit envying people with six figure salaries a long time ago when I realized that if I worked hard enough I could get there. Granted, I didn't get the golden parachute they may have; but that will make the experience all the more important to me in the end. Most, if not a considerable majority, of your large corporate CEOs have stories that are like this.

      and I reiterate an "ounce"; you don't need to fall all over your bottom lip over them. I spend a lot of time reading about small business people and large business people and taking do's and do not's from what I have read.

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  107. I never said he was trying to make a market by burgburgburg · · Score: 2
    I quoted the article which said that he felt that India's progress in information technology would be thwarted by AIDS. And the quote line mentioned that the Microsoft software development center in India.

    He could have chosen a different time to make the donation and not tied the charity and his main agenda for the visit, which is convincing Indian programmers to not use/program for OSS: he didn't.

  108. I guess I'm missing the point.... by nathanz · · Score: 2, Informative

    What is the use of pushing MS technology on Indian programmers? I'm assuming that MS is targeting Indian programmers who work for outsourcing firms (body shops). Every time I've used such places with clients, we've never given the out-sourced developers their choice of platforms. You tell them exactly what you want and when. If developer X doesn't have the ability to write the program in Java, then we go to X' who can.

    1. Re:I guess I'm missing the point.... by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2

      If they can push Shared Source on the Indian developers they can target them for later lawsuits and take them out of the game entirely, anytime they want. I think that would be the point, at least on Microsoft's side.

  109. racists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That should be Native Americans.

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

      american indians and asian indians are two separate races of people, you stupid foaming fucking retard. fuck you! ok? you're a stupid asshole, and a fucking dumbass, fuck you!

      kthxbye~!

      Yours Sincerely,
      The Big Bad Troll.

    2. Re:racists by JimFromJersey · · Score: 1

      Nowhere in the taxonomical representation of plants/animals is there any mention of race:
      Kingdom,Phylum,Class,Order,Family,Genus,Spe cies. The concept of "race" being of genetic origin is incorrect. Nor does the term lend itself to a more sociological representation, for that use the term ethnic, as in "two seperate ethnic groups".

      --
      between the greater and lesser infinities sleep the dreams undreamt
  110. Except for one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you ever had to WORK with an Indian developer? Oh, MY god. My dad told me about how when he was in college, the students spoke of a "turban factor." The more Indians in a class, the easier it would be to do well, because of the curve. After the heavy influx of H1B visa recipients, I found out what he meant.

  111. Beware the Silken Iron Fist of M$ by demo9orgon · · Score: 5, Interesting
    M$ will gleefully deliver a firehose of CD's, half-assed poorly documented API's, and happy-fun stickers, folders, and posters in the target localization at the first hint of being able to get a toe-hold in some emergent or established company anywhere in the world.

    Then they'll regularly send someone by to see how things are going, talk up their latest "inno-cough-vative" offering, and see if the target company is _motivated_. Sometimes, if they're lucky, one of the new programmers will have some "happy fun intranet site, or happy joy widget" made with said technology to show off (you know, the port of something which has already been working in PERL, PHP, or both using Sun, or Zeus) that will probably score them some nifty t-shirts, a mug, or hey, maybe another dousing with the developer-cd firehose.

    And then if they really want to see how things are going, they'll ask for a tour of the _server room_, the holiest of the holies for said company. The annointed one will be walked around, and they'll look for familiar names, like Compaq, or Dell. But, if they see "SUN", or beige boxen then the annointed one will carefully steer conversation towards determining the nature and purpose of these boxen. Depending on the cluefulness of the tour-guide, things could either go well, and the annointed one will leave, only making note of a possible hardware upgrade deal, or they will become wrathful, and the sales-calls, port-scans, and off-hours questioning through "chance meetings" will take place until they have enough information to confront the president of the company. They will act hurt, or betrayed, and say interesting things like,
    "I thought we had an understanding that you were a Microsoft Development shop", or
    "How can we help you fully become a Microsoft Developer?", or my favorite,
    "How has Microsoft failed to meet your needs? We are eager to help you in any way we can."

    Of course, years later when the BSA sends out their letters to the less-than-faithful, and begins bringing in the police to follow up on portscans and megabytes of downloaded header logs showing all of the boxen development-only copies of software running. there will be those who remember these honeyed promises aimed only at the hearts, minds, and struggling companies or schools.

    M$ has much to gain, but in the end, as they squeeze diversity and skill out of developing countries, they will also loose these possibilities forever. Linux is safe, becuase just like the smart people in Africa who refused flawed crop-seed to avoid a hideous cycle of dependency, developers in India and around the world know that freedom is more important than easily made promises. Held to a hard-line of artificial ability and capability(M$ API's are Black-boxes...no lookee, no touch-ee, no-feelie) with brittle security, smart developers and business leaders will realize that there is no get-rich quick incentive to supporting a core of fatally flawed intractable components supplied by a company which is really incapable of doing anything more than strong-arming hardware and software developers(even savvy developers need support--and when they become the support they are no longer developers), coercing companies with hideous licensing schemes by buying legislation and counting coup on the legal system of the United States. Companies seeking to get rich by suckling at the four-paned teat would do well to remember that M$ eats it's young, and often the young of others too.

    --
    Every new form of media has it's own Requirimento
  112. India, Aids, and the google scoup. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google News gleaned a story this morning relating to Gates's having donated some $100 million, or there abouts, to fight the AIDS epidemic in India. I wondered, while reading this news, weather this gift was part of a greater MS campaign to improve relations with India....

  113. Exodus by Mannerism · · Score: 1

    Well, perhaps M$'s efforts will come to naught if India's developers band together with India's physicists. ;-)

  114. Re:Overseas-Balance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well to put some balance here. Popularity doesn't equal liked. Second people can work on more than one OS. Kind of like elsewere. There's plenty of Windows by day, Linux by night programmers out there. Guess who's been getting the better end of that split? Pragmatism doesn't mean exclusion of what one love's doing. And love of what one's doing is what has been driving OSS for years. Or is everyone under the impression that we've been doing all this because we hate our corporate masters?

  115. Not just coincidence... by neo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's an article where Bill Gates has taken a real interest in India... I don't think these two event are unrelated.

    Bill Gates hands out millions to fight AIDS in India

  116. Bill vs India/China by Cheese+Cracker · · Score: 2

    How noble of Bill to share a puny portion of his fortune on preventing AIDS in India. I wonder if Bill is going to dump some of his money in China as well... they got a lot of AIDS cases as well. Perhaps he've understood the longterm direction of the Chinese market isn't pointing towards Windows, so he won't spend more cash on trying to bribe the Chinese.

    In the coming decade, China is going to become the second largest IT development sweatshop after India. And the next step will be that India and China will pass the rest of the world in developing software packages. Western IT companies will go the same way the US car industry went... they'll become a player on a market with stiff competition... no more dominance. Maybe Bill and Steve will become more humble over the years?

  117. RedHat? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Does anybody know why RedHat are losing so much money. Arguably they are the most successful Linux business. I believe in their last shareholder report it talked about restructuring their embedded division or something. They seem to be growing still - shouldn't they be focussed on making money first?

  118. How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by Magnus+Pym · · Score: 1

    A lot of Columbian drug dealears give lots of money to catholic charities. Mother Theresa received quite a lot from them. Does that mean that we should ignore how these guys made the money?

    If I steal a million dollars and give a hundred thousand to charity, does that make me immune to criticism?

    Magnus.

    1. Re:How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      It doesn't make the charitable gift wrong, which is what the entire discussion is about.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by mangu · · Score: 2
      It doesn't make the charitable gift wrong,


      Yes, it does. The end doesn't justify the means. Do you think the "medical research" done at the nazi extermination camps was right? A donation made with illegal money isn't charitable at all, no mather if the money came from selling drugs or from an illegal software monopoly.


      There is, for sure, a difference in degree, but that wasn't the point. Maybe one could say that money gotten through violent crime is "more evil" than money from white collar crime. But I fail to see any redeeming value at all in donating 0.1% of a fortune that came, in large part, from illegal operations. Anyhow, it's not as if BillG would miss a few billions more or less...

    3. Re:How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by Bake · · Score: 2

      sssh, don't talk about things like that.

      Now all the coke-heads will have an excuse to snort the next line. "Hey *snort*, it's for charity *snort*"

    4. Re:How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by g4dget · · Score: 2

      Sure it does, if the gift is intended to improve the public's perception of oneself. And it works, and you can bet that that's why people like Gates do it.

    5. Re:How about Drug Dealers who donate to Charities? by krinsh · · Score: 1

      Since when did Bill Gates become a drug dealer? For the hundredth time - we bought into the whole thing. We didn't buy Novell; we didn't buy UNIX or VAX/VMS; we bought Microsoft. What they did after they got market share is not good. What is going to really be done about it by the courts still remains to be seen. I, personally, do not think that forcing them into an open source model is a viable solution and I have more than just greedy reasons for that. As a consultant and small businessman; I watch independent programmers get continuously asked for the source to their projects - which they will not provide until they are dead and the safe deposit box is opened; the Will read. There are too many possibilities for abuse by big name companies... oooh, did I say that? Of course there are too many possibilities.

      If you're so set on changing the system; stop name-calling and start getting active in providing real solutions. And re-read my message: I don't condone criminal activity but I also don't continue to condemn someone for the same thing over and over again. Plus I don't blame an individual for the actions of an entire corporation - Enron was committed by the whole of management. On the other hand; I do blame an individual for their own actions - but give them a chance to prove me wrong.

      What would you have done in the same situation?

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  119. Gates gives 100mil for HIV research or bribery by Thrazzle · · Score: 1


    BG gets a red mark on his forehead.

    Miztah Gates is giving 100mil for HIV research.

    http://www.msnbc.com/news/833383.asp?0pu=61

  120. like the mafia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, the local dons where I live are wonderful
    old men. They sit at the cafes sipping capuccinos, buying little kids ice cream....while their planning who their going to off.

    People seem so shocked that Gates would give money. Of course, it should not change your opinion of him one iota either.

  121. Oh, PUH-LEEZE!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    90% of the white Americans I have worked with were excellent professionals, too, and the "quality" of some of the Indian programmers I have been forced to work with has been less than great. Both your experience and my experience are anecdotal. What's your point?

  122. Re: by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    Post ignored.
    Fucking moron.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  123. Language Barrier by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2

    Ballmer's going to have to modify his act. What's Hindi for "DEVELOPERS! DEVELOPERS! DEVELOPERS! DEVELOPERS!!!!"

    --
    And the brethren went away edified.
  124. Re:In Related News... (scaremongering?) by jez9999 · · Score: 1

    That sounds like what China said up until last year - "We don't have an AIDS problem". Turns out they do, about 25 million cases worth.

    So that's what... 1% of their population?

  125. Re: Ignore above by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 2

    Okay, the actual text of that message was in the topic, and slashdot has decided to ignore my topic... so just ignore the above

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  126. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you believe that Bill Gates isn't possible *gasp* of ulterior motives? Oh my, he must be a saint sent to save us! Hail BIll Gates! Yay!

  127. To paraphrase... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    Or to put it another way... This software is now the ultimate power in the universe. I suggest we use it!

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  128. lollilop by eggcozy · · Score: 1

    >Give Microsoft competition; give 'closed source' competition; don't just spew mindless immaturities - "Waaaaah, he gots a lollipop and I don't".

    Speaking of being immature, I don't recall making fun of someone a level of maturity. I see no indication of jealousy in the comment about the relation to the push to keep microsoft developers.

    I've witnessed many times guys who take up charitable interests just to get laid, and it works, over and over. The guy really might not be an a-hole and might even agree with his new found ideas, but somehow it just seems a bit cheesy.

    If you respond to this, keep in mind that my reason for this viewpoint is not because I want a lolipop, or my neighbors sweet little ass, it's just a shared observation.

    1. Re:lollilop by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2

      I've witnessed many times guys who take up charitable interests just to get laid, and it works, over and over

      You're sitting on a goldmine, Trebeck.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    2. Re:lollilop by krinsh · · Score: 2

      Ah... but are we implying that everyone has ulterior motives when they do something charitable? I'm sure that would insult a few right-wingers in here... but wait a minute the very fact that I told people to look at the man, not the megacorporation, obviously insulted more than a few people in here.

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  129. This could backfire in a spectacular way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Expanding the pool of inexpensive developers will not by itself manufacture a demand for Microsoft products. Indeed, M$ will have to give away product in India to keep the devlopers onboard. Even if that effort is successful, the existance of cheap labor in India is hardly an incentive for Western companies to stick with M$. It may even act as a counter-incentive for US and European developers. They might simply abandon the "low-end" M$ platform, leaving it to the "low-cost" developers. The danger of vigorously pursuing the bottom of the market is that you might actually win it.

    The salaries of Microsoft professionals are already lower than comparable Unix/Oracle positions. Who says so? Microsoft proclaims it loudly, every chance they get. Not that all M$ professionals are poorly paid, but when you see a laughable salary for an open position, it's more often than not a M$ shop of one type or another. How much lower do they have to be in order to keep M$ from losing market share to other technologies? How much lower can they go before the developers correct the market imbalance by "upgrading" themselves to non-M$ capabilities? As a defensive action against a massive migration to Linux, the giveaways will serve a purpose, but it's not going to "make the penguin extinct" anytime soon.

    At the end of the day, Microsoft has to find someone who pays full retail price for their products. No matter how many low-cost developers are out there, it is customer satisfaction with M$ pricing, stability, and security, and overall cost that makes or breaks the deal. There aren't enough low-cost developers in the world to make me feel good about the cost, licensing terms, stability, or security of M$ products.

  130. Re:WTG, malakai..!!-Robin Hood syndrome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It just so happens, WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT, that Mr. Gates is very very rich. And you know what; even if 98% of what his company does is wrong; getting there was not as wrong as you think. And that man worked hard to get where he is; and deserves an ounce of your respect for that. There are two sides to a coin; and the very fact that he gives back in areas that many others do not or would not donate time or money towards is laudable."

    So since were on the issue of ethics. Were should we draw the line of what's right, and what's wrong? That's basically were it come down to. If a drug dealer gives some of his money to homeless shelters and soup kitchens, does that make him a bad man or a good one? What if someone electroniclly robs the bank of london? Hey it doesn't affect "me" or physically hurt anyone so it must be OK. I swear this whole planet has the most fucked-up morals I've ever seen. OK so Gates is giving his millions to do good things. Since that's OK. I hereby submit that everyone (yes you!) should cease all activities that would stem gates flow of philanthropic funds. Also everyone should make repatriations for any funds denied him because of everyones previous efforts. After all it's "for the children". Sheeesh!

  131. Free Source? by infolib · · Score: 1

    Linux, the free source operating system (OS) that has evolved over the years, owes allegiance to none

    "Free Source"? - Perhaps that's what we should call it to end the Great War? Hmmm, on second thought, Stallmann would never approve it.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
  132. Re:India specialz... in Win is a boon to US/EU by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 3, Insightful
    If Indian programming shops are in majority unable to take up Linux-specific programming tasks, this weakness will be an opportunity to slow the leaking of programming jobs outside western countries.

    And how, pray tell, is this a boon to Linux? It may be a boon to your yankee job, but Linux improved in India is still improved.

    Please, this is slashdot, let's have OS prejudice not race and nationality prejudice. On purely humanitarian grounds, parochial protectionism is no boon to the third world.

    --

    My Karma: ran over your Dogma
    StrawberryFrog

  133. STUPID by applejacks · · Score: 1

    I don't know why I bother posting.

    How in the world does India own 10% of the development community? I think you mean China. Or rather, the distribution of the development is so massive its almost impossible to compute the statistic.

    Seriously, quit trying to quantify the world and the events with in it.

  134. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ok, wake up now.

  135. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by rseuhs · · Score: 2

    Did you even read my post?

  136. who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not too impressed with developers from that area. There are some smart people in the region, but most I've met are hackers and don't think things through to build reliable maintainable solutions. Let M$ take them and continue the heritage of M$ being a hackers OS.

  137. Re:Overseas-Balance by mangu · · Score: 2
    ...Windows by day, Linux by night programmers...


    Last time I did that was in the old days of 1.2.13 kernel. For at least five years I have been able to convince the managers in my company of the Linux superiority, not by talking, but by coding superior software in Linux.

  138. Revisionist History Alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He bought DOS. Sure it was for a song, but he paid the guy the agreed-upon sum. I'm no big fan of MS' practices, but it was not Bill's fault that the inventor of DOS was a lame business man who didn't know what he had.

    If you don't like living in a capitalist society, then get the hell out.

  139. Mass murder by davidsansome · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Targeting Indian Developers

    That's it... a little to the left... a little more... BANG!
    Muhahahahah, another potential linux developer down. Who's next?

    --
    -- Wibble
  140. news: bill gates donates 100m to india for "aids" by honold · · Score: 1
  141. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let it be known that Indian "programmers" really do suck. They fuck up everything they touch. Even stupid russian coders are better than dot-heads.

  142. It is not flamebait by burgburgburg · · Score: 2

    Bill is the one who chose this trip, so focused on getting Indian programmers to program for Windows instead of OSS, to provide this donation. Bill is the one who tied these two together. And the article points out that he expressed concern that AIDS would thwart India's progress in IT, and tied the sentence together with the presence of the Microsoft software development center in India.

  143. cover is cool, but needs more by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 1

    i want to see the penguin with boxing gloves on punching bill in the face, south-park style. Not because that's what's happening, but just cause it would be funny and cool.
    sir_haxalot

    --
    stuff |
  144. Bill's tux by MicklePickle · · Score: 1

    I notice that in the posted image Bill is wearing a tux. Looks like it's affecting him more than he thinks.

    --
    -- main(s){printf(s="main(s){printf(s=%c%s%c,34,s,34) ;}",34,s,34);} $p='$p=%c%s%
  145. China sucks too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Want some unoriginal 17th century thinking? Go to china. If you want some unoriginal 18th century thinking, go to India.

  146. Re:he is not the richest man in the world QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, thinking about it, I don't think a drug lord could get within even an order of magnitude of 50 billion. That's so much money that there's no where they could keep it. There are only so many banks that will accept drug money, and there's just not enough assets that you can buy with it.

    Fifty billion is an unimaginably large amount of money. Put it this way, $50 billion is like 10 MILLION pounds of gold.

    There's just no way a criminal could move around that kind of money.

  147. Extraordinary claims demand... by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 1

    That's quite an impressive claim you make there. Do you have a reference to back that up?

    --grendel drago

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  148. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by archen · · Score: 1

    Fear, Uncertainity, Doubt... You know I think it's worked pretty well on me. I think pretty much everything sucks all the time reguardless of the operating system. And strangely enough computer related stuff in general tends to prove my point time and time again.

  149. Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Indians cannot afford to write GLP'ed code. They would write primarily for Windows anyway. So, it is great news Gates is spending his money on a Linux lost cause.

  150. Microsoft is not strategic to India. by tds · · Score: 1

    Microsoft will use it's money to try an influence Indian software companies and developers, but anyone who has done business in India will know. Indian's are smart and have a sharp sense of business.

    They may well take Microsoft money now if they are gaining business and making money. But in the long run Linux is a strategic platform that India will use to move beyond the so called out sourcing programming business model to compete on an even basis with western software companies.

    Microsoft no matter how much money it spends has nothing to offer in this regard.

  151. What country are you talking about? by mangu · · Score: 2
    A copy of Windows cost around 6000 Bucks there. You can probably feed a whole family very good food for a week(or maybe more) over there with that money


    Not even Monaco is as expensive as that! I guess in India it's more like $6/week to feed the average family.

  152. Services and Code Generation by HanzoSan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Someone has to write the code and you have the most programmers in india, this = $$

    Someone has to write serious government apps and people would pay money for this.

    Open Source does not mean Free as in beer.

    Open Source is Open Source.

    You can sell programs, but the source code is free, you sell the compiled code, most people when they buy a game dont know how to or dont want to spend days compiling it, they want a CD, they want to pop it in, and have it work.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  153. Tools are nothing without knowledge by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Microsoft and the USA has a monopoly on knowledge so what good is having the tools?

    Instead of teaching them to fish, we give them fish.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  154. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  155. Re:Get a grip, please... by symbolic · · Score: 2

    And that man worked hard to get where he is; and deserves an ounce of your respect for that. There are two sides to a coin; and the very fact that he gives back in areas that many others do not or would not donate time or money towards is laudable.

    First, the only people that are worthy of my respect are those who can aspire to a Gates-like position in an ethical and honest manner. This would tend to explain why I have no respect for Gates. Second, I don't believe that Gates isn't deriving any benefit from the money he's giving way. This topic has come up before, and can be summed up in two words: tax writeoff. Face it- he has an agenda, and it's very much in his favor.

  156. Microsoft Targeting Indian Developers by user+no.+590291 · · Score: 1

    What a coincidence! So is the Pakistani High Command.

  157. It is nice to see the author has missed the point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill is doing this because US companies are now outsourcing to India in droves. If the Indian programmers use MS, then so will the US slave labourers.
    NOT because he could give two stuffs about India or its programmers. I thought this would be obvious???

  158. windows is just a tool by Fuzzums · · Score: 2

    I'm developing web-applications. it just happens there are a number of handy applications to develop them under windows.

    sweet eh? use windows to develop for linux. that's the way bill woulnd't like it i guess ;-)

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  159. But Oracle... by SystematicPsycho · · Score: 1

    Larry Ellison already has most indian developers on his pay roll doing the most mundane of tasks, like manually hex editing oracle tablespaces and writing pl/sql in machine language.

    --
    Analytic & algebraic topology of locally Euclidean meterization of infinitely differentiable Riemmanian manifold
  160. selling overpriced trash by g4dget · · Score: 2
    So, you think that the future of the Indian computer industry should be in selling overpriced trash? Sorry, but I don't think that will work.

    If open source is truly more cost effective (as I firmly believe) than Microsoft software, it will succeed in the long run. Of course, you are right that being "more cost effective" means less opportunity for revenue. In particular, open source eliminates much useless duplication of effort, meaning that it needs fewer programmers to provide the same range of products--but it still needs paid programmers to create the software in the first place. Open source software still offers plenty of opportunities for making money: consulting, custom development, some closed source packages running on top of open source systems, etc.

    Don't bet on a loser--bet on what economics tells you must win in the long run. And I think that's pretty clearly open source.

    1. Re:selling overpriced trash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " In particular, open source eliminates much useless duplication of effort"
      Does it ?
      Ah, so this is why OpenSource world is "blessed" with so many GUI toolkits, so many different implementation of basically the same ideas ( WMs, desktop enviroments )
      It is all about code reuse ...

  161. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Part of the /. appearance of MS FUD could be due to the near-certainty that MS has been massively astroturfing here...

  162. Why I don't give a flying Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, does this increase H-1B's or decrease them? I find I can't give a penguin's ass about MS vs. OSS when I don't have a job doing either these days. When my wallet is not so empty someday I might start caring agian. Fuck your war. I just want a fucking job. A job from Gates is better than no job.

    1. Re:Why I don't give a flying Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Does this give programmers here in U.S. any jobs or not?

      I could give a flying fig who is on top, MS or some other entity vying for the throne.

      I just want to work doing what I love again!!!

      There are NO jobs here, and there is no one to watch out for our jobs, either. Neither major party gives a fuck about us...one sells us out for "diversity"'s sake, and the other does it in the interest of global free trade. A real "free trade" system would adjust for the value of the dollar...and exact punitive fees on companies that go to places like India and other armpits of the world, while having a few American managers here to give the impression it's an American product.

      And lastly, I agree with what another poster on here said: Indian "programmers" generally DO have a reverse-Midas touch - everything they touch turns to shit. I have only seen one example of a good programmer from India. All the rest couldn't find their ass with two hands and a flashlight, but wasted a lot of my time as well as the company's time faking it - this was, of course, back when I still had a job. Those days are loooong gone now.

  163. To all those "Bill is not a bad man" comments by Pitawg · · Score: 1

    This is an MS move on the market.

    MS or Gates donations along with their other actions are political moves for the corporation. This is global politics. Call it business if you like, but there are MS goals behind each move.

    This is an attack on resources owned by a country. Do not try to push "Bill is not bad, he gives...." as it makes you another FREE MS MARKETER whining as you aid the man and his company.

    A dictator is still a dictator even if he/she opens a healthcare system for one group under his/her rule. Charitable acts do not remove any detrimental acts on the record. Regardless of future events or decisions, this man and his company are a drain on any future this planet has. No amount of kissing up will change this fact. No amount of free marketing from these comments will change this either.

  164. Bill Gates pledges $100 million US to fight AIDS by dirvish · · Score: 2

    I can't help but think that this is related.

  165. Microsoft and Indians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see many people are concerned that how Indians are falling for Microsoft but nobody ever thought that the programmers also need to feed themselves in order to live. Pretty much all the programmers will leave Microsoft and start programming for Linux or the open source community only if they were guaranteed a source of income. By programming for Linux they don't make any money and they only do it out of personal interest. Also somebody mentioned that India lacks innovation. Well we lack the resources and when given the right resources we can do wonders. It was an Indian who invented the Pentium chip (Even though most of the slashdot readers use Anthlon) and if you check with any big company like Motorola or IBM you will a good number of Indians holding key position in areas including in the R&D department. Just because the Indian who mentioned that India is not innovated is dumb asshole doesn't mean the whole country should get a bad name. PS- In fact India gave the world "0" all comes down to 0 and 1.

  166. Bangalore by maxconfus · · Score: 1

    I don't care about the politics on this issue. I am an IT worker. A core reason I got into this job was to meet as many people as possible.

    --
    A hand up and a foot on every chest...
    1. Re:Bangalore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I am an IT worker

      Is that a euphemism like uh .. sex worker?

  167. Old migrations by Pseudonymus+Bosch · · Score: 2

    To think that only a few hundred years ago, we were all in our separate continents, living in dull homogeneity.

    Well,... African slaves to Europe and America, European crusaders to East Mediterranean, Asian nomads to Europe, Indonesians to Madagascar, Arabs to the Pacific, and others didn't stay in their continents

    --
    __
    Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
    GW Bu
  168. The idea is ... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2

    ... not fighting back, it fighting back where you don't look as shallow and idiotic as "the enemy".

    Don't like his tactics? So why adopt them as your own?

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    1. Re:The idea is ... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      "... not fighting back, it fighting back where you don't look as shallow and idiotic as "the enemy".

      Don't like his tactics? So why adopt them as your own?"

      I thought I made myself clear. Not fighting back simply encourages bullying and predetory behaviour. The best way to deal with a bully is to hit them back. If you simply lie down then maybe you can whine about being a victim but if you fight back you can at least hold on to your pride even if the bully beats the shit out of you.

      This is exactly what is happening. Bill Gates is beating shit out of everybody in his way but some people at least try to fight back. You apparently are not one of those people.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    2. Re:The idea is ... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2

      Ugh. Its late here and I type the first part wrong.

      The idea is fighting back, but doing it manner which is "honorable". Name-calling and shallow tactics isn't.

      >I thought I made myself clear

      Yes you did. It was I who wasn't.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    3. Re:The idea is ... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      "The idea is fighting back, but doing it manner which is "honorable". Name-calling and shallow tactics isn't."

      I don't know what country you are from but I am from the US. In the US we have a different conception of the word "honorable". To us honorable means using overwhelming force to kill our enemies while doing our absolute best not to get any americans killed. Take the last few wars for example. We bomb from the air out of reach of the enemy for as long as it takes to kill most of them and to wipe out their defenses. Then if we have fighters from other countries we arm them and send them to fight for us. Only after those two phases are done do we actually send our troops in to clean up.

      To a third world person it may seem "shallow" or "cowardly" to bomb the enemy for a month before going in. To them bravery and honor is looking in the eyes of your enemy while you plunge your sword into their heart.

      As a result of their warped sense of honor they die and we live.

      As long as you hang on to your antiquated notions of honor and fighting fair you will suffer the same fate as the taliban, the serbs, the iraquis and the palestenians.

      The American way is to fight to win, fight to kill. Bill Gates is an American and you can be sure he is fighting to kill no matter what the tactics involved.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    4. Re:The idea is ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The American way is to fight to win, fight to kill. Bill Gates is an American and you can be sure he is fighting to kill no matter what the tactics involved."

      So bullying is ok then.
      If you can suppress others and get away with it (even if it's against the law) it's ok.
      You really seem to know a lot about ethic.

  169. coincidence or just a nice guy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    found this on CNN.org just now. Now Im not saying that Bill Gates isnt doing this for the hell of it or because he can afford to do so but $100 million? Its good PR is nothing else. Kind of just an odd coincidence that hes looking to grab a nice slice of the Indian programmers as well. Oh well... check this out. http://cnn.org/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/south/11/11/indi a.gates.reut/index.html

  170. Carnegie and moneybags by Sam+the+Nemesis · · Score: 1
    Speaking of Carnegie, I remembered this quote from Einstein:

    "I am absolutely convinced that no wealth in the world can help humanity forward, even in the hands of the most devoted worker. The example of great and pure individuals is the only thing that can lead us to noble thoughts and deeds. Money only appeals to selfishness and irresistibly invites abuse. Can anyone imagine Moses, Jesus or Gandhi armed with the money-bags of Carnegie?"

  171. Actually, YOU must be joking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While certainly there is no shortage of talented developers from India (as there are from Russia, China, and just about everywhere else, even the good ol' US of A), the reason for hiring Indian programmers has almost entirely to do with economics, i.e. Indian developers are very cheap, at least in India. Yes, the reasons that blue collar jobs have gone to East Asia are the reasons that white collar jobs will go to India and anywhere that programming labor is dramatically cheaper.

  172. Lets analyze this by orcaaa · · Score: 1

    Action A: Indian Government Chooses Linux for Academia.
    Action B: A highly sucessful linux show is completed in Bangalore
    Action C: Mailing lists show lots of signs of an even bigger linux show happening in Bombay.
    Action D: Microsoft Targets Indian developers
    Action E: Bill gives $100 mn to a charitable cause in India.

    There is obviously more connections between D,E and A,B and C than are obvious on face value. Surely, the timing for D could not be at a more critical time time. One of the software engineer producing factories of the world(India) is making a conscious shift towars linux. Enter Microsoft. The rest, will be history!

    --
    -- Reality is just an extended dream.
  173. Following Carnegie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carnegie was a tough business man but a great philanthropist. Gates seems to be following the footsteps. Gotta give him credit though.. he could have spent his 2.7 billion dollars buying off politicians but he spent it on humanitarian and philanthropic causes. I check that guy off in my list as a nice guy.

  174. Or he's desperate by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 2
    He's desparate. He knows Microsoft dropped the ball in regards to the Internet and has frittered away the time it needed to catch up. He knows that Closed source will no longer enjoy the market it once had (why pay for work twice, thrice, etc.?) He also knows that the growth through acquisition strategy historically used by Microsoft ends when there is nothing left they can acquire.

    Now the company's technology is woefully behind OSS in every technical aspect and has the edge over OSS only in the user interface and marketing. Apple has them beat by a mile on the interface and OS X gives you the best of BSD and Apple.

    The last straw is that Microsoft has grown by acquiring, or "innovating" if you will, external products and technologies into their own product line. Companies that grow through acquisition eventually hit appogee and then drop like a rock.

    So this visit reeks of desparation. Given that starvation, undernourishment, even smoke from cooking fires are more serious health problems (in India) than AIDS, the choice to target AIDS is not for the benefit of India but instead audiences in North America and Europe.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  175. This sheds some light on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Bill Gates recent charity activity in India. Doing some much needed charity work, while cleaning up his image, and Microsoft's in turn. Here are relevant links here and there.

  176. Re:Microsoft has already succeeded in FUDing slash by oniony · · Score: 1
    As a side, what's to stop the likes of Walmart from massively customizing the linux distribution for their own benefits at the cost of the Linux image and brand?



    Are there any safeguards to prevent the Linux name from being tarred (in the treacle sense) by the brush of unscrupulous vendors? Walmart (or AOL or even Microsoft) could easily create their own distro that does everything most Linux users dread -- media copy protection, subscription software, vendor controlled updates and restrictions. They have the might after all few outside the mainstream would have the insight that there is anything better out there when it comes to a well marketed product. Look at the sucess of AOL as an example.


    How many of the existing Linux distros would not be tempted by a contract with one of the big companies, even if it does mean compromising their existing morals?

    --

    Powered by onion juice.

  177. Re:Yes, but...A BIG RANT by Insipid+Trunculance · · Score: 1

    Its IDIOT REDNECKS like you that get my goat.

    Ever been to a Banglore software factory?Ever in your life?who told you abt the stolen software?ever ever ever been outta your tariler park?

    Just an assumption isnt it?because i who fscking worked in three places knows what happens if you bleeding install SHAREWARE before informing the BOSS...yeah got my balls ripped out by installing WInproxy and neglecting to mention to the boss it was over the trial period and i was using a friends registration.

    For a fscking redneck like you let me put it in simpler terms-unless these chaps can have a framed license hanging on the walls they cant sleep at night nad suffer from chronic indigestion.

    so go back to your trailer park and drink up your cheap beer.

    after all just as you assume all indian software developers steal software i assume you are just a brainless dodo.now crawl back where you come from.....

    TO ALL THE INTELLIGENT /.s PLEASE IGNORE MY RANT.SORRY FOR THE NOISE.

    --
    Wanted : A Signature.
  178. My experience as an Indian student... by theprancinghorse · · Score: 2, Informative

    As a student studying at an Indian university in Mumbai(Bombay) I have observed that Microsoft far more dominant that Linux.

    _None_ of our computers in any lab or any faculty run Linux. They all run Windows ( Pirated copies BTW..).

    I study Computer science, and none of my teachers are familiar with Unix/Linux. They have a very superficial knowledge, if at all. At the same time, they are proficient at administering windows systems.

    This is all contrary to the articles that have been posted on slashdot about the Indian government promoting linux in universities. It is not happening.

    The main thrust for promoting Linux comes from the students. The student bodies try to organize workshops to familiarize other students about Linux. I have helped in such ventures and my experience is that most other students do not care much about Linux. Their thinking is that knowing how to use Microsoft products will help them more in getting a job than knowing about Linux. And thats all they care about.

    -----

    1. Re:My experience as an Indian student... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak for yourself. We did most of the serious programming in our University on Unix (which was all Linux, bar a couple of old Solaris machines). Didn't you use any unix tools for your course on Compilers?

    2. Re:My experience as an Indian student... by theprancinghorse · · Score: 1

      Well, I have still not completed my course and so far, we have not had to use any unix systems. I spoke to a few seniors and they have not done any programming on unix either. BTW, where do you study? ---

    3. Re:My experience as an Indian student... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anna University, Chennai and that was 2 years ago. Sorry, didn't mean to be impolite ...

  179. Re:Get a grip, please... by krinsh · · Score: 2

    Where has it been said he made it where he is in a dishonest manner? I do know that Microsoft's position has been *maintained* in an unethical manner. Again, a lot of people seem to think that the very fact that people have material wealth makes them crooks.

    --
    I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  180. Gates Offers India $100 Million to Fight AIDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NOV 12 - NY Times article

    http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/12/international/ as ia/12GATE.html?todaysheadlines

    I'm not saying this is a bad thing, but the timing here has to say something???

  181. I totally agree with you... by SnafuX · · Score: 1

    This kind of article doesn't disturb me in the least. Linux will always grow because it can! Microsoft can do whatever they want to try and thwart the open source movement but it will always fail for one simple reason. The price!

    Anybody can learn how to code. Admittedly, however, not everybody can code well but for every 10 coders there is one (perhaps more) who can code well. So, the odds are in the open source community's favor since Microsoft can only hire so many developers and only those developers who are in it for the money will probably go with m$. The others who feel the movement will probably tell m$ to go shove off.

    Nah, this is not a threat. It's fodder. Bill Gates will never be able to overcome this movement short of bribing the whole open source community and while he may have the money to do such a thing, I don't believe the open source community is willing to give up their freedom for a little cash...at least that is how I see it.

    There is a point in a human being's life where one learns that money is not everything but merely a means to some physical pleasures and necessities. The excess of money is not necessary for the necessities.

    --
    - J
  182. A genuine donation ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    attribute this to Business or Charity but Bill Gates is the Modern Equivalent of Robin Hood - ** Rob the Rich to pay the poor and needy **

  183. /. FUDed ? by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2



    Are you kidding, since whence will /. being FUDed ?

    No, /. will ne'er get FUDed, not by Microsoft.

    We maybe, a little bit too excited, however.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  184. Re:Get a grip, please... by symbolic · · Score: 2


    If I remember correctly, Gates pulled a few very cunning, and I'd say very opportunistic moves during his initial forays into the world of business. I'd even go so far as to suggest that this way of doing business has pervaded Microsoft's corporate culture, thus explaining its ongoing lack of ethical behavior. Gates (or his corporate cronies) practically lied under oath during the trial. What does that say about his character?

  185. Re:Get a grip, please... by krinsh · · Score: 2

    That doesn't say much at all, I admit. But is cunning and opportunistic the same as evil? I honestly have to think about that one [and maybe have a chat with some philosophical and pious people I know].

    --
    I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  186. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT

    Title: Are Frogs Turing Compatible?
    Speaker: Don "The Lion" Knuth

    ABSTRACT
    Several researchers at the University of Louisiana have been studying
    the computing power of various amphibians, frogs in particular. The problem
    of frog computability has become a critical issue that ranges across all areas
    of computer science. It has been shown that anything computable by an amphi-
    bian community in a fixed-size pond is computable by a frog in the same-size
    pond -- that is to say, frogs are Pond-space complete. We will show that
    there is a log-space, polywog-time reduction from any Turing machine program
    to a frog. We will suggest these represent a proper subset of frog-computable
    functions.
    This is not just a let's-see-how-far-those-frogs-can-jump seminar.
    This is only for hardcore amphibian-computation people and their colleagues.
    Refreshments will be served. Music will be played.

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...