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de Icaza: Rest of World Will Force US Into Linux

Eugenia writes "OSNews had an interesting discussion with Miguel de Icaza about all things Linux and Novell. Miguel talked about the general patent problem and how this will become the one single stumbling block of widespread adoption of Linux in USA, while he asserts that Longhorn uses some 'new' technologies already found on Gnome and elsewhere. Miguel believes that poor countries will be the first that will adopt widely Linux, and as long the EU won't adopt a similar system to US for patents, Europe will follow soon after, leaving no option to USA but to eventually adopt Linux as well in the long run (despite potential patent problems). Another strategy Miguel discussed was about moving as many F/OSS applications as possible to Windows in order to familiarize the casual users with open source. Among many other interesting tidbits he also mentions that Quark is now using Mono on Mac OS X." Of course, the EU not adopting software patents seems to be less and less likely.

21 of 786 comments (clear)

  1. EU software patents. by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Note: The European elections are due in a month or so, so contact your MEPs to ask why they exist if the parliament can be bypassed like this.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  2. The new market for the 21st century by spidergoat2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is the 3rd world. While these countries are poor now, their economies will be openning up. If they have adopted a standard of open source, they will have no reason to change. Certainly not at Microsoft's prices. The point will come where, if the US wants to do business, we will be forced to adopt their standards. Good thing we already have Linux here.

  3. Evolution Win32 (Slightly OT) by CdBee · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm genuinely looking forward to the release of the Ximian Evolution Windows port as it'll finally give a decent free mail client, which I can distribute to the several dozen friends' PCs I unofficially support.

    I've been trying to get them off Outlook/OExpress for ages (for safety purposes) but most refused to go to Thunderbird as it was "too different"

    They can hardly say that about Evolution.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    1. Re:Evolution Win32 (Slightly OT) by MooCows · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've been trying to get them off Outlook/OExpress for ages (for safety purposes) but most refused to go to Thunderbird as it was "too different"

      Exactly the same problem here.

      I've tried to get our administrative staff to switch to Thunderbird.
      Really just for safety reasons. (because our email addresses are in many attachment-clicking-OE-users' addressbooks, and it takes only one non-attachment OE-exploit to infect our staff's computers)

      However after a week they told me in unanimity they wanted to switch back to OE.
      Naturally, I asked: Why? Doesn't Thunderbird do everything OE does too? (and better, like filtering and searching)
      They answered: Well, yes that's true, but it's still different!

      So grudingly I had to switch them back.

      Moral of the story: We need a better Outlook skin for Thunderbird. :P

      --
      The path I walk alone is endlessly long.
      30 minutes by bike, 15 by bus.
  4. Because Miguel de Icaza is unbiased? by mhesseltine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Of course someone deeply involved in the Open Source software movement is going to say that Linux will become the dominant system. It's in his best interest to say that.

    Bill Gates, Steve Balmer, Craig Mundie, etc. all feel that Windows and Microsoft software will be the dominant platform. Steve Jobs thinks that Apple and OS X will be the dominant platform. Is this really news?

    The more interesting question is if de Icaza *really* believes that Gnome and Mono are going to be the dominant desktop. I know as the founder of the project, again it is in his interest to say yes. I just wonder if he's tried to use a KDE 3.2.x system and what his impressions are of it?

    --
    Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
  5. Do as I say, not as I do?? by moehoward · · Score: 3, Interesting


    It always bugged me that Evolution was not available for Windows. I'd be more than happy to ditch Outlook, but a good alternative does not exist. The Mozilla family is not a good alternative.

    I hope that this means we'll see Evolution and others ported to Windows in the near future.

    --
    "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
  6. Russia and China by thodu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Two countries that simply refuse to be bullied by anybody. Watch out for Linux development heading eastwards - patents or no patents. China, as we have seen went out of their way to develop an alternative DVD standard just to get around patent crap. And they almost went their own way on WiFi too. I wonder what the terms of settlement between Intel and China amounts too. Japan too, for their consumer electronics industry adopting Linux in a big way. NTT DoCoMo's reference platform for the next generation phones is based on Linux.

  7. Re:Havn't I heard this before? by Yorrike · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I thought that the rest of the world was supposed to force the U.S. into Metric.

    No it didn't work, but the rest of the world cares not for the backwards, stone-age measurement systems used by the US. Instead of persisting, we just point and laugh when the US talks of feet and inches.

    The US won't be the world's super power forever, once they're second or third for a half century, I'm sure they'll make efforts to fall into line.

    --

    Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?

  8. Business.. by xxx_Birdman_xxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've been following Linux for several years, but it's only this year I been able to stay exclusively on linux for a week or so while doing uni work. It's like everything has clicked for me, and I'm finding that I'm prefering to work under linux for coding. Maybe it's because i've been fiddling around long enough that I've grown to love the OS and desktop managers like KDE, or maybe it's because projects in the open source community have risen to such high levels of quality.

    Thats not to say though that I haven't had my share of problems- cant get tv out working nicely, or 5.1 sound, or my OpenGL working right...

    But for sitting down and doing research, coding and web activites, I'm finding Linux (i'm using Mandrake 9.2 btw) is more productive for me than Windows.

    And when it comes to business, productivity is a significant drawcard. Due to my new found fondness of linux and OSS this week, im thinking that OSS will win users over due to it's increasing quality moreso than patent issues.

    --
    Live in your skin. Keep changing the scenery.
  9. Metric System by Venner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What are you talking about? The United States Congress officially adopted the metric system in 1866. :-)
    They just didn't force people to stop using the units and measures with which they were familiar.

    Coming from a science/engineering background, I *hate* working in traditional/avoirdupois/empire units.

    On the other hand, it feels unnatural to talk about the weather in anything but degrees Fahrenheit. I've tried. I have plenty of European relatives. But centigrade's units feel too "big" and awkward.

    --
    A preposition is a terrible thing to end a sentence with.
    1. Re:Metric System by OS24Ever · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What gets me about not using the centigrade measurement system is that it makes so much more sense. Where 0 = where water freezes. Vs. Degrees F = where a half mixture of salt and water freezes.

      Is it the American thing where 'bigger is better' or what? That's what always confused me on why we don't adopt the metric system. Base 10 is so natural to use, not this base 12, no, base 3, no, base 5280, no, fractions baby! Is it a math teacher conspiracy or what?

      I dropped out of college to stop my brain from exploding when I went from a physics class that was full metric to an aerospace engineering course that was all 'english' measurement. When a prof or whatever popped up and said something about a 'slug' being an measurement of atmospheric pressure I thought I was going to die.

      --

      As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

    2. Re:Metric System by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I *hate* working in traditional/avoirdupois/empire units.

      My dad thought metric was horrible until I gave him a 5-minute explanation and then asked him how many grams of water are in a cubic meter, and he was able to answer. Then I asked him how many tablespoons are in a ton of water, and he decided that metric had something going for it after all.

      My father-in-law thinks it's funny that I never remember how many cups are in a pint, or some other weird conversion. To him, it proves that people don't learn as much in college as they think they do.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  10. Microsoft might prefer piracy over Linux usage... by jaylee7877 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One interesting question this raises is which MS would prefer the poor countries to do: Pirate MS Products or use Linux. My guess is MS would prefer them to use pirated Windows than Linux because MS at least then has the vendor lockin. MS change of heart concerning WinXP SP2 installation on pirated machines would certainly argue for this.

  11. Does it matter? by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting
    If by the time GNU/Linux is adopted throughout the world (assuming that happens), it's just a poor clone of Windows, will it matter if the US adopts it?

    And does anyone actually want a monopoly operating system? I know I don't.

    There are two or three agendas in the FOSS movements which can be summarized thusly:

    • "Why? What are we going to do tomorrow Brain?" "Same thing we do every night Pinky... try to take over the world!" Microsoft, goes the argument, is eeeeeeevil. We must topple it at all costs. While it may or may not be true, there's an element of 1918 here, toppling a cruel and dictatorial czar and not caring what the regime is that replaces it.

      Above all, the regime being proposed is frequently the worst of all worlds. People who hold this view tend to argue that Windows needs to be replaced with a version of GNU/Linux that looks like Windows. But a version of GNU/Linux designed to be as similar to Windows as possible to an end user is going to be dysfunctional by definition. GNU/Linux isn't Windows, it shares few of the same concepts, the solutions Microsoft came up with for interfacing the underlying OS with the user are unlikely to be relevent to GNU/Linux and rarely are in practice. And Windows is simply not a good example of a user friendly operating system, unless you're talking about the original version of Windows 95, which at the time was "pure", it hadn't been hacked to try to push certain competing middleware out of the market. And do you really want to switch to Windows 95 today? GEM and Mac OS System 6 were user friendly too, would you like to clone either?

    • "Freedom!" - Proprietary software is eeeevil, we must topple it at all costs, toppling dictators whereever we might find them even at immense cost to ourselves.

      There's some legitimacy to this view, but again it has a tendency to be undermined by its own supporters who frequently assert that, as a starting point, you need to clone whatever's already there. Again, the Pinky and the Brain scenario springs to mind here, with the more vocal supporters being in favour of a dysfunctional system "because it's what users know." In fairness, most also argue that free software, by its very nature, improves choice because if you don't like the way something works, you can modify it. However, it's not "free software" that's taken hold so much as "open source", where programmers across the world collaborate. This is both a strength and an Achile's Heel, because just as Microsoft and other proprietary vendors cannot keep up with such a freight train, neither can most ordinary users who'd like their software to work with a better paradigm.

    • "Choice" - The problem isn't Microsoft, it's Windows. If Windows was what we wanted, we wouldn't be so hostile to it.

      This is the only one of the three scenarios that has immediate and obvious benefits to end users. A view based on choice works best when people create Free Software, when programmers try to do original things, and when people try new things.

