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Hackers on Linux's Exciting Desktop Future

Gentu writes "OSNews features two interviews with prominent open source developers: Robert Love started working at Ximian this week and he will be leading the 'effort to improve the Linux desktop experience via kernel development'. In this Q&A, he explains what he will be working on hardware integration, freedesktop.org's D-BUS & HAL, low latency optimizations, power management, X & 3D and a 'Linux answer to WinFS'. The second interview is with Red Hat's Owen Taylor. Owen speaks of GTK+ development and where he sees the project going in the Gnome 3 timeframe: freedesktop.org's new X server, Cairo support, GTK#, OpenGL & other widgets and more."

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  1. One good reason to like open-source software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When someone announces they will be working on a project -- low latency optimization, for example -- you can pretty well tell that they are *actually* working on it because the code is released and you can look at it. It might have mistakes, crash a lot, or be missing features, but another developer can build on it if the original coder leaves the project because of other commitments or just out of boredom.

    On the other hand, with proprietary code you are never quite sure where you stand. The company holding the source can claim they are spending the next month concentrating their resources on security issues, and if the program appears to be as insecure and bug-ridden as before you aren't sure if the developers took a month-long cruise to the Bahamas and blew it off or if they are actually inept at security. If you depend on that program for your own product, you can't even fix the problems you encounter if the developer decides to ignore or even kill the product because the source code is secret. And for those that have a paranoid bent, it's entirely possible for certain companies to sow FUD by claiming to be working on some incredibly desirable improvement they have no intention of delivering, or to leave hidden programming hooks which allow only certain products to use it.

    Too bad our founding fathers could not have forseen the entire source code/copyright issue. I would like to think they would have required complete specificity with regards to programs -- if you wanted to copyright a program, you would have to show exactly how it was created using industry-standard tools. It would not only prevent monopolistic power in one programming area (*cough* operating systems *cough*) from extending to another, but it would be one heck of a lot easier to prove copyright *infringement* because the source code from various products could be compared.