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MS Rails On Open Source, Appeals To Gov't Greed

Bill Harper writes "Open source software is a 'waste of money,' a Microsoft executive has said. He goes on to say that governments planning to use it will damage their own economies and that giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot. What's interesting though is that this is just the latest in a series of nonsense arguments put forward by MS in Asia because it's scared of Linux stealing the market. An early one was that open-source software is anti-competitive!" Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat.

635 comments

  1. Funny? by Dunarie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat."

    Funny? It's scary more than anything, as it'll just make what he says seem more 'credible'. Of course, he's just some greedy bastard, and it's good to see him not working for an OSS company anymore, but it doesn't help Linux much in this propaganda campaign.

    1. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The fact of the matter is that money makes the world go round. You need it to buy houses, cars, computers, food, and all of that wonderful shit from ThinkGeek.

      Being greedy is one thing, but making money is another. There's NOTHING wrong with making money.

      Whilst the claim the open source software will devastate the economy is probably overblown, Mr. Sharp does have a point. Goverments _should_ purchase goods from their home country whenever possible, or from companies that hire the citizens of said country.

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

    2. Re:Funny? by CajunArson · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Of course, he's just some greedy bastard

      I would be a little more hesitant to call anybody who goes to work for MS a greedy bastard. I go to a small university in Pittsburgh that has a rather large anti-MS student body.... but at the same time I have never seen a larger turnout for prospective job seekers than when MS comes to town. Microsoft has the luxury of being able to hire the best people, and in the marketing business they can often come from the competition. After all, who better to detail the flaws in a competitor's products than someone who used to hawk them?
      That being said I think the arguments are bunk but if you ever want to succeed you should learn to never hate your enemy since it clouds your judgement.

      --
      AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
    3. Re:Funny? by timeOday · · Score: 1

      I doesn't give him credibility, just the opposite. It just highlights that what a company says can usually be safely ignored if they have a vested interest. (And yes, that includes RedHat, and no, "Open Source" and "Linux" are not companies).

    4. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well he seems to be one of those management figures.
      As we all know they are not used to say the truth. They say what the company may help.

      their only goal to achieve is money. They are not in the moral bussiness. This is the "job" of RMS or Noam Chomsky.

    5. Re:Funny? by StormReaver · · Score: 1

      It's scary more than anything, as it'll just make what he says seem more 'credible'

      Read the article, as it spends quite a number of lines describing just how incredible this guy is. He contradicts and deludes himself frequently. Maybe that's why he left Redhat for Microsoft.

    6. Re:Funny? by ron_ivi · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Remember, Microsoft has a history of hiring strong people from it's competitors, like the guy from SUSE

      Or perhaps the best example, from cache Borland's web site back before they were payed off^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H settled their case with msft.

      • Microsoft's Concerted and Systematic Efforts to Unfairly Compete with Borland
        ...the method Microsoft chose to develop its answer to Delphi, as well as to C++ and the Internet tools, was to hire away the people at Borland who had developed Borland's superior products. By taking Borland employees, Microsoft reduces the number of people working on products that can compete with Microsoft and support open industry standards.
        ...
        Gross had always been vehemently opposed to Microsoft and its way of doing business and had tried to discourage many of Borland's employees from taking jobs there. Representatives of Microsoft set their sights on Gross, however, and one day Silverberg and Bob Muglia of Microsoft arrived outside of Borland's headquarters in a limousine to pick up Gross to recruit him over lunch at an expensive restaurant.
        .... As Gross put it, without even asking him to interview, "Microsoft gave him an offer he could not refuse." Borland is informed and believes, and on that basis alleges, that Microsoft's offer included a $1 million signing bonus, stock options and title to selected real estate in or near Redmond, Washington. Microsoft also informed Gross that it would increase the already substantial offer if he would accept it immediately, even though he had already scheduled a three month sabbatical to plan his wedding.
        ...Borland is informed and believes, and on that basis alleges, that Microsoft viewed Gross as key to its successful recruitment of Anders Hejlsberg ... Hejlsberg was reluctant to leave California, but Microsoft offered him a $1.5 million signing bonus, over a base salary of approximately $150,000 to $200,000 and extremely lucrative options to purchase 75,000 Microsoft shares.
      Wonder if the RedHat guy got anything close.

      Personally, though, I think it's nice to see that Microsoft recognises individual talent and rewards these people well.

    7. Re:Funny? by smittyoneeach · · Score: 5, Insightful
      There's NOTHING wrong with making money.

      Who ever said there was anything wrong with commerce?
      Consider a normal transaction, where free people exchange goods or services, with 0 subsequent dependencies in either direction, for an agreed price.
      Consider an abnormal transaction between a drug dealer and an addict.
      Now, proof by analogy is fraud (Stroustrup), so we'll let the reader decide to which degree either of these models apply to the Free or Proprietary model.
      open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people

      Software is an infrastructure cost. Whether or not you threw away another ~$500 for the latest version of the Mighty Spiffy Office suite has little noticeable affect on the quality of the memo you wrote, but it does have a vampiric effect on the quartely earnings statement.
      That sucker really does suck, as in 'the life right out of you', when your company is laid out flat by the virus du jour.
      Can we face some realities here? The basic protocols and application required to run a business are fairly well understood, and implemented.
      I think that the price of MSFT over time, and the price of an MSDN Univerasl (scaled appropriately for the truckload of stuff it contains) pretty well argue that Moore's Law, tired of crunching silicon, has turned its Beholder-eye towards software prices.
      And for all that cost, Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    8. Re:Funny? by kfg · · Score: 1

      "Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat."

      Of course, he's just some greedy bastard. . .

      A man may not serve two masters.

      KFG

    9. Re:Funny? by nysus · · Score: 1

      Yes, let's not be so quick to judge. He might not be greedy...but he's definitely a whore. Probably a high-priced one, too. But, really, is any amount of money enough to take edge off of being Bill Gates' bitch?

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    10. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I like the way that borland case continues...

      "Microsoft's continuous raiding did not stop after Microsoft took the top Borland strategist and Borland's top tools developer. Before 1996 was out, Ramin Halviatti, a Delphi Development Manager and, Jean Marie Babet, a C++ R&D engineer, had moved to Microsoft. In the past few weeks alone Microsoft has successfully recruited at least three more key Borland employees: Bill Dunlap, Marie Huwe, and Roland Fernandez."

      "In April 1997, Microsoft hired two Borland marketing managers. Both Bill Dunlap, the Product Manager for JBuilder and Marie Huwe, the Product Marketing Manager for C++Builder,"

      "Microsoft also hired Borland's senior Architect for its C++Builder product. Roland Fernandez, who resigned from Borland on April 25, 1997 played the key role in Borland's development of C++Builder, Borland's Rapid Application Development ("RAD") tool for C++. He left Borland with detailed knowledge of the overall architecture and feature set definition of C++Builder. At Microsoft, he is now doing exactly the same thing: creating a RAD C++ tool that competes directly with C++Builder. Unable to fix its tools products on its own, Microsoft has recruited Borland knowledge to do it. Minds that previously worked on products that support a wide variety of open industry standards are now limited to products that now support Microsoft platforms and proprietary technologies"

      " Microsoft willfully, deliberately, according to its plan, and with the intention of harming Borland, hired at least 34 former employees of Borland, and set them out to use their knowledge of tools development, some of which is proprietary to Borland, to create tools for Microsoft. Microsoft continues, and will continue unless restrained, to accomplish this illegal course of conduct by continuing to solicit and recruit Borland employees. ...Borland is informed and believes, and on that basis alleges, that Microsoft=s solicitation and recruitment of Borland employees is intentional and being done for wrongful purposes: to inhibit Borland's competitive position in this technology area and to acquire Borland confidential information -- all with the express intent and purpose of unfairly benefiting Microsoft."

    11. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He didn't change companies, just departments.

    12. Re:Funny? by pinko-rat-bastard · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people.
      No, open source software doesn't seem to directly employ very many people. In other words, it is not so good for those companies that are in the business of selling shrink wrapped software. It is, however a wonderful thing for the vast majority of developers: those involved in corporate development and specialized vertical market applications. Every dollar not syphoned out of the corporate I.T. budget and shipped off to Redmond to pay for nothing but software infrastructure is another dollar that can be used to pay a developer (hopefully a local one) to build the thing the company really wants: the applications that run the business. Linux, Perl, PHP, mySQL, Postgres, JBoss, Apache and all of the other highly successful OSS projects are not all that useful just by themselves -- they are, after all, just plumbing. The money, Mr. Coward, is in putting them to work.
      --
      YooHoo/2U2
    13. Re:Funny? by NineNine · · Score: 0

      Software is an infrastructure cost. Whether or not you threw away another ~$500 for the latest version of the Mighty Spiffy Office suite has little noticeable affect on the quality of the memo you wrote, but it does have a vampiric effect on the quartely earnings statement.


      So is plumbing. Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free.

    14. Re:Funny? by HBI · · Score: 1

      Umm, hating your enemy is important. You need that killer instinct to really go for the throat.

      That said, you should never be emotional about business decisions. Very foolish indeed to be that way.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    15. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A man may not serve two masters.

      Not even Chalabi?

    16. Re:Funny? by tuomoks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes - it is funny ! People like Anders Hejlsberg don't move for money ( it always helps and I know that your old company will not offer same as the new but... ) - they move for opportunity to create something new. I have known some - even I may be one, I haven't (yet) moved for money - Borland had ( has ) at that time stopped creating anything new, at least I would have been looking something new ( they now follow .NET ( and C# by Anders )). An example - the history of SQL, read it, those people didn't move for money but for an opportunity to create. have a nice day.

    17. Re:Funny? by panaceaa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Greed may not be the right word, but Chris Sharp is showing that his motivations are monetary, not belief-based. Perhaps Chris doesn't have any political views or preferences in the industry he's working for, but that's pretty unbelievable considering he's chosen it as his career. My bet is that he started working at Red Hat because he thought open source was a good idea and the future. Then Microsoft made him a big enough offer that he left his political views behind for his own personal reward. I think that's somewhat sad, and yes, "greedy".

    18. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I (the parent poster on a different terminal) agree with you. Microsoft recognized Hejlsberg's talents and gave him opportunites that Borland either didn't or couldn't.. As I mentioned in the post you replied to - I admire the fact that MSFT "recognises individual talent and rewards these people".

      (though taking you too literally - the physical act of moving from around Santa Cruz to Redmond itself was probably helped by money)

    19. Re:Funny? by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Now, I like Linux and Emacs and whatnot just as much as the next slashdotter, but I have to respond to this:
      And for all that cost, Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...
      While you might not be able to play Tetris or send email with Visual Studio (or maybe you can - they did, after all, put a flight simulator in Excel!), you also can't visually design a GUI with Emacs!

      --
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    20. Re:Funny? by miu · · Score: 3, Interesting
      So is plumbing. Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free.

      Couldn't agree more.

      The worst thing is all those government health, safety and reliability regulations that relate to plumbing. Don't even get me started on national open standards. The fact that a property owner can go out and choose any old vendor and installer for their plumbing needs is ludicrous.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    21. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      "Hejlsberg was reluctant to leave California, but Microsoft offered him a $1.5 million signing bonus, over a base salary of approximately $150,000 to $200,000 and extremely lucrative options to purchase 75,000 Microsoft shares."

      Yeah.. and since Hejlsberg, the former Chief Engineer at Borland, is Microsoft's Chief C# Language Architect , About.com even speculates about a Conspiracy Theory: MS's .Net IS Borland's Product

    22. Re:Funny? by kfg · · Score: 1

      The intelligence services above all are familiar with this dictum, despite, or rather perhaps because of, their reliance upon double agents.

      KFG

    23. Re:Funny? by hazem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If there's a group of people who are willing to consistently do plumbing for free, and the quality is just as good as commercial plumbers, then I expect the government to use the free plumbers.

      A business is free to do as it chooses. But it's foolish to spend a lot of money on something when its competitors can get the same functionality from something that costs very little. It has to compete just that much better in everything else, and ultimately that can't be sustained.

      In any business decision I make, Microsoft will have to prove to me that it's worth it to pay $250-$500 per seat for their stuff before I'll buy it. Their stuff is pretty good, but the free/libre alternatives are pretty good too.

    24. Re:Funny? by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Stepping into your plumbing example, I'm saying that it's nice to pay a plumber to fix a problem, and kinda irritating to have the person manage the problem for an extremely long, financially draining time.
      Who ever said charging for software was evil? Requiring a price is frequently a self defense mechanizm as much as anything else. See 'pay the piper'.

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    25. Re:Funny? by rah1420 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Greed may not be the right word

      I think the word we're groping for is 'whore.'

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
    26. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Greed may not be the right word, but Chris Sharp is showing that his motivations are monetary, not belief-based."

      And this was different when he worked at Redhat?

      Exactly how?

      Give me a break, the belief-based logic that Linux zealots use is primarily based off monetary incentive.

    27. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "...All plumbing should be done for free."

      That's not the point. The point is that you shouldn't be locked into only one vendor for your plumbing parts. If your plumbing required only left handed threads of a certain pitch that was covered under layers of patent protection and NDA's then you would have a more comparable situation.

      Ring ring.
      "Joe's plumbing, how may I help you?"
      "Come fix my sink."
      "Ok, I'll be over."
      .
      .
      .
      "Sorry guy but you got a blufurbl sink there. You can either pay extra for the rental of the blufurbl sink tool or we can swap you in a new Murican Standard -- course swappin' will cost more up fron but Murican Standard will take any old pipe wrench."

      So: do you rent the wrench or buy a standard system? In direct response to the parent: There's no question you pay Joe for his work. The question is do you pay extra a little extra to blufurbl industries and hope this never happens again? What if you know blufurbl will force you to upgrade to a new blufurbl product next year by getting a compound put in the water that will eat some select parts of your old blufurbl pipes?

    28. Re:Funny? by cshark · · Score: 1
      To summarize the recent remarks of Microsoft execs:

      It's not free! It's free! There's no money in it! There's money in it! There's no interest in it! There's interest in it, but it's not goooood....


      Meanwhile, they're actually releasing open source code themselves, granted probably as part of a larger agenda. And then there's their shiny new Open Source Resource Lab where they "educate" people on the "merits" of OSS.

      It almost sounds like Microsoft is two different companies that don't really agree with each other.
      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    29. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Delving a bit deeper into that; if you're sufficiently motivated, you can learn to fix your plumbing for free; and not only is plumbing knowledge essentially free ( if you are willing to look for it ) but the standards on how to do so are published in the books available for a small cost.

      Oh, and there are many people who will teach you about plumbing if you are willing to learn (it's part of my current job).

      That's why the money to be made (and that is being made all over) thru open source belongs to the service trade. (There's no shame in being a software maintenance guy; the nice thing about open source vs. closed is that you have a lot more options open to you, whether you are a programmer or DIYer :)

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    30. Re:Funny? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people.

      You seem to be working under the misconception that employing people for the sake of it is good for the economy.

      By that logic, we might as well employ people doing any old jobs, whether it's writing an OS when a free one is already available, or breaking windows and then repairing them - after all, it's good for the economy, right?

      It's certainly good for those employees or that company if their product is bought, but that doesn't mean it is better for the rest of the economy that is having to pay for it.

      That open source gives results without having to employ many people is at least as much a good point than a bad point - it means costs are lower, and production is more efficient!

    31. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      So is plumbing. Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free

      I don't think your analogy is very accurate. The parent was saying that a memo is a memo, whether it is written using software that costs $5 or $500. A plumbing analogy is that your pipes will work whether you go with the cheap guy or the expensive service. But, if you company has to shell out more money for the expensive service, then that will affect your bottom line. Nowhere in the original statement did he say anything about things being done for free. He was just pointing out that it's the content that is important, not always the means you use to get it.

    32. Re:Funny? by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      People got to give this guy a break. He's probably doing his best to put food on the table for his family with his ludicrous 7 figure salary working for M$. I am sure redhat didn't pay him that kind of money to bring out this garbage.

    33. Re:Funny? by DShard · · Score: 1

      Funny, not reallly... I thought you were talking about sun there for a moment.

    34. Re:Funny? by YankeeInExile · · Score: 4, Insightful
      open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people

      Actually, that is false. OSS employs many people who make good livings writing both open and closed source software, standing on the shoulders of Open Source projects. Administering systems running OSS (Even OSS that runs on non-OSS platforms), or running their non-technology business using OSS

      Just because very few peopele have FSF or Redhat or Your Pet OS Project at the top of their paycheck does not mean that OSS is not a force in the global economy.

      --
      How does the Slashdot Effect happen given that no slashdotters ever RTFA?
    35. Re:Funny? by di0s · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that outlandish, shortsighted comments coming from Redmond such as this one still make news stories. Must be a slow day at TechWorld.

    36. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open standards is one thing, but giving away your service and products for free is another.

      Let's pretend for a minute that a sufficient number of people learned the plumbing trade and began doing this for free in a given (isolated) town that they undermine the plumbers for hire. What then happens to the plumbers who were relying on this trade for their source of income?

      I fear this same thing will happen to programmers too. People need jobs to earn money. When you take away a source of income, they must move on to another. Where does it end? I'm not usually one for tradition, but this thing we call economy has evolved over thousands of years in one form or another, in which one always gains something in exchange for goods or services. I fail to see how programmers can make money by giving their wares away for free (Don't tell me "support", because I sure as hell wouldn't want to give up programming for being stuck on a phone all day helping people -- I prefer to get paid doing what I love).

    37. Re:Funny? by airjrdn · · Score: 1
      A business is free to do as it chooses. But it's foolish to spend a lot of money on something when its competitors can get the same functionality from something that costs very little.
      So, who would one go after if the plumbing job sprung a leak and ruined twenty grand worth of housing?

      Not trying to start an argument by any means, just wondering what the recourse is when receiving defective "free" items or services.
    38. Re:Funny? by cshark · · Score: 1

      It's all good. Wasn't really trying for funny. It's more ironic than anything.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    39. Re:Funny? by acro-god · · Score: 1

      uh... yes. I rather be known as Bill Gates' bitch than my redneck neighbor's bitch from down the street. Hell... enough money would wash the taste of Bill Gates dick out of my mouth...

    40. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd like to see you try to collect any compensation from MS when their software 'sprung a leak'.

    41. Re:Funny? by zeugma-amp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, who would one go after if the plumbing job sprung a leak and ruined twenty grand worth of housing?

      This is a completely bogus argument that I am sick to death of hearing. Show me one single company anywhere in the world that has managed to squeeze a thin dime out of microsoft because of losses resulting from defective microsoft products.

      --
      This is an ex-parrot!
    42. Re:Funny? by Carnifex487 · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting I coould sue Microsoft if Word crashes and takes 12 hours worth of work with it ? If you are, you need to reread your EULA.

    43. Re:Funny? by Carnifex487 · · Score: 1

      you also can't visually design a GUI with Emacs!

      Why do I need too ?

    44. Re:Funny? by airjrdn · · Score: 1

      No, I was suggesting someone enlighten me with the answer to my question. Hence the reason I asked it.
      br. What's w/all of the MS questions people, there are other companies in the world.

    45. Re:Funny? by AstroDrabb · · Score: 4, Informative

      Huh? Have you _ever_ read your MS EULA? You are _NOT_ able to sue MS for anything!!! If your whole business comes down because you run it on MS software only and get hit hard by a virus, guess what? You cannot sue MS and MS is not liable according to the MS EULA. period. So all that crap about who is responsible in OSS is bull, since in closed source software, and especially with MS, there is no you can hold responsible. Do you know how many _billions_ of dollare world wide that have been lost to viruses, worms and holes in MS Software? It is staggering. And yet, not one company that lost money because of using MS software has been able to recoupe money from MS.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    46. Re:Funny? by Fuzzy+Bo · · Score: 2, Funny


      Of course, we all know what the pipes that the plumber installs and the software MS builds have in common...? They're both full of !

    47. Re:Funny? by hazem · · Score: 1

      It's a valid question, and has to be part of the total equation. One should consider the probability of a leak and the amount of damage a leak is likely to cause.

      Hopefully one has insurance to cover the potential damage. So, it's possible that one's insurance company may charge a higher premium for going with a "free" plumber.

      On the other hand, plumbing might not be the best analogy to software. Most pieces of software have some kind of EULA stating that the software is not suitable for any particular purpose and that the vendor is not liable for any damage resulting from use of the software.

    48. Re:Funny? by AstroDrabb · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Insightful? This is anything but Insightful. If there were tens-of-thousands of high quality FREE plumbers around that could fix my problems, I would certainly be sure to use there service.

      Even more, one can learn to DIY plubming, and be pretty good at it as well. You see, there are standards for plubming as there are for software. Howver, unlike monopoly companies like MS, plubmers have to adhere to those standards.

      There are also tons of people who know plubming, septic, etc stuff inside out (I am not one of them), who would gladly share that knowledge with you with out crying "IP" violations.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    49. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's amazing how the idiots here repeat the same "I hate Microsoft because..." for every Linux article - please, for the sake of interesting reading, come up with some new material you bone heads.

    50. Re:Funny? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      That's irrelevant. The point is that the feature exists.

      --

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    51. Re:Funny? by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1
      I prefer to get paid doing what I love.
      So do I, but that doesn't mean that I'm going to get paid doing what I love.

      It doesn't matter what you prefer; it matters what people are willing to pay.
      If a person is willing to pay you for doing what you love, that's fine.
      Otherwise, you will have to do something that you don't love to bring home the money, and then do what you love in your spare time.

      Do major clothing manufacturers have an obligation to sell clothing at higher prices so that people who love to make clothes by hand can make a decent living doing so?
      No.
      Do I have an obligation to sell my software so that some other programmer can make a decent living doing so?
      No.
      I fail to see how programmers can make money by giving their wares away for free
      Well, some might do so as a way of advertising their capabilities.
      A prospective employer can see the quality of software that person can produce, before hiring him/her.
      Another way to make money is to create an Open Source application/library that becomes popular, then write a book about it.
      Still another way is to write the application/library under a dual license, where a company can license the app/lib in its closed-source product for a fee.
      Or get hired by the company to make changes in the product that will more suit the company's requirements.

      There are many ways to make money in an Open Source (or semi-Open Source) world.
      --
      Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
    52. Re:Funny? by sempf · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps it means he knows exactly what he is talking about.

      But don't mind me, I've had a bottle of wine tonight. Site design brings that out in me.

      --
      /usr/bin/grep -i -E meaning life.txt
    53. Re:Funny? by panaceaa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A lot of people working in a currently niche areas like Linux are there because they like the concept and want it to advance in the future. Other examples would be joining the Peace Corps and volunteering in the community you live in. Unfortunately this comparison is becoming less and less true as Linux is commercialized and companies like Red Hat are making profits selling it. But for many working on Linux, I still believe they contribute because they want open source to grow.

      This is different than working at Microsoft. Microsoft does nothing for the world but contribute to the pocketbooks of its employees and shareholders(*). By working for Microsoft, you basically conscript yourself to maintaining the status quo. You're saying that you have no new ideas worth implementing(**) and that you're happy just receiving a paycheck.

      (*) In theory, anyway. In reality MSFT's stock price is the same place it was 5 years ago.

      (**) I know Microsoft developers are known to work long hours, but the only developers that created a new product were the Intellimouse Wheel developers. Otherwise Microsoft is basically 55,000 employees rebranding other people's ideas.

    54. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      And for all that cost, Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...

      Yes, of course. The very few IDE's have as many capabilities as Emacs - setting breakpoints, watch windows, Memory Windows, etc is a breeze in Emacs. The only MS product which comes anywhere close is probably Notepad.

    55. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
      I have a drip coming out of the valve that feeds my toilet. What's the best way for a non plumber to fix it? I'll take any cheap solution that works.

      Currently, I catch the water and dump it periodically, because I'm afraid to take it apart.

    56. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the Borland experience its pretty obvious what's going on. All the high profile OSS developers are just tying to get MS to buy them. Linus has a family to look after. Think of the children!

    57. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I understand your concern. In theory, though, there's an insatiable demand for new software, such that open source can never meet it. Let open source take care of the basic plumbing while we build high rises commercially.

      The link in my sig is commercial software I offer built on open source such as JBoss, Tomcat and MySQL. It works, however, with applications running in commercial J2EE vendors such as WebSphere.

      There's room for BOTH open source and commercial software.

    58. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a drip coming out of the valve that feeds my toilet. What's the best way for a non plumber to fix it? I'll take any cheap solution that works.

      Post to one of the plumbing newsgroups or mailing
      lists (of course after reading the FAQ & the FM).
      Of course, if you are landlord of an apartment complex with a lot of toilets, Red Hat can sell
      you an annual contract for helping you fix it.

    59. Re:Funny? by CuppaJoe · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

      So while having to equip huge government agencies with excruciatingly expensive software will keep 40 engineers employed at MS, they will have to cut 200 government jobs because they spent so much on software.

      Which is more detrimental?

      (These aren't researched numbers, just illustrating the point)
    60. Re:Funny? by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      I don't know how things stand in your part of the world, but in Australia, this would be illegal. Technically, even replacing the washer in a leaky tap _must_ be done by a licensed plumber. (That said, I recently replaced a toilet cistern which had some small but vital and no-longer-made part in it broken. Doh! I just incriminated myself.)

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    61. Re:Funny? by btakita · · Score: 1

      And for all that cost, Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...

      At least with VS.Net, you wont get RSI as quickly. For an example look at Ben Wing, chief architect of XEmacs and his RSI, .

      If you like pain, use Emacs.

    62. Re:Funny? by Canberra+Bob · · Score: 1

      "Every dollar not syphoned out of the corporate I.T. budget and shipped off to Redmond to pay for nothing but software infrastructure is another dollar that can be used to pay a developer (hopefully a local one) to build the thing the company really wants: the applications that run the business. "

      Umm...no

      Every dollar not shipped off to Redmond will be split between a bonus for the CIO, the CEO and shareholders. If company X needs 1 person to support MS products + pays enough licensing equivalent to hiring 10 people, and switches to FOSS software and requires 1 person to support the system, dont expect them to hire another 10 support staff. They will keep the 1, and the department will run 10 X employee salaries under budget. So instead of the in-house developer / support tech and MS developers all getting paid, the in-house support tech now gets paid, and the rest go to the PHB's.

      And now the in-house developer instead of having one point of contact, has to spend their time chasing around the net to hopefully find a documented solution (FOSS projects are not exactly famous for their great documentation). A boss will generally accept "it has been escalated to the vendor". They will not accept "I cant find the answer on the net"

    63. Re:Funny? by Froze · · Score: 1

      Make sure that the valve is all the way open. There is a tendency for cheap valves to leak if they are either not all the way closed or all the way open. HTH

      --
      -- The morphemes of your disquisition are ascertainable, but they have eschewed an ambit of transpicuous exposition.
    64. Re:Funny? by Canberra+Bob · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "My bet is that he started working at Red Hat because he thought open source was a good idea and the future"

      My bet is he started working at Red Hat because they offered him a job with the salary and conditions he was looking for.

    65. Re:Funny? by tuomoks · · Score: 1

      Yes - I know some people who moved to MS because MS ( as for ex. IBM, I also know some research persons there ) understands the value of free ( individual ) developement. We ( I'm a Linux person - of course because from Finland ) often forget that supported ( money ) develeopement is easier ( not better or worse ) than unsupported. It's up to a person what to do with their skills. Anyway - all the free spirits, like Anders end up both making money and making something we all can use. And I personally don't envoy their money and enjoy the results of their hard work what no corporation can fully own - otherwise they will walk away, money or not ( seen it happen - read Univac, Dec, AT&T, etc.. history ). ps. I'm too old - I still think that assembler is a language...

    66. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just ask. :)

      Troubleshooting:

      1) Out of the valve, and not out of the bottom of the toilet tank (water is or is not running down the supply line)
      2) Assuming 'yes' to 1); you have to replace either the valve or supply line running to the toilet:
      2a) Leak coming from the toilet side of the valve, or the pipe/line coming from the floor/wall?

      3) If toilet side, likely you need to replace the supply line, it has a bad gasket. There are some instances where it might be the valve connection itself, but that depends on the valve type (old chrome non-flex style?)

      4) Leak coming from the supply line side, that will depend on what kind of supply line; copper compression fitting, Pex, Polybut, iron threaded, ?

      5) Valve leaking from the valve stem: that's easy, valve needs replacement. It's a lot cheaper to replace most of those valves than it is for the average DIY to try to dismantle the valve and replace the internals.

      Come on, give me a challenging one. I do this every day, and although most people can give me more info than you do, I've solved it on less info (other than the cracked toilet tank scenario, those are cheaper to solve by just recommending a new tank - commercial toilets are outside of this discussion, as they most often involve custom parts, other than Sloan flushers)

      So how is this any different than a open source software author(s) diagnosing software? Differing degrees and levels of diagnosis, but troubleshooting is troubleshooting. I've done both of those, and motors, and many others. They all have the same basis, if differing details.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    67. Re:Funny? by tuomoks · · Score: 1

      AND - why didn't Borland do anything ??? You can't just take people - they move on their own free will ! I have seen this happening in many professions, not just computers. Sorry - living 15 miles from Borland at that time and meeting people - Borland either didn't value a lot of these persons or Borlands future plans were different than a lot of personal views and a lot of people were told this is the way - period. I like Borland but they have had, as any company, their ups and downs in management and future plans. By the way - Delphi rocks, almost as good as Simula.

    68. Re:Funny? by NewNole2001 · · Score: 1

      Put in a new valve. It's not that hard.

    69. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 4, Insightful



      You're kidding me, right? No...

      Well, technically, here in the US in most towns plumbing requires one to be licensed if you are running new lines to the vanities in question. It does not apply to simple fixture repair, however ( at least where I'm at, jurisdictions vary, I'm city licensed, which is somewhat unusual in the States)

      That said, the teaching part I spoke about comes from my main job, which is a hardware monkey in a local hardware store. I have over a decades experience working as a Handyman in three states, each with varying laws. I like this one :)

      The nice part about my job is the back and forth between us and the local contractors - we teach each other, and we all learn. For example, there will be times when I'll teach a plumber how to replaster a wall that he had to open up, and he teaches me a trick or two about how master plumbers do their job (I'm a JOT, but a master drywall finisher).

      That is how it should be. My point was share and share alike is what benefits the most people... and there are places in the US where the specialties have monopolies too. In my opinion this contributes to the general ignorance, but what the fuck do I know :)

      Sorry if that comes across a little offensive, but it's a pet peeve of mine. Contrary to some opinions, I don't feel I'm in danger of losing my job by teaching the proper way of doing things to the average Joe. On the contrary, I might get to take a vacation someday... Guess I'm old fashioned, without being old (only middle aged) :)

      Cheers!
      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    70. Re:Funny? by senatorpjt · · Score: 1

      So is plumbing. Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free.

      Your analogy sucks. What's going on here is more like if only one company could make pipes, and they keeped changing the thread size every three years so you need to replace your entire plumbing if you want to add a new sink.

    71. Re:Funny? by nelsonal · · Score: 2, Informative

      IANAP, but my dad and I plumbed our house a few years back. It depends on where the drip is coming from three likely sources are condensation on the fitting, the threaded area where the fitting connects to the tube leading to your toilet tank, or a malfuctioning valve. If the fitting is covered with condensation and it is dripping you can wrap it (with cotton or linen) to slow the dripping and spread it allowing evaporation to do the work.
      If the leak is coming from the threaded connection, it's an easy fix. Close the valve, flush the toilet grab a bucket and wrench and unscrew it. Once it's off get a new o ring and wrap the threads with teflon tape (it's a white tape that sticks to itself and will provide a better seal for the threads). Slightly more expensive is to replace the entire flex tube that goes to the toilet tank, you'll still want some teflon tape. Take the old one in or measure it and just buy a new one if the leak is coming form somewhere in the flex tube.
      If the valve is leaking (usually from the handle. You will have to replace the valve fitting. To do that you will need a propane torch to turn off the water prior to the valve, there should be some sort of shut off between the water entry and that valve, and a new fitting. You melt the solder and replace the valve and solder it back into place. To learn this you will probably want to see it and give it a try at one of those DIY shows at home depot or lowes. You'll probably have to cut the sheet rock out of the wall and patch that with plaster as well. Reply back with questions.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    72. Re:Funny? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      In the US you can do most things on your own house yourself (electric, gas, and perhaps plumbing must be inspected). However you are not allowed to sell your plumbing services (or electrical services) without certification. I am not sure if the general contractor test covers this, or if you have to go through the apprentace/journeyman/master plumer trades.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    73. Re:Funny? by Zordak · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Umm, hating your enemy is important. You need that killer instinct to really go for the throat.
      Actually, the GP post is one of the most insightful things I have ever read on Slashdot, and is totally true. Hate has the ability to blind people to all logic and reason, replacing those with blind passion (it is, in many ways, similar to amorous infatuation). Do you really think Osama Bin Laden and the Taliban do what they do because of their immense religious devotion? Those guys are no more "real" Muslims than the Inquisitors were "real" Christians. They preach hatred because it's an easy way to prey on the weak-minded and build a power base. If you can get your minions to hate the Western Satan and Zionists, they'll be willing to do things for you that you would never do for yourself, like fly planes into buildings and strap bombs to themselves. But, like the big Drug Lords, never indulge in the stuff yourself. You need to keep a clear head. You need to be cold and calculating because you need to make important strategic decisions. The leader who indulges in hatred is bound to fail, because it will blind him the way it does his followers, and will lead to the same kind of self-destructive behavior.