    My problem is I see too many people who see GNU/Linux as a chance to create an alternative Windows. And I don't see how anyone really benefits from that. We replace one monopoly with another, that monopoly might be less "evil", but we don't even know that. What we do know is that an inappropriate clone of someone else's work isn't likely to be as good as the original. And many, many, of us do not like the original.

    Personally, I love free software. Given the choice, however, between One (Supported) Free Operating System (the "Supported" is important), an Operating System whose design choices have made me dislike it intensely, and a miriad of supported proprietary systems, at least one of which works in the way I prefer, I have to go with the Devil and chose the latter. It's not Microsoft I dislike, it's their operating system and the dull grey rock of monoculture. Changing who owns that rock doesn't make things much better.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  12. Law of unconsidered consequences by dpilot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    More to the point, IP laws in the US are generally becoming more restrictive, as corporate interests codify their wish-list into our legal system.

    This will backfire, as it forces innovation out of the US.

    Honestly, I expect Europe to follow the US lead. The same corporations that are doing this to the US are also well entrenched in Europe. So in effect, we're pushing innovation to India and China, the new growing world economies.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  13. Re:All that needs to happen by ajs318 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually I'd say the best way of producing games software would be to have the bootstrap loader and OS on the actual CD/DVD media. (I'm actually thinking of doing something like this myself with FUSE and a bunch of old Spectrum games running on a minimal Slackware.) It then would be "neutral" with respect to whatever OS already was installed on the host PC, as long as it had the right architecture.

    It needn't even be Linux ..... it could be a BSD variant, a pared-down Windows, or even a whole brand new OS if anyone can be bothered to write one. The point is that games with such an on-disc OS would not depend on a particular installation, but would be usable equally by Linux or Windows users. This should lead to greater reliability, since the author would know what package versions were in use and all dependencies would be met already.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  14. Re:Uh huh... by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is this really an "US and them" issue ?

    After all, we're only ordinary men.


    Holy crap! Someone makes a joke about a comment using a pretty well known, 30+ year old Pink Floyd line and it gets modded Insightful instead of Funny. I always thought those guys were great lyricists, and this looks like conclusive proof to me.

    Rock on all you Floyd fans!

    --
    Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  15. Re:Do not underestimate the EU by the+chao+goes+mu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ranked 1st if counted as a single country? Um, it is 2nd in both figures you give. (Well, 2nd of 2). What does this Ranked 1st mean? First in what? You already said GDP is lower, GDP per capita is lower. I don't follow.

    --
    Boys from the City. Not yet caught by the Whirlwind of Progress. Feed soda pop to the thirsty pigs.
  16. Canada's worse by JediTrainer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We're a bit worse off in the Great White North, because of exactly this. While we're technically supposed to be metric, because of heavy trade with the US we have to do both. FYI I live near Toronto.

    When you're buying a house, the property size is measured in metres. However, the interior measurements are all given in square feet.

    I know my height in feet and inches, but my driver's license lists it in centimetres. Funny, because I measure my skis in centimetres.

    I buy meat in the store by the gram or kilogram, but my microwave asks me how many pounds is it when I want to defrost it. Of course I know my weight in pounds.

    Construction materials are measured in feet, while I drive in km/h. I pump litres of gas into my tank, while I purchase hard booze in ounces. But beer, water and soft drinks are sold in millilitres.

    I read the outside temperature in celsius, and I set my thermostat in C, yet my oven is set in farenheit. At least, all the recipes I have do (some ovens have both C and F listed).

    We're pretty damned confused up here.

    --

    You can accomplish anything you set your mind to. The impossible just takes a little longer.
  17. Re:The European Union is not "Europe" by ErroneousBee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is a very good chance the UK will withdraw from the EU after the referendum. There is an unholy alliance of little englanders, anti-immigration parties, free-marketeers, beaurocracy haters, democracy lovers, and now software developers. Straw polls indicate 60% of the population will reject the new constitution.

    I wouldnt be suprised if Denmark breaks away too, possibly taking the rest if Scandinavia with it.

    Germanic cultures will then find itself isolated with Latin countries to the West, poor ex-communist states to the west, and independant states to the north and south. Cant imagine Germany will hang around when its having to bankroll everyone elses peasant economy.

    After that, I think its Britain's turn to invade France. Or maybe Germany's, its hard to keep track these days.

    --
    **TODO** Steal someone elses sig.
  18. Re:Nope. by vidarh · · Score: 3, Interesting
    You underestimate market pressures. If the EU and "some third world countries" (such as China, which is catching up fast enough that they are now the worlds largest market for cell phones?) move to Linux, US software companies will face one of two choices: Become irellevant, or support Linux before the competition (whether US or foreign).

    The huge risk in not migrating is not being able to satisfy your customers while your competitors do.

    If your clients decide TCO is compelling, then it doesn't matter what you think - someone will be there to support them, and someone will be there to send them documents in formats that work well for them, or take their data in formats you can't handle, or whatever is relevant to your business.

    That's how Windows and Office came to dominate in the first place: Some people saw a benefit, and they got a domino effect from partners, customers etc. that may not have seen a direct benefit, but saw a benefit in interoperating with people who had taken the leap.