      If you have an enemy to conquer, rather than hating him, ask yourself why you want to conquer him. If you have good reasons, they will be all the motivation you will need to "go for the throat." A DA doesn't need hatred to vigorously prosecute a murderer or rapist. He needs a sense of justice. Then he has the presence of mind to lay careful plans and make effective maneuvers. If all you have is hate, you will generally be impulsive and opt for that which causes the most immediate pain, which usually turns out to be a poor long-term strategy.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    74. Re:Funny? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 0

      Uh, exactly this happens already. We had to go through three different companies before we could find one who could fix our boiler. It was kind of an obscure model, very efficient for its time, but parts were apparently hard to come by.

      Unfortunately, the first two companies didn't tell us parts weren't available for the boiler. They told us it was unfixable, tried to sell us a new boiler. We asked them if they could adjust a standard part to fit it, and they just shook their heads. Have to machine a new one, and that's expensive because it's completely custom work. The third guy, luckily, knew that model boiler and was able to hunt down a part for us. It still cost an arm, but I got to keep the leg.

      Back to the metaphor, with Open Source there's no guarantees that a particular project will exist or be supported after a few months. For development to continue on a project over a number of years, the project either has to be profitable or popular. Choose a niche project, or use a popular project in a unique way, and you're stuck with the check for custom work. Is this really what we want? To pay $100 per hour to get our software cooked up with no guarantees? Or to hire your own developer to come up to speed on the OSS codebase and write the software for you? Maybe this would work for a big corporation, but my company employs 20 people. We don't even have an IT guy. We're certainly not going to pay somebody to write custom software every time we have a bug. And if we do, we're going to want to resell that work, not be forced to give it back to a community that's just failed us.

      Personally, I like open source software as a framework for creating for-pay software and services...but I have to agree with Microsoft that there are some things I'd just rather have the assurance of a well run company employing smart designers and knowledgable maintainers. I just don't get that in the OSS world. Instead, I get a bunch of altruistic cowboy coders doing what they like when they like it, and maybe helping me out in their spare time if I donate. Tell me, how does this uncertainty help government, help business or help education?

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    75. Re:Funny? by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      I wonder why exactly this part of EULA - no liability - should be valid and enforceable. Perhaps you just have to give it a try?

    76. Re:Funny? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd like to see the numbers on just how many people make money in OSS versus commercial software, and how much work they had to do to get that money.

      I'd like to see that, because it could go a long way in either direction to convincing programmers what they should do with their lives. And it could save a lot of idealistic young programmers from writing corporate America's infrastructure while they themselves have to get fast food jobs.

      Gentlemen: if you do work, you should be rewarded for it, and the reward should fit the work done. Old hardware shouldn't be good enough...until you can make the same $25-$50 per hour writing open source software than you can writing equivalent closed source software, OSS is failing developers. Neat features and customizable desktops don't feed my dog, they don't paint my house, and they don't repair the clutch on my car.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    77. Re:Funny? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So you're saying that anybody who isn't for Open Source Software lacks beliefs? Frankly, I'm insulted.

      And maybe Chris Sharp isn't who you think he is. Red Hat is, after all, a software company. If Mr. Sharp worked there, and decided that the umpteen failures in their manipulation of the "OSS Model" were indemic to OSS itself, it would be foolish of him to stick by it because he "believed" in it. Maybe he decided, as many others outside of Slashdot have, that not every aspect of traditional software is inherently evil. Maybe he realized that "forced upgrades" pay the bills which fix the software and finance new development. Maybe he noticed that when you can download something for free OR pay $50 for it and get support, most people will err for free and just fight through the issues -- so if you want to make money, you can't give them the option.

      My hosting business started as a web collective. Everybody was gonna pay for his percentage of the server, and we were going to be a non-profit. For art! For software! For the sheer coolness of being the first Open Cost webserver! But when it came time to pay the bills, nobody ever had the money, and since we were equal partners I couldn't well shut them off without selling out, could I? Eventually, I had to turn commercial to pay the massive hosting bill, and you know what? Selling a little webspace for a fair price was FAR BETTER from pretty much every standpoint than trying to force everybody to pitch in to a communal server. I still attracted artists and programmers, but if somebody didn't pay, I could shut off their account, and then the money came in real quick. Yeah, I guess I abandoned my morals. But the more authoritative method actually worked. And that goes pretty far in my book.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    78. Re:Funny? by Technician · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I like your analogy.

      If you want to see it in real life, go to your local Pepsi and Coke distributors. Order bags of Syrup. Now try to find the hardware to attach to the bags. They are a little hard to find other than from the Pepsi or Coke distributor. The connections are not open standard. You won't get the Pepsi bag connected to a Coke adaptor. Try buying a Pepsi connector when you don't have a Pepsi fountain with a service plan.

      These two fierce competitors will want to tie you into an exclusive plan to sell you the syrup and despensor parts. Without an exclusive plan, it's hard to get parts or syrup. Microsoft is the Pepsi Company of software. They don't have a Coke competitor. The competition is Apple (7-up botteling). Needless to say the MS exclusive distribution model tend to lock out other products (Netscape, Opera, Quicktime, RA, etc) favoring their own flavors exclusively (Media Player, IE). Try going to your favorite restraunt and ordering a Pepsi, Coke and 7-up for your party. Most of the time 2 products will be substituted as only Pepsi or Coke is on hand. Only rarely will 7-up be provided. Exclusive distribution contracts are to blame. Non-soft drink products are not affected. You can get coffee, OJ, water, etc. as they are not considered a threat. Linux as has hit the software industry as a replacement for expensive soft drinks. It's the healthy tap water, free for the asking that is killing high price software market. They snuck in as water. Free, but who wants it. Now that is is improving and becoming popular it is becoming a big threat to established software. No one vendor has a monopoly on water, It can be trucked or piped in from anywhere. It can be gotten for free when it rains.

      The software industry (MS) is trying to fight both competition from Apple, Sun, IBM, HP, and the threat of free as in rain water software.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    79. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, check it. He's been moderated -1, Incomplete Conditioning.

    80. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
      Thanks for your help! Here's more info:

      The valve is about two 1.5 feet below the tank, and the pipe the valve is in goes straight into the wall at that point. The valve and pipes are chrome.

      The drip occurs about once per second and appears to be coming out of the valve threading. In other words, it's coming out where the valve stem goes into the bolt, and turns when you turn the handle.

      Someone mentioned teflon tape. Will that work? Or do I need to replace the valve?

    81. Re:Funny? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1
      For development to continue on a project over a number of years, the project either has to be profitable or popular.

      But that's true for proprietary sowtware as well (even worse, a popular, but unprofitrable proprietary project is quite likely not to be continued). Now, if a commercial procect ceases to be supported, you can either just use it and hope that it will continue to work (with your new hardware, with new demands to it, etc.), or switch to another product (if there's another whitch can replace it). With OSS, you have the same options and in addition the options to try to find another company willing to support the very same product you're already using, or to hire some programmer yourself to adapt the product to your changing needs. Of course there may be cases where you won't find such another company, and can't afford hiring a programmer, but in that case you'd still not be worse than with proprietary software.

      Instead, I get a bunch of altruistic cowboy coders doing what they like when they like it, and maybe helping me out in their spare time if I donate.

      So the paid programmers at SuSE, Red Hat, ACT etc. are all altruistic cowboy coders doing what they like when they like it? You seem to be missing that the time where OSS was only developed by individuals is long gone. OSS is business now. There are companies writing/improving OSS, and giving you support guarantees for it.

      Of course, if you just download OSS from the net instead of buying a contract from a company, you don't get the advantages of a contract. But then, if you just get a copy of Windows from someone else, MS won't give you too much support either. The only difference is that with OSS it's legal to copy. But other than that it's always the same, irregardless of the software model: If you want to get support, pay for it. Except that with proprietary software you're forced to get the support from the original producer (and if that upport is lazy, you're stuck), while with OSS a lousy support from one company will give another company the chance to offer better support and get the first company's customers this way, therefore an OSS company has a strong incentive to provide good support.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    82. Re:Funny? by FooBarWidget · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's why you combine Emacs with the excellent QT Designer. Emacs is meant for writing code, and being *good* at it.

    83. Re:Funny? by pellaeon · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that governments should spend money I was forced to give to them on software that performs the same function as free software, so that this money can't be spent on, say, education and health care? And then have me give them more money to make up for the deficit?

      I bow to your 'wisdom'.

      --
      -- /bin/coffee missing. universe halted.
    84. Re:Funny? by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

      Rather than saying people who don't do OSS lack beliefs it might be fair to say that they have different beliefs. You obviously underwent somthing akin to a conversion.

      And I say that nonjudgementally. I like having OSS around just because it's one of the rare business models which seems capable of competing with a monopoly and forcing them to give a good product at a fair price "or else."

      i.e. MS can't run OSS out of business or buy it out using quite the same tactics it has used with other companies.

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    85. Re:Funny? by comet_11 · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's not technically true. If you've read the EULA, you might have noticed the bit that says "some of these restrictions may not apply to you". Many countries and US states don't allow a company to disclaim liability for a product they're charging for. You might want to ensure you're not talking about a state that has such protection before you fire up the MS = legally invincible rant.

      --
      By reading this comment, you immediately waive any and all rights regarding it.
    86. Re:Funny? by panaceaa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I never said that anyone who isnt for OSS lacks beliefs. I said that someone who worked for Red Hat and then went to their staunchest competitor apparently had no emotional connection to the product he was promoting. And considering this is what he's chosen to do for his life, it's pretty sad that he switched his public stance on the issue just because he wanted to be paid more.

      I work for a commercial software company and I don't see anything wrong with the commercial software company business model. I just don't think Microsoft's employees are very ethical.

    87. Re:Funny? by karnat10 · · Score: 1


      Microsoft has the luxury of being able to hire the best people...

      And the luxury of letting them make software of poor quality. I wonder about M$' enterprise culture, and I imagine it's somewhere between Spartacus and Indiana Jones II.

      Or maybe once the "best people" work there and receive their heavy rewards they just say themselves "Wow, I did it, I fooled them into employing me", lean back and go reading /. all day.

      As for my part, I'm already into reading /. all day, it's just the "heavy rewards" part I have to figure out yet...

    88. Re:Funny? by kwoff · · Score: 0
      Being greedy is one thing, but making money is another. There's NOTHING wrong with making money.
      Actually, it's illegal to make money unless you're the government. [+2 Funny]
    89. Re:Funny? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Or that Red Hat fired him and Microsoft can only get their leavings.

      But much, much more probable than the above theory, or the parent's, or the grandparent's is that Microsoft just offered him more money (remember, this is a sales guy, not a coder, and he'd probably be just as happy organizing sales campaigns of toilet paper) in the hopes of bringing in more people who know what Red Hat is up to from a sales perspective.

      It's a pretty safe bet that there are people that work at Red Hat that used to work at Microsoft. And the same with IBM. Hiring people away is much safer than corporate espionage, and par for the course for large companies.

    90. Re:Funny? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      It's a good bet that there's a lot of disagreement at upper levels about how to try to cope with open source.

    91. Re:Funny? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Linus recieved a large chunk of Red Hat stock, which he promptly sold off and got a decent nest egg with.

      He is now one of the most famous software developers in the world and has extensive operating system, Linux and x86 knowledge. He has a graduate degree. He speaks English. He's not an asshole (blunt, yes, but not an asshole). I do not think that Linus needs to worry about his children starving any time soon.

    92. Re:Funny? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      Microsoft has the luxury of being able to hire the best people

      I think that's pretty insulting to all the people who work (for pay) on free software such as Linux. Or what, do you think Alan Cox - who was approached by Microsoft and turned them down - is not one of the best?

      Please. Implying that the best people only care about the size of their salary is doing a disservice to all those who have other factors in their choice of work.

    93. Re:Funny? by goatan · · Score: 1
      Whilst the claim the open source software will devastate the economy is probably overblown, Mr. Sharp does have a point. Goverments _should_ purchase goods from their home country whenever possible, or from companies that hire the citizens of said country.

      That's a good argument for open source software as that is what most of the local computer users know.

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

      How is using open source that the locals know not good for the economy? besides if you spend less on your computers you can spend more on your staff.

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    94. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with "sinks" is exactly what happens in the car industry. My car (let's just say it's brand X) had problems with the left front shock absorber.

      I had to buy a Brand X (insert model of my car) _left_ _front_ shock absorber. There was nothing else that could fit or do the job, and they are twice the price of standard shock absorbers.

      But I can't just replace the whole car - and if I do I am sure to end up with similar limitations from another manufacturer!

      What bugs me about MS and their anti-customer practices is that they are not unique - they just seem to perfected them for their industry.

    95. Re:Funny? by 4b696e67 · · Score: 1

      First IANAP (I Am Not A Plumber). The valve that is between the wall and the toilet was leaking on my toilet and this is how I fixed it:

      1. Went to the hardware store and bought a new valve.
      2. I shut the water off to the house at the main valve (this was in the basement at my house).
      3. I relieved the water pressure in the house by running a faucet.
      4. I used a creacent (sp?) wrench to loosen the couplings on either side of my bad toiled valve. Then removed the old valve.
      5. I wrapped the threads on each side of the new valve with teflon (sp?) tape.
      6. I reinstalled the new valve and tightened the couplings.
      7. I turned back on the water at the main valve to the house. I had my wife stand by the toilet to yell if it was spurting water during this stage incase I didn't get the toilet valve tight enough.
      8. I opened the toilet valve a little bit at a time to get the toilet to fill up at a decent rate, but not gushing out. I did this a little bit at a time, flushing to check.

      Total cost was under $20 for the teflon tape and the new valve. It may or may not be the correct way to fix it, but it was cheap and it worked. The toilet valve has been leak free for over a year. Hope this helps.

    96. Re:Funny? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      You're right, everyone needs money and luckily there is no reason why you can't make money from Open Source.

      Governments ( other than the US ) would definitely be better off not giving their money to the likes of Microsoft or IBM and Open Source provides a way for them to employ their own citizens working on government open source projects.

      The benefit is of course that if a project is open source then obviously anyone with the necessary skills will be able to work on it which creates a level playing field and competition amongst your contractors for implementing / maintaining or updating installations. With competition you get the best workers for the lowest price and are able to use the results of their work to build on elsewhere in your government as you like.

      Claims from people like Microsoft that Open Source stymies competition and is "unfair" are just nonsense.

    97. Re:Funny? by PhiRatE · · Score: 3, Informative

      Intriguing. I guess your situation wasn't that different from mine (http://exorsus.net/), but I started out with very few people as part of the collective (3 of us in fact), and the bills were never very high anyway, so, we're still a collective, kinda. different people have paid the bills at different times, sometimes me only, sometimes me and up to 4 others, right now just me and one other guy, but it has worked out nicely. Never be a business tho.

      --
      You can't win a fight.
    98. Re:Funny? by cattail.nu · · Score: 1

      Clippy: It looks like you are trying to hang a new shower curtain. May I help you?

    99. Re:Funny? by Danathar · · Score: 3, Informative

      IANAL....BUT....in the U.S.

      Just because Microsoft says you cannot sue them does not mean your lawyer can't walk down to the courthouse and file a suit ANYWAY. Now the Microsoft Lawyer can hold his breath at the preliminary hearing all he wants complaining that the defendant is not allowed to be in the courtroom, but the judge can still rule that the plaintiff has valid grounds for a suit.

      I can sue you for ANYTHING....including wearing a bad shirt, it may just be thrown out of court...or may NOT.

    100. Re:Funny? by glenalec · · Score: 1

      Ah... assuming said company has competition they want to undercut, most of the saved money will go into making the product/service cheaper. Which in turn means their customers now have more cash at THEIR disposals.

      And so on.

      The increased sales (not just from competitors' customers, but ALSO from new customers who couldn't afford the old price, but can afford the new) increases sales. Oh gosh: Need more people on the shop floor and in the cubicle farm.

      Or their competition gets there first and undercuts them. This is supposed to be a free and competitive market!

      Assuming the company has no competition, yes: CEO gets more money in his bank account. Proprietry software is the only place I know where this situation is common.

      Even in the latter case, the CEO's money eventually gets spent or invested SOMEWHERE, generating some sort of employment, that employment, then leading to someone else having more money to spend on something else. Money doesn't generally fall into black holes in large quantities. It circulates in the economy (grandmothers burying it in tins in the back yard notwithstanding). Savings in one place pop up as expenses elsewhere.

      The trick to life is to make this as efficient as can be so as much of the expenses as possible are on things that make life enjoyable and worthwhile, rather than having to spend it all on boring stuff. Why else bother with it all otherwise?

      --
      The man with no surname and a silly hat

      On the universe: It's bunk.
    101. Re:Funny? by ragnar · · Score: 1

      I think it just demonstrates that some people don't treat their employment or their operating system as a quasi-religious statement about themselves. The higher up in an organization you go, the less you should care about personal allegiance, in lieu of professional allegiance.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    102. Re:Funny? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      No one is talking about giving away your services for free.

      There is a difference between plumbers and programmers in that a lot of the plumbers work comes from private individuals whereas a lot of a programmers work comes from companies.

      So if everyone learnt how to program open source then the companies would still need to employ some of them if they wanted programming work. Maybe someone already in the company would be able to do the work so they wouldn't hire externally but ultimately a programmer is still getting paid.

      If you think about most software packages used in business I'm sure you'll come to the same conclusion I have that 99% of them only do 50% of what they usefully should be able do and trying to get them do the rest ( to fit in with the way the company works for example ) is virtually impossible. With open source it wouldn't be like that, business would demand applications which do exactly what they wanted them to and they'd need people to make that happen for them.

      I think Open Source is great, considering that an awful lot of IT jobs rely on knowledge of a particular system e.g. Oracle, SAP etc for which you either have to a pay an awful lot for training/certification or be lucky enough for an employer to pay for you. With open source the training is free, you can train yourself - there are no barriers and it's brilliant. Hurrah for Open Source.

    103. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      Yeah. I love the license plate frame Wired says Linus has on his Acura SUV:
    104. Re:Funny? by FooBarWidget · · Score: 1

      So why is that point relevant? I can just as easily point out that Emacs can be a phychotherapist (no joke, that feature does exist) and that Visual Studio can't, but that's just as pointless as your point if I don't need it.

    105. Re:Funny? by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 1

      It's not scarey that he's saying or doing that stuff. He works for Microsoft not Redhat now. Redhat isn't paying his bills or putting food on the table for him anymore.

      Also as evil as MS is villified to be and I tend to think they are myself. It's probebly a very interesting and exciting place to work. Also if your working for a place like Microsoft and not McDonalds, what would you do?

      Still, I just hope people in the government nod and smile as they pop a Linux CD in the drive if it suits their needs better then Windows products.

      --
      ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
    106. Re:Funny? by rking · · Score: 1

      Most software companies will try to avoid liability, pretty much like anyone else will. You also have to consider whether a particular company copuld afford to pay out if something went seriously wrong.

      The main thing here really is that it's just not an issue relating to free software / open source in particular. It applies to proprietary software just the same. You sue IBM if they implemented the system, or Red Hat, or Microsoft or whoever you hired to implement your system and they may or may not have a whole host of liability disclaimers which may or may not prove valid in court. The question is, why do you think that this is an issue in relation to free / open source software in particular?

    107. Re:Funny? by spudgun · · Score: 1


      -> Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...

      No M-x doctor ?
      No M-x tetris ?

      you call that a programmers editor ?? :)

      --
      Type unto others as you would have them type unto you.
    108. Re:Funny? by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      Sure, you first : )

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    109. Re:Funny? by AstroDrabb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And exactly how many companies have successfully sued MS because they lost time/money/etc because of issues with MS software? The MS EULA as a whole may not be valid, however your going to have one _very_ expensive case on your hands. MS will throw everything they have at that case since they would not want to be sued by every company out there that lost money due to their software. At the end of the day, MS and other proprietary software (as well as OSS) is use at your own risk.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    110. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neat features and customizable desktops don't feed my dog, they don't paint my house, and they don't repair the clutch on my car.

      Yeah, there should be a tax on software development to pay for your dog. Grow up. Competition lowering prices is a GOOD thing, yes even in programming.

    111. Re:Funny? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A small digression: What is it that makes Osama bin Ladin anything but a "real Muslim?" or the Inquisitionists "real Christians?" Dismissing their claims of religious conviction just because we find their behaviors reprehensible smacks of the "No true Scotsman" fallacy.

      If someone sincerely believes that there is no god but Allah, and Mohammed is his Prophet, that is enough to make him a Muslim. Though he is a painful embarassment to many of the noble people who ascribe to the same beliefs, we cannot dismiss him from the ranks of believers in Islam except on rational grounds. The only way to remove bin Laden and the Inquisitionists from their respective pools is to assume that religious devotion can only have positive effects on devotees. Such an assumption will make any debate over the value of religious conviction impossible.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    112. Re:Funny? by ReTay · · Score: 1

      "So, who would one go after if the plumbing job sprung a leak and ruined twenty grand worth of housing?"

      Me I would go after the people that I had doing my quality control. If they were doing their job correctly any shoddy workmanship would have been caught before the virus....I mean the leak started and cost money.

    113. Re:Funny? by Uggy · · Score: 1

      I do not think that Linus needs to worry about his children starving any time soon.

      Neither do the guys sitting on top of the Amway pyramid.

      --
      Toddlers are the stormtroopers of the Lord of Entropy.
    114. Re:Funny? by loconet · · Score: 1

      And for all that cost, Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...

      .. I'm sure you meant vi right? ;)

      --
      [alk]
    115. Re:Funny? by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      I didn't say I thought this was particularly sensible. Otoh, when I consider the thought of my average fellow-citizens dicking around with electricity (particularly) I can see that these laws maybe aren't so silly either. Unfortunately there's no easy way to legislate for only those bright enough to have a clue fixing their taps, wiring, ...

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    116. Re:Funny? by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
      You didn't answer his question.

      --
      Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    117. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said! That's a really nice analogy.

    118. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because prototyping a UI in a WYSIWYG is a useful tool employed by most of the programmers on this planet you egotistical fuckwit. Some people like to get shit done, not wank superior over the REALLY UGLY FUCKING INTERFACES you fucking kids put together, if you even bother to put an interface together.

      Oh well, at least I know you'll submit your resume in an ASCII format so I can easily throw it into the dumpster.

    119. Re:Funny? by airjrdn · · Score: 1

      Because it seems as though it would be harder to hold someone liable if they acheived no monetary gain by providing the service (software in this case).

      If I help a friend out by working on his water leak and it goes catastrophic, he can sue; however in court the main jist of the suit will be that I was helping a friend and things didn't go so well. If he hired a professional plumber; someone he had to pay to provide the service, it would seem there's an inherent additional burden of liability for the proffesional plumber compared to me; the helping friend.

    120. Re:Funny? by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, the original poster was probably thinking about all the IT McJobs that Microsoft's shoddy software created for us. These jobs were filled with MSCEs, CNAs, and the like.

      I think it's time to get rid of the McJobs in IT by replacing all that shitty software.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    121. Re:Funny? by lwriemen · · Score: 1

      Think about how much cash Microsoft has, and how little it would cut into that cash to give every CIO of a major company a $10k kickback for standardizing on Windows. Ever wonder why companies can "stay the course" in the wake of yet another virus crippling the infrastructure? Not too funny. :-(

    122. Re:Funny? by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

      >Of course, he's just some greedy bastard

      That's probably true - after all, he worked for Red Hat :-)

      Then again, greed is legal.

    123. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Big Difference!

      With electricity, the worst you can do is kill yourself - unfortunate, but Darwin's theory is still in effect. Address complaints to the management, in person.

      With plumbing you could possibly screw up the sewage and make your neghibor sick. Externalizing costs is evil.

      Conclusion:
      Allowing people to do their own electrical work is fine, but plumbing needs some form of oversight.

    124. Re:Funny? by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd like to see the numbers on just how many people make money in OSS versus commercial software, and how much work they had to do to get that money.

      Directly or inderectly? Ask Phil Katz how much money he made after putting a ZIP manipulation library in the public domain. Ask Linus Torvalds how much giving Linux away has made him.

      Money made with OSS doesn't come with the sale. It comes through other avenues like support (Red Hat) or concurrent development (IBM plugins for Eclipse).

    125. Re:Funny? by broeman · · Score: 1

      funny, I just thought about the same analogy some time ago, just that:

      MS is a cola, nice packaged and ready to drink, but pretty unhealthy in the long run.

      Apple is a diet Coke, nice packaged, somewhat healthy (the NutraSweet discussion).

      OSS as water, which you can mix yourself with some effort, freely available, hopefully through a standard infrastructure, and you would now whats in there (if you don't buy some weird sweetener).

      --

      (yes this can be compared with sex)
    126. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 1



      Sorry, fell asleep :)

      Yes, teflon tape will work. Shut off the house water, remove the supply line going to the toilet, unscrew the valve and clean the threading out, then wind teflon tape around the threads in the same direction you screw the valve on.

      Rescrew valve. Should be done :)

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    127. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Visual Studio still hasn't got half the functionality of emacs...


      Heh.... most OSS folks get all riled up about feature bloat (like MSOffice, etc.) but... I guess it's OK if an OSS project is bloated.

      "Eight Megs And Constantly Swapping" was the joke back in the day.

    128. Re:Funny? by broeman · · Score: 1

      oh yeah, and if you found a nice recipé, you could try to sell it and/or share it so everyone else could enjoy it. Isn't this what is happening with all the small breweries ;)

      OMG, Linux is beer, of course! it all makes sense now

      --

      (yes this can be compared with sex)
    129. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 1


      Um, no. The worst thing you can do if you mess up the electric work is to burn down your place and possibly the houses on either side of you (or the apartment building if you live in one).

      The worst thing you can do with plumbing is to flood the guy downstairs (or ruin your new finished basement)...the chances of screwing up your sewage lines to the point of making the neighbors sick are pretty small :)

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    130. Re:Funny? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think Microsoft employees are PLENTY ethical. The ones I've met have been. They are somewhere between dreamers and pragmatists.

      The only reason Microsoft's marketting seem so nefarious is that they're at the top. When a company at the bottom bundles practically everything you need when computing along with their OS, e.g. Apple, it's a good business practice. When Microsoft does it, it's anti-competetive, despite the fact that these guys at the bottom are apparently competing quite nicely.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    131. Re:Funny? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      Lower prices are a a good thing for CONSUMERS. It's a bad thing for companies, and a bad thing for their employees. That's why Wal-Mart's practice of lowering their prices below those of rival stores, even if it means a loss, is anti-competetive. It will cause companies to go out of business, leaving only Wal-Mart in their wake. This is the sort of thing that destroys towns.

      Now, Open Source Software is usually free. It don't get no cheaper. And that's a bad thing. Because if Open Source puts a company out of business in a particular market, there's only Open Source left in its wake. Meaning no competetion. How is this bad? Well, you're hard pressed to sell webserver software thanks to Apache. Does this mean Apache is the end all, be all, best possible approach to web serving? Of course not. But it does mean that it won't be profitable to write your own, even if your own webserver had superior performance and managability, because the inferior product is so inexpensive as to make it worth the hassle for many.

      I'm sick of hearing that the price of software is a tax. Hey: if a product takes a million dollars to write (which is pretty cheap), another million to support for a year, and has a market of roughly ten thousand, how much do you have to charge for it? If your answer is "nothing, because 10% of them will buy support licenses from you for $1000 a year," you're wrong.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    132. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So your web hosting collective didn't work for you. Doesn't mean it won't work for anyone else. For instance, there is the Community Co-Location Project which has chapters all over North America and has been going strong for years. In fact, the Fremont facility is up to 8 full cabinets of member systems, along with dedicated virtual hosting machines running Plesk and VMWare which support another few hundred members - and CCP runs in the black.

      So you can't pull off the non-profit thing, big deal, maybe its not your thing but it does not follow that its not possible to do such a thing. They are doing it now very sucessfully.

    133. Re:Funny? by chris_mahan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Every dollar not shipped off to Redmond will be split between a bonus for the CIO, the CEO and shareholders.

      Excellent point. You are saying that by not paying MS for software functionality and gettting similar functionality from OSS, you can increase executive management compensation as well as return on shareholder investment. This is great! Companies everywhere will jump at the opportunity.

      Now, it may seem bad for the programmer, but let's follow through.

      All those rich people, namely, the CEO, CIO, and the shareholder now have all this money. What do they do with it? Invest (trust me, that's what they do). But where? Back into the company, or into other companies, by buying stock in the form of shares.

      Now, those companies end up with extra cash. They have to earn more money with it since the investors expect a great return. They need to spend it. So they hire more programmers and send a s little as possible to Redmond again. Then the company is profitable, and the profit goes to the CEO and CIO and shareholders...

      And it all starts back again.

      Note that the advantage of well-paid CEOs and CIOs is that the top executive world is relatively small, and a lot of them know each other.

      Let's imagine CEO Bigshot and CEO Amthegrehtest are playing golf:

      Bigshot:
      Hey, nice putt...

      Amthegrehtest (picking up his ball and starting to walk to hole 6):
      Thanks! Say, I heard you made out like a bandit last quarter.

      Bigshot (walking along):
      The stock price went through the roof, and they took care of me.

      Amthegrehtest: So what did you do different? This time last year you were worried you wouldn't meet your numbers.

      Bigshot (admiring the trees):
      We went open source and our developers just went to town. We attracted a couple of really good guys. Heck one of them even wrote a book on programming some stuff.

      Amthegrehtest:
      Really?

      Bigshot:
      Yeah, and the streamlining of operations allowed for a 4% reduction in variable costs... Plus everybody's happy and IT is getting great reviews from the rest of the crew.

      Amthegrehtest:
      Say, can we set up a meeting to talk more about that? I'm really interested. I'll bring some people along.

      Bigshot:
      Yeah, of course. Sushi at SoPriciFich?

      Amthegrehtest:
      Excellent... (queue in golf-related executalk)

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    134. Re:Funny? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      if you do work, you should be rewarded for it, and the reward should fit the work done.

      I've been digging a perfectly conical hole in my backyard for 4 years- it's now 110 meters deep. This has been a HUGE amount of work- so make with the reward!

      OSS is failing developers

      No. OSS is demonstrating that developers are becoming less needed. Software is reaching the point where it's acceptable to continue using the old stuff with minor modifications. In the future there will be fewer programmers servicing a larger number of computers, in the same way that there are today fewer farmers feeding more people. Those programmers that do continue to work will be only the very best.

      To suggest that today's developers stay away from OSS for their own job security is Ludditism... desparately holding back progress because the future will make you obselete.

    135. Re:Funny? by Belegothmog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If someone sincerely believes that there is no god but Allah, and Mohammed is his Prophet, that is enough to make him a Muslim.

      Um, no. I someone believes there is no god but God, and Jesus is His son, that is not enough to make him a Catholic, either. A person who believes in Allah and His prophet Mohammed could be of Babist or Baha'i faith -- whom many muslims would (and have) kill. No, a religious faith has teachings which its followers are expected to believe and follow. If you don't follow those teachings, you aren't really a member of the faith, even if you say over and over that you are.

      You might want to assume that religious devotion can only have positive effects on devotees, but that would be a very bad assumption. Sure, you can make any assumption you want for your model, but having bad assumptions doesn't make for a very good model.

    136. Re:Funny? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      So explain the bottled water market to me. The government provides drinkable water for free; yet somehow, companies manage to charge $5/litre for their own "superior" water. But you just proved that it's impossible to compete with free!

      And what about the automobile market? Do people really spend 10 or even 50 thousand on a car, when they could just walk for free? I can't understand it!

      because the inferior product is so inexpensive as to make it worth the hassle for many.

      Conversely, the superior product is too expensive to be worth the cost for many. I just don't see the problem here...

      If you're offering something "better", and nobody buys, then the free market has proved it wasn't "better" enough.

    137. Re:Funny? by PedroDeAlvarado · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has the luxury of being able to hire the best people...

      Of course: if you extract monopoly or oligopoly profits from a market, you can afford this and other luxuries.

    138. Re:Funny? by CKW · · Score: 1

      > AND - why didn't Borland do anything ???

      Because paying someone a $2 million dollar bonus for staying around just isn't sane, rational, or within the capabilities of almost any company?????

      You can bet that he wasn't allowed to tell anyone what his wage or signing bonus with Microsoft was, so it's not like the people at Borland can just counter the offer. And until Microsoft has paid $1 million dollar signing bonuses to 35 of your BEST key people, you don't have a case against them.

      I don't think you're head is connected to reality. Your logic and reasoning skills are direly lacking.

      Note I'm not saying ANYTHING at all about Borland as a company or their managers, and of course they did it "of their own free will". You show up and offer me $2 million dollar signing bonus to me I'll leave the company I'm currently VERY happy at. But what insane person would offer me $2 million dollars for "no reason what-so-ever", and how the FUCK could you hold not "matching that" against the company I currently work for? It's idiotic.

      CLEARLY and without question Microsoft was using it's market domination and deep pockets to destroy a competitor using non-competitive practices.

      Which we as a society have deemed "not good for all" and legislated as "illegal". Hence the lawsuit.

    139. Re:Funny? by Technician · · Score: 1

      MS is a cola, nice packaged and ready to drink, but pretty unhealthy in the long run.

      Apple is a diet Coke, nice packaged, somewhat healthy (the NutraSweet discussion).


      Bad comparison. Coke and Diet Coke come from the same place like XP and XP Pro.

      A better comparison is Coke and 7-up. One is not caffinated.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    140. Re:Funny? by smallguy78 · · Score: 1

      This goes on all the time in corporate America - is it such a big shock that Microsoft has slimey yuppies working for them too?!

      --
      Nothing costs nothing
    141. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think you're missing the point. Unlike Borland, RedHat, SuSE, etc; Microsoft *IS* respecting the talents of these individuals and rewareding them handsomly ($1MM+ Gross, $1.5MM+ Hejlsberg).

      It's not slimey - it's respect.

    142. Re:Funny? by upside · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think it's perfectly valid to say inquisitionists weren't "real" Christians any more than Russia's Liberal Democrats are real liberal or democrats. Of course they'll try to twist things around with convoluted logic, but their ideas and actions can't stand a minute of reasoned debate.

      In the end all these debates boil down to meanings of key words, but I'm confident it's possible to capture the essence of "Christianity" or "Liberalism" to the extent that you can show they contradict these people's ideas and actions. Such actions and motives don't stem from their convictions, but from the fact that they are mentally ill, power-hungry, feeling marginalized, angry, they didn't get enough attention as kids or whatever.

      Ideologies are power tools. If you were to start a war, you'd have to mobilize the masses. Pick one from: Democracy, Freedom, The Nation, The Flag, King and Country, God, Allah, Protect your family etc. If you have a secret agenda you take an accepted ideology and use it for your own purposes.

      Lastly, I'm not sure how fruitful or even possible it is to try to compare the "value of religious convictions". Values stem from convictions and vice versa. If you are a Christian you're quite likely to end up thinking Christianity is better in line with your own Christian values than other religions, i.e. most "valuable". :)

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    143. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're dichotomy between "open source" and "commercial" software is false because open source software can be commercial too. The argument raised by the Microsoft spokesman presents a dichotomy between "open source" and "proprietary" software. It makes no sense to refer to "commercial software" when discussing this topic.

      Please learn about the subject at hand before discussing it. You are simply confusing the casual reader into believing something that is not true.

    144. Re:Funny? by compro01 · · Score: 1

      are you implying that a beverage having caffine is a bad thing?

      *ducks*

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    145. Re:Funny? by ronchman · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

      You're forgetting *where* the money comes from. It comes from the companies residing in that specific country. From the point of view of a national economy, it doesn't matter whether that money is paid to a software company that employs local people or if it stays in the pocket of the company that has implemented an OSS solution.

    146. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Does anybody think a 21st century emacs might be a good idea? I mean by using the emacs configurability model in a gui software development application.

      Exposing the "power of emacs" to an audience used to GUI software might just sway a few developers.

    147. Re:Funny? by Anthony+Stuckey · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

      Your statements are entirely neutral, and have nothing to do with each other. Stringing them together the way that you do is dishonest, without providing more support.

      If OSS software can be produced to the same or better quality as closed source with fewer people or less total labor, then that is a good thing. To do otherwise would be inefficient. The remaining people should be retrained into some other productive sector, or working hours can be reduced. None of this is bad, either in absolute or in communion with other ideas. I know I'd be happy to work a shorter work week if it meant more full employment by competent people.

    148. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
      Thank you very much. That is very helpful. It seems obvious after several people said it, but that's what I needed to hear.

      The teflon tape thing is something I would never have thought up on my own, so that also helped a lot too. I'd probably have a leak again in a few months without it. This job was done about a year ago by professional plumbers. If I don't see teflon tape when I take it apart I'll ... well... you know.

    149. Re:Funny? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      while with OSS a lousy support from one company will give another company the chance to offer better support and get the first company's customers this way, therefore an OSS company has a strong incentive to provide good support.

      This brings up one of the hard-to-avoid weaknesses of F/OSS software economy: if the bulk of a company's revenue comes from paid support, then they have no incentive to make the software easier to install. In fact, they can even be motivated to make it intentionally more difficult for the non-expert.

      Consider how hard it was to install a PCI sound card for Microsoft(tm) Windows(r) 10 years ago versus today....

    150. Re:Funny? by DrCode · · Score: 1

      It also enables closed-source development that people might not want to do for free. My employer sells fairly expensive EDA software, and we use TCL/TK for the GUI, GCC for compiling, and Linux as a development platform. Many of our customers (EE's doing hardware and chip design) run our product on Linux.

      So, am I worried that someone will produce open-source versions of our tools, and that my job will go away? Not really, because:

      1. EDA work tends to be fairly messy, and isn't the sort of thing a person might do for fun.
      2. Even if someone does try to do open-source versions, it will take a looong time to catch up to the proprietary tools.
      3. By the time someone does succeed, I'll want to be doing something else anyway.

    151. Re:Funny? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Who cares about the Baha'i? They screw up broad definitions of any religion, because they tend to accept any and all spiritual leaders as prophets of their own faith. For example, if I were to define a Mormon as someone who believes that Jesus was the Son of God and that Joseph Smith was his prophet, the Baha'i would be in that definition as well. As far as religious definitions go, I consider them a mere technicality, and not one worth pursuing. Whole different situation from your "Catholic" example.

      I'm not sure what the babtist faith is. Google only brought up naked women and alternate spellings of "Baptist". I'm pretty sure the vast majority of Baptists don't accept Mohammed as a prophet of God.

      Until you can find a more substantial example of non-Muslims who accept Mohammed as a prophet, I'm standing by my definition.

      Now, who defines which specific teachings and doctrines a person must adhere to before they are considered a member of the faith? With churches that have a well-defined heirarchial organization (Catholicism for example) the answer is clearer: A person is an adherent to that faith if they believe the things that the person at the top says they should. If the Pope says person X is in breach of the fundamental doctrines of the faith, then they are.

      If the leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints says excommunicates a person, then they are no longer members of that faith. On the other hand, the term "Mormon" is broader, as it encompasses dozens of splinter sects. Some are polygamous fundamentalists, others (like the RLDS) are virtually indistinguishable from liberal Christians.

      While every one of these splinter groups would love to keep the name "Mormon" for themselves (even the LDS Church, which has begged the media to stop using the term, to no avail), it cannot happen. It doesn't matter which is "the true church" or which Joseph Smith would be happiest with, none of them have the ability to excommunicate any of the others from "Mormonism," because the term is defined only by those principles shared by all factions commonly considered "Mormons": Belief in Joseph Smith as a prophet and the Book of Mormon as scripture.

      A similar situation exists in Islam. The Sunni and the Shi'ites are both branches of the faith. Neither has any control over the other, neither has a strict organizational structure, and neither group can claim the right to define their beliefs and teachings as "Islam." There may also be other branches I'm not aware of.

      The point is, in order for your definition to work, there has to be some group or organization which demands adherence to certain teachings. If I run a church called the "Holy Fellowship Church (1300 S. and Sunset, behind Jerry's Bait Shop)" I can set myself up as the guy who decides who is a member of the Holy Fellowship Church. I can even claim that no person not a member of HFC is a "true Christian." But this puts the rest of Christianity under no obligation to accept my definition. And if the rest of Christianity denounces my ministry as an abomination, that puts me under no obligation to stop calling it a Christian ministry.

      Maybe the Bible and Koran would help to solve the question of what constitutes "True Christianity" or "True Islam." But both are often maddeningly vague and give at least the appearance of self-contradiction. While some readings of these books are more justifiable than others, there is still plenty of room for interpretation. Furthermore, in the case of the Bible, you can get even more traction by criticizing the process by which the books of the Bible were selected, and therefore add and remove early books as you please. You could even reject the Bible outright, and by maintaining a belief in the divinity of Jesus you would still maintain at least a small claim on the title "Christian."

      It is therefore foolish to try and compile anything but a very short, very general list of attributes for such labels

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    152. Re:Funny? by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      You have a right to conduct business.

      In conducting your business you do not have a right to make a profit.

      You may make a profit provided that you follow the laws of the land you do business in. This includes the Anti-Trust laws

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    153. Re:Funny? by jo42 · · Score: 1

      It used to be, that if you stole, you got the hand that did the stealing lopped off. What did they do to liars?

    154. Re:Funny? by Gilk180 · · Score: 1

      Whilst the claim the open source software will devastate the economy is probably overblown, Mr. Sharp does have a point. Goverments _should_ purchase goods from their home country whenever possible, or from companies that hire the citizens of said country.

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.


      If you look at this from a smaller government is better point of view, if governments spend less money buying software, they can lower taxes or put the money to better use elsewhere.

      They may also instead spend the money on developing on top of/improving/customizing the open source software, which will not only employ programmers (all of whom are their citizens), but will give said government better software. If they buy proprietary software, they give money to a company to do the same things except they do not know where the money is spent. Much of it may go overseas even if they purchase from a domestic corporation.

      If you take a good look at the real economics of the system, governments should spend as little as possible. Sometimes it is even worth buying from overseas. Less spending means fewer taxes and any economist will tell you that lower taxes are better for an economy when taken as a whole. If taxes are lower, the citizens will have more money to spend. Goods will be cheaper and therefore more marketable overseas.

      Admittedly, this is a simplification, but I think it hits pretty close to the truth. There are also many other factors that need to be taken into account. Governments do more than just watch over the economy.

    155. Re:Funny? by anomalous+cohort · · Score: 1
      you also can't visually design a GUI with Emacs

      You can't visually design a professional GUI with Visual Studio either.

    156. Re:Funny? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I accept your comparison with the "Liberal Democrats." In this case, both "liberal" and "democrat" have very narrowly defined definitions to compare the party platform against. This case is much like the brazenly named "Democratic Republic of the Congo", which doesn't appear to have had a peaceful government change in the last thirty years.

      But when it comes to "Christianity," it's very hard to specify the definition without excluding large groups which traditionally have been considered Christians. For example, many mainline Christian denominations try to keep Mormons from labelling themselves Christians because the latter don't accept the Nicean Creed. But neither did any of the Christians who lived before the creed was written. I've also seen protestants who define Christianity in such a way as to exclude Catholics.

      Rather than trying to define Christianity in an objective and precise way that fails to map onto the problem set, or a totally subjective way that varies from person to person ("Christians are those whom God will judge worthy in the afterlife"), it's easiest just to accept any and all claimants to the title, and then start evaluating particular positions within Christianity based on whether you find their ideals and teachings to be ennobling or degrading.

      I would agree that the Inquisition doesn't capture anything of the nobler side of Christianity, and that the actions of the inquisitionists say more about the problems of giving any one group too much control than about the value of Christianity itself. But I do think that they have to be taken into account in any serious attempt to understand the "essence" of Christianity, just as the critics of Christianity would be unfair in evaluating the faith without examining its more ennobling aspects.

      Many of the practices of the Inquisition were obviously motivated more by greed than by any true feeling of religious devotion. For example, it was a common practice for the suspects of the Inquisition to pay the (often extravagant) living costs of the inquisitionists. But it's not a fair evaluation of history to say that every Christian who violated the best principles of the faith were acting according to a "secret agenda." For many of the worst offenders, the protection of their concept of Christianity was the agenda.

      It's just as easy to dismiss all the abuses of Communism as the betrayal of Marxist principles by leaders with a secret agenda. To some extent it might even be true, but the abuses cannot be dismissed as irrelevant to the question of whether Marxism is a good idea.

      Keep it coming. You gave me a lot to think about.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    157. Re:Funny? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I would say that there's quite a lot of unprofessional GUIs out there, then!

      I'm not trying to make a value judgement for or against Emacs or Visual Studio, just pointing out a fact: Visual Studio has a GUI builder tool; Emacs doesn't.

      Of course, Visual Studio (or at least Visual Basic 6, which is what I used) is easy to use; I was able to make a little "periodic table" program years ago with it, long before I even understood what "object-oriented" even meant! I didn't know how to open file streams (I hardcoded the element info into the source instead of a data file where it should have been), but I was still able to make a (IMHO) pretty cool GUI for it. I doubt that I'd be able to reproduce it even today with Java or C++, if I had to code it by hand (or, at least not without a lot of effort looking up methods).

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    158. Re:Funny? by druxton · · Score: 1

      If it is an older valve, you may have to do what is called repacking it. Packing is the material that surrounds the shaft of the valve and prevents water from seeping up around the shaft, and when it needs to be replaced it causes exactly they symptoms you have described. Teflon tape around the packing nut won't help if this is the problem. Instructions are on the evil site: Packing a valve

      If it's a newer valve, the cartridge needs to be replaced when it starts to leak around the shaft.

    159. Re:Funny? by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      Some people like to get shit done, not wank superior over the REALLY UGLY FUCKING INTERFACES you fucking kids put together, if you even bother to put an interface together.

      When I checked last, the computers are there to get things done. I'll pick a well-written software with solid insides and spartan (which some call "ugly") interface over something that needs Pentium-III just to launch the GUI and that was done by some mousehead who brags about "generating, not programming". Do you prefer a beat-up car with a top-notch engine, or a polished limousine for which you need to hire two MCSEs to push it when you need it to move?

      Oh well, at least I know you'll submit your resume in an ASCII format so I can easily throw it into the dumpster.

      With this attitude, no wonder you got stuck as a HR drone.

    160. Re:Funny? by penpendisarapen · · Score: 1

      Another, one incorporated into the collective. "Resistance is futile!" - BorGates

    161. Re:Funny? by El+Kevbo · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...you also can't visually design a GUI with Emacs!

      Fool! Don't give them any ideas! Do we really need to add more things into Emacs???

    162. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
      Thank you. Unfortunately, MS is still learning how to tighten down security:

      Server Error in '/' Application.
      Access is denied
      Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.

      Exception Details: System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception: Access is denied

      Source Error:

      ...

      Source File: e:\webroot\home80\content\Improve\TroubleshootMain LineValves0.aspx Line: 47

      Stack Trace:

      [Win32Exception (0x80004005): Access is denied]

      [InvalidOperationException: Cannot open log for source {0}. You may not have write access.]
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.OpenForWrite() +368
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.WriteEvent(Int32 eventID, Int16 category, EventLogEntryType type, String[] strings, Byte[] rawData) +280
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.WriteEntry(Strin g message, EventLogEntryType type, Int32 eventID, Int16 category, Byte[] rawData) +463
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.WriteEntry(Strin g message, EventLogEntryType type, Int32 eventID, Int16 category) +21
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.WriteEntry(Strin g message, EventLogEntryType type, Int32 eventID) +15
      System.Diagnostics.EventLog.WriteEntry(Strin g message, EventLogEntryType type) +11
      clsMSUserConfig.LogConfiguration() +734
      clsMSUserConfig..cctor() +983

      [TypeInitializationException: The type initializer for "clsMSUserConfig" threw an exception.]
      MSUser.clsMSUser.get_MSID() +36
      MSUser.clsMSUser..ctor(HttpRequest Request, HttpResponse Response) +40
      MHACoreLib.App.CpApp.GetMSID(Boolean bCreate) +430
      MHACoreLib.App.CpApp.GetMSID() +10
      MSNHomesControls.PageUI.Header.Render(HtmlTextWri ter writer) +154
      System.Web.UI.Control.RenderControl(HtmlTextWrite r writer) +243
      ASP.TroubleshootMainLineValves0_aspx.__Render__co ntrol1(HtmlTextWriter __output, Control parameterContainer) in e:\webroot\home80\content\Improve\TroubleshootMain LineValves0.aspx:47
      System.Web.UI.Control.RenderChildren(HtmlTextWrit er writer) +27
      System.Web.UI.Control.Render(HtmlTextWriter writer) +7
      System.Web.UI.Control.RenderControl(HtmlTextWrite r writer) +243
      System.Web.UI.Page.ProcessRequestMain() +1918

      Version Information: Microsoft .NET Framework Version:1.1.4322.573; ASP.NET Version:1.1.4322.910
    163. Re:Funny? by generationxyu · · Score: 1
      Clickthrough EULAs have never been held up as legally binding in court. Microsoft simply has the money to back it up.

      If I wrote an operating system, and a business used it, and it had bugs which caused loss of data... the lawyers for that business could probably force me to pay (out of court) by sheer quantity of funds, regardless of whether or not they had agreed not to sue in an EULA.

      For another example, Mike Rowe (of MikeRoweSoft.com fame) had every legal right to register the domain name mikerowesoft.com. M$ didn't like that too much. He ended up being payed $10k for the domain name. If this had gone to court, Mike's rights to the domain name likely would have been held up. However, he chose to take the money and not go through the costs and hassle over a $70/year domain name.

      Law only comes into play in a civil matter when both sides cannot reach an agreement out of court.

      --
      I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    164. Re:Funny? by generationxyu · · Score: 1
      While you might not be able to play Tetris or send email with Visual Studio (or maybe you can - they did, after all, put a flight simulator in Excel!), you also can't visually design a GUI with Emacs!

      Maybe not, but you could write an Emacs Lisp module that would let you, and if you submitted it, it would likely be included in a subsequent version of Emacs.

      --
      I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    165. Re:Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Making money is not wrong, but neither does it excuse anything. Too many people in our country see "Making Money" as a perfectly acceptable justification for otherwise immoral acts. There IS something wrong with making money if the means to making it are wrong.

      Greed is generally interpreted as a desire for money that goes beyond other concerns, such as concerns for the morality of certain tactics. In that sense, greed is bad. Just wanting money is not greed, but wanting money beyond a certain level is greed.

      The welfare of a government's citizens is derived from a multitude of factors, but every tax dollar (or yen or ruble or whatnot) that is spent on software (or anything else) comes directly out of someone's pocket. I would much rather have the government use Linux than take $500 from me to buy a Windows license to "serve" me with. The overall economic effect is identical--$500 less for microsoft is $500 more for me, which means $500 for other companies regardless (unless I save my money, which is apparently unpatriotic). The "Economic Benefit" of governments buying anything is a fallacy, or at very least overblown. They can alter demand, but they can't alter the total movement of money within the system.

      I think the real reason this honks people off isn't economic anyway; it's moral. They are throwing FUD to hurt other people (In this case, open source advocates) for personal gain. That is immoral. IMHO, making money does not justify any act morally, so lying to make money is no better than lying for the hell of it. Either way you're hurting people, whether out of selfishness or spite. The economic argument is used by greedy corporations to justify their actions when people point out that they're full of shit. We put up with it because the amount of damage is small, but I think just because we put up with it doesn't make it right.

      I'm all for making money, but I happen to think it should be in the ways that made our economy strong in the first place--by providing desired goods and services at fair prices, not by chicanery, marketing wizardry, lobbying or contract strongarming. I still believe that you can be honorable and still get rich, though I will grant it's a hell of a lot harder when you're competing in our economy since being an asshole provides such strong competetive advantages.

      In short, this is wrong because doing business with people should not require constantly rolling Saves Versus Bullshit.

    166. Re:Funny? by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      You've stepped outside of the bounds of the issue by introducing another program. The original point was that Emacs had more features, the reply was that Emacs was lacking a rather useful feature.

      Saying that you can use something else that has that feature is bogus, then. You might as well say "Then use Emacs to code, and VS.NET to design a GUI." Personally, I've used Emacs. I like it a lot more than I like VI. I don't like writing code in emacs... the visual tools that exist in VS.NET, Eclipse, C#/Delphi/C++ Builder, KDevelop, etc. are very useful. I like to see a graphical tree of all of my classes and functions, that I can click on to get to that point in code. I like being able to write stored queries on the database server from the same environment as the one that I'm coding the front-end in. I like being able to see the entire database from the application. I like seeing all of the servers on my network, and all of the web services that they provide...

      It comes down to using the best tool for the job, as well as the philosophy you have. Emacs doesn't cut it at the moment, as far as the work that I do. I don't mind having a huge monolithic application either.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    167. Re:Funny? by shadowbearer · · Score: 1



      Well, I just thought that having to call a plumber to repair a toilet is a silly regulation, no reflection on you :) Toilets are pretty simple and screwing one up isn't likely to cause injury; no, that sounds like a union lobbied regulation to me. Plumbing is actually one of the most simple non-structural DIY repairs one can do. (The increasing use of Pex for plumbing is going to make that tougher, tho; but there's still CPVC, which is danged hard to screw up ;) but overall Pex is pretty neat technology.

      OTOH, while fixing existing plumbing is fairly easy, for insurance purposes it's a good idea to have a plumber install new stuff, unless you're certain that what you're doing will pass an inspection...

      Electricity tho I have a very healthy respect for, and electricians absolutely should be licensed; I also agree with electrical codes. Ditto with General Contractors.

      Cheers!
      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    168. Re:Funny? by tuomoks · · Score: 1

      Depends - it's a question if someone is worth of that amount money ( you don't only pay for knowledge but the name and reputation ). $2 million is nothing ( not even for Borland ) - look the bonuses, sign-ups, golden whatever for some people, some corporations think that someone is worth of $10 million, $200 million, some companies even after the person in question has already had a questionable performance. You don't have to ask or tell - just make an offer, it is accepted or not. I still believe that many ( technical ) persons are more for challenge than money BUT of course money always helps, it's just not all - have a nice day.

    169. Re:Funny? by upside · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of your post. You do recognise that we are talking about abuses and betrayals of principle. One should ask questions like "are abuses such as the inquisition inherent to christianity or (organised) religion in general?" or "does communism tend to/always lead to totalitarianism?". If the answer is yes, you have to ask why. To return to islam and terrorism, I see it this way: Islam is for many what Communism has been for many African and Asian countries. These are nations that have suffered abuse under colonial and local despots. These ideologies provide a intellectual counterpoint and a mobilizing force against colonialists.

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    170. Re:Funny? by Andor · · Score: 1
      So you're saying that anybody who isn't for Open Source Software lacks beliefs? Frankly, I'm insulted.


      No he isn't -- you are simply misinterpreting him. I think it's rather disingenious of you!

      It's not a question of lack or presence of beliefs, it's a question of whether you make your decisions based on any beliefs you may have, or based purely on monetary considerations.

      That's his point, and it's very valid. Working or selling yourself on the basis of monetary considerations alone is technically called prostitution.
    171. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Ideologies are power tools. If you were to start a war, you'd have to mobilize the masses. Pick one from: Democracy, Freedom, The Nation, The Flag, King and Country, God, Allah, Protect your family etc.

      The "popular" one missing is make out in some way that the people you intend attacking, occupying, disposessing of their land/mineral resources, etc are somehow less human.

    172. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I accept your comparison with the "Liberal Democrats." In this case, both "liberal" and "democrat" have very narrowly defined definitions to compare the party platform against. This case is much like the brazenly named "Democratic Republic of the Congo", which doesn't appear to have had a peaceful government change in the last thirty years.

      "Democratic" dosn't imply that things will be peaceful or governments will be stable. The issue, as with the former "German Democratic Republic", would be to ask if the government in question is either a republic or democratic.

      Many of the practices of the Inquisition were obviously motivated more by greed than by any true feeling of religious devotion.

      Whilst very few religions preach hatred. This appears to be almost the norm when politics and religion become intertwined.

      For example, it was a common practice for the suspects of the Inquisition to pay the (often extravagant) living costs of the inquisitionists.

      This is hardly the only, or even the most recent, example of victimised people being expected to "pay for the privilege".

    173. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      OSS is demonstrating that developers are becoming less needed. Software is reaching the point where it's acceptable to continue using the old stuff with minor modifications. In the future there will be fewer programmers servicing a larger number of computers, in the same way that there are today fewer farmers feeding more people.

      Or developers become more akin to electricians, plumbers, builders, etc.
      OSS works well with tertiary business models. Software has the interesting property that it costs nothing to duplicate.

    174. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Now, Open Source Software is usually free. It don't get no cheaper. And that's a bad thing. Because if Open Source puts a company out of business in a particular market, there's only Open Source left in its wake. Meaning no competetion.

      Only if you insist on seeing software as being about manufacturing "off the shelf" widgets. When this kind of software is actually in the minority.

      I'm sick of hearing that the price of software is a tax. Hey: if a product takes a million dollars to write (which is pretty cheap), another million to support for a year, and has a market of roughly ten thousand, how much do you have to charge for it? If your answer is "nothing, because 10% of them will buy support licenses from you for $1000 a year," you're wrong.

      The value your customers place on the product has no relationship to your costs.

    175. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      So explain the bottled water market to me. The government provides drinkable water for free; yet somehow, companies manage to charge $5/litre for their own "superior" water.

      Sometimes what they are bottling is drinking water from a water company...

      Conversely, the superior product is too expensive to be worth the cost for many. I just don't see the problem here...
      If you're offering something "better", and nobody buys, then the free market has proved it wasn't "better" enough.


      Or that most people don't agree that what you think is "better" actually is. One person's "features" are another's "bells and whistles" and vice versa.

    176. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      So is plumbing. Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free.

      Plumbing is a tertiary industry. The major cost is in any plumbing job is "labour". i.e. the cost of skilled people's time.
      Microsoft treats software as a secondary industry, as though they are manufacturing a product.
      Whilst manufacturing and transporting pipes has a real cost software can be duplicated (and even transported about the planet) at close to zero cost.
      OSS allows software infrastructure to be treated just like plumbing. Including being able to "get three quotes for the job" etc...

    177. Re:Funny? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Or developers become more akin to electricians, plumbers, builders, etc.

      I wouldn't exactly put it that way. Consider an automobile mechanic as a profession with a similar level of skill (and salary) to electricians and plumbers. I'd call her equivalent to a system administrator or "IT guy" today, whereas a programmer is like the engineers at Toyota who design new cars.

      Obviously, we have about 1 million times as many mechanics as car designers, and I expect software to follow that pattern more. The relative number of programmers will go down in comparison to sysadmins.

    178. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      So, who would one go after if the plumbing job sprung a leak and ruined twenty grand worth of housing?

      You either go after the plumber who installed it or make an insurance claim.
      Note that you couldn't claim from the pipe manufacturer unless you could demonstrate that they were defective in a way that a competent plumber would not be able to spot.

    179. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Hopefully one has insurance to cover the potential damage. So, it's possible that one's insurance company may charge a higher premium for going with a "free" plumber.

      Or they might charge extra if you used a plumber with a reputation for poor workmanship.

      On the other hand, plumbing might not be the best analogy to software. Most pieces of software have some kind of EULA stating that the software is not suitable for any particular purpose and that the vendor is not liable for any damage resulting from use of the software.

      Actually plumbing is a good analogy. If you compare software with plumbing components. Rather than comparing software with a piece of plumbing work...

    180. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      But that's true for proprietary sowtware as well (even worse, a popular, but unprofitrable proprietary project is quite likely not to be continued).

      It's quite possible that whilst that piece of software is profitable the company itself is not.

      Now, if a commercial procect ceases to be supported, you can either just use it and hope that it will continue to work (with your new hardware, with new demands to it, etc.),

      Assuming you can. Maybe your licence dosn't allow you to do this...

      or switch to another product (if there's another whitch can replace it). With OSS, you have the same options and in addition the options to try to find another company willing to support the very same product you're already using, or to hire some programmer yourself to adapt the product to your changing needs.

      Without it mattering why the software became unsupported in the first place.

    181. Re:Funny? by mpe · · Score: 1

      You're dichotomy between "open source" and "commercial" software is false because open source software can be commercial too.

      In addition it's quite possible for proprietary software to be "non commercial". e.g. freely downloadable.

    182. Re:Funny? by Whatever99 · · Score: 1

      Nice post. Your experience has deeper connotations relating to commercial vs communal economic systems. Also I put forward the notion that your communal sysetm was actually more authoritarian than the commercial one. The group with authority decided that no one should be responsible for paying the bills. A less authoritarian system would be based on free trade. That meaning that while someone can buy services, the buyers and seller(s) have a free choice in the process. Free choice is freedom and that is less authoritarian. Yes you got more authority over the system but overall, your commercial venture was less authoritarian than the communal one.

    183. Re:Funny? by PastaLover · · Score: 1

      My government is throwing away enough of my money already thank you very much. And microsoft is off course completely wrong about the money thing. A government needs independent contractors to produce task specific software for them. When a government buys software from a company, I don't want them buying a "license to use", that's a waste of tax dollars, cause they'll be at the mercy of the contractor. And after 5 years, when that specific contractor decides to discontinue support, the government has no other recourse than to "upgrade". Even though in many cases it is completely unnecessary. With free software now, the government has a chance to foster competition amongst different, smaller companies. The government can contract different companies to support different parts of their infrastructure. This could all lead to more, smaller companies instead of one behemoth. That is what free software is about. And if you know anything about economics, that's the whole point of the free market principle.

    184. Re:Funny? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      If there's nothing wrong with making money, why are the cops looking to have a "friendly chat" about some
      hundred-dollar bills I circulated in the neighbourhood and are keenly interested in what kind of printer I own?

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    185. Re:Funny? by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Let's face it, open source software doesn't seem to employ very many people. It's not good business for Governments to push products that are detrimental to the welfare of its citizens.

      ???? How many is not that many?

      How many developers has IBM, Cray, SGI, etc. paid to work full time on the Linux kernel? How many people are employed in order to work on Apache? How does this compair to the developers that Microsoft has hired to write the Windows *kernel* or *IIS?*

      I would be willing to bet that the most successful open source projects probably have more developers who are employed as developers to work on it than their proprietary counerparts.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    186. Re:Funny? by sageman · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm a little confused here: "there's an insatiable demand for new software, such that open source can never meet it." Seems difficult to believe considering the www wouldn't exist as it is now without an OS program called BIND (might have heard of it). Also, Apache, OSS webserver has more than 60% market share. If OSS can take on, and dominate, such large areas (such as the aforementioned, and also kernels, compiliers, et cetera), I find it difficult to believe that open source can't meet demand. Especially considering the bazaar method of OSS which has been shown to produce typically more reliable code, in shorter periods of time, through various case examples (Apache's a good one, as well as the Linux kernel itself, the GCC compiler, and tons more). I fail to see this insatiable demand and why OSS can't "build high rises" instead of just the (incredibly important, mind you, more important than the 'high rises') "basic plumbing" (which the commercial products are dependent on). With more coders than commercial software, and being that bazaar style coding seems to be (through example) much more efficient than commercial "cathedral" style, there is no demand that OSS can't meet of which commercial can that I see.

      --
      --- "To iterate is human, to recurse divine." -- Robert Heller
    187. Re:Funny? by Openstandards.net · · Score: 1
      The concept of insatiable demand comes from economics. It basically says that people are never truly satisfied. No matter how much technology evolves, how many new gadgets cars have, and how big houses get, people will always want more. The insatiable demand applies whether it is being met by free open source or commercial sources. It has to do with the "markets" both free open source and commercial proprietary products fill.

      The point I was making is that there's enough room in the universe for both, because just as the universe is forever expanding, demand for products and services, whether free or commercial, open standards based or proprietary, open or closed source, are insatiable... that is, they can never be satisfied.

      When I said "there's an insatiable demand for new software, such that open source can never meet it", I could have just as accurately said "there's an insatiable demand for new software, such that commercial proprietary software can never meet it," and still been accurate. However, if you read the post that I was replying to, the poster wasn't concerned about whether or not there would be room for open source in the future. He was concerned about whether or not there would be room for proprietary development in the future, or at least development that could pay the programmer's bills. I wasn't saying that one could build higher high-rises than another. I was simply saying that he doesn't have to worry about the open source supply lines eliminating the need for commercial supply lines.

      As for my statement about the basic plumbing versus high rises, that was more or less a response to his analogy and a statement about the role that open source has played to-date. Your own examples are perfect demonstrations of plumbing, or infrastructure... BIND and Apache. Other examples are MySQL, JBoss, Linux and OpenOffice.

      The point I was making to him is that we use all the software you mentioned, although BIND abstractly (through use of DNS), by custom applications built by paid developers every day. Since the commercial proprietary applications are built on top of the open source foundation, the costs are greatly reduced and the economy grows faster. But, the point is that if we permit open source to do its job, the commercial applications will always be built on top of the open source foundation, and not the other way around. If Linux does it's job, building applications on Windows could become a thing of the past, because the OS has been delegated to "plumbing"... basic infrastructure necessary but easily open sourced. However, commercial applications will still be built on top open source.

      A perfect example was a projet I was on last year. We were building a commercial payroll application on J2EE. We used Apache and Linux, but also built on proprietary commercial software such as WebSphere. Interestingly, though, they seriously considered running it in clusters of JBoss, which is open source that is increasingly displacing the proprietary commercial counterparts, such as WebSphere. However, the application we were building wasn't a payroll application you would ever buy off the shelf. It was specifically one designed to handle the payroll of thousands of different companies, with countless options and customizability, yet be run and managed by a single company, the payroll service provider. In other words, it's not an ERP system.

      There's virtually no incentive to open source it, because individual companies can't even use it to do their own payroll. Unless you are running a payroll business, it's far to complex to touch with a ten foot pole for any other purpose. This is an example of what I meant by high rise. It's not a high rise because open source developers aren't technically capable. It's a high rise because no one would ever want to do it for free, because the only direct benefactor would be large payroll companies. Yet, it can be built on common reusable pieces... plumbing (OS, web server, database, etc,...).

      The "high ris

  2. Perhaps.. by One+Louder · · Score: 4, Funny
    Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat.
    Perhaps he still does.
    1. Re:Perhaps.. by Alan · · Score: 1

      Doubtful. If I was MS getting someone who knows a lot about open source and has been "in" the market would be a perfect person to use against it.

    2. Re:Perhaps.. by pklinken · · Score: 0

      Seeing the idiotic things he says in the name of MS i'd say he definitely still works for RedHat :) (a feint within a feint within a feint ...)

    3. Re:Perhaps.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it doubtful? It's not like Chris has to wear a RHL uniform to work. He can contribute on his own time just like anyone else.

    4. Re:Perhaps.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi; we are looking for volunteers to help with the rehabilitation of "Chris Sharp".

      Your identity will be protected, as the things that we will do will seem legally questionable to some.

      What the plan is; We have rented a van with darkened windows. Will need a good driver for this van.

      As Chris Sharp is entering the grocery store, we will drive than van up behind him. One volunteer will open the door, while another two volunteers will "assist' him into the van. He will need to have a hood placed on him.

      From there, he will be taken to a vacant office building, where he will be "deprogrammed" and his mental health restored. We will use the same deprogrammers that have worked with those trying to leave scientology.

      He can, with your help, become a productive member of the open source community once again.

      Thanks.

    5. Re:Perhaps.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And still, perhaps he does. It would be convenient to have someone in on the linux dissemination briefings. Being an inside man is a double edged sword. He has outside contacts that would consider this kind of information invaluable. Doesn't it make you wonder if he's constantly given loyalty checks? Especially if Bill is as shrewd as we all know...

    6. Re:Perhaps.. by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      MS (like any other company, including companies that support OSS) would almost certaintly not allow that. Too much of a conflict of interest. I'm virtually certain MS would require permission for him to work on an OSS project (yes they can do that), which I'm virtually certain Microsoft would not allow.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    7. Re:Perhaps.. by cshark · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, but how seriously can you take a guy named C. Sharp who says companies will be better of with Microsoft?

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    8. Re:Perhaps.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL thanks - You made my day!

    9. Re:Perhaps.. by _Qiang_ · · Score: 0

      Yeah! C shark vs. C sharp

    10. Re:Perhaps.. by cshark · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The day people take me too seriously, I'm done for.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

  3. MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the painful lesson that they will have to transform from a company that create standards to being one that contributes to them.

    They honestly believe that having tons of cash will buy them anything but open standards and architecture eventually win out. They always have, they always will. They are just throwing up their arms in exaperation because they just don't get it. They will,..soon enough

  4. Hurt your Country and Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yeah, right.

    Only hurts if you have M$ Development in your country and very little at that.

    In the end you benifit by having control of the whole show. Even if the licence changes you just fork your Countries version off.

    1. Re:Hurt your Country and Community? by recharged95 · · Score: 1

      Again, MS is marketing the theory that goverment should be run by a capitalistic philosophy, for PROFIT. Where "the good for the people" comes out of that philosophy I do not know yet (cause I'm poor).

  5. Riiight... by slashrogue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Doesn't Microsoft also claim that their software shouldn't be used in mission-critical systems? Wouldn't you think that government systems quality (usually) as mission-critical?
    Hooray for hypocracy.

    1. Re:Riiight... by damiangerous · · Score: 5, Informative
      I don't think they actually use the words "mission critical". What they say (paraphrased) is that it should not be used in situations where lives would be on the line. Emergency services systems, hospital equipment, air traffic control, things like that. This is really just common sense (and ofen the law).

      I know in the case of air traffic control the FAA must certify all systems, and with hospitals the various professional specialty organizations certify software within their fields.

    2. Re:Riiight... by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Most hardware manufacturers, for their components, include the exact same warning. Look at a TI datasheet - at the bottom you'll find the exact same kind of warning.

      It has nothing to do with MS's quality, it has to do with the requirements for mission-critical systems (things like aircraft flight systems, medical life support, etc.). These applications require a higher standard; a standard Linux isn't allowed to be used either.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    3. Re:Riiight... by hawkeyeMI · · Score: 1
      I don't have sources but I could swear I remember hearing about linux being trialled for air control tower use somwhere.

      Or maybe it's my imagination.

      --
      Error 404 - Sig Not Found
    4. Re:Riiight... by rspress · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Several government agencies have moved away from Windows and jumped on the MacOS X bandwagon.

      Steve Jobs made a really good point about Microsoft, he said that after Apple forced him out in the 80's they person in charge was a salesman. Apple made obscene profits but in the long run damaged the company and almost killed it...he said that Steve Ballmer is one of the biggest salesmen he has seen.

      It is obvious that MS is very worried about linux taking some of their profits...even more so now that they have no new OS for sale for the next several years. If linux wants to make inroads now is the time since MS has not product to compete with new developments in linux.

    5. Re:Riiight... by sploo22 · · Score: 1

      You may notice that the vast majority of OSS includes the same disclaimer. And I quote:
      Except when otherwise stated in writing the copyright holders and/or other parties provide the program "as is" without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. -- GPL

      --
      Karma: Segmentation fault (tried to dereference a null post)
    6. Re:Riiight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Sure they get certified. HP is one of the biggest certifiers of hospital equipment in the world. We use them hear for our main cardiac equipment. Main OS? Windows 2000. Previously? NT4. Previous? VMS. We have yet to have any problems with any certified systems as they are basically 'hardened' versions of the OS.

      Longhorn will drastically improve this, as certifying companies will be able to remove hundreds (if not thousands) of un-needed components instead of needing to manually remove dozens, and then needing to manually hack out the rest.

      A huge bonus to those of us with healthcare dollars to spend.

    7. Re:Riiight... by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      Microsoft products, and TI hardware, and a lot of other stuff gets used in critical applications as well.

      Just not out-of-the-box, without a heck of a lot of additional testing and evaluation.

      --
      resigned
    8. Re:Riiight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i have friends who work at astronautics that are doing a lot of stuff with linux for onboard aircraft systems. they're using linux because windows won't and can't be certified. anything they have problems with in linux either a) gets chopped out or b) they rewrite it.

    9. Re:Riiight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't Microsoft also claim that their software shouldn't be used in mission-critical systems?

      That's the warning you get when you download Java.

    10. Re:Riiight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      slashrogue, don't worry you are at home, there are so many idiots here on slashdot that, you would be often treated as a smart guy if only you are one of the dumbest guys around here. Your idiocy seriously shines here. What a great way of proving that you are an idiot.

      mission-critical stuff is nothing extraordinary to note about. You can't legally sell Linux to governments and do the same thing, otherwise governments can sue your ass off and bankrupt you easily. No Linux distribution is used either in any of those important systems. You are truly stupid man.

    11. Re:Riiight... by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      Wouldn't you think that government systems quality (usually) as mission-critical?

      I would think that most missions of the government are not critical and as such have no problem with them running whatever rube goldberg thing that they want as long as they stay out of my business.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    12. Re:Riiight... by SnoBall · · Score: 1

      Doesn't Microsoft also claim that their software shouldn't be used in mission-critical systems? And you wonder why people complain about BSOD's happening in XP.

      --
      Don't eat me ... *looks at nickname* ... okay, eat me.
    13. Re:Riiight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which ones?

    14. Re:Riiight... by jimmydevice · · Score: 0

      Microsoft and linux and other products ARE used in mission critical systems. But, they have to be used in a dual independent solution system with a hardware comparison system. I know, I helped develop an aircraft landing system. And it uses QNX for the guidance solution and WINNT for the verification solution. See DO-178B

    15. Re:Riiight... by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1


      This last stab from Microsoft is sad and pathetic. Come on, Microsoft, taking these uneducated cheapshots at open source is not going to get you anywhere. Silence these fools and come out with a better message, or get into another business.

    16. Re:Riiight... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs made a really good point about Microsoft, he said that after Apple forced him out in the 80's they person in charge was a salesman.

      (a) Steve Jobs brought said person into the company (rather famously, as well). I'm not sure how he can blame anyone but himself for that person being there.

      (b) Steve Jobs is also a salesman. He's no Woz or Atkinson.

      That being said, the weaker Microsoft is from many *IX firms nibbling away at their market share, the happier I am.

    17. Re:Riiight... by CGP314 · · Score: 1

      What they say (paraphrased) is that it should not be used in situations where lives would be on the line.

      I can't think of a bigger system that puts more lives on the line than a government.


      -Colin

    18. Re:Riiight... by rspress · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt that he knows that he brought them in and he knows he made that mistake. He also thought he would be around to rein them in if needed.

      Yes, Jobs was the salesman of the Apple I and II lines. He did not support the IIgs or the III. At that time he was hard at work on Lisa and the Mac. The Mac was Jobs baby from day one and Woz had little to nothing to do with it. While Jobs was no programmer or designer he did pull the talent together and protected them from Apple....which sounds weird but was true.

      That is where Jobs talent lies....he knows the people to get the job done and he knows how to inspire those people. If he were a great salesman, Next would still be in business.

      If you have not read "the second coming of Steve Jobs" you should check it out, it provides a good insight into Jobs, whether you like him or dislike him.

      As far as MS goes what goes around come around and I love it when it comes home to roost!

    19. Re:Riiight... by Gr8Apes · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Steve Jobs made a really good point about Microsoft, he said that after Apple forced him out in the 80's they person in charge was a salesman. Apple made obscene profits but in the long run damaged the company and almost killed it...he said that Steve Ballmer is one of the biggest salesmen he has seen.

      Every company I've ever seen that is run by a "salesman" and does more than just sales has always failed. They may make an initial splash, but a salesman's job is to appear to please everone while screwing them out of as much cash as possible. Sooner or later, everyone notices that they're getting screwed. Salesmen generally can't see past the next sale, and are extremely shortsighted.

      People with real business acumen know that while their role is to attempt to please everyone and make money, they cannot screw people over regularly, because in the long term, that is not sustainable, and they'll have destroyed their company. They also know they cannot please everyone all the time, and sometimes not gouging a customer and only making a modest amount of cash, or even none, will result in more money over the long haul in repeat business.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  6. Chris Sharp... by rasafras · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...so that's why they named it C#!

    1. Re:Chris Sharp... by CSharpMinor · · Score: 2, Funny

      I had NOTHING to do with this.

      --

      Whatever it is I'm complaining about, I'm sure the Republicans did it. This is /., after all.
    2. Re:Chris Sharp... by jelle · · Score: 2, Funny

      So the real name of this guy is Chris Hash? Smoking something?

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  7. what did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat.

    The only thing Chris Sharp works for is Chris Sharp.

    If you don't have any ideals at all, you probably won't work well in Open Source.

    Of course, I really shouldn't speak for Chris Sharp.

    1. Re:what did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, I really shouldn't speak for Chris Sharp.

      That's okay - I will!

      I, Chris Sharp, am nothing but a money-hungry, no-principle, brown-nose. Linus stole my lunch money, and I want to have Bill Gate's baby.

      Legal addendum: All statements in the above post pertaining to claims of identity of Chris Sharp are to be disregarded. However, claims made to the effect that using Windows results in the torture of small puppies, and making baby Jesus cry have been proven in 9 out of 10 independent studies.

  8. Right... by TheDarkener · · Score: 5, Insightful

    governments planning to use it will damage their own economies

    ...And governments using MS products aren't damaging their own economies by exposing themselves to 31337 h4x0rz, virii, spyware, seineewerasreenigneepacsten style backdoors, and other closed source, proprietary crap that only Microsoft can spoonfeed to us?

    *rubs index finger and thumb together* This is the worlds smallest violin, playing a sad, sad song for you, Microsoft.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Right... by antiMStroll · · Score: 5, Funny
      ...And governments using MS products aren't damaging their own economies by ....

      Sending money to a foreign company? Not all governments are American. Hell, I'll venture most aren't.

    2. Re:Right... by real_smiff · · Score: 1
      > ...governments using MS products [are] damaging their own economies by exposing themselves to 31337 h4x0rz, virii, spyware...
      ...not to mention sending their money to the US. When they could be supporting a local Linux support outfit.

      (pro-OSS, but anti-US. What will the mods do?! ;)

      --

      This is my Sig, this is my Gun. One is for Slashdot and one is for Fun.

    3. Re:Right... by Unordained · · Score: 1

      ... sending it to america, where it gets sent back out (in reduced quantities) to india (or wherever they decide to outsource next.) You can probably also trace the money through taxes to the US government where it'll get used to fund other nations, or fund wars against them, or whatever we jolly well please.

      Regardless, buying from microsoft does not pay your local IT population directly. Using OSS might let you keep the money, and use it for something more critical than your software, like your farms or industries. And with OSS, there's a greater chance that the locals can pick up the products, and for a fee, adapt them to local needs. With proprietary stuff, they'd get to build from scratch ... which is fun, but more expensive for the customer.

      And then there's the auditability, security, customizability, knowing-what-the-hell-is-going-on, ... making sure there aren't back-doors installed by the vendor ... and all that.

      But the monetary thing is just ... hmmm. Not sure why anybody would believe them when told "no, please don't not spend money!" ... ('course, there is the free vs. open-source thing here to talk about.)

    4. Re:Right... by rtv · · Score: 1
      Not all governments are American.

      Oh, but the US is working on it...

    5. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, Bush will make sure all governments are American...

    6. Re:Right... by wayward · · Score: 1

      Currently, I'm working for the government (Army contractor) and we're heavily using open source products, e.g. Linux, Apache, Eclipse, GIMP. It's been a very good thing for us, because we're under pressure to deliver and our budget (especially for software) is limited.

  9. Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is that "waste of money" like in beer?

    1. Re:Waste of money... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Funny

      Great. Now some jerk is going to make a crack about "pissing away our future."

    2. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or waste as in waste of breath?

    3. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the sign said at the bar, "We do not sell beer, we rent it". Of course, that would explain why the same errors keep showing up over and over in the MS series.

  10. Only in Microsoft-land by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can "free" be a waste of money...

    1. Re:Only in Microsoft-land by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People tend to believe it is free, he said, but even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor.

      So you're saying Internet Explorer wasn't really 'free' all these years?

  11. Guys like Sharp are a joke by randall_burns · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously, talking to someone like sharp is like talking to a dollar bill-or a stock market. The only thing you can count on them to do is to say things in an attempt to enrich themselves. The thing that is scary: Sharp may actually believe his own material. He really may have believed what he said when he was at Red Hat--and changed those beliefs/judgements when he went to Micro$oft.

    1. Re:Guys like Sharp are a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude. He's an executive. I thought that comes with the territory.

    2. Re:Guys like Sharp are a joke by sudohnim · · Score: 0

      Which make him a shill, plain and simple. We all listen to shills, right? Riiiight.

      --
      Its pretty sad when a commercial OS ships a debugger with their system but no compiler.
    3. Re:Guys like Sharp are a joke by randall_burns · · Score: 1
      That's the problem. Virtually all US executives _are_ jokes-which is a big part of the reason why US industry is a joke despite having one of the world's most highly skilled work forces.


      I don't think that was always the case. Folks like Ford,Hughes and Carnegie-whatever their failings weren't nearly as much of hypocrites as the current crowd appears to be.

    4. Re:Guys like Sharp are a joke by randall_burns · · Score: 1
      The problem is that shill are _supposed_ to be believable-in Sharp's case, that really can't be the case. What I _can_ believe is that the strategy is to attempt to de-moralize the Open Source community by showing that they can get prominent figures in their community to degrade themselves by throwing money at them(imagine if someone had gotten Mother Theresa to pose in Playboy or Hustler--not that it would by attractive, but it would have shown that money could get someone to break the taboos of the organization they had devoted their life to).


      I'm not sure if the Microsoft management can really imagine a community organized around anything other than accumulation of money-they really believe that is all there is to the world. History is full of examples of decadent financial empires that get militarily overrun by forces they didn't take . IMHO the eventual destiny of Microsoft is to encounter software that simple subsumes and contains them. Linux has been an important first step. Xen,Bocks,Plex86,Wine are other important steps here--combined with Linux/BSD they give Windows much needed adult supervision. I suspect the stuff that Chuck Moore is doing with ColorForth and his hardware designs could eventually obsolesce both Intel and Microsoft.

  12. to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $$$ by WiPEOUT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "waste of money" argument does not hold water. Instead of the government earning X% on the profits of closed-source companies, every dollar spent by anyone on OSS development is potentially a dollar the government doesn't need to spend, and that the community does not need to duplicate by spending said dollar.

    From the government's point of view, the ROI on OSS is orders of magnitude greater than that of closed-source software.

    It's a vastly more efficient utilisation of resources.

  13. from the article... by fodi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    '"If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge,"'
    -Chris Sharp

    translated:

    f**ck you all. We're only here for the money.

    1. Re:from the article... by Jaysyn · · Score: 3, Funny

      I bet his Karma sucks too.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:from the article... by c0dedude · · Score: 1

      No, everyone then has the ability to benefit from that knowlege. And isn't the government supposed to give back to the community?

      --
      Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    3. Re:from the article... by chromatic · · Score: 1

      Perhaps his brain is too full to hold both what he just learned and the community's contact information.

    4. Re:from the article... by jelle · · Score: 1

      Right. He mainly forgets that governments aren't in the software selling business... His arguments only make a little bit of sense for software selling companies looking to build overpriced software by modifying GPL software...

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    5. Re:from the article... by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      I bet his Karma sucks too

      Dude, if you are compelling someone to do something, then their karma is clean and yours sucks. That's how it works.

    6. Re:from the article... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you going on about?

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
  14. Traitor by CatGrep · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat.

    Traitor.

    Says what they pay him to say.

  15. Riiiight... by khym · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sharp, who used to work for Red Hat before joining Microsoft, said building open-source software is a "waste of money" and that a company was in effect giving away its intellectual property, preventing it from getting future benefits. "If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge," he stressed.

    Because, of course, Microsoft is sooo concerned about it's potential competitors in the Asian market. "We'd just hate for our competitors to lose profit and stagnate"
    --
    Give a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day, but set him on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
  16. What he really means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that if you use open source and Microsoft knows that you do it will raise the cost of Microsofts products to you, thereby damaging your economy. Furthermore, it will change its code to be incompatible with any open source package that claims to be compatible with Microsoft and push that out in the next service pack. Finally, this Chris guy, even if he did once worked for Red Hat it just goes to show you that money corrupts and Microsoft has a lot of money to corrupt with.

    You really have only one choice with a company that operates like this, don't do business with them.

  17. Newsflash by hpa · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft lies again in an attempt to protect their monopoly and resulting profit stream.

    Film at 11.

  18. Whinin' in the past by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot, if your business model depends on locking up source code and charging lots of money for it. For those of us in the rest of the world, giving away source code is the way things always used to be done, increasingly is the way things are being done, and will very much be the way it will be done in the future. Only dinosaurs like Microsoft will complain, while the rest of the world rapidly moves forward in innovation, something Microsoft has never shown a propensity for.

    And if you want to start a company in this world and make money while giving away source code, go right ahead. Lots of companies are doing just fine that way. It's only the proprietary, lock-em-up, IP theft is a crime!, sign this NDA! crowd that will fall further and further back.

    1. Re:Whinin' in the past by LO0G · · Score: 1

      Ah, but here's the rub.

      Does the time and effort you put into writing your code have any value to your corporation?

      Red Hat's a corporation. They have a fiduciary responsibility to their stockholders to maximize their profits. So's IBM.

      These companies aren't investing in open source solutions out of the goodness of their hearts, they have to have a business model that allows them to make money out of open source. If they didn't, their shareholders would find them a new board of directors who would come up with a new business model.

      And they do have a business model. They sell services built on Linux. The OS is a loss leader for their servicing (or consulting) business divisions. They don't care about the cost of development of Linux, they have an unpaid work force that does all the work for them.

      Now IBM and Red Hat do employ developers to work on Linux. And they do give back to the community. But the work of these developers is a loss leader as far as IBM and Red Hat are concerned. So as far as IBM and Red Hat, the work of their employees IS zero. Because their revenue model is based on services, not on open software.

      I think that's what Sells is saying (in an incoherent way) - everyone who contributes to the open source effort (be it a government, or an individual) is actually giving Red Hat and IBM an opportunity to make even more profit on the value of the contributor's labor. And the contributor isn't getting paid for the value of their labor.

    2. Re:Whinin' in the past by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      It's also 'shooting yourself in the foot' if you want to sell a product, and will have 1500 competitors selling your code to your potential customer base.

      'Giving away source code' is the way things 'always used to be done' when IBM and DEC could count on expensive mainframe/mini sales, and on a constant revenue stream from their fleet of customer engineers.

      The history of the 'PC' industry going back a LONG TIME is not one of 'giving away source code.'

      It's okay to advocate a new way of doing things, but it's wrong to distort history to claim it's a 'return to the good old times.' It isn't. The fact that a small subculture of UNIX enthusiasts and hackers did that kind of thing in the past does NOT represent what the Computer Industry was doing.

      --
      resigned
    3. Re:Whinin' in the past by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 1
      Those enthusiasts were the 'PC' industy way back when. I remember those days, including the birth of shrinkwrap software when the first shrinkwrap packages were put on shelves. Before that, it was packaged in platic baggies. Back then it was common to share code. That was the culture Bill Gates railed against in his famous early letter arguing that software shouldn't be shared.

      I'm not advocating a new way of doing things, but a return to historic norms. You hit the idea correctly: You make money in other ways, the way IBM and DEC did.

      Anyway, the forces of history are inexorable. The Microsoft way will be marginalized.

    4. Re:Whinin' in the past by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      IBM and DEC made money that way, back then, because they had Monopoly shares of their respective markets.

      You're talking about the 'hobby computer' scene, which preceded the PC Industry. Visicalc NEVER was available in a baggie. And before Visicalc, the PC market was strictly a hobbyist thing.

      Or are you just paraphrasing that distorted history that Perens parroted in 'Revolution OS'?

      --
      resigned
    5. Re:Whinin' in the past by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 1

      I was talking about the 'hobby computer' scene, which was the start of the PC Industry, not preceding it. Visicalc was not avaiable in a baggie, but plenty of other stuff was. That was the era when the idea of locking down intellectual property began in the software industry. It was not the way things were done in the beginning.

    6. Re:Whinin' in the past by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      Well, in the beginning we all ate grubs and berries from the trees, which were free.

      The 'hobby computer' scene ended about the time the TRS-80 came out. The Tandy machines didn't trigger the end, they were just a sign of the times. There were tons of machines yet to hit the scene and be popular with hobbyists, but the TRS-80 had Microsoft BASIC in ROM, just like about any machine from that period late in the scene.

      If you're going to talk about the era before when people toggled in bootstrap code to get their 1702-processor machine fully loaded with 4K of RAM (all RAM sockets populated) to start reading the paper tape, you're talking about an era before more than .5% of the populace were involved with computers.

      Call that the 'elite period' of Personal Computers. Don't try to harken back to it with nostalgia if you're at all open to regular folks using computers.

      --
      resigned
  19. Asian piracy by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Given that there are the reports of high percentages of windows installations in Asia are pirated (not govt installations you would have to hope though), going from a situation where the end user pays nothing (or next to nothing in the markets for their Windows OS CD) to having to pay something for a legit OS is not gonig to be popular.

    This should be a great selling point for the Asian markets for OSS - pay the same price as you've always paid for your software, but get legitimate software.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
  20. Funny Hell. by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Its NOT funny that he came from Red Hat. It will lend some 'creditability' to his words, in the public's eye.

    "See...he had to move to Microsoft to make an income and not work for one of those evil/stupid 'Linux companies'".

    Microsoft's marketing machine is in full motion these days, and we are taking a beating beacuse of it.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Funny Hell. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Microsoft's marketing machine is in full motion these days, and we are taking a beating beacuse of it.

      We are? My system booted fine this morning and works as well as or better than it did a year ago. I also had no trouble writing and using some kernel patches last week.

      In what way exactly are we taking a beating? Inquiring minds want to know.

    2. Re:Funny Hell. by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Who's "we"?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re:Funny Hell. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Its NOT funny that he came from Red Hat. It will lend some 'creditability' to his words, in the public's eye.

      If you work at or visit a Fortune 500, I think you'll be astounded how many people previously worked at other companies in the same industry. This is not abnormal behavior in the least.

  21. working for the Tribe by Doctor+Crumb · · Score: 1

    Does it sound to anyone else that this guy is doing his best to sabotage MS in Asia, a la Eastern Standard Tribe?

  22. MS = Prostitute ? by xs650 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MS sounds like tired old prostitute complaining about women that give it away.

    1. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by martinX · · Score: 1

      You mean some women give it away? Like, for free? Woah...

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    2. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by hpa · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Software is like sex - it's better when it's free."

      - Linus Torvalds

    3. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Old prostitute don't deserve to be compared to M$.

    4. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by One+Louder · · Score: 4, Funny

      I thought the *prostitute* was the one that was supposed to be screwed, not the client.

    5. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is a very thru analogy, as a single male hedonist i have met many women willing to have sex just for the fun and pleasure of "getting it on"...

    6. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by niko9 · · Score: 1

      Exuse me sir, but where do i find these women that giveth it away that you speak of? For I am only a lonely slashdot subscriber.

    7. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Ciderx · · Score: 1

      Christ, and there are people complaining about Bullmer comparing GPL to cancer. This is marked INSIGHTFUL...

    8. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So OSS is just a whore?

    9. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One wonders if their increasing shrill and irrational pronouncements will backfire on them. They keep doing more and more desparate things and it's starting to make them look really bad. Once you get the stink of a desparate loser on yourself it's just about impossible to get it off.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    10. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by McNihil · · Score: 0

      NO. The client get the VD.

    11. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Sadly, you still do not know till later that it was infected.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    12. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1
      Software is like sex - it's better when it's free.

      Grrr... that is offensive to us buy-sexuals.

    13. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You've obviously never been with a prostitute in Soviet Russia.

    14. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 2, Funny

      For I am only a lonely slashdot subscriber.

      Then where's the star after your username? You're no slashdot subscriber!!

      (in case anybody wondered, yes, having a 4-digit or less Slashdot UID and/or a star after your name gets you laid regularly **)

      (** but you better develop a liking for those bearded dudes who hang out in the back of the room at the LUG meetings)

      --
      resigned
    15. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by mark-t · · Score: 1
      Actually, the prostitute does the screw_ING_... so the client quite definitely gets screwed.

      The analogy works.

    16. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Dwonis · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's looked bad since the early 1990s. You've just started to take notice.

    17. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by tonywong · · Score: 1

      it worked for SCO...erm, nevermind.

    18. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you see the V.D. films in sex ed? Sleep with a prostitute and you'll get a virus.

    19. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by pb · · Score: 1

      "Software is like sex - it's better when RMS isn't involved."

      - Shoeboy

      --
      pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    20. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by DreamerFi · · Score: 1

      Software is like sex. If you want to pay for it, you'll always find somebody willing to take your money,

    21. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like buggy, virus prone software has given them a bad name? Seriously, most people just don't care.

    22. Re:MS = Prostitute ? by archen · · Score: 1

      Software is like sex - you screw up once and end up supporting it for the rest of your life.

  23. Open source economy by prostoalex · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Open source is a good source of business revenues if you're in a country with cheap labor where you can more or less limitlessly hire support people.

    If you're in a country where the labor is more or less expensive, and moreover if your employees are not support people but software engineers, then the financial outlook is questionable. For people and companies not wanting to move into cheap support, but stay in higher-paid research and software development going into open source does not make a whole lot of sense.

    The government should care little about the source. They should mandate open standards. If you decide that your document standard will be the OpenOffice Writer XML-based standard, documented and open, then you can use either OpenOffice Writer for that (free) or any closed source utility that will save to desired format, but perhaps offer some other advantages.

    1. Re:Open source economy by s0m3body · · Score: 2, Interesting

      who is writing open source ? people who know how to code, and have some income
      how is it possible ?
      because they are good in something, yet have enough time to work on opensource

      if you have comparable abilities in writing code and it is the only thing you know, then you'd better start learning something else, because there are already people doing it for free

      if you are better then that, you can analyse, you can design, you can think, then someone will pay you for that

      if you want to get more money then someone else, you have to be better, or to sell yourself better
      if someone else is doing the same for free, you have a problem

      but this is not about open source, this is about capitalism, isn't it ?

    2. Re:Open source economy by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      I think the open standards idea is great. That way no commercial software company can complain that they don't have a chance. They just have to be better than OSS or have actual useful features that open source software doesn't.

      For developing countries, one thing that can be said about "shooting self in foot" is paying heavy licencing fees to foreign companies to develop and use their software, money better kept within your own borders. There's a reason why China is making their own standards to counter the heavy patent encumberments of Western standards.

    3. Re:Open source economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You care about labor costs everywhere, even in poorer countries, because you usually sell to those poor people. So your income is low as well as your expenditure.

      Also you mix up the cheap labor available simply for hard work, like construction, and labor available for system administration.

      Cheap labor only makes sense, if you are producing your products with cheap labor and sell it to another country or place with high-income people. So support people are still important in those countries.

      Some people hyped the word "open","standards" so much that I am doubtful if those who use the terms really understand what they mean. I don't know any "closed" standards, but what is important here is that whether you have standards or not. The standards may not be open, it may be that someone has to pay royalties (like mp3) but the net effect is that governments are ready to pay up for those products provided that they offer great value. This is the case in tons of products, so many things governments buy are proprietary, governments care less if they are open or closed. Standards may be irrevalent also btw, it depends on what value does the product offer, is it important enough. You really have to evaluate what you need and what the other side offers. You will doom the country if you dictate that everything you buy has to be open standards and so on. You may also doom the country if you dictate that your country will only buy open source software. These people have lots of responsibility, they can't post to slashdot and manage their countries.

    4. Re:Open source economy by NullProg · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure why you got moderated as insightful, but I have a couple of issues with your post (not a flamefest).

      If you're in a country where the labor is more or less expensive, and moreover if your employees are not support people but software engineers, then the financial outlook is questionable. Support for programs cost more than the initial development if the programs weren't designed right to begin with. Programmers should solve problems, not introduce new ones or work-arounds.

      The government should care little about the source. Governments should maximize the ROI of taxpayers money. Whether its OSS or proprietary.

      For people and companies not wanting to move into cheap support, but stay in higher-paid research and software development going into open source does not make a whole lot of sense.

      Ask Hans Reiser or any other kernel developer if going open source makes sense. Whould Hans, Linus, or myself be allowed to experiment with the internals of Win32/OS2/AIX etc? I think not. I can dick around with the internals of BSD and Linux.

      Anyway Enjoy,

      --
      It's just the normal noises in here.
    5. Re:Open source economy by N1KO · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between paying royalties for MP3 and having to reverse engineer the .doc format. It isn't just closed, it has changed several times throughout the years. Even if a government institution is still using Word 20 years from now they won't have access to much of their data.

      Anyway, most industries work with standards. They haven't doomed any countries yet.

    6. Re:Open source economy by boots@work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      On purely practical narrow grounds, open standards are more important. It holds for any business, in fact: they ought to prefer not to be captured by any single vendor. Of course for complex situations, having the source may be the only reasonable guarantee that the format really is open.

      But there is more to good government than just circulating memos at minimum cost. Governments ought to consider all the additional benefits of investing in open source rather than proprietary software. It contributes to what Moglen calls "the world's greatest technical library", to the benefit of students. It creates opportunities for local businesses, whereas most proprietary software is developed in the US. Free software can be used by every citizen, so they all get value from their taxes, and so that people unable to drop $700 on an office suite are not excluded.

      Perhaps none of these matter to corporations, who don't need to care about whether their purchases help the public good or not. But they ought to at least be considered by governments.

    7. Re:Open source economy by prostoalex · · Score: 1

      Support for programs cost more than the initial development if the programs weren't designed right to begin with. Programmers should solve problems, not introduce new ones or work-arounds.

      And your points is? That the government should just go to the OpenOffice.org Web site and download a copy for each one of its employees, and refuse a tender bid from any company that mentions support, since that would mean the designed software product is of low-quality?

      Ask Hans Reiser or any other kernel developer if going open source makes sense.

      And let's ask OPEC whether going into oil business makes sense. From the business point of view (making money) Microsoft is a good example of benefits of going closed-source. From the government point of view, whatever does the job in the most efficient way, is the best tool.

      The government's goal is to maximize the value for its electorate, not ensure someone has access to OS-level code and drivers.

    8. Re:Open source economy by ImpTech · · Score: 1

      The open source vs open standards distinction is a nice one to make, and I agree with you in theory. In practice, of course, its damn hard to find closed source software that adheres to good open standards.

      Of course, as the consumer, its nice for these governments to be able to look at the code and modify it to suit their specific needs, rather than living with the 'our software is perfect for us, so its good enough for you' mentality. Though I suppose the larger governments could probably get Microsoft to work with them a bit on featureset.

    9. Re:Open source economy by NullProg · · Score: 1

      Wow. You are the Zen Master of logic and programming. I stand humbled and corrected.

      Enjoy,

      --
      It's just the normal noises in here.
    10. Re:Open source economy by bit01 · · Score: 1

      open standards

      While I agree with you in theory in practice it is just too easy to slightly pervert a standard to make it overall incompatible

      Software is complex, a standard cannot mandate every detail and a malevolent company can use that fact to lock in the customer. For example, look at the M$Word implementation of XML and the use of embedded binary blobs to hold all useful information. Only open source can fix this problem.

      --

      It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
      It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
      Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA/MPAA abuse.

  24. Chris Sharp was the Redhat Australia guy wasn't he by SirFlakey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think I have met him once at a RedHat presentation in Sydney - he wasn't terrribly open source centric back then either.

    I think it's probabaly a fallacy to think that the RedHat managers are open source evangelists - they are more "executives" than evangelists.
    Even the current local RedHat CEO doesn't come across as your typical oss advocate. They are more business driven (perhaps unfortunately - perhaps not, depends on your view).

    --
    Jon - TheSpork
  25. Microsoft and open source by FattMattP · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Open source software is a 'waste of money,' a Microsoft executive has said.
    Then why is Microsoft wasting time and money releasing open source projects on SourceForge? They better get on the ball.
    --
    Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    1. Re:Microsoft and open source by FattMattP · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, I should have provided links.

      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    2. Re:Microsoft and open source by mm0mm · · Score: 1
      Open source software is a 'waste of money,' a Microsoft executive has said.
      He's referring to their own open source projects. Pity.
    3. Re:Microsoft and open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congrats on your extra karma. Don't spend it all in one place... ;)

    4. Re:Microsoft and open source by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      SPF is broken as a spam-prevention system, and Microsoft's Caller ID is only slightly improved.

  26. What is "Fear"? by jeoin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    To propose that sharing code is by nature insecure is saying security can only be achieved through secrecy. It says once you have my windows code, windows is no longer secure.

    I think if these guys had any brains they would give away a base version of windows that had enought functionality to be useful.

    --
    Jeoin
    1. Re:What is "Fear"? by name773 · · Score: 2, Funny

      a base version of windows that had enought functionality to be useful
      that's nice, but they'd have to write it first.

    2. Re:What is "Fear"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have a brain, then why the hell you keep posting for Microsoft bashing, again and again mindlessly for the same FUD topics from OSDN and Slashdot? Clearly you are the one without a brain.

    3. Re:What is "Fear"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a version of Windows with enough functionality to be useful?

    4. Re:What is "Fear"? by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      They did. It's called Windows 95/98/ME. I think the only low-level consumers who bought any of those operating systems were

      A. People that paid for them with their new computer

      B. Nerds that bought a copy for their own computer, then installed that copy on all of their luddite friend's computers ("What, you mean I have to pay to get my computer to work? Can't you just install your copy on mine?)

      Que a million replies how none of those OS's were functional (especiallty that horrid cash grab called ME.)

    5. Re:What is "Fear"? by jeoin · · Score: 1

      that wasn't given away. it was stolen, its a little different.

      How well did linux and unix work then? How available was it?

      A base version of xp would be helpful to lots of people.

      --
      Jeoin
  27. People change. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People and corporations change all the time. Remember the old evil The SCO Group? No more. They're now embracing linux again. I've got the evidence right here.

    "As a corporate sponsor of Linux International, SCO is a strong proponent of the Open Source movement, citing it as a driving force for innovation. Over the years, SCO has contributed source code to the movement, and currently offers a free Open License Software Supplement CD that includes many Open Source technologies."

    See? :-)

    I expect AdTI to change soon also. Mr.Brown is going to apologize to Torvalds, Tanenbaum and the whole community, don't you think?

  28. They will go for it by demon_2k · · Score: 1

    Big companies and governments lite to hear this sort of thing, they will go for it.

  29. to MS or not to MS by mm0mm · · Score: 1
    He goes on to say that governments planning to use it will damage their own economies and that giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot.

    In any case, developers in India will probably be busy for the next several years. Microsoft is an American corporation, as are Nike and Walmart.

  30. Economic Risk of Open Source Software... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Um...I guess we'll need less sysadmins per network. Patching and virus cleanup would be a bit easier, requiring less manpower and less time.

    Stability and reliability means less work for the IT industry...thus an economic hit. Saving money is definitely bad for the economy. Whose economy, I'm not sure.

  31. really? by npgmr · · Score: 1

    "Funny thing is, the MS executive (Chris Sharp) used to work for Red Hat."

    If that's true, that shows how ugly it's.

  32. Re:Very Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    (just leave out the details of how he corrupted your girl if that's the case...)

    Unless you have pictures ;)

  33. No fooling? by ichimunki · · Score: 1

    From the article: he pointed out that open source giants such as Red Hat and IBM are still after a return on their investments. "They are not for the greater good of the community; they are also after the money," he said.

    No kidding? Really? And Microsoft, on the other hand, is only writing software for the good of mankind?

    --
    I do not have a signature
  34. Gotta love the article.. by naelurec · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After reading this article, it sounds like Microsoft, atleast in the Asia-Pacific region, does not have any advantage in the market over OSS.

    Perhaps its about time for Microsoft to realize the playing field has changed and it should figure out (like IBM, Novell, etc..) how to utilize OSS instead of trying to fight it.

    1. Re:Gotta love the article.. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      You realize how dumb they'd sound if they did so, after all the years of anti-Linux and anti-OSS rhetoric?

      "Yes, we used to fight open source, but, ah well, it's not that evil, it's really useful...just buy Microsoft Linux though and a Shared Source license, so OSS companies can't go after profits on it...."

    2. Re:Gotta love the article.. by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      it should figure out (like IBM, Novell, etc..) how to utilize OSS instead of trying to fight it.

      After witnessing the tactics MS uses to dominate its industries, I'd just as soon prefer that they continue trying to fight it (and losing) instead of figuring out how to utilize OSS. I can't imagine anything good that could come of MS jumping on the OSS bandwagon. They're completely unnecessary to the advancement of OSS, and given that the strategy of embrace and extend is so ingrained in their culture, I question whether they could ever sincerely "play nice" with OSS.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  35. IP my ass by gomel · · Score: 1

    a company was in effect giving away its intellectual property, preventing it from getting future benefits

    Tell me, Mister Sharp, what good is Intellectual_Property ... if you can not use it?

    If the future benefits never arrive because your particular solution has never gained enough market share for you to benefit from it ?

    If everybody chose to rather standardize on the Dominant Player's product, because it just is and will be there?

    --
    Fight Frist Psoting!
    Browse Slashdot with 'Newest First'!
  36. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It depends on what you spend your money on. When you install a copy of Linux, what's your support agreement? The government has to be able to support the software they use, and if they don't have a Linux support agreement then they'll have to pay additional staff to handle those duties. I'm not saying that Microsoft's right in their claims, but you can't just point at the XP=$300, Linux=$0 as evidence that OSS is cheaper or has a higher ROI. It's just not as simple as that.

    You can, however, point to hidden costs like the expenses of in-house/outsourced Linux support vs. Microsoft support (those MCSEs bills are expensive!), savings from your enhanced security (the what virus? I guess I didn't get it), and the fact that Microsoft doesn't always produce the best product in a given industry - so you're not tied down to them.

    Microsoft, on the other hand, can point to the negative effects on the economy of losing major employers like itself, of removing gov't income (there's no sales tax on free software), and their longevity and reliability (they've been around, and aren't going anywhere soon).

    There are two sides... the people with the money will need to examine them both carefully (and hopefully make the right choice).

  37. Win9x/2k/XP et all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Win9x/2k/XP et all is the biggest waste of moneys the computer industry has ever seen, Bill Gates & M$ST are living in a delusional world thinking every computer MUST have their M$FT brand of kludgeware...

    GO Linux, BSD, (anything that is not Windoze)

  38. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not so sure about this. It would be an interesting study to see if the costs saved on using OSS are greater than the taxes earned by any taxes on said closed source busineses and employees.

    Can anyone point out an existing study on the matter?

  39. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by pklinken · · Score: 0

    They will be probably be forced to conform already according to a previous /. article
    China developing own standards

  40. Not worried at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    So, Microsoft is not at all worried about open-source software destroying its market control because they are damaging themselves and no one is using open source anyway.

    And this is exactly why Microsoft doesn't make big number of this non-existent piratewarez called Open Source. No one is using it and we are not concerned about that. At all. Please change back to Microsoft and stop using what you don't use already.

  41. Government suicide==MS partnership? by Chris_Willman · · Score: 5, Informative

    He goes on to say that governments planning to use it will damage their own economies and that giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot. Though I distinctly remember a few hundred government PCs running Windows 2000 going offline for days this summer in Philadelphia City Hall after MS Blast was first rampid, while all Linux boxes were fine. If practically "self-imposing" a shot, to continue the analogy, isn't what occured by the government using Windows boxes unpatched, fully aware of their dangers, then I don't know what is. Also, IIRC, most Gov Linux distros are heftly modified;governemts are smart enough to not just run a freshly-downloaded distro. Matter of fact, the NSA developed their own Linux distro which highyly encorporates VMware, which I was a bit ago.

    1. Re:Government suicide==MS partnership? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      while all Linux boxes were fine.

      Well, yes. All the printer servers were up and running just fine. And a lot of vanity websites could still be reached.

  42. Free software increases productivity by RobinH · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, I think that certain products, like software, are helper technologies that increase overall productivity. To make a distinction, if you could get, say, a coffee table for free, then maybe you're hurting the coffee table industry, but if you can get software for free, and people use the software to be more productive, then having a wider spread use of the software because it's free is a good thing.

    Coffee tables, on the other hand, tend not to increase anybody's productivity.

    --
    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    1. Re:Free software increases productivity by mec · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yup. Free markets are all about enabling the customer to get what they need. It's a feature, not a bug, when the customer gets more value in exchange for less cash to the producer.

    2. Re:Free software increases productivity by timiscool999 · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're just not using it correctly. My productivity has increased 10x (or 2.5x or something) ever since I started using my coffee table with BitKeeper.

    3. Re:Free software increases productivity by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      then having a wider spread use of the software because it's free is a good thing.

      You know, you're right. Any sufficently enlighened software company knows that if they slash the price of their product to zero dollars, they can make up for reduced price in increased volume.

      Oh... wait....

      --
      resigned
  43. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Piquan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When you install a copy of Linux, what's your support agreement?

    Have you ever actually tried to get Microsoft to support their product as part of the purchase price?

  44. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 0, Troll

    Their site alone is a fairly good support tool. There aren't nearly as many resources, comprehensive or not, for Linux support. That's not a flaw of Linux - it's just history and inertia. As Linux becomes more mainstream, there will be much better free/generic support.

    Mid-size and large companies often have support agreements (for a hefty price, but it's usually effective) with Microsoft. Call 'em up, get a person, and sometimes you'll get a fix just for your problem. Kinda makes you wonder what drives their patches - the future implications and risks, or the immediate buck behind the phone call?

  45. Re:Very Interesting... by reverius · · Score: 1, Insightful

    He's being paid to publicly bend the truth to the very border of deceit. If that doesn't make him a "greedy bastard", I don't know what does.

  46. MS tells it like it is. by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Interesting
    From the article:

    Sharp added that there are several myths surrounding open source. People tend to believe it is free, he said, but even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor. Apparently undermining his initial assertion about open-source ruining local software efforts, he pointed out that open source giants such as Red Hat and IBM are still after a return on their investments. "They are not for the greater good of the community; they are also after the money," he said.

    Really? Huh. So tell me again... as a Microsoft marketing strategist, when you look at me, what do you see?
    1. Re:MS tells it like it is. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that is a first, companies are motivated by commercial interests and community have other greater interests.

      It does not matter that companies have commercial interests in your open source software, ..., if you do not want companies to benefit from it, then do not make it open source. People and companies that make products open source understand the advantages/disadvantages of release source code.

      Cheers.

    2. Re:MS tells it like it is. by binkzz · · Score: 1

      "We see a promising new heart drug." I think they misspelled 'hard'

      --
      'For we walk by faith, not by sight.' II Corinthians 5:7
  47. First they ignore you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    then they laugh at you,
    then they fight you, (we are here)
    then you win.
    -- Mahatma Ghandi

    ps: I don't claim originality to this post. I've read it previously in slashdot. But it is appropriate to this story, and that's why I'm posting it anonimously.

    1. Re:First they ignore you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, I think it's --
      First they ignore you,
      then they laugh at you,
      then they fight you, --- (we are here)
      then you win. --- only a matter of time, man.

    2. Re:First they ignore you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      then they laugh at you,
      then they fight you, (we are here)
      then you win. ...then you beat the living hell out of them. Then you raze their compound. Then you take all their code and release them to the world as comic relief for CS students.

      Until then, just be sure you grep your own source code for "MS Engineers are Weenies" so it doesn't look TOO bad when the revolution happens. :)

    3. Re:First they ignore you... by Junta · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They actually (at least used to) have that quote large on a wall of the main lobby of Red Hat's HQ. One of the things I noticed on a visit...

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    4. Re:First they ignore you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then you drink lots,
      then you become complacent,
      then you are the bad guy,
      then I steal your booze.

  48. Microsoft's Ally over here by zlel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In my part of SE Asia, piracy must be a very powerful ally of M$. People have grown so accustomed to M$ products and proggies running on windows 'cos they know where they can get them - and they've all been so "trained" in them cos of their "availability". And I would think that much of the general comp literacy in the region is due to this ally - I wouldn't be surprised if M$ sees this region as rather "safe" since Linux is kind of a "hardcore" "server" "alternative" solution.

    oh yes i must also mention that after all those years of "free education", M$ started "cleaning up" several years back. Talk about traitors.

    1. Re:Microsoft's Ally over here by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Interesting


      In my part of SE Asia, piracy must be a very powerful ally of M$. People have grown so accustomed to M$ products and proggies running on windows 'cos they know where they can get them - and they've all been so "trained" in them cos of their "availability". And I would think that much of the general comp literacy in the region is due to this ally -


      I don't think your experience is much different than your peers in the United States, Europe, or any other computer-using economic base.


      I wouldn't be surprised if M$ sees this region as rather "safe" since Linux is kind of a "hardcore" "server" "alternative" solution.


      That's exactly what Microsoft is worried about. They're after the base architecture everyone uses. Anything that dilutes their impact on that architecture is a threat. That means servers.


      oh yes i must also mention that after all those years of "free education", M$ started "cleaning up" several years back.


      Microsoft isn't cleaning up. They're fighting an increasing perception of the OS as a commodity. Windows being widely available for free, even illegally, re-enforces the perception that the OS itself is generic.
    2. Re:Microsoft's Ally over here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      running on windows 'cos they know where they can get them


      The word is "because" you stupid gook. This isn't SMS.

  49. MS - Altruistic? by FractusMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No. What is this? They are trying to save Governments from themselves, yet at the same time, collect a profit? I mean, really, what place does MS have, WHY would MS care what the Chinese government does, unless it's effecting Microsoft's business? MS is not some independant party. They aren't stupid. I can see the blank Chinese faces right now, just sort of staring at Sharp and waiting for him to leave.

  50. "a 'waste of money,'" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
    "a 'waste of money,' a Microsoft executive has said"

    And by God, if anyone can recognize a waste of a customer's money it's Microsoft!

  51. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The thing you have to ask yourself is if MS were a buggy whip manufacturer facing competition from cheap automobiles, do your pro arguments make sense? For my part, closed-up jack-booted-thugs-may-ensure-EULA-compliance software is already unacceptable to me. MS' marketing machine likes to talk about OSS liability and promote themselves as the "safe" choice. A PHP coding site I was looking at today had one of those SPA pitches to disgruntled employees.

    Even one SPA audit kills any number of the "advantages" they're touting; they always find something and they always extort something from you. The time your business is effectively shut down is costly too.

    For many categories of software, MS' methods are outmoded. Now the buggy whip manufacturers need to buy and cajole their way out of the jam they're going to be in.

    All that and well, MS complaining that FOSS is anticompetitive is pretty rich. You know what they say about people who live in glass houses.....

  52. Re:Very Interesting... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but some people need it spelled out apparently.

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  53. Bingo! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
    After all, MS is out there telling the US govt that they need to crack down on "piracy" in Asia....

    So their govts are cracking down on piracy! They're choosing software that everybody can afford so they won't have to pirate anymore!!! Remember, they ARE COMMUNISTS [for all those who call GPL Lovers commies] and most of SE asia is mildly socialist anyway due to the serious problems of overpopulation and feeding everyone.

  54. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by iminplaya · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...they just don't get it.

    They don't get it? Hell, I'm the one that doesn't get it! What is it beyond the 50 billion(not that this money actually exists) in the bank that they want?? This is all very psychotic to me. Dudes, cash out, hit the Riviera, French, Mexican, Mayan, whatever. They must be doing this for a good laugh, watching us wetting our pants everytime they speak. There's just no other reason. Maybe it's some "wag the dog" thing. What are they distracting us from?

    --
    What?
  55. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by antiMStroll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One minor quibble. Microsoft doesn't create standards, they impose them.

  56. MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by twigles · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At least it's good for the US's economy. M$ is basically funnelling money from around the world back into the US, which has a lot to do with why the rest of the world (at least EU, Latin America and Asia) are so hyped about an alternative. Especially nowadays with Bush increasing anti-American sentiment like never before seen.

    In that sense if a non-programmer wants to help the FOSS movement then translating a how-to, a man page or something else is a great way.

    1. Re:MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, they funnel money in from elsewhere, but they bend us over with monopolistic pricing too. I think we can say the two cancel out at best, but we're most likely getting screwed. I can write software for an OSS platform rather than Windows and be just as happy.

    2. Re:MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by bruthasj · · Score: 1

      Especially nowadays with Bush increasing anti-American sentiment like never before seen.

      Correction: s/Bush/The Media/g

    3. Re:MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by idlemachine · · Score: 1
      Really? That's funny, I don't recall it being the media offering Free Trade agreements with Australia in exchange for the dismissal of local media content restrictions...

      When US President George W Bush addressed the Australian Parliament, 18-year old Ahmed Habib and his mother Maha, were the invited guests of Greens Senators Nettle and Brown. During Mr Bush's speech, Ahmed stood up in the public gallery and asked about this father, who has been held without charge for nearly two years. As Ahmed was removed from the gallery by security officers, he called "what about my father's rights?"

      (http://www.kerrynettle.org.au/300_campaigns_sub .php?&deptItemID=1)

      And it certainly wasn't the media that answered with smarmy remarks about loving free speech...

      Of course, if you took the Whitehouse' version of events as being gospel, it's no wonder you're confused...the official record doesn't manage to record exactly what was said in protest yet somehow they transcribed every pathetic laugh:

      http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/10/20 031022-12.html

    4. Re:MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Red Hat is also a US originated company and sells Linux with support services all over the world.

      They too "funnel money" into the US...

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    5. Re:MS *is* good for a country's economy .... by nyri · · Score: 1

      Well, they don't pay taxes and have some $60bn lying in the bank account. And that *is not* good for a country's economy!

  57. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Paleomacus · · Score: 1

    [i]You know what they say about people who live in glass houses.....[/i]

    They shouldn't walk around naked?

    (couldn't resist, sorry, _not_ funny)

  58. Hypocrytical Microsoft by technomanceraus · · Score: 0

    Why has one division of microsoft released some of its code as open source WTL (Windows Template Library) which is available now on sourceforge, and another division is deriding open source as a method of developement. Maybe the WTL developers would like their work called a waste of money ... but i doubt it

    --
    -= Technomancer =-
  59. And yet MS has two open source projects now by treerex · · Score: 1

    Isn't it ironic that Microsoft has allowed two projects, WTL and WiX, to be released under the CPL? Evidently these have little value to the company (and by extension, the developer's are not valued.)

    This is more FUD coming out of Microsoft, but that is stating the redundant.

  60. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Paleomacus · · Score: 1

    Fsck...too many LQBB postings lately. Please excuse the mark-up. I hope everyone understands what I meant with those tags :P

  61. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    You are completely fucking delusional.

  62. Like no one saw this happening by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

    Ofcourse Microsoft says it's bad, the Govt picking OSS over them means less money for them. I don't think there will be an qualms from the tax payers though, certianly I won't be upset to see Microsoft get out of the U.S. government. Just FUD that's all it is.

  63. Oh oh oh! I like this game! by Fullmetal+Edward · · Score: 1

    Product C will give you cancer because it is better then us!

    Coca Cola is made from babies! It is evil ban it!

    Linux is made from sacrificing penguins in a Satanic ritual.

    Heard it all before, probably will again. Nice try Microsoft but, we perfer our bullshit in sarcasm at slashdot. :)

    --
    --- [Insert intresting Sig here]
  64. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where I work, we spend lots of money of Microsoft products, 1 call to our sales rep and I can usually get a call from someone at MS that has the answer I need. The same can not be said for all the venders we deal with.

  65. Waste of what? by rhysweatherley · · Score: 2, Insightful
    My first thought was "How exactly do you waste money on something that is free?". :-) Yeah, yeah, free speech, not free beer, and all.

    Of course free software is attractive to governments in Asia, South America, Africa, etc, etc, etc. Every dollar saved on the cost of a desktop OS or database server is a dollar that can be spent on health care, education, etc. You know - those pesky issues that ordinary people care about more than "How much richer is Bill today?".

    Microsoft seems to be operating under the delusion that the only thing a government should care about is growing a local software industry. Heaven forbid that they have other priorities.

    1. Re:Waste of what? by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but if you're concerned about growning the local software industry, and you're not the US government, your best way to do it is probably not by buying Microsoft...

    2. Re:Waste of what? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Microsoft seems to be operating under the delusion that the only thing a government should care about is growing a local software industry.

      I disagree.

      Open Source is one of the primary things that allow the software industry to spread into areas where it is not currently present. The GPL is one of the most competetion-enabling systems in *existence*, prohibiting the use of any patent that is not freely licensed for use (and derivative use) in a GPLed product. In a system of people using Open Source (and particularly the GPL), there is an extremely low barrier to entry. We do not currently know of any way (and if there was, it would probably be a bug fixed in GPL v3) to raise the barrier to entry with the GPL. Established software companies (and especially monopolistic ones like Microsoft) obviously lose out in such a scenerio. However, new companies (in places like China and Vietnam) and software consumers clearly win in a more competitive environment.

  66. Speaking of evidence... by GAVollink · · Score: 5, Interesting
    So I guess, Microsoft's own Open Source project is also a waste of money?

    Lest we forget, Microsoft has at least one OpenSource project. While copyright, and restricted use, microsoft has many, many example source programs on MSDN as well. Not GPL, but certainly open (as in viewable and modifiable) source.

  67. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by sploo22 · · Score: 1

    They are just throwing up their arms in exaperation because they just don't get it. They will,..soon enough

    Or they won't, and they'll just keep persecuting and exploiting the general population ad infinitum.

    --
    Karma: Segmentation fault (tried to dereference a null post)
  68. Reality distortion field by darnok · · Score: 4, Interesting

    MS seems to fairly regularly confuse say "this is good/bad for consumers" when it really means "this is good/bad for Microsoft". Do they knowingly take MS-internal-only presentations and show them to the public as normal business?

    A statement such as "With open source, there is no way to make more software" may make sense to a bunch of coders inside of Microsoft, but it's so obviously stupid outside of that context that it doesn't even survive cursory analysis.

    Could they actually define at what point this "no way to make more software" statement has/will kick in? Was it after Linux was released in 1991? After Apache was released a year or so later? Maybe OOo was the last piece of software that could be produced? Is it happening right now, and the code that's being developed at the moment can't be finished? Maybe it's in the future sometime; I'd really like to know the date that it's gonna occur so I can get into another industry beforehand.

    Idiots

    1. Re:Reality distortion field by donscarletti · · Score: 1

      To be fair OOo wasn't actually created by the open source movement, only improved.

      --
      When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  69. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Spoing · · Score: 2, Funny
      1. Their site alone is a fairly good support tool. There aren't nearly as many resources, comprehensive or not, for Linux support. That's not a flaw of Linux - it's just history and inertia. As Linux becomes more mainstream, there will be much better free/generic support.

        Mid-size and large companies often have support agreements (for a hefty price, but it's usually effective) with Microsoft. Call 'em up, get a person, and sometimes you'll get a fix just for your problem. Kinda makes you wonder what drives their patches - the future implications and risks, or the immediate buck behind the phone call?

      Annonymous Coward: You are completely fucking delusional.

    LOL! Out of the mouths of 'babes'!

    --
    A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
  70. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Halcyon-X · · Score: 1
    you can't just point at the XP=$300, Linux=$0 as evidence that OSS is cheaper or has a higher ROI. It's just not as simple as that

    Yes it is. Linux does in fact = $0. Microsoft just doesn't want you to see it that way, and they succeeded.

    The government has to be able to support the software they use, and if they don't have a Linux support agreement then they'll have to pay additional staff to handle those duties

    Instead of paying MS for support? What's the difference? Supporting Linux yourself for your needs could be a lot cheaper than MS supporting your business for you. Cut out the middle man.

    --

    .sig: Open Source, Open Mind

  71. Re:Very Interesting... by kantai · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A good question is whether or not it is actually bending the truth. Think for a moment, what is better for you ( universal you ) the paid programmer frightened of outsourcing or what-not, commercial or free software? closed or opened? There is a interesting if not valid point hidden in the propaganda, you just need to deal with that point.

  72. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    wait a minute!

    when you install your copy of XP professional where is your support agreement...

    YOU DONT HAVE ONE. Microsoft does not profide free support when you buy their OS you have to pay for support. JUST LIKE LINUX.

    I dont know where this myth that microsoft OS has syupport built in comes from but everyone in the business that works with MS operating systems knows that MS support comes with a very large price tag and is never EVER free.

    XP=$300.00 PLus a support agreement price... Linux= $0.00 plus a support agreement price..

    even if Mandrake or Suse/Novell support was the same price as MS support (it isn't... it's cheaper) you are STILL ahead by $300.00 + the cost of the Office Suite + the cost of the server seat licenses + the cost of the assorted support software that comes free with the linux distro and is supported by the linux vendor.

    the cost of support that is supposedly attached to linux is also there for Windows. nobody ever seems to mention that... or they somehow forget that HUGE bill they pay to MS for that support agreement they signed.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  73. obligatory "In a related story.." by Keck · · Score: 4, Funny

    in related news, health food causes cancer, according to a McDonalds spokesperson

    --
    A computer without Microsoft is like ice cream without ketchup.
  74. Re:Sites really slow - article text by dropoffx · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's is a google cache copy of an interview that Chris Sharp gave just before the release of Red Hat 8 touting that RHCE are the highest trained professionals in IT.

    --
    This space for rent. Contact for our rates.
  75. I've heard stupider things by nwbvt · · Score: 3, Informative
    My CS class had recruiters from several companies (including MS) come to discuss the job market, industry, etc. They were asked where they saw the industry going in the next few years. Most of the participants had some good observations (automated systems, nanotech, AI, distributed computing, etc.). But the MS kid just said something about everything moving back to the desktop and away from the Internet.

    He did make one good point. "People tend to believe it is free, he said, but even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor." But so what? Is a MS executive really complaining about companies wanting to make money?

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  76. Re:Wanna cyber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    bloodninja: Baby, I been havin a tough night so treat me nice aight?
    BritneySpears14: Aight.
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    BritneySpears14: Hey...
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    BritneySpears14: Don't ever message me again you piece of ****.
    bloodninja: Robots are trying to drill my brain but my lightning shield inflicts DOA attack, leaving the robots as flaming piles of metal.
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    bloodninja: Baby?

    -------------------

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    bloodninja: I stomp the ground, and snort, to alert you that you are in my breeding territory.
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    j_gurli3: stop, cmon be serious.
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    bloodninja: I stomp my feet, the dust stirs around my tough skinned feet.
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    bloodninja: Goddam am I hard now.

    --------------

    BritneySpears14: Ok, are you ready?
    eminemBNJA: Aight, yeah I'm ready.
    BritneySpears14: I like your music Em... Tee hee.
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    BritneySpears14: I swear if you do it one more time I'm gonna report your ISP and say you were sending me kiddie porn you f*ck up.
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    Bloodninja: I lick your earlobe, and undo your watch.
    Sarah19fca: mmmm, okay.
    Bloodninja: I take yo pants off, grunting like a troll.
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    Sarah19fca: you like that?
    Bloodninja: I peel some bananas.
    Sarah19fca: Oh, what are you gonna do with those?
    Bloodninja

  77. Re:Sites really slow - article text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    karmattack - Please stop pretending that major sites are slow and that is why you are mirroring them.

    Please also review other responses to your mirrors/posts that indicate that you do not seem to ever mirror/post stuff from sites that might actually get /.'d

    Maybe your connection is slow and that is why these sites are slow for you.

  78. Isn't this obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OSS is something MS can't buy, and that scares the shit out of them. thousands of people have already said this thousands of times. It's just that simple. OSS has one major advantage which MS doesn't. OSS gets the technology right more often than proprietary projects. this is from first hand experience. god I wish the code in proprietary projects were half as good as Apache and the latest Linux kernel. This isn't because the programers are inferior. It's because of managers and deadlines. Most projects have horrible code base that is total spaghetti code. In fact most of the consulting projects I've been on the code desparately needed to be replaced. People would be surprised how many proprietary projects haven't profiled and stress tested to make sure the application scales well and behaves in a predictable manner.

  79. And the Asian government reps just nod and smile.. by B747SP · · Score: 5, Funny
    And the Asian government reps just nod and smile and say

    "Yes, yes, you Americans have very large penis!"

    .. then duly ignore the stupid American who is trying to tell them how to run their country and go off and do precisely whatever it was that they intended to do before the stupid American started mouthing off.

    I just love the way Asian folks do business. It varies a bit from country to country of course, but generally, they'll make a nice polite show of pretending to give a shit about the rubbish the stupid American is spouting, then go quietly back to whatever they were doing before, unmoved. It's fun to watch the religous types pushing their word in Chinatown anywhere. The victims listen politely, nod and smile, and go on their way. The religious types read the situation to mean that because (a) no-one told them to f*ck right off, and (b) someone nodded and smiled at them, that they're getting their message through. This is why Chinatown precincts are always more clogged with religous freaks than elsewhere in any given city.

    Here in Sydney, Australia it's generally the Morons pushing their false religion with their stilted crash-course Chinese. They're incapable of picking what nationality any given Asian person is, so they try to talk to everyone in Mandarin Chinese (very few people actually speak Mandarin here in Sydney, it's a predominantly Cantonese thing here). It's amusing to wander along 10 metres behind them, watching them greet random people with their "Ni Hao" and a big cheesy smile and all the wrong intonations, and watch the victims return the greeting with a polite nod and smile, then crack up laughing once the Morons (mormons?) have passed!

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  80. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by whereiswaldo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What is it beyond the 50 billion(not that this money actually exists) in the bank that they want?? This is all very psychotic to me. Dudes, cash out, hit the Riviera, French, Mexican, Mayan, whatever. They must be doing this for a good laugh, watching us wetting our pants everytime they speak. There's just no other reason. Maybe it's some "wag the dog" thing. What are they distracting us from?

    It's about power. Maybe a little about accomplishment. Doubtful that the customer is as important as a person as as a worshipper.

  81. Chris Sharp, Lou Reed summed you up best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "You'd eat shit,
    and say it tasted good,
    If there was some money in it for ya."

    -- Dirt

  82. Totally off-topic by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

    I don't like SPF. It's a kludgey answer to a problem that generally affects a lot of protocols and needs a better, more general answer that isn't tied to the centralized domain name infrastructure.

    1. Re:Totally off-topic by FattMattP · · Score: 1

      What protocols other than SMTP does it affect?

      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    2. Re:Totally off-topic by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      http, irc, any of the instant messenger protocols, the list goes on...

      http tries to solve one side of the problem using https, but https is mildly broken, and it only solves the problem for one side. IRC doesn't solve it at all, and most of the instant messenger protocols don't either, though some of them use SSL to sort of solve it for the server side.

    3. Re:Totally off-topic by FattMattP · · Score: 1
      I'm a bit confused. SPF has nothing to do with anything other than SMTP. It certainly wouldn't affect HTTP, IRC, or any instant messenger protocol. It's just a DNS entry that says where mail from that domain is authorized to come from. The MX records say "this are the IPs that receive mail for this domain" and SPF records say "these are the IPs that send mail for this domain."

      I realize that not everyone may want to do the SPF checks at this time due to issues with needing to solve forwarding. But I think that the publication of SPF records is a good thing. People who still want to do checks can do so. I've been doing SPF checks and putting the emails that fail checks into a folder to check. The emails are few and far between at the moment but they are all spam.

      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    4. Re:Totally off-topic by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      SPF is about authenticating senders. It uses DNS to authenticate IP addresses. Neither of those two is particularly secure.

      Also, DNS is controlled by a centralized authority, and I don't like relying on it for pieces of new infrastructure. I think SPF will tend to have the effect of making it harder for smaller operators to send email, which I think is very bad.

      SPF is a kludge. If they had gone to the effort of defining a new DNS record type and carefully designing the data structure, I'd be much happier. But right now, it's a bunch of gobbedly-gook text stuffed into a TXT field.

      Lastly, all of the other protocols I mentioned all have problems with authenticating the communicating parties. There needs to be a general solution to that problem, not a bunch of little piecemeal kludges.

  83. The problem.. by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "He goes on to say that governments planning to use it will damage their own economies and that giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot."

    Well it'd shoot Microsoft in the foot as they wouldn't have a competitive edge. But the gov't isn't in the software business.

    I'm not exactly anti-MS, but this comment isn't very persuasive.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  84. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    I guess it isn't funny but it sort of works too. Its not as though what they're up to with funding SCO, buying Linux user groups pizza parties, shnozzling politicos, and keeping a stable of pet "journalists" isn't obvious.

  85. MS damages by CaptainPinko · · Score: 1

    And MS doesn't damage the economy? Sending all your money to the US? I don't mean to troll but wouldn't it be better for an economy (not to mention more struggling ones) to hire a some local, that way your currency can stay within your country.

    --
    Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
  86. Re:Wanna cyber? by nicfit · · Score: 1

    LOL! Thanks!

  87. WWJD by matrix0f8h · · Score: 1


    "If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge," he stressed.


    Now that is definately not what jesus would do...

    How can a company run by such a benevolent man see fit to spread such FUD?

  88. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by jdhutchins · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There aren't as many resources for Linux? There are MANY, MANY resources for linux. You do have to have a slight idea of what you're doing, but once you have that, you can find anything you want. Google works VERY well, as does HOW-TO's on www.tlpd.org . If you go to a project's homepage, you can often find support there, or a mailing list. There are PLENTY of resources for linux, saying otherwise means you don't know what you're talking about.

  89. hurt their economies? hardly. by Malor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sending money to Redmond, Washington, United States does not help your economy, unless you are in Redmond, or to a lesser degree in Washington State.

    It's good for the economy when things like steel and coal and fabric gets cheaper, because it means a better standard of living for consumers. Businesses also become more efficient; when their raw material costs go down, they either make more money or drop prices, both of which are good for the local economy.

    So if cheaper steel is good, why on earth is cheaper software bad?

    But Microsoft is trying to assert that if you wnt any chance of growing your own Microsoft, you need a strong IP regime.

    But the simple fact is that there will be no new Microsofts. The existing one will make very sure of that. Only people who completely change the rules and play a different game entirely can hope to succeed against a compaany with half the money in the world.

    If your local economy actually DID 'hit gold' and come up with a wonderful new software idea, it's virtually certain that Microsoft would simply subsume it into Windows. This has happened many times over the last twenty years; Microsoft has put company after company out of business by leveraging Windows. (Stacker, Quarterdeck, Lotus 1-2-3, Netscape... the list goes on and on.) The Windows software ecosystem has very little diversity; there are a few big companies and a lot of small ones, but very very few midsize ones. The sharks eat them instead and get bigger.

    In other words, with Microsoft already existing in the world, the chance of creating your own local Microsoft is ZERO. The creation of the closed source software industry was a very special event that will only happen once; it will not be repeated.

    There can still be small software niches, of course, ones that are too small for Microsoft to bother with. But if you grant that you most likely can't make huge piles of money, why not give away the code for free and sell services and support instead?

    As a government, why not encourage consulting-type technology businesses like this? Service businesses can make very comfortable amounts of money. While they don't have the huge potential upside of being able to sell, over and over again, a product that costs them nothing to duplicate, they don't really have that upside ANYWAY because of Microsoft. The open-source industry is still forming, and there's lots and lots of room for new companies.

    If you REALLY want to help your economy out, get behind open source and PUSH. Your local government spending $5,000/year for local companies to support and fix their Linux servers is a HELL of a lot better for your economy than is sending a check to Microsoft. Money that goes to Redmond is gone; money that is spent locally stays in your local economy.

    Now, if Microsoft offered solutions that were wildly better than their open-source counterparts, it might make financial and economic sense to buy Windows. If you can be twice as productive, say, on a Windows box, and the total cost of Windows is less than twice that of Linux, then it's an overall win to buy Windows. I'm setting aside control and forced upgrade issues, along with many others, but economics is ultimately about cost, and you can abstract all those factors into cost of ownership.

    But if, as I believe, Windows' overall advantage over Linux is slim at best, then it's just wasteful to send money to Redmond when you can spend it locally instead.

    There's one other scenario, too... you may be so technically savvy you that you don't NEED support. In that case, you you can drop your computing cost to ZERO. This is STILL better for the local economy, because that $200 you don't send to Redmond is money you can spend at the county fair.

    In a world with free alternatives, paying for Windows is very much like a tax. Taxes are always harmful (at least directly) to an economy, because it's wasted money...profit that didn't get reinvested.

  90. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The studies conducted clearly shows that Microsoft has a lower TCO than Linux in many areas.


    I've lost track, was that the study Microsoft did, or the one they paid for or both?

    In addition, in most of the cases open source products are imitators of corporations. Linux stole ideas from Unix, Mozilla from Netscape, OpenOffice from StarOffice and so on.


    Uhm, actually no. Mozilla IS netscape, just a few genereations and a name change later, with much more added to it. And the relationship between Open Office and Star Office is mostly the same.
    The exception being the one about Unix. Wich is not to good a point as Linux is a POSIX compliant os same as Unix.
    Of course you are almost certainly a 3rd rate troll, or just possibly a employee of a comercial company threatened by OSS who failed to do his/her research and is now sitting there with egg on his face.

    Mycroft
    --
    https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
  91. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by panaceaa · · Score: 1

    Also for Asian countries, governments should consider that money spent for Microsoft is headed out of their country. Instead if the governments spend a little more for locally-based individuals to support open source software, that money is being taxed by the government and being recycled in the local economy. Only if open source solutions were drastically more expensive, which is a flimsy argument to make, would spending money on Microsoft products be fiscally responsible.

  92. Been there...replied to that FUD by donnz · · Score: 1

    even before they thought of it:

    Follow the links and strengthen the case. It's been a while.

    --
    -- Free software on every PC on every desk
  93. You know, it occurs to me Microsoft is un-american by gru3hunt3r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, selling products for less in other countries encourages businesses to leave the united states.

    I can't blame a company who outsources work to another country because its less expensive.
    I can BLAME an American company who intentionally lowers prices in other countries and rapes us here in the states.

  94. All this talk about FUD by TechniMyoko · · Score: 1

    Im starting to think it's just all anti microsoft FUD

  95. Windows gives out source also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Windows is open source also, well not legally, but now it is :) I guess everyone running windows should do what Microsoft said and shoot yourself in the foot now. Bill Gates should shoot himself in the head.

  96. Microsoft versus Slashdot by bonch · · Score: 0, Troll

    So a Microsoft guy said Linux was a waste of money. Cue the mocking article.

    How is it different from Linux zealots saying Windows is a "waste of money?" You guys are just as one-sided, closed-minded, and full of self-serving ideology as they are, except that it's worse with you because for them it's just a paying job, but for you it's a religious belief.

    1. Re:Microsoft versus Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because calling a waste of $0 (the MSRP of Linux) a "waste of money" is just silly.

    2. Re:Microsoft versus Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps more fair to say Linux saves time.

    3. Re:Microsoft versus Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were 100% outwitted. Hit the showers, you'll get another chance next game, son.

  97. One small detail Bill... by vettemph · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I stop sending my money to redmond, will it grow mold and get stale?
    No Bill, I'll find somewhere else to spend it. Perhaps down town at the restaurant, Maybe a tread mill from Dick's Sports. I could get my lawn treated. I could spend money on my local economy supporting jobs just like mine. Everyone wins but you bill.

    --
    The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    1. Re:One small detail Bill... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      You know, that's an interesting point. Restauraunts are a good at soaking up short-term surges in economy. What happens when people get bonuses and the like? They go out to eat.

  98. too much risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine how much it would cost to risk using Linux when you could be using Swiss Cheese Server 2003.

  99. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

    It's more accurate to say that Microsoft becomes the standard.

    --
    resigned
  100. Hooray for Slashdot by Darth+Cider · · Score: 0, Troll

    Calling attention to nonsense coming from MS is a huge public service. Thanks.

  101. Microsoft opens mouth: hilarity ensues by stealth.c · · Score: 1

    Their claims will only get weirder until either MSFT finally gets it, adapts, or dies.

    It makes me grin whenever these ludicrous press releases come out of Microsoft. Don't get angry when they spew this crap. Don't even get annoyed. Just smile knowingly, nod, and keep on telling people about the Better Way. If Microsoft does its marketing job well enough, their influence will diminish considerably.

  102. Creditability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It will lend some 'creditability' to his words, in the public's eye.
    Yup, creditability indeed. Clearly, Microsoft employed much strategery when they decided to hire him.
  103. Whaaa? by shadowbearer · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sharp added that there are several myths surrounding open source. People tend to believe it is free, he said, but even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor. Apparently undermining his initial assertion about open-source ruining local software efforts, he pointed out that open source giants such as Red Hat and IBM are still after a return on their investments. "They are not for the greater good of the community; they are also after the money," he said.

    So what he's saying is that doing both is no better than just doing the one?

    He then contradicted himself again, adding that without getting back any commercial returns, a software company will find it difficult to invest in developing new software products. Intellectual property rights fuel sustained innovation, was his point. "With open source, there is no way to make more software."

    WTF? He at least has to have heard of Mozilla...

    This aggressive if confused approach comes after months of determined effort by the software giant to prevent Linux taking over as the de facto operating system in the world's largest expanding software market.

    Months? Try years....

    FUD.

    SB

    --
    It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  104. Give back to the community?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    '"If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge,"'
    -Chris Sharp

    This statement is absolutely spot on. After all, what benefits could possibly come from sharing information and knowledge?

    The same argument should be used to end the cheap/free distribution of HIV drugs in Africa. After all, who benefits from research into saving lives if those lives are saved without reasonable profit margins?

    In fact we should put an immediate end to free condom distrubution, because somebody had to work very hard indeed to come up with the design of the resevoir tip. Nobody benefits from condoms, especially free ones.

    Libraries should also be dismantled and the books therein burned. If you want the information, you should have to buy the books, because otherwise nobody benefits.

    As a former teacher of English in the developing world I am appaled at my own past behaviour of occasionally offering language instruction for free. Clearly nobody at all has benefited from this compulsion to 'give back to the community'.

    I fully agree with Mr Sharp (with his delightfully descriptive name) that all information should be propriatary.

    If someone wants to know, for example, how I am on any given day, I simply tell them that the information belongs to me, but I offer a range of scalable licensing plans to allow access to that information. Who could possibly benefit from me saying 'I am well' without proper remuneration?

    Unsecure research, open communication, and 'giving back to the community' have done nothing since the beginning of time except stifle innovation and harm consumers' interests.

    As a result of my new dedication to Knowlege (TM), I am pleased to offer the following innovative products that no consumer can do without:
    I Am Well (TM)
    Making Fire (TM)
    Boiling Leaves to Make a Tasty Beverage (TM)
    Conveying Heavy Objects More Easily with Narrow Cylinders (TM)
    Making Pleasing Sounds by Striking Membranes under Tension (TM)

    Futher products are in developent.

    1. Re:Give back to the community?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As a former teacher of English ... I am appaled..."

      Uh, isn't that "appalled"?

      Is THAT irony?

    2. Re:Give back to the community?! by displaced80 · · Score: 1

      No, it's a typo. ;-)

      --
      What's the frequency, Kenneth?
    3. Re:Give back to the community?! by igny · · Score: 1
      Boiling Leaves to Make a Tasty Beverage (TM)

      What a waste of resources. Everyone knows, leaves must be burnt, so that one can inhale the smoke. Duh.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
  105. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 0, Troll

    There are millions of Linux 'experts' in IRC channels and in Usenet groups. There are tons of half-written and often obsolete HOWTO documents. There are dozens of people telling you dozens of ways of doing each simple task.

    That's not necessarily a good thing. It's not what management at a company wants to rely on. It's a good opportunity for sales-types to sell a Linux solution and clean up after the committment with support lock-ins, though. Again, that's not what management at a company wants to rely on.

    I use Linux at home and have had a lot of success with it (I prefer NetBSD, personally, but that's an aside, I've used Slackware in various capacities since the first half of the 90's). I'm not sure I advocate it for everybody.

    --
    resigned
  106. No, MS = Wife by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Forget the prostitute analogy. MS's argument is more like the marriage argument: "sure, you can get free sex now, when you're young and there's plenty of people who will do it for fun. But what about later, when it's not just for fun anymore? Don't you want to get your sex as part of a sustainable long-term relationship?"

    I'm not sure I agree with their argument (open source looks pretty sustainable to me), but it's not really about $$$-versus-no-$$$. It's about the nature of long-term commitments.

  107. Re:Very Interesting... by andalay · · Score: 1

    You are right. I think a good study would be one that took into account how open-source actually affects the economy. As I use open-source mainly because I don't want to pir8, I would not pay the gobs of money that equivalent software demands esp for home use.

    My guess would be that open-source people are those who cant afford the closed-source equivalents and those who dont want to steal it as well as those aiming to be l33t.

    Another good study would be how many of those outsourcing companies in other countries use pirated software. Here are some stats:

    Now the cost of piracy in Canada is similar to that of India. I can imagine that this is due to home users. How many people in India have a home computer? Where does the pirated software end up then?

    This is not an attack on any of those countries. Just that sensible people would think about these issues

    I do think there are some valid questions about the sustainability of a sector that depends on giving stuff away for free. Note: Open-source!=free beer :) I also think that there is a nice balance between closed source and open source.

  108. Anyone who *overcharges* for plumbing by Intraloper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    that makes it difficult to use another plumber or add fixtures from another comapny, is pure evil, and plain greedy. A plumber who does good work for a fair price, using agreed standards so the next plumber can easily find his way around the job, and so that off the shelf fixtures bolt right on, is worth his service fee.

    1. Re:Anyone who *overcharges* for plumbing by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      that makes it difficult to use another plumber or add fixtures from another comapny, is pure evil, and plain greedy.

      I know (of) a fellow who's called "Green Wire Tom". He sells and installs commercial sound systems. He got his name because he wires everything using only green wires. That way, it's extremely difficult for anyone else to trace what he did to fix it, upgrade it or add anything new.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    2. Re:Anyone who *overcharges* for plumbing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't have very good electrical technicians 'round there, do you?

  109. STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Open source software is a 'waste of money,' a Microsoft executive has said.

    That exec is a waste of skin, but I'm not doing anything to "correct" this. Maybe I should...

  110. Microsoft Funds Unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It doesn't matter what Microsoft says. Microsoft is not going to beat linux _or_ the BSDs. This is not a fight to be won by marketing droids. The decision to use, or not to use, will be made by hard-ball CIOs and CFOs. Open source is good software; in most cases it is the best software of it's kind. It is inevitable that businesses will use it. Those decision makes that don't use it will be taken care of by the darwinian marketplace and the not-so-stupid managers that don't want to waste their company's money.

    Microsoft is stalling for time while they build a new OS that uses the incredible security and power of *nix AND the incredible product branding they've built up with Windows. Look at what crap Windows is. Remember Schwinn? Microsoft is dissing *nix while feverishly copying it and hiding the result under the Windows UI with the hood screwed shut. The BSD license would let them do this. Just like Mr. Jobs did. (At least he's giving back a bit.)

    Don't be fooled. Bill Gates is a technological idiot. But he's a very, very dangerous business adversary. People should be using linux and the BSDs not because they're free (in either sense of the word), but because they're the best damn software in the world. That's the message businesses will listen to. Price is farther down their list.

  111. Re:Chris Sharp was the Redhat Australia guy wasn't by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember the uncomfortably look I got in a hotel meetingroom in Bloomington, Minnesota back in about 1997 when the 'Red Hat' representatives showed up for a presentation. They were all uncomfortably suited folks, and we were the unwashed hacker masses.

    I further remember the uncomfortable look I got when I asked the pantsuited sales lady if it was okay if I made copies of my Red Hat 5.0 CDs to share with friends.

    --
    resigned
  112. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by westlake · · Score: 1
    One minor quibble. Microsoft doesn't create standards, they impose them.

    How many engineering standards can be traced back to a well-positioned, politically adept, corporation with plausible technical arguments and even greater marketing clout?
    Think of the near fifty-year dominance of american broadcasting by David Sarnoff and RCA.

  113. Honorable officals by GoClick · · Score: 2, Funny

    Honorable officals, as you can see FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD Open Source FUD FUD This simply can't be the case! FUD FUD FUD We must stand up against this and FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD You're wasting your money on these people who don't know what.. FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD Here have some cash oh and some FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD FUD

  114. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

    I'm trying to argue both sides here - but Microsoft does offer free support and such free, comprehensive Linux support doesn't exist.

    Microsoft could make the argument that it would be more expensive to use Linux because you'd have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in staff to support Linux, their office space, their benefits, etc. Creating an IS team that doesn't exist is expensive, no doubt about it. That's one reason that many companies buy MS support.

    MS also plays the training/implementation card - switching users from Win98 to Linux is hard. Switching your whole network is even harder. And expensive. With all the costs built in, over the long run, MS can easily convince a government panel that their software will be cheaper. They're not lacking in clever excuses.

  115. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by TheRealSlimShady · · Score: 1
    when you install your copy of XP professional where is your support agreement...

    YOU DONT HAVE ONE

    That's a good strawman, but he never actually claimed that there was a support agreement with XP. If I was pushed to make a guess, I would guess that it would be cost neutral supporting Linux over MS. I think you'd take a hit somewhere in there purely on volume - MS can do lower prices for support over more contracts where Linux doesn't have that luxury (yet). That will probably change in the future.

  116. Ignorance of Power by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 4, Interesting
    People in government are accustomed to a strict heirarchy of power that comes from the law makers and big lobbyists (and, I suppose, indirectly from the people). But when it comes to computers and standards, they seem ignorant of how much power they really have.

    Governments are in a position to establish vendor neutral specs that could dominate the industry. If the IRS established XML specs for tax forms (rather than letting Intuit or another vendor dictate proprietary formats as the standards) then they can drive real competetion for good software that implements the standards. If this sort of thing expands it could make communication of data about patents, censuses, and parking tickets as easy to find as looking up a zip code is online today.

    Governments don't seem to recognize that by giving power to the little dictators and their proprietary products they are ceding their own power as the neutral referee and protector of their people.

  117. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

    Linux distro ISO = $0
    Training employees = $50,000
    Adding Linux support staff = $150,000/year
    Office space for new staff = $300,000
    Overhead for new offices = $40,000/year

    Microsoft is expensive, yes. Adding their support is really expensive. But if you think Linux = $0, no strings attached (or that any system is), then you're obviously not thinking from the perspective of the people with the money. And if you are the person with the money, let us know so we can be sure to sell your stock ASAP.

  118. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea, I watched our happy little 13 people, Unix only, group grow to 63 with the addition of Windows. So, where once there was a business that needed 13 for all it's IT "needs". Now, it "needs" 63. What changed? MS-Windows, and only only MS-Windows.

    And when we paid for that evil Unix "support", it included not just the right to call for dubious help, but you got all upgrades and patches that came down the pike.

    So, let's not mention the freaking fortune we pay to Microsoft for their "Duh, reinstall the Operating System, or Upgrade (and pay more)." support service. Half the stuff, a quarter the IQ, all yours for double the price.

    Yep, no doubt about it, Linux/Unix has clearly demonstrated it costs more to buy, to maintain, and to support! In every way, Microsoft costs lesssss! Sure.

  119. Re:hurt their economies? hardly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Giving up mod points (and postings as AC)...

    Having lived near Redmond (and while working for MS) I can tell you that Redmond (and WA in general) do not get much from MS. Certainly while I was living there (up to 2000) the almost total gridlock around the MS campus caused Redmond considerable problems. Also through various means MS avoided giving much money to the city.

    Incidentally this also applied back then to Boeing, who managed to avoid the full property tax on their sites.

    WA was in serious trouble from lack of money - the huge cash pile that MS has doesn't seem to help the local economy much.

  120. The money to hire the best? by dpeltzm1 · · Score: 1

    Must've been used to buy them off, cause the 'best' sure aren't writing the code!

  121. The truth lies within... by kurt.griffiths · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So What? I have heard open-source advocates contradict themselves much worse, and even resort to spouting misinformed opinions when it suits their needs. It isn't that Open Source or Microsoft are inherently good or evil. Both worlds are full of unselfish and selfish people. You have to take everything with a grain of salt.

    1. Re:The truth lies within... by CaptainTux · · Score: 3, Informative

      You may be right to an extent: both camps have their agendas and are willing to do a lot (including lie sometimes) to move those agendas forward. But look at the motivations of each and things soon become much clearer...

      Proprietary software is all about removing consumer choice in order to gain marketshare. The more people that dump boatloads of money into your software, the more people that train on and become experts on your software, the more people that develop towards your software, lessens that chance that those people will ever move away from your software or service. Why? Economics! If you paid several million dollars for software in this economy and invested huge amounts of time and energy in it you would be very wary about moving to something else - especially something of such highly contested value as open source. In proprietary software, the software's success relies primarily on the quality of the marketing department and not the software itself.

      Contrast this with the open source model: you write software and give it away. But we're not talking freeware here we're talking source code and all. You're empowering consumers. You're saying "use this software and, if you don't like the way we're doing things then change it or go to someone else who'll change it". That is a powerful thing. It's forcing the development company to compete on a much higher level and necessitates that they develop much better software because there is much less incentive for a company to stay with you as a vendor if you mess up. With open source software, people stay with you because you are the best and they are loyal. In proprietary software people stay with you because they've dumped millions or hundreds of millions of dollars into your platform and are so confused by marketing FUD that they are afraid to leave. It's a huge difference.

      Don't get me wrong: I am not saying that proprietary software is always a bad thing. I don't believe it is if it in the hands of an ethical and responsible company. Unfortunately, there are too few of them out there to effect change in the proprietary landscape. Personally, I would love to see a hybrid of the GPL and a proprietary license. Why NOT provide the source code with a proprietary product. Allow users to customize the product to their needs. Allow them to create very tight integration components that spawn whole communities around your software. But still sell it in a quasi-proprietary model. We could have the best of both worlds: fully business friendly OSS. Unfortunately, that probably won't happen for a very long time until open source developers stop being so freaking anti-commercialization. Like I said, that probably won't happen for a very long time to come.

      --
      Anthony Papillion
      Advanced Data Concepts, Inc.
      "Quality Custom Software and IT Services"
    2. Re:The truth lies within... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Open source developers aren't about being anti-commercial. The original source of the GPL was because Richard Stallman wanted exactly what you suggested, the ability to modify components that came with software. But if you do a lot of work, you might want to give it to friends to help. Under a non-open license, you wouldn't have that right. Even more, if you could give it to your friends under a BSD license, they might end up making more changes and start selling the product under a proprietary license. While that's great for them, if you buy the product from them you're back to not being able to alter or give away your changes to the bought software (and if they don't include source, you can't even easily make changes). Sure, you can try studying the behavior of their program and clone the behavior, but you're just duplicating effort.

      So, the GPL breaks you out of this cycle. And of course it also means anyone can resell software under the GPL at whatever price they like, but then the source comes along GPLed which can be sold and redistributed. So, the GPL doesn't allow for a closed system. So, the only reasonable way to make money off GPLed software is through an indirect means (providing a service for support, making changes to source, etc). And adding proprietary components along with GPLed software just gets you back into the "trap" again. With GPLed software, you don't get paid in money; you get paid in all the available free source (or price of shipping and handling plus media).

      So, is it a real surprise that open source advocates want people to contribute? Just remember that it's the free software advocates that say it's amoral to use proprietary software. And it's the open source advocates that pragmatically will suggest proprietary software, but they'd rather support open source when they can so they're more free to do what they want with their software.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    3. Re:The truth lies within... by kurt.griffiths · · Score: 1

      I see what you mean. "One Microsoft Way" has certainly gained a lot of momentum over the years that is proving difficult to overcome. You see a similar momentum in the media industry. Whenever a new innovation in product delivery comes along, the big players generally freak out because they are either too set in their ways, or are not nimble enough to respond as fast as they would like (note that these reasons, especially the latter, do not necessarily make them "evil"). This has happened with VHS, music sharing, and now movie sharing and PVRs. The response is always to pretend that nothing needs to change, and even to fight the inevitable change in consumer preferences.

      Now we have a "new" model (new as in it is mainstream enough now to worry the big boys) called open source, with its various licensing schemes. Just like the media companies are nervous about new technologies cutting into their bottom line (that is what the execs get payed to defend), Microsoft and Friends can't see much benefit in open source, and even see a lot of competition. So they stall until they can figure out either how to get rid of the threat, or are fourced by the market to embrace the new paradigm.

      I think it would not hurt Microsoft and other traditional software companies to give out their source code with every purchase. They are scared that by so doing all their hard work will go unpaid. Their fears are valid. You simply can't work hard all day and then come home to your family with empty hands. You can't buy groceries with "good will".

      That being said, I do not think that sharing one's source code necessarily predicates the failure of one's product to make plenty of money. Here's why:

      1) With so many concerns about security these days, people feel better about having the source code to tweak as they like when problems arise. However, as Microsoft gets better at writing secure code, people will tend to rely on them for their software updates anyway, since it is generally less expensive than hiring your own team of security programmers to sit around hacking the source code. Whether or not they ever look at the code, however, customers just feel better knowing they can if they need to. When you have the code, you feel more like you own what you payed for.

      2) Even though you can download linux distros for free, many people still pony up the dead presidents for a nice box of CDs with some documentation. The greate majority of the population have no clue how to burn an ISO image, but they know what CompUSA or Walmart is.

      3) Tech-savy customers have more faith in you if they see that you "have nothing to hide" (e.g., crappy code hiding behind a facade).

      4) Non-programmer customers don't have a clue what "source code" even means, let alone have the skills to do anything with it. There are a whole ton of these kind of people out there.

      5) Of course, potential competitors will get a hold of your code. Look at companies like Trolltech that give you the source code. Yet you don't see a million versions of Qt running about from various vendors that snatched the code and rebranded it. There are several possible reasons for this. First of all, it takes a lot of time, talent, contacts, and money to successfully market a product, and especially to take it to the commercial channel (Walmart, CompUSA, and friends), especially against the originaly vendor of that product. Secondly, In order to compete, you need your product to be different and more exciting than the other guys' stuff. You can pretend it is through false advertising, but that doesn't work for very long. You can actually mess with the source code to get something different, but then you have to spend a lot of money and time on regression testing and maintainence for your branched code. When all is said and done, it is generally easier to use the original vendor's APIs and tools to create a plugin (or custom control, in the case of Qt). Such things are easier to market and maintain. Therefore, re

  122. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    the servers are down, the boss is breathing fire...

    and you expect me troll Groogle for a solution I need NOW, THIS MINUTE simply to keep my job?

  123. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

    So... the Linux alternative to support.microsoft.com is: Google, scattered sites with information of varying accuracy, individual project homepages, mailing lists, IRC channels, and newsgroups.

    I know how to get the info I need... but does the $25,000/yr help desk consultant? How about the secretary that needs to figure out how to change her computer's wallpaper? Or the professor that wants to play a .WMV for his class?

    I think the problem is due to the large number of distros, the non-standard OS setups, and dissenting opinions within the Linux community. How do you create a comprehensive Linux support site if you don't know what to support?

    Look at it from the perspective of a University IT department: which desktop environment(s) should you support? Which command shell environment? How about office suite? Or graphics package? Media players?

    Relying on open source has its benefits... but there are problems that they'll be skeptical about. And support is one of them - not only from the OS provider, but within your own organization. It's a huge problem even for Microsoft-based companies.

  124. What a stupid comparison by donscarletti · · Score: 1
    If a house is outfitted with plumbing, nobody stops other people from simply copying how the pipes are set up. Plumbers do not cover their pipes with a giant box so nobody can see which pipes are connected to what.

    Payware has nothing to do with going to peoples houses and charging for setting computers up and free software has nothing to do with going to peoples houses and setting up things for free. What it is about is creating a single design that may be copied for free or for money. This replication takes an amount of effort bordering around zero, plumbing however takes quite a lot of effort from the tradesman in each instalation.

    This debate is about information, this is why comparisons with other trades will not work. The only part of plumbing that software can really be compared to is the basic design. In software this basic design changes with every competing product, with plumbing this basic design has been in place since the third palace of Knossos in Crete was built with running hot and cold water and some semblance of flushing toilets in around 1700 B.C. In plumbing this basic design of tap valves, manifolds, U-bends and O-rings is available to everyone. In software, many people seek to restrict the usage of their own basic designs to those who have payed for it. Plumbers don't hide their information, and software engineers are not expected to install their information on people's PCs. This is why your comparison and similar comparisons are wholly invalid and frankly getting quite tiring and repetitive.

    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  125. Re:Its OUR TAX DOLLARS by bussdriver · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Make sure your government KNOWS that you want YOUR tax dollars to support things that are not only cheap, but good quality and create a job market by creating support and development jobs with all that money they save by NOT buying MS software!

    If my government makes something with MY money, it should be open/free for at least the people who payed for it.... Not pay a 3rd party who is funding campaigns so they can get an exclusive deal.

    It would be cheaper to simply hire some inhouse IT people to support and develop software than it is to pay outside...and multiple cities and governments can collaborate.

  126. MS = Gigolo ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Err. I don't know about prostitute but...

  127. Free plumbing, not free plumber. by lysium · · Score: 1
    Anyone who charges for plumbing work is pure evil, and plain greedy. All plumbing should be done for free.

    If you could duplicate pipes in your toolbox, on demand and at no cost then I would certainly not expect to be charged for them. But I would pay the plumber to put all of the pipe sections together into a cohesive system, and then keep it in working order. Alternately...

    ...since we are talking of pipes, can I interest you in upgrading that tired PVC (or worse!) piping currently installed in your home? Perhaps the new, titanium-alloy self-cleaning pipe system might appeal to you? It will never clog again, don't you know...

    ===---===

    --
    Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
  128. Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by cammoblammo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A few years ago I was one of a bunch of religious freaks who hit Sydney's Chinatown. Fantastic location. We didn't pretend to speak Chinese--in fact, we did our thing with some simple street theatre and a couple of really cool dance routines. We had a crowd of people watching, and some of the local businesses even gave us lunch because we were getting business for them!

    If anyone wanted to talk about what we had presented, that was up to them. If people wanted to watch the concert and leave, that was fine too. We did the same thing in King's Cross and Darling Harbour.

    What wrecked it was the freaks who followed us. The moment they started with their fake Chinese and bible bashing, people ran. We actually gave away over a hundred Bibles that day, and people seemed pleased with what they got. These other idiots didn't get to base one.

    The moral of the story is that you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar. We said what we had to say in a non-confrontational way, and moved on. Everyone was happy. Go out of your way to offend, and end up going backwards.

    This applies to the Linux evangelists as well as anything else. I can't stand Windows or anything else by MS (apart from their mice!) But I've found the easiest way to get people thinking about changing over to the Light Side is to use Linux, maybe show off a little bit, and know what the differences are. When people get interested, I can explain the benefits, and give them a copy of Knoppix. Easy. By treating people as human beings instead of targets to be hit everyone benefits.

    --

    Cogito, ergo sig.

    1. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by Canberra+Bob · · Score: 1

      "The moral of the story is that you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar"

      You can catch even more with a flamethrower.
      Should have tried that one!

    2. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by B747SP · · Score: 1
      What wrecked it was the freaks who followed us. The moment they started with their fake Chinese and bible bashing, people ran. We actually gave away over a hundred Bibles that day, and people seemed pleased with what they got. These other idiots didn't get to base one.

      I think you've got it in one there. These clowns have such heavily structured procedures for 'witnessing' or 'preaching' or 'evangelising' or 'missionaryising' (!) that they can't see that they're beating their heads against brick walls. The only real difference between the western folks and the Asian folks is that we won't hesitate to tell a religous freak where he can stick his $holy_book{$religion} if he goes all in-your-face on us, whereas Asian folks won't be so confrontational, and they'll tolerate them out (as opposed to *hear* them out). The religous freaks take the polite tolerance to mean acceptance, and extrapolate that to a point where they believe that their methods are actually working!

      You're equally correct in drawing correlation between evangelistic methods for religion and operating systems. Wearing penguin/daemon t-shirts and neglecting personal hygiene makes people assume we're freaks - we might as well go and take a one-day course in the wrong language like the Mormons do. On the other hand, the install fests, and free Linux CDs and free 'The Open CD's actually do work, 'cos they're not confrontational, they're not silly, and the target audience gets something usefull out of it.

      That's not to say that a good belly laugh as a result of some silly twat mispronouncing "You good?" at you in the wrong language isn't a good thing mind you!!!

      --
      I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
    3. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by cammoblammo · · Score: 1

      Er... I'm Australian.

      Point taken though.

      In fact, you're not that far away from my point, which was that people are far more likely to sympathetically listen if they're not being browbeaten and threatened with hell. That didn't figure into our style at all. One of the principle tenets of Christianity (yeah, I know, I can't figure out why most Christians don't realise it either) is that we should treat others the way we wish to be treated. I certainly don't like being attacked by Mormons (although it gives me a perverse pleasure...!) but I don't mind watching good street theatre and chatting to a reasonable sort of a person about religion and philosphy.

      Interestingly, one of my most vivid memories of my experience in Chinatown was when some Muslim ladies (on holiday from the Middle East) came along and had dinner with us. They were fantastic, and were quite surprised to find a group of Christians that didn't either Bible bash them or try to drop a bomb on their village. We actually agreed more than disagreed on a lot of things about the nature of God, and in some ways their views were more fundamentally Christian than my own!

      On the other hand, one of the corollaries of having freedom of speech is that you have to put up with other people going overboard for whatever it is they want to say. Unfortunately, some of those will be extreme zealots for whatever not-so-unreasonable point of view they may have. The result is that the point of view in question takes on an unpleasant taste for the majority of people, regardless of how reasonable it may be. I know a lot of people who have left the church or not belonged in the first place because of idiot Christians giving God a bad name. A large part of my job seems to be helping such people to see the difference.

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

    4. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You believe that nobody should try to force their beliefs on anyone else. So why are you trying to force that belief on other people?

      Think about it... then you might understand why Christians also want to spread their message.

    5. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by stridebird · · Score: 1
      ...you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar

      Hey bud, the chances of "converting" me just lowered some more. Don't call me a fly. Anyway, if you want to "catch" me, use beer instead. Works better...

    6. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by cammoblammo · · Score: 1

      Is Guinness honey like enough?

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

    7. Re:Religious Freaks in ChinaTown by cammoblammo · · Score: 1

      You're right, I don't believe we have the right to force our beliefs on anyone else. But we do have the right to instigate discussion (at least, in countries where freedom of speech is recognised). By extension, those in the discussion have the right to terminate it any time they want. I'm not forcing anyone to do anything.

      Being a Christian, I do understand why Christians want to spread their message. My point is that there is a (morally) right and wrong way to do it. That just comes down to common human decency.

      Let's face it, isn't the free exchange of ideas what Slashdot's all about?

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

  129. c# on linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    c. sharp used to work for redhat!

    yeah, i know, lame joke.
    sorry.

  130. What is the Value Proposition? by CypherOz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Microsoft's value proposition is product based, i.e. sell lots of units of software product to make profit.

    OSS value proposition is service based. Give the software away, and provide services, consulting etc. to help companies deploy and use the software. Companies may get support from either internal and/or external resources - either way they cost $.

    Note: You still need services for product based vendors.

    IBM (and others) have a hybrid model, services and software product sales. IBM get much more revenue from services than they do from software product. Interestingly, IBM will heavily discount there products (80%) in competetive situtaions - guess what? they want the service revenue!

    Which model wins in the long run? The market will eventually sort that out.

    Assuming that a service based model wins, then product oriented companies will fail: Which is why M$ are poohing their pants on this issue.

    The basic economic free market model for OSS assumes a service based model. In fact for OSS to really work, it needs a really free market. Software patents are a really big risk for OSS, praticularly where the granted patent is for the trivial (one click, scroll bars, progress bars etc.)

    Now we talk free market - we get political (where are Stallman and Raymeond when u need them :-). I won't go political.

    --
    You want a signature? You can't handle a signature!!
    1. Re:What is the Value Proposition? by michael_cain · · Score: 1
      Microsoft's value proposition is product based, i.e. sell lots of units of software product to make profit.

      OSS value proposition is service based. Give the software away, and provide services, consulting etc. to help companies deploy and use the software.

      So, given this distinction, how does OSS move into the consumer market? At least in the US, consumers appear to be much more motivated to buy a thing rather than a service. This is one of the problems that Tivo faces: people are willing to buy a $300 PVR, but are much less enthusiastic about buying the $20/month service that goes with it. US consumers buying a computer assume that the device will just work -- they don't need to buy a service contract, or hire a consultant. Very few of them are interested in buying a complete OS package separately from the computer.

    2. Re:What is the Value Proposition? by CypherOz · · Score: 1

      I was addressing the corporate market. Your assessment of the consumer market is correct. I belive that pre-installed OSS solutions are the answer.

      One of the main problems at this time is the lack of game support for Linux. Many consumers want a product (PC with software) that will game as well as help with homework etc.

      Maybe in the longer term a Wine/DirectX environment on Linux will allow Windoze PC games to be installed and run to the same level as they do under Windoze.

      Today there is a big gap between Server and Desktop requirements. In time we hope the gap will shrink. As the cost of M$ desktop escalates OSS will fill the void - I hope.

      --
      You want a signature? You can't handle a signature!!
  131. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by noda132 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm trying to argue both sides here - but Microsoft does offer free support and such free, comprehensive Linux support doesn't exist.

    I call bullshit.

    Microsoft's knowledge base is nice, yes, but honestly, it's there out of strict necessity. And it's not as good as Google anyway. For both Linux and Windows, Google is the way to go.

    If you have a real problem with Windows, it won't be on support.microsoft.com, it'll be on Google. Probably Google Groups. And probably with a bunch of people with titles like "Microsoft MVP" chiming in with their two pence, all wrong and clueless. Guess why? Because nobody knows how the software works. And these real problems don't get solved.

    How do you solve the problems? By calling up Microsoft. They'll charge you hundreds of dollars, to be refunded if they decide it's a bug in their software. You will be on hold for hours on end, and their support is far from helpful.

    I spent over six months with Microsoft support on a single issue a few years ago; I still see the problem today, so their solution obviously didn't work, but we just learn to live with the problem.

    More recently we experienced a bug with Windows 2000 Server SP4; it just kept rebooting randomly. Turns out this stems from a fix of a vulnerability in SP3 and below. Microsoft support was useless and to my knowledge they haven't actually fixed the new bug. Google Groups, on the other hand, helped us find the problem (we just use SP3 now, vulnerability and all).

    I've set up GNU/Linux in mission-critical situations. When problems come up, IRC or Google or Google Groups has always had the answer. The three have a combined 100% track record. Why? Because the developers listen, and if not, you can always look at the source code. (You'd be surprised how easy it is to find the problem in the source code going by nothing more than an error message.)

    In my experience, GNU/Linux support costs all of $0. But if I had a scary manager who wanted support, I could always recommend one of the zillions of companies selling Linux support. I doubt any would be as good as newsgroups, but they can't hurt. They'd certainly be more helpful than Microsoft, since in my experience Microsoft support is nothing more than a waste of time and patience.

  132. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by sparkz · · Score: 2, Insightful
    In my experience, GNU/Linux support costs all of $0.

    Plus your time. What does that cost your employer?

    I'd largely agree with your post, but your employer pays you for your expertise. If that costs, say, $50k pa, then that's part of the cost of supporting Linux.

    --
    Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
  133. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by fbg111 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    .. then duly ignore the stupid American who is trying to tell them how to run their country and go off and do precisely whatever it was that they intended to do before the stupid American started mouthing off.

    Unless the stupid American happens to be Microsoft, who is quite fluent in the international language that everyone know$. And I'm not talking about love, smarta$$. Frankly, I wonder if MS will be reduced to bribes/unrefuseable deals of the sort they used to lure Gross and Hejlsberg in order to prevent foreign governments from defecting to Linux. They already offer major sweetheart pricing/licensing terms to such governments; how long will it be before various governments (and corporations) refuse even that, forcing MS to take whatever next step they deem appropriate?

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  134. I don't think it's FUD, it's RGB by BCW2 · · Score: 1

    The folks at M$ actually believe this crap! So they keep spreading this RGB (rumor, gossip, & bullshit).

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  135. you guys amaze me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are you all working for opensource cos?

    What's wrong with making money from something that you spend time to think up and code?

    you spend 3 years developing a product, only to publish it OSS and have some okay smart chap in some far corner of the world just pick it and up compile and use and make money from it eventually?
    oh great that's going to pay your mortgage and kids tution. and medical bills. and groceries.

    wake up guys. nothign wrong with closed source. authors get royalty. why should software writers be like that too?

  136. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Stop forcing your children to do work and routinely killing female children."
    "Oh, ok *rolls eyes*"

  137. The WORK is not free. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    A plumber who charges for their work is not evil.

    A plumber who will not relinquish control of the pipes is.

    Would you pay an architect who wouldn't allow you see the blueprints for the building?

    It's not about "All plumbing should be done for free." As usual, the meanings of free allow this reversal in English. It's about freedom, and that has nothing to do with not paying people for their work.

    As long as there are programs that need to be written, then programmers will have jobs.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  138. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by sparkz · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Isnt't that the problem? Ximian, Sun, et al, are pushing corporate Linux solutions, where the cost-per-head is low ($50 in Sun's case) but the volume is high enough to deal with those low costs.

    Personally, I raised (via my employer's support team) one bug with MS, in 1994, and I can't even remember what it was, just that the answer was "tough - that's how it is". For history's sake, I wish I'd made a note.

    Support is a really strange thing - on one hand, you've got the users who say "fsck support, it works!" and on the other, you've got people who say "I don't care if it 'just works', I want someone to cover my ass if it doesn't work!"

    For those people, support is worth megabucks.

    These people who will pay megabucks for support will also live without functionality (eg, SATA drive support, WiFI, etc) for supportability.
    I heard recently of a Gov't who nearly went back on a known-working cluster config because one of the (3+) vendors involved didn't explicitly support it (they'd not got around to testing it, although the other 2 vendors had tested it).

    Support is a strange creature, which must be endured, but also understood.

    --
    Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
  139. True for any company except Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    When the situation is so bad that a company is allowed to write it's own antitrust agreement with the U.S. government, then it's time for the user community to take charge. That's what's open source has done.

    In most other circumstances I would agree that open source is a bad thing. But destroying the software marketplace is unfortunately the only way to free us from Microsoft's monopoly.

  140. Healthy Redmond Economy by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In other words, they're saying that in order to protect the US economy the Government needs to, pay excessively for the software it is using and tie the rest of industry to an ageing software development model and its Monopoly vendor to the detrement of competition.

    Yup, that looks like a recipe for a healthy economy, if you live in Redmond. It would screw the rest of the country and damage our international competitiveness.

    Look, the very fact that Microsoft is pitching this to the government means it cannot win on fair terms and it knows it. Surely is Microsoft believed it's own story on TCO lobbying government to eliminate the competition wouldn't be required.

  141. Bonch, it's time to go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Please delete your Slashdot account immediately and refrain from posting for the next sixteen(16) months.

    Please refrain from using the internet for more than ninety(90) minutes in a ten(10) day period. This will also last for sixteen(16) months.

    At the end of the probationary period, you will be required to write a five(5) paragraph essay on why you had to leave the Slashdot community, and submit it as an article.

    Bonch, it's time to go.

  142. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by wuice · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's about appeasing the shareholders. Shareholders always want more.

  143. No MS tech support person sees source code... by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    Support Agreement!!!?????

    It doesn't matter how much money you pay to Microsoft, Sandeep and Li and Chung don't know the answer. Some of them give the impression they have never owned a computer.

    At least with Linux it is theoretically possible to get an answer to any question. With Windows, you will never talk to someone who has seen the source code, no matter how much you pay.

    Not only do no MS tech support people see source code, apparently, but they wouldn't know how to understand it if they did.

    1. Re:No MS tech support person sees source code... by TheRealSlimShady · · Score: 1
      Not only do no MS tech support people see source code, apparently, but they wouldn't know how to understand it if they did.

      Incorrect. Ever dealt with the Microsoft Premier support people? Their escalation path leads up through a couple of levels, then goes to the coders. If you're ringing the support line for your Office installation, then you're right, you don't get people who can see the source code. If you're using Premier and it needs escalation, eventually you will.

    2. Re:No MS tech support person sees source code... by haruchai · · Score: 1

      How much does Premier support cost? The truth is, if
      you buy an OS from any of the established vendors, be it MS, IBM, HP, Sun, Redhat, Suse or Apple, you can get the level of support you want if you're willing to pay.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  144. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by Grey+Haired+Luser · · Score: 1

    Incorrect.

    They embrace, extend, and extinguish them.

  145. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha Ha! Chris Sharp is an Australian....

  146. uh neutral and protector of the people? WTF? by waspleg · · Score: 1

    what country are you from? this one is run by oil cartels and ashcroftian neo-nazi facism.

    and what, with the speed the gov't implements new technologies and standards we'll just leap ahead by bounds all the other tech saavy nations

    *cough*

  147. I realized ... What M$ mean ... by turnin · · Score: 1
    giving away source code is shooting yourself in the foot.

    Yes. I realized. M$ you please do it for me.

  148. open source developers are selfish! by the-build-chicken · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Thought that would get your attention :)

    Let me explain my reasoning:

    Ok, initially, the majority of open source development was dev support based (libraries, support and development applications...and a few OSes). However now there is a plethora of open source work being done in the application domain. Writing open source applications puts companies out of business. I'm not arguing if that's right or wrong yet, just stating fact. I write an application, sell it...someone comes along and starts giving it away...I go out of business (generally).

    So, where does selfish come into it. One developer, who doesn't have to worry about the other parts of software development (administration, quality control, iso certification etc) because he's giving his product away, develops a product simply for the glory of it and maybe some cash in support money. If the application get's big, maybe he makes enough money to be well off from support and on the conference circuit.

    Now, if he'd had the courage to take a chance and develop his software as a going concern...and it took off...he would be building something bigger than himself. A company that supplies income to many, perhaps even 1000s one day, employees and their families. But instead, he puts a company out of business (or at the least reduces market share)...all for his glory he puts 100s of families out of work. Sounds pretty selfish to me.

    p.s. I'm now a microsoft nut, and do contribute regularly to several open source projects (library projects). I just think open sourcing applications of every variety is going to end up killing our industry

    1. Re:open source developers are selfish! by Log+from+Blammo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The micro-economic argument would go like this:

      The cost to produce one additional unit of software (marginal cost) is very near zero. Furthermore, the average cost per unit at higher levels of production is always decreasing. The fixed costs of development are spread over ever increasing copies of software, which each have negligible cost to produce.

      Software development is a contestable market. That means that new companies can enter and exit the market at an insignificant cost. (Anyone can write software at home and distribute copies over the Internet.) In a contestable market, if the average cost curve has negative slope where it crosses market demand (guaranteed for digital copies, since the slope is negative everywhere), there is a "natural monopoly". The "natural contestable monopoly" firm must set output and price at the point where their average cost curve crosses market demand, where profits equal zero. At a lower price, the firm takes losses, and at a higher price, it invites competition. Even then, a firm that can incur lower fixed costs (zero for open source) can outcompete the others. The price would tend to move to where marginal cost (near zero) meets demand.

      Essentially, profit-seeking companies must innovate first, before a zero-development-cost solution becomes available. They must continue to innovate, and always ensure that the consumers are willing to pay more for higher quality and additional features, otherwise they sell fewer copies.

      So open-source won't kill the industry. It is the heel-nipping dog that will drive the industry towards more innovation and greater consumer satisfaction. Unfortunately, there is not much room for either profit or error, unless your company has just invented something totally new. In that case, a patent can provide breathing room, though piracy still puts limits on pricing.

      Also, though 100 families may become unemployed when an open source project is completed, 100 million can now become more productive at near-zero cost. The hundred can now move on to a new project with no competitors.

      --
      "This quote is a product of the Frobozz Magic Quote Company."
    2. Re:open source developers are selfish! by 0x0d0a · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't buy it. That's the same argument that a farmer using manual laborers would use against the automation (and associated massive efficiency increases -- we now produce far more food per worker) of farming.

      Industries always improve efficiency. As a matter of fact, that's one of the key reasons for having free markets. As part of this process, people get put out of their jobs and forced to find new work. Perhaps reimplementing word processors isn't a viable job any more, and programmers will be forced to work on, say, font creation software.

      Until that day when there isn't a thing in the world that computers could potentially be made to do that they can't do, there will be jobs for every software developer in the world.

      Also note that there are more people working on custom code and vertical-market code than horizontal-market code. Horizontal-market code derives the most benefit from open-sourcing -- if you're doing up a custom forum system, *some* of the work may be done for you if you start with an existing base, but it's unlikely that everything is complete.

      I think that you should be more concerned about improvements in ease of programming. If everyone had to code in assembly, it would take many more man-hours to write a package. High level languages like Java, SQL, and perl allow people to produce software much more quickly. This *does* affect vertical-market and custom development.

    3. Re:open source developers are selfish! by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Writing open source applications puts companies out of business.

      Sorry, but who decreed that software creation should become commercial ventures in the first place? I'm not denying that businesses have a right to trade and to make money making new and innovative products but the history of software stems from the military and the academics - that meant that software was either restricted to certain users within the military or handed out amongst the academics freely, in the same way that academic papers & other knowledge was shared.

      Software distribution originally was pretty much Open Source, closed source and making money from it came later.

      develops a product simply for the glory of it

      What's wrong with that? Getting a man on the moon was done for the "glory of it" in the same way that Edmund Hillary climbed Everest. Okay, so writing "vi" isn't quite in the same league...

      if he'd had the courage to take a chance and develop his software as a going concern

      You're assuming that everybody is motivated purely by money - what's wrong with just writing software for the sake of it?

      I'm in a tech support/software role, I enjoy my work, I could advance through management and double my salary but it doesn't interest me because I like fixing and fiddling with things.

      all for his glory he puts 100s of families out of work.

      There's no logic to this statement - if he doesn't emply them in the first place, how can he put them out of work???

      I just think open sourcing applications of every variety is going to end up killing our industry

      Wrong! Ignoring Open Source and open standards will kill your industry. There is nothing stopping any commercial venture making money from Open Source software (what are Red Hat, IBM, Novell, etc all doing currently?) and if you recognise that you have the ability to work with the Open Source community, then you can use that to your advantage - why do you need to employ a programmer to write an application that already exists as an Open Source package?

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    4. Re:open source developers are selfish! by mortenalver · · Score: 1

      This reasoning fails, because if I can put a commercial product out of business with OSS without spending any money, they surely didn't have a valuable enough product, and *SHOULD* be put out of business.

    5. Re:open source developers are selfish! by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, it don't work that way. Most of us open source developers are toolmakers, creating tools to fit a need. The closed source world prevents us from sharing the tools, and incredibly limits our creativity by forcing us to all buy our own toolkits: so the student programmer can't use, or tweak, the C compiler unless they shell out $5000 for a source code license, for example. So tools simply don't get created, or their bugs are concealed and cannot be repaired except by the Authorized Vendor (and their often over-worked support staff). In the open source world, the payment we make is for my salary to go tweak the tools to fit our site's particular needs. I get paid alright, and they get tools customized to their needs, and the tools get revised *quickly* to fit new requirements. And the overall quality is much higher because gifted people poke their noses into the tent and share their tools from other open source projects for me to work with (such as gcc, the OpenSSL libraries, Perl, Python, etc., etc.) Having the right tools available for the cost of your engineers' open source development time is a very, very good trade in most cases.

    6. Re:open source developers are selfish! by hyphz · · Score: 1

      The only problem with this is that, 90% of the time, a good chunk of the reason why these apps are written as open source in the first place is that starting a company to produce them as a business model would be instant suicide as the company would immediately be smacked down by an established firm.

      I mean, come on - would YOU invest in a business whose goal was to develop an office suite, or a web browser? Bearing in mind that since they're doing it non-OpenSource, they have to start from scratch, and Office and IE are already out there? How about an art package, when there's already Photoshop/PSP? How about a database when there's already Jet/Oracle?

      So unless you're going to argue that Adobe need to make Photoshop worse and less established, in order that they are not putting people who could otherwise have formed another company writing art software out of work, then there's no reason to argue that for open source.

      Yes, in a capitalist system, giving stuff away free is a vicious, market-warping and ultimately unsustainable model, but right now it's the only thing that works. Even MS knew that with IE.

    7. Re:open source developers are selfish! by the-build-chicken · · Score: 1

      Excellent response. F%$&ing brilliant analysis.

  149. case in point by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought I read fairly recently that custom software development for specific businesses was still the largest paying sector in the IT world in the US. Open standards mean more jobs for us slashdot nerds! Case in point: I wrote the first version of the Quality Assurance database at my work in VB because I already knew it, and it was fast and easy. I got promoted (largely because of my badass database!) and got my own desk and everything! Guess what, that desk had it's own computer, I wouldn't want to piss off the BSA, and I certainly didn't want to buy another copy of VB (one of the techs was making nicer UI's for the DB so I couldn't just uninstall) so I went python(I friggin love that lang BTW) and now I am writing version 3.0(don't ask) entirely in Python and it will friggin rock. I could confidently say that open source software has not only provided me with the tools to be incredibly productive, but given my employer a productivity boost to go along with it.(we used to write the test data on paper and have the night tech enter it into an Access DB which took at least an hour a night) Not to mention that it will ensure that some python kiddie gets a job when I leave. How could this possibly be a bad thing???

  150. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by amber_of_luxor · · Score: 1

    What is it beyond the 50 billion(not that this money actually exists) in the bank that they want?

    When all the microsofties have put in their twenty years, and cashed their stock options in, that cash reserve will ensure that the stock price does not go down. That means that microsoft can live for about a decade after the original programmers retire, before it collapses. The hope is that before that decade is over, microsoft will have such a grip on software, that they won't go out of business.

    Amber

    --
    Wind Beneath Thy Wings
  151. yea and how many of you paid for your copy of wind by waspleg · · Score: 1

    and lets not forget how easy it is to get cracked/pirated versions of everything

    if the BSA or anyone else actually enforced the anti-piracy laws OSS would take off like a rocket.

    naturally i'm glda they don't, and M$'s more or less lax stance (they've disabled all of what, a handful of the most pirated keys?)

    suggests they aren't entirely blind to the fact that most of their market dominance has been due the proliferation of free and highly discounted products as well as getting in bed with universities and whatnot...

    what they have in place is only good enough to stop joe six pack in teh USA who doesn't really care what percentage of the price of his new dell the OS constitutes and who gets stuck with a shitty home version of xp

  152. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by jschottm · · Score: 1

    Open standards haven't won out so far. IE still has over 90% of the market and barely support CSS2. Outlook rules corporate e-mail. Most mail software doesn't try to be something better than Outlook, it just tries to be compatable on a different platform or with less cost. CIFS/SMB rules basic networking, while the Samba team tries to figure out the protocol that even MS doesn't know. Where have the open standards won out?

    None of the above is a good thing, but it's how it is right now.

  153. Re: Contradictions and delusions by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1

    The thing that surprised me most about his arguments is that he was making pro-capitalist, anti-communist statements in China.

    --
    Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
  154. Neither Linux nor MS are used in ATC or Hospitals by Travoltus · · Score: 1

    this is typically a job for real-time OSes like QNX or, at the very least, BSD.

    (Dear mods.. this isn't intended as flame-bait.)

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  155. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Uhhh... The MS version costs in my time as well. I sit on phone waiting for help, listening to elevator music, while my employer is paying me X per hour to do absolutely nothing. On the other hand, I could be browsing the web looking for answers and clues, get support from IRC or USEnet, and learn in the process.

    Point is that one version costs $X per hour, the other version costs $X per hour plus the $100+ to talk to MS support. I suppose it is rather subjective and variable to the situation which will result in a better outcome, but I tend to think the employer gets more out of it when I teach myself how to fix the problem.

    Second point...how long are you on hold with MS support? Could it be that searching google turns up the answer in 1/2 the time it takes to even talk to an MS employee? With that in mind, the cost to talk to MS support is $2X + 100+.

    So, I could sit there and hum for 2 hours while my employer pays me and MS to do basically nothing or I could hunt down the answer on the web in 1 hour and learn shit in the mean time.

    I can also multitask better when waiting for a responce from the web. I post to usenet and move on to other problems only to check back later and get my answer. I can't multitask as well while waiting for someone to take me off hold...my attention is taken too much.

    Hmmm...I know which way _I_ would go as an employer. I think 2X is too conservative an estimate.

    NR

  156. Re:Wanna cyber? by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

    I must admit that this is the most amuzing troll I've seen to date.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  157. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


    Most mail software doesn't try to be something better than Outlook, it just tries to be compatable on a different platform or with less cost.

    But that, in itself *is* something better. If a software package makes it so that I can run an OS I can be productive with, instead of having to run Windows to talk to the rest of the company, then that's a benefit.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  158. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by Friggo · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of Ethernet, TCP/IP, HTTP? To name a few...

  159. Re:Its OUR TAX DOLLARS by Bush+Pig · · Score: 2, Informative

    > It would be cheaper to simply hire some inhouse IT people to support and develop software than it is to pay outside...and multiple cities and governments can collaborate.

    Err ... no. At least not always. Things like word processors are best bought off-the-shelf. Of course, once you have slightly unusual requirements, customising COTS software (like, say, SAP) gets hideously expensive. This is _not_ an endorsement for MickeySoft, btw.

    --
    What a long, strange trip it's been.
  160. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by rossz · · Score: 1
    XP=$300.00 PLus a support agreement price... Linux= $0.00 plus a support agreement price..
    I paid about $80 for SuSE Linux Pro 9.0. It came with basic support. The WinXP Pro the office bought cost $150 (or so), but came with zero support that I could find.
    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
  161. what nonsense by dtfinch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    governments that standardise on open-source software are hurting their local software vendors as they can't make the money needed to invest in their own software products.

    You'd expect a government to buy direct. The only "local" software vendor here is Microsoft.

    building open-source software is a "waste of money" and that a company was in effect giving away its intellectual property, preventing it from getting future benefits. "If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge,"

    Their benefits are (1) The free use of software that they CAN imrove on, (2) The use of those improvements in their own line of business (If you need a new feature or bugfix in a commercial product, your options are limited, as in your only option is to wait and see), and (3) The use of improvements made by businesses who are using the software because of your improvements. Etc.

    even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor.

    Yeah, what's wrong with expecting a little well earned profit?

    Intellectual property rights fuel sustained innovation

    Need is a pretty big motivation to innovate. Some call it the root of all invention. You keep your IP rights, enough to relicense and enforce against commercial pirates. And open source won't prohibit you from making commercial software, on your own, and seeing how far those IP rights get you when nobody wants to pay to use your software because you're competing with Microsoft. And how was 15 years of DOS, an OS that was a decade outdated when it was created, defended heavily by litigation and anti-competitive tactics, and based entirely on the works of others any without credit or compensation, a shining example of innovation fueled by IP rights? Quite the opposite.

    Or what about the fear of patent litigation if I invent something that someone else invented independently? Non-innovators need not worry about such things.

    With open source, there is no way to make more software

    ??? With FUD, there is no way to make more sense?

    1. Re:what nonsense by cball2k · · Score: 0

      FUD is what your argument is....

      "Yeah, what's wrong with expecting a little well earned profit?"

      whats good for linux is evil for MS....how two-faced is that???

      grow up /.-linux noobs, stop the ms bashing, and try doing something constructive for a change...

      --
      karma, hah...
  162. "anti-competitive" by the_meager · · Score: 1

    Isn't "anti-competitive" behavior competitive behavior? This all seems like nonsense to get your product to the top.

    Like IBM financially supporting OS/Linux against Microsoft. Like Netscape against Microsoft all that long ago.

    This is getting out of hand. Microsoft is exploiting holes in the system --- or benefitting by utilizing copyright and IP laws that exist in the system. This means that Microsoft is not being anti-competitive, but rather competitive; they're just being better at it.

    --
    Speckpot?
  163. free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as in speech, dumb ass...

  164. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by B747SP · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I just got some hate mail in private email from one of the aforementioned 'Morons'. Poor guy seems a bit delusional. First up, he's of the perception that the aforementioned crash-course means of learning a new language works really really well. Well hey, if your foreign language skills were half as good as you think they are, I wouldn't be getting a kick out of watching native speakers laugh their guts up at you behind your back! Then, he somehow managed to establish that my discussion of culture and business was actually talk about religion!!! (go figure) and that I was attacking him. I guess that's why they're colloquially known as 'Morons'. Anyway Mister Joe Brower , I don't accept unsolicited mail from anyone, much less unsolicited hate mail from someone who has problems interpreting stuff in his native language whilst professing to be an excellent speaker of a bunch of other languages. What I *will* do is enter "jb_02_98@yahoo.com" on any web page that wants to know my email address for the next month or three. No, thank *you* for your time (and you're right, I'd like it if you kept your religion out of my slashdot).

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  165. Wrong Microsoft is un-american argument. by sybert · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Price discrimination is good. Whatever pricing lets an American company (MS) maximize foreign profit is good for America. Product licensing means that foreign prices do not affect domestic prices.

    Microsoft is Un-American because they are anti-capitalist.

    [Sharp] said governments that standardize on open-source software are hurting their local software vendors as they can't make the money needed to invest in their own software products.
    I blame Microsoft for falling for the broken window fallacy and arguing for greater government spending. Government spending reduces investment in the economy because it takes capital away from the economy in taxes and borrowing.

    It would help if our own government, especially the California legislature, understood this.

    1. Re:Wrong Microsoft is un-american argument. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Price discrimination is good.

      Not for everyone.

      Price discrimination is bad for people that do not get significant money back from the company that gets more money (if I ran a restauraunt chain in Seattle, I could benefit, but if I'm a barber in Kansas, I wouldn't) and end up having to pay more.

      For example, most people on Slashdot are probably abnormally heavy users of network bandwidth. They aren't the little old lady that gets on to check the news and her email. They benefit *greatly* from their ISP not being able to effectively and efficiently discriminate between that little old lady and them. If it could, they'd be paying more .

      In the system as a whole, I agree that price discrimination is generally a good thing.

  166. YRO? by wan-fu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And this has what to do with my rights?

  167. C'mon Microsoft, GROW UP! by pandrijeczko · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Now is about time that Microsoft stops behaving like a spoilt child and starts acting like an adult.

    Open Source has NO interest in MS except with regard to APIs and protocols to enable OSS to talk with proprietary MS protocols. Other than that, OSS does not care that MS exists or not, it has no interest in defeating MS is some kind of software war and is here to stay whether MS like it or not.

    MS should now accept this, just like they had to finally accept that TCP/IP became the globally accepted way of networking computers together about 10 - 15 years ago.

    A rational adult company would recognise that it now has some serious competition for market share and would begin to take positive steps to secure its userbase - for starters, spending some of those huge cash reserves to improve the products that are out there already, make them better and more secure and, yes, lower their prices to make them more value for money.

    Additionally, an adult company would accept that it's products have to work with competitors products and take action to ensure that (some of) its APIs are open or that it adopts more open standards within its products.

    The problem is that at the moment, the only damage MS is doing is to itself. This "spoilt brat" behaviour is lowering its public image even more and giving some of its customers another excuse to adopt OSS in favour of its own products.

    My personal belief is that MS are very close to having to adopt a major tactic change (for the better) in order to stay in business in the future (and they know it). I'm sure that very soon we'll see the patent litigations start against the likes of SAMBA and those that built FAT/NTFS support into the kernel but I really don't see how backwards engineering will be seen as infringing a patent when tested in court - I also suspect (and hope) that one or more of the big Linux players (IBM?) will step forward with the money for OSS to fight these litigations - if not, then I believe the community itself will find ways of raising money to fight them. After all the court cases are done, MS will just be perceived as inflexible and (more) arrogant and lose more customers as a result.

    The article just indicates how desperate MS are getting (in terms of trying to stop OSS) and very soon they'll realise that they just have to accept it and work with it or give up with software completely.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  168. Funny... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    This is total crap! What OS DIDN'T have UNIX as a root??! I seem to recall that Windows NT used to be POSIX compliant as well. And didn't IE start life off as Mosaic?

    And the last time I checked, MS Office was not the first office 'suite'. Wasn't that Lotus 1-2-3? Besides which, LONG before Word for DOS was created, there were plenty of other competitors (XYwrite, Wordperfect, etc.)

    In fact, StarOffice started life almost 10 years ago from a German firm as a commercial product. It was open sourced by Sun as 'OpenOffice.org'. The incredible results of just three years of effort show what OSS can do when properly focused.

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    1. Re:Funny... by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

      Are you replying to the post above mine (that's currently sitting at 0-troll) or did you mistake the parts of his post I blockquoted in mine for my words?
      Not sure, but if the latter please re-read mine and maybee the parent to it.
      If neighther I have no clue what your trying to say.

      Mycroft

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
  169. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1, Troll

    To be fair, you did say "..pushing their false religion" which is loaded enough to be asking for trouble.

    Also why do you put your email address on slashdot if you don't accept unsolicited email?

  170. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by B747SP · · Score: 1
    Also why do you put your email address on slashdot if you don't accept unsolicited email?

    'cos there's an RFC somewhere that says faking email addresses in headers is a bad thing, mmmkay. Admittedly, the RFC I have in mind is 820 or 821 or one of the nntp ones, but it's still bad, mmmkay! :-)

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  171. How desperate. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The salary has to be paid anyway, so frankly you have no point there.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  172. And the savings? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    How many MS licenses would you stop using?

    Did you spend on training before (or did you learn employees figure it all out because MS software is "easy"?

    How much MS support staff was replaced?

    How much office space was freed by former MS support people?

    etc.

    You cunningly choose to ignore the savings.

    Most importantly, you forgot to put a price to the fact that with Linux and OSS you become again the owner of your IT infrastructure and data. Put a price to that.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  173. What about transparency and accountability Batman? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Goverments should balance between those two values and cost. Goverments should not use always the best tool for the work nor the cheapest one, if that tool hinders transparency and accountability.

    Goverments have (or should have) more concerns than cost and efficency, goverments can't be cheap bastards all the time since they should defend core values comaptible with democracy.

    Oh sorry, I forgot you are most likely USian and that the current political winds in the US do not support transparency and accountability. Sorry, my bad.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  174. I do. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    They will look as dumb as when they realized the Internet was the next big thing.

    But oh boy, see where they are now, some people believe they invented it....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  175. Re:hurt their economies? hardly. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    Taxes are always harmful (at least directly) to an economy, because it's wasted money...profit that didn't get reinvested.

    Not necessarily. Taxes *tend* to get re-distributed at least somewhat evenly. A few poor states like West Virginia get disproproportionate amounts of funding (due to the powerful Senator Byrd).

    Taxes are very useful from an economic standpoint for some things. They solve the public-good problem, for one. Probably the biggest example of this is roads. The US road system would never exist if people had to privately fund the whole thing -- there would be tollbooths all over in the best case. I'm not willing to pay for twenty feet of highway (20' of highway does me no good), but I *am* willing to put in money if it means that everyone else does as well and I get to use the resulting road system to transport myself and goods.

  176. Boo Hoo. Read on. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In some respects i agree with MS... But really this is silly.

    If you look at it from the same point of view as outsourcing American jobs to low wage foreign workforces... Its the same argument. Funny that a Corperation is now using it to battle the free will of the people. How convient.

    But the truth is... Open Source software still requires a work force to maintain it, author it, and contribute to it.

    Microsoft is really concerned with sales of their software... not the jobs of people :)

    If we put our super secret microsoft pr decoder glasses on, the statement actually reads:

    "if you dont buy our software, it's going to hurt our company"

    Well DUH Microsoft. It seems as if someone is affraid of a fair competitive market.

    Microsoft could switch to the redhat buisness model and still hold the same market dominance with an open source Longhorn...

    But they're all too greedy for that.

    Its so funny to see Microsoft complaining about how free software is impossible to compete with... IE anyone?

    Nope.. Mozilla firebird for me!

  177. old joke by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    Q: How many MSCEs does it take to change a lightbulb? A: None. MS simply declares darkness the new standard.

  178. Pirate Empire by Sv1ad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    MS is just pissed off because OSS looks like piracy but unfortunately for MS, it isn't.
    In days of yore when someone started doing things like OSS, it was easy for groups like MS because all they had to do was declare OSS a bunch of copyright pirates and take them apart with the help of every legal mechanism available.
    But when the "pirates" use the same language as the "privateers" (see GPL using the language of copyright back against MS, and everyone else) then it's on for everyone. Good luck to MS with the rhetoric, because that is, in reality (and unsubstantiated SCO totally aside) all they've got to use.

  179. Re:Chris Sharp was the Redhat Australia guy wasn't by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I further remember the uncomfortable look I got when I asked the pantsuited sales lady if it was okay if I made copies of my Red Hat 5.0 CDs to share with friends.

    Meh, 'sokay. As long as Red Hat's actual content producers are those unwashed hackers and don't start ignoring unwashed hackers like me, I'll be happy.

    To be honest, I don't envy those Red Hat business types. They are quite literally forging new ground and having to produce and test new business models for a changed market, all while fighting one of the largest companies in the world. This is not a position that implies survival -- usually it's companies that *follow* companies like these and can tread on the dead bodies of the companies that made mistakes before them that end up making it big.

    The Red Hat hackers, on the other hand, get dream jobs. They get paid to hack on OSS.

  180. Translation:Open source has no bribe money to give by kd4evr · · Score: 1

    attention moderators: Karma2burn

    Reading between the lines, M$ is telling governements (and intereseted governement officials in particular) that it is very unlikely that a big open-source deal in a public service would be accompanied by any sort of bonuses, benefits and commi$$ions for the decision-makers.

    1. ignore open source
    2. ??????
    3. Profit?!

    The shortened example below is purely coincidental and totally misses the point:

    Slovenia recently decided on a huge license deal with M$, not even considering open source solutions as well as ignoring the news that M$ is willing to give licenses for free to countries just not to switch to non-M$.

    Another job well done and taxpayers money well spent, would be in tune with the above article.

    The interesting detail below is purely coincidental and has no point whatsoever:

    Former CEO of M$ Slovenia is now married to a former governement-head-of-PR. The happy couple made the tabloid news couple of years ago - he giving her an Audi TT as a gift - or some sort of an engagement present...

    Thank you for moderating this comment. This is not a signature. Handle with care. No lifeguard on duty. Anything below this point is no longer related to the post above. He who dies with the most taglines wins. Why don't somebody, following the fine example of RIAA, sue Microsoft for designing, providing and distributing virus-spreading tools?

  181. Parent deserves mod points by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Support is a really strange thing - on one hand, you've got the users who say "fsck support, it works!" and on the other, you've got people who say "I don't care if it 'just works', I want someone to cover my ass if it doesn't work!"

    This is a huge, huge, huge deal.

    In many cases, much of business lies in separating the interests of an exec at a client from the interests of the business he works at. That may take the form of something as simple as wining and dining them. It may be because vendors can take advantage of imperfect reward systems at companies -- execs generally recieve little or no reward for doing something slightly better than expected (Windows works, Linux works better, the exec isn't getting a bonus for going to Linux) and tremendous punishment for anything going wrong when a finger can be pointed at them. Official support is rarely worth the money it costs (especially if you are a large company with a skilled in-house IT staff) unless you are working with some very specialized software. However, if something goes wrong and a support contract is present, the exec can just say "I did my job". He won't get nailed if it's widely known that this software has caused problems before, but he *will* get nailed if something goes wrong and there is no support contract in place.

    "Cover my ass" is one of the inefficiencies in business, and something that businesses should (hard as it is) work to eliminate.

  182. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

    isn't there an option in slashdot to hide your email address?

  183. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    Sparkz, your post theoretically is true. I think the problem is that you're making an invalid assumption.

    I have yet to find phone support of any kind that's worth a damn, and have long since given up on it, and solved problems myself. (Well, "myself", as Google/Google Groups/IRC are valid resources in solving it myself.)

    As long as there are no good systems in place for evaluating the quality of support and publically rating companies on them, I suspect that the quality of support will continue to be abysmal, and a primary area used to cost-cut. If calling up put someone in touch with the developer of the software, that's a totally different story -- but it generally doesn't.

  184. Dude by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

    I heard that Saddam Hussein refused to use Linux and that's why the US invaded. One of those guys in Abu Ghraib with the black cloth over his head was actually Linus Torvalds. Haven't seen him around lately, have you?

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
  185. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by kwoff · · Score: 0
    This is why Chinatown precincts are always more clogged with religous freaks than elsewhere in any given city.
    I think your sweeping generalization is dubious. I don't remember seeing religious freaks in Chinatown in Boston, but they were often in the subway. If true, though, maybe it's because they like the food better there.
  186. Pyracy or OSS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pyrated windows in india gives employment to
    more people that microsoft can employ!! So better
    move to OSS and be ...

  187. By your analogy by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    Open source software is more akin to the pipes and tools which the plumber uses. You still pay him for his skills, time and effort. Are you saying that he shouldn't be able to design his own tools and give them to who he likes?

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  188. tax & spend by qtothemax · · Score: 1

    Aren't they basically saying that software purchases in government should be a "new deal" type tax and spend program aimed at boosting software companies' profits and employment? I don't think Microsoft would appriciate it much if the government looked for the most expensive alternative for everything it bought, as it would be coming out of microsoft's pockets in the form of taxes.

  189. I can make Linux cost a fortune. by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    "The studies conducted clearly shows that Microsoft has a lower TCO than Linux in many areas."

    As a Unix administrator, I can make Linux cost an absolute fortune simply by changing the way the systems are designed. I can make it hideously complex, unreliable and expensive to support.

    Or, since I actually know what I'm doing, I can make it cost a tiny fraction, scale to thousands and make 90% better use of the hardware. It all depends if you know what you're doing. If you have a team of Windows bods, don't expect to make any savings at all just translating the windows system architecture directly over to Linux without making any changes.

    "Linux stole ideas from Unix,"

    You're giving the impression that those ideas were not given freely. They were.

    To IBM, Linux and Open Source is simply an enabler, a tool to allow them to provide services.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  190. Re:You know, it occurs to me Microsoft is un-ameri by cpghost · · Score: 1

    Price discrimination is a necessity, because the cost of living is not the same everywhere. USD 100 in the US is definitely not the same as USD 100 in the Philippines!

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  191. Brainwashed? by essreenim · · Score: 1

    Yep, scary stuff.
    Maybe M$ broke down his theta brain waves or something.

    The natural progression of development would be former M$ employees amending their ways and working for Linux, not the other way around?

  192. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I just got some hate mail in private email from one of the aforementioned 'Morons'."

    I don't know what the guy said, but using the term "Moron" for "Mormon" qualifies as hate speech in my book, or at a minimum is very insulting and inflammatory. Are you really surprised that someone took offense at it?

    "I'd like it if you kept your religion out of my slashdot)"

    Aren't you the one who first mentioned religion in this thread?

  193. Oh NO! by kahei · · Score: 1, Insightful


    A corporate employee -- in MARKETING no less -- whose motivations are monetary, not belief-based!! We must stamp this out before it becomes socially acceptable!! Thank goodness there's only one of them. I'm pretty sure every other executive in the world is still going to work each day out of a sense of belief, but if this 'monetary motivation' thing catches on, we could be looking at people going into business to make money, or, worse yet, going to work in order to get a paycheck! *splutter*

    Seriously, guys, listen to yourselves.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  194. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MS also plays the training/implementation card - switching users from Win98 to Linux is hard. Switching your whole network is even harder. And expensive.

    switching users from win98 to XP is harder, switching your network to active directory is harder than ripping out your entire network and starting over from scratch...

    I know I did both... active directory is a bastard child that makes life hell for all field IT. the switchover whould be seamless, but it isn't. data loss for clients is a huge possibility unless you dedicate IT to manually back up EVERYTHING the user might have and restore it for them... when you are staring at 10,000 desktops or more it's near impossible... and we lost some critical data because laptops and profiles were changed without backing up everything... (why cant I force all user documents to go to a certian folder?? why can't we run with real security that is possible instead of being forced by the fools in the executive wing to run everyone as power-user or administrator??)

    Sorry administration and migration of any windows network and destops is at least 20 times more difficuklt and costly than any linux or unix implimentation.

    in fact with the money saved we could replace all the laptops with powerbooks and have the absolute best linux deployment available as powerbooks are 100% linux supported and better than any intel laptop on the face of this earth.

    linux IS cheaper all the way around. there are no migration issues, no training issues that are not there with windows it's self, and there are NO costs built in.

    you need to show me a real breakdown of the costs built in.... all I see are liabilities built into windows...

    the ever looming threat of a BSA audit also comes with Microsoft.... funny how that is not there when you center on OSS and linux.

  195. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

    For some reason, this quote from 1984 seems appropriate, from right after O'Brien says that the rule of the Party is simply for power and greed:

    "If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face...forever."

    It's just so they can be dominant and push people around. No other reason. So long as they're number one, they're happy.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  196. incriminating? by andrewweb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What's the bets that RedHat might have some juicy comments of his from times past, in email or whatever, singing the complete opposite to what he's chanting now?

    Now would be the time to reveal these publicly and really make him look a fool :)

  197. Open Source Makes Good Sense For Governments by rben · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Taxes tend to have a negative effect on the growth of the economy. You have to have some taxes or you can't run a government at all, and there are certainly important programs that must be funded, but governements should try to save money wherever possible. If I'm not giving my money to the governement, I'll spend it myself, and I'll spend it on things that will drive the economy towards making more goods that I want to purchase.

    I'm no economist, but I believe that when governments decide where the money gets spent, you create artificial economies that can collapse when political tides change. There are buying fads as well, but I believe they have less of a deterimental effect on the economy.

    By investing in Open Source solutions for software, governments help create a body of software that can be used by all other governments. Keeping it open gives us a way to directly help governments in smaller countries by making top quality software available for them. This is all done without any extra cost. It's sort of foriegn aid as a by-product of smart shoping on our governments part. Since most governments face similar organizational problems, there is bound to be tremendous overlap in the software requirements they all have.

    Open Source software is more secure, in general, than commercial softare because it is open to public scrutiny and analysis. I think it's frightening to imagine viruses taking over government computers and opening them up to manipulation by criminals. It seems that creates all sorts of potential problems that are best avoided.

    In summary, I think that the best decision any government can make is to use Open Source Software whenever it meets the requirements of the situation. It's the best thing for the economy and for the taxpayers.

    --

    -All that is gold does not glitter - Tolkien
    www.ra

    1. Re:Open Source Makes Good Sense For Governments by mr_mischief · · Score: 1

      Not just foreign governments. State and local governments can benefit when the federal government spends on Open Source software. That means lower overall taxes or that the tax mney goes somewhere more useful.

  198. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by igny · · Score: 1
    say, $50k pa,
    Is it metric dollars, as in 50 times 1000, or royal as in 50 times 1609.3, or nautical, as in 50 times 1853.2, or binary, as in 50 times 1024?
    --
    In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
  199. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Many times it is more of a language barrier even if they can speak english to some extent and even if we can speak their language to some extent. The accents are usually very thick. While americans are more willing to ask questions if there is something that we don't understand, for we follow the philosophy "He who asks a question is a fool for 5 minutes, He who doesn't is a fool forever.". While in Asia if they don't understand you they will try to look like you know what your talking about so they are not the ones that seem stupid, and beside it is only the "Wide Eyed Barbarians" who are talking to them, so it can't be that important. Even if they paid Thousands or Millions of dollars to listen to this "Wide Eyes Barbarian" speak. But if it is a situation where they can really understand what you are saying then they will be far more involved in what your saying and ask the intelligent questions that they are willing to ask.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  200. Your point? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    I do, and i have... But that doesn't alter my original statement that his past leads more credibility ( typo fixed.. grrr must proof read ) to his statements.

    When an 'expert' from a telecom company moves to another company, he brings his experience with him, thus he's more credible in the new position to discuss telecom issues.. This is the same concept, only with an OSS slant.

    And for those that asked who is 'we' or didn't understand what the bashing reference was, I was speaking of the PR issues and public opinion.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  201. Re:hurt their economies? hardly. by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

    So if cheaper steel is good, why on earth is cheaper software bad?

    Well, it isn't bad, but this is Slashdot. When Linux competes with Windows on price, it's good. When Indian programmers compete with Americans on price, it's bad.

    Certainly no-one has yet produced compelling evidence that Linux is actually cheaper. We have a bunch of studies from IBM et al saying that it is, and we have a bunch of studies from MS saying that it isn't. But I will say this: if something has no upfront cost and there is still doubt that it is cheaper, then maybe it's worth paying upfront.

  202. Hate to break this to you: their mice suck too by leonbrooks · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    They're way too heavy, and it's far too easy to accidentally middle-click while you're scroll-wheeling.

    I use an AOpen O-35G, which has two scroll wheels (one of which clicks) and four other buttons, costs about half as much, and weighs about half as much - far easier for the kids to manage too. For my laptop, and for the kids' screen when I get time to plug it all together, I buy a little (matchbox-sized) AUD$23 USB optical scroll mouse from Big W's stationery section.

    By treating people as human beings instead of targets to be hit everyone benefits.

    I can tell you right now that this won't go over well in the gaming community. (-:
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Hate to break this to you: their mice suck too by cammoblammo · · Score: 1

      Now that you mention it, the wheel on my MS mouse has an annoying habit of depressing every time I lightly tap the mouse on the desk. This can be annoying when I'm fiddling while reading /. because my browser will try to find whatever's on my clipboard at the time.

      So point taken.

      And sorry, I've spent far too long playing racing sims and I've forgotten the KETM rule...

      So point taken again.

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

  203. Safe? Microsoft are SOL then... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    I wouldn't be surprised if M$ sees this region as rather "safe" since Linux is kind of a "hardcore" "server" "alternative" solution.
    A reasonably prominent Penguinista here in Oz reports that the company he works for - a dedicated MS shop flogging seeHash-on-dotNyet solutions - is having great trouble selling into Asia because while the Asians like what their software does, they keep asking, "and does it have a Linux version?"

    What a pity.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  204. MSFT is trying to have it both ways by tjic · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Microsoft has come out fighting in Asia, telling governments in the region that adopting open-source software will damage their own economies and is a "waste of money".

    ...

    Sharp, who used to work for Red Hat before joining Microsoft, said building open-source software is a "waste of money" and that a company was in effect giving away its intellectual property, preventing it from getting future benefits. "If you are compelled to give back to the community, then you don't have the opportunity to benefit from that knowledge," he stressed.

    So MSFT is trying to have it both ways:

    1. drinking this "milk" thing is stupid, because no one wants milk, and it's bad for you
    2. selling "milk" is stupid, because there's no way to make money at it.
    3. therefore everytime some sells milk to some else, they're both STUPID
    4. why doesn't everyone just drink Microsoft Cola (tm), which is good for you, strengthens teeth, cures rheumatism, and helps our stock price?
    5. And Also: if you don't...you're stupid.
    Economics 101 teaches "The Principle of Revealed Preference": you may not understand why people are choosing A over B, but the fact that they are means that they prefer A over B. It's darn-near tautological, but it's not actually 100% trivial. Real world observation beats ivory tower speculation 10 out of 10 times.
  205. AntiTrust by SaxtusGR · · Score: 1

    This reminds me a movie that was released 3 years ago... http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0218817/combined

    --
    Saxtus
  206. US Army joins forces of light by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Over at www.globalsecurity.org an article about the Future Force Warrior, the "FFW "restores to our infantry the same technological superiority that the rest of our military has".
    And: "They have at least one idea, though. "Avoid the use of Microsoft Windows operating systems," a recent memo on the subject directed" because "Cleaner software needs less energy to run".
    Now, the war between M$ and Linux isn't really fair. The war between the US Army and M$ however...
    Not sure The US Army can win this though... And don't tear down Abu Ghraib yet!

  207. Perspective: what is $300 worth? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
    If there's a group of people who are willing to consistently do plumbing for free, and the quality is just as good as commercial plumbers, then I expect the government to use the free plumbers.

    Why do people keep implying that the quality of the free and open source software alternatives is equivalent to the mainstream commercial applications? With a few exceptions, it simply isn't true for any of the big name apps that matter. (Not coincidentally, those exceptions are the ones making serious inroads into the marketplace.)

    In terms of features, the freebies are still mostly playing catch-up to the established commerical players. It's true that some are pretty much there now; I gather Gnumeric is very good these days. Very few are ahead, however, and those that are ahead in places usually lag behind in other areas.

    In terms of usability -- and please understand that usability is everything outside of GeekWorld(TM) -- free software isn't even on the planet where Microsoft, Apple et al live. This was exemplified right here on Slashdot a few days ago, when an article slammed the GIMP for its non-standard interface amongst other things, and a zillion slashbots collectively put their heads in the sand and missed the point. The Mozilla project's continued stubborn insistence that W3C standards are more important than being compatible with the browser used by 90+% of surfers, to the extent that their product does not work with a significant number of major web sites, is another fine example.

    On the plus side, in terms of portability, open standards compliance and sometimes even technical merit, several of the freebies are ahead of the game, though rarely by as far as they think they are. However, you have to realise that these things are mostly implementation details, and come in a distant third place in the "what matters" race.

    As my previous posts will tell you, I'm no apologist for megacorps, but you have to keep these things in perspective. $300 to an individual is a lot of money. $300 to a business is merely the cost of employing somebody useful for a few hours, and the associated overheads. If an alternative software product with poor usability or a missing feature cost those few hours, you've already justified buying the $300 product instead. If the freebie wastes that time twice, it just became a liability.

    So, yes, when the free kit is just as good as commercial in every way and the cost of switching is small, I would expect government to move to it. But that's not going to happen for a while yet, and in the meantime I have no problem with government spending some of my tax money on a more productive alternative.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by Directrix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why do people keep implying that the quality of the free and open source software alternatives is equivalent to the mainstream commercial applications? With a few exceptions, it simply isn't true for any of the big name apps that matter. (Not coincidentally, those exceptions are the ones making serious inroads into the marketplace.)

      Although, this is a completely domain specific topic, I'll go out on a limb and say in most cases open source software is at least up to par with closed source alternatives. People often tout missing features in open source software while ignoring the converse. Also, just because something isn't done in exactly the same way doesn't mean that a feature is missing. Open source isn't about emulating closed source, its about providing a viable niche filler with minimal investment.

      In terms of usability -- and please understand that usability is everything outside of GeekWorld(TM) -- free software isn't even on the planet where Microsoft, Apple et al live. This was exemplified right here on Slashdot a few days ago, when an article slammed the GIMP for its non-standard interface amongst other things, and a zillion slashbots collectively put their heads in the sand and missed the point.

      The GIMP bashing was a case of, "I learned photoshop and now I don't want to learn another new interface" crybaby syndrome. Most people that learn photoshop make a living off using photoshop and showing others how to use photoshop. They feel threatened when they see this new interface (because they are no longer experts with it), and naturally try to discredit it. A case in point: I was showing a couple of my creations to one of our guys that just so happens to be a "Photoshop expert", and as soon as I said that I used a free photoshop alternatve, he immediately got offended and said, "There is no free photoshop alternative." And he stuck with that rather adamently. He is not the only I talked to with this opinion. He is just the most recent one I remember. So given this common disposition, I completely understand every non-GIMP users disdain towards the "non-standard interface" (whatever thats supposed to mean anyways). I, personally, started with Photoshop, and I find the GIMP's interface to be far more natural, that is after you understand the extremely complex concept of right clicking.

      The Mozilla project's continued stubborn insistence that W3C standards are more important than being compatible with the browser used by 90+% of surfers, to the extent that their product does not work with a significant number of major web sites, is another fine example.

      Well, I use Mozilla and have found that the number of websites that I cannot use, are far and few between. I have actually found more instances of Microsoft's browser not rendering pages correctly. Furthermore, the usage of non-standards compliant web-sites would only put more control in to the hands of the competition, because you would be letting them dictate the spec. Not a very good idea.

      As my previous posts will tell you, I'm no apologist for megacorps, but you have to keep these things in perspective. $300 to an individual is a lot of money. $300 to a business is merely the cost of employing somebody useful for a few hours, and the associated overheads. If an alternative software product with poor usability or a missing feature cost those few hours, you've already justified buying the $300 product instead. If the freebie wastes that time twice, it just became a liability.

      Ah, the accounting argument. This one I find most realistic. But people always fail to take into account the fact that sooner rather than later, you're going to have to purchase an upgrade or continue your support license. Most software upgrades, both open and closed source, take negligible time (with exceptions in both cases of course) to tweak the configuratios for an updated version. Is it really worth it to keep paying that $300, every year or so, even when you

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    2. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Ah, the accounting argument.

      This is imho the primary reason OSS fails in the business world and the primary reason geeks don't understand it's failure: The US, through the tax code, gives businesses money to spend on 'capital investments' that they can depreciate for years and years.

      For *some* reason, buying a license for commercial software is capital, even though in all practicality you *have* to upgrade when your vendor says so and most all businesses do. If you don't upgrade, bugs and software incompatibilities cause you to eventually abandon use of the product you bought anyways. In all reality, software looks like a service and sounds like a service, yet is priced and taxed as a 'product'.

      Can some accountant in the crowd explain to me how a commercial software license is 'capital' and money spent on installing and improving open source software is somehow not a 'capital' expense?

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    3. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Although, this is a completely domain specific topic, I'll go out on a limb and say in most cases open source software is at least up to par with closed source alternatives.

      You're quite right that it's domain specific, but in this context, I think we're pretty clearly talking about the mainstream apps used by a large number of businesses: office suites are the obvious one, and things like browsers and e-mail clients, graphics and DTP packages, and accounting tools are probably common enough to merit inclusion.

      In these cases, I'm afraid I strongly disagree with the claim quoted above. You can make a strong case for switching to Linux and Apache in the server markets. You could make a reasonable case that one or two other specific applications (I mentioned Gnumeric before) are now roughly on a par with the established commercial players, although in reality it takes much, much more than being on a par to justify someone switching. Most of the open source rivals simply aren't in the game yet, though; OpenOffice is perhaps the best example of an OSS application with great potential but needing another couple of years of strong development to start seriously challenging the incumbent market leader.

      The GIMP bashing was a case of, "I learned photoshop and now I don't want to learn another new interface" crybaby syndrome.

      There was an element of that, but there was a lot of genuine and objective criticism also. I made the effort to try it myself, but gave up after repeated crashes while trying to save my work or applying a straightforward filter. (The most telling thing was that most of the replies I got said that was my fault for using Windows and the Windows version of the GIMP isn't L337 enough, or something.) Even when it did work, I found it very difficult to get fairly basic effects out of it, when I could easily achieve them using any number of commercial alternatives (Paint Shop Pro, PhotoImpact, Photoshop, etc.) The non-standard interface, at least to Windows users, is also a major disadvantage. There is a reason nearly everyone uses the same conventions: it makes the user's life easier, unless there is a very compelling reason not to. The fact that the developers happen to like a different menu appearance is not such a reason.

      I'll mostly gloss over your comments on Mozilla, noting that I too find fewer pages that don't work these days as web developers seem to be a bit more aware of W3C standards. However, I stand by my claim that the dev team's stubborn insistence on "open standards" rather than interoperability with the guy with 90+% market share demonstrates incredible naivete if their goal really is widespread penetration, and is a great example of why your average business is sticking with the current commercial products.

      But people always fail to take into account the fact that sooner rather than later, you're going to have to purchase an upgrade or continue your support license.

      Why is this any more true for commercial products than OSS? In fact, isn't it more true for OSS? How many times have you seen someone told they can get the bug fix if they just get the latest source from the project CVS repository and rebuild it themselves? How many full (not alpha or beta) releases of Mozilla have their been in the past couple of years, compared to any commercial browser? (I'll mention in passing that there have been numerous backward-compatibility nightmares in those releases, including a Moz 1.6 upgrade that completely toasted my 1.5 mail database, so upgrade woes are hardly unique to commercial apps either.)

      Is it really worth it to keep paying that $300, every year or so, even when you already understand the configuration process, already have a base configuration, and just need to tweak that base in order to continue using the upgrade.

      I am typing this on a fully patched Win

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by Skeeve · · Score: 1

      The cost aspect that I don't usually see is the support issue. I have recommended a free/OSS option, and been told to use a commercial app because if they need support, they want to be able to call someone. Look at how people are making money off of Linux. Not in selling Linux, but in selling the support. Until there are a lot more people out there who know how to support and are selling this support, closed source will still win.

      Another aspect is finger pointing. I, as a business owner, don't want to spend a lot of money. Less money I spend, more money I get to take home, right? But if I buy this M$ OS, browser, office suite, and CRM application, and they don't work right, I am not going to be told 'oh, we don't support that, you need to talk to their vendor'

      And since I am usually calling support when I am down/losing money, it makes more sense to spend the money up front. Same reason we buy insurance.

      Now, this doesn't apply to everyone, but the general business owner it certainly does. A buddy of mine does support for the small business market, and he is still supporting a lot of Win9x/NT PCs. They will upgrade when they need to. Office 97? Still works fine for me. Why do I need to use those new features? And they will do so until they can no longer use the PC. So, they are not going out and replacing PCs every couple years just to get the latest thing. In fact, the company I am working for now still has some old Compaq Deskpro 2000 (P200 CPU) machines running Win98 and Office 97. Granted, I get rid of them as soon as I can, but they don't see a reason to remove them unless they break.

    5. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Although, this is a completely domain specific topic, I'll go out on a limb and say in most cases open source software is at least up to par with closed source alternatives. People often tout missing features in open source software while ignoring the converse.

      e.g. lack of multiple virtual desktops in MS Windows...
      Claiming that proprietary software is always best is simply bigotry.

      something isn't done in exactly the same way doesn't mean that a feature is missing. Open source isn't about emulating closed source, its about providing a viable niche filler with minimal investment.

      If you really need a "feature" you can always add it yourself, pay someone to add it for you or even just ask. With a proprietary piece of software then you are likely to be out of luck if your requirements don't fit with their "vision".

      The GIMP bashing was a case of, "I learned photoshop and now I don't want to learn another new interface" crybaby syndrome. Most people that learn photoshop make a living off using photoshop and showing others how to use photoshop. They feel threatened when they see this new interface (because they are no longer experts with it), and naturally try to discredit it.

      Of course a piece of proprietary would never change it's user interface between versions...

    6. Re:Perspective: what is $300 worth? by mpe · · Score: 1

      This is imho the primary reason OSS fails in the business world and the primary reason geeks don't understand it's failure: The US, through the tax code, gives businesses money to spend on 'capital investments' that they can depreciate for years and years.

      Just because things work this way in the US does not mean that this is the case everywhere...

      Can some accountant in the crowd explain to me how a commercial software license is 'capital'

      Probably because the likes of Microsoft like to pretend they are selling a product. EULA's not withstanding.

      and money spent on installing and improving open source software is somehow not a 'capital' expense?

      What catagory does building, cabling, plumbing, etc come under here? Is putting up a new building or refurbishing an old one "capital investment/expenditure"?

  208. I'll tell you about a waste of money by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft vic^H^H^Husers having to pay IT support professionals $$$ to remove viruses and spyware because their plan for "security through obscurity" is completely fucked up. Two nights ago I finished a marathon session of sitting up, loading antivirus and spyware removal programs on a customer's PC (I'm doing freelance to supplement the unemployment while laid off), then patching the thing with all the latest and greatest fixes.

    Tons of spyware and, surprisingly, only a few viruses were found.

    Sorry, Chris, but my PC's here at home don't have those problems because security was designed in as part of the system from the get-go. MS is the biggest waste of money on the planet.

  209. Re:MS STILL hasn't started learning .. by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    You have to remember that Msft isn't just the wealthy leaders, it's also mostly a LOT of relatively newbies struggling to put in their 7 years and make a bundle also - that's what keeps them going - and the languishing flatlined stock price isn't helping morale, so, what to do? Pick a scapegoat (FOSS) and wail away. "Keep plugging at that filesystem, we're taking care of those free software communists that're currently hurting our growth numbers but when we're done you'll be able to make a bundle too".

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  210. Dumping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Selling a product in another market cheaper than you sell it at home is called "dumping" and is against WTO rules.

  211. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by DarkSarin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I don't know why it is that you feel it necessary to bash any particular religion, especially one that you don't seem to like.

    While I can't agree with anyone sending you a hate mail, I do think you are being excessively inflammatory, trollish, and otherwise offensive to a group of people who are trying to live their life the way they feel is best. The goal of proselyting is not to _force_ an idea on anyone, but to allow others to hear your view and hopefully off them information that they did not previously have.

    Many people, LDS missionaries (which you oh so politely refer to as 'morons', and obviously have no hatred for whatsoever) included, make the mistake of being overly heavy handed.

    As someone who has been involved in missionary work, I find it very disturbing to read accounts like yours. If you don't want to hear the message someone has, then ignore them. If you do, then fine. But I don't see the point in doing what you are doing. It only makes you seem immature.

    I do agree with part of your post, however. That there is a huge difference between Asian and American culture. Americans, for the most part, have forgotten how to be polite. We are, by and large, an excessively rude group of people. I am sad to see that the Australians seem to be following in our footsteps (the Europeans are marching lockstep in the same direction too, so don't get on any high horse there). It seems that only the Asians (and not all of them), are maintaining a culture of politeness and civility (at least on the face of it).

    I do hope you have a wonderful day, however.

    --
    "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
  212. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by awol · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look, the argument about ROI is completely facile. OSS will always win. Take a step back from the issue and think for a minute. Itemise all the tasks that need to be done wrt to software. Does, buying proprietary software make those tasks disappear? Of course not. There is probably a strong case to say that proprietary software has more tasks associated with it. Even in a world where you take the Keynsian view on government expenditure, the economic utility from spending one more dollar on a platform that is standards based and universally available is a dollar better spent than if it were spent on something proprietary and that is even before one takes the margin out of the sale and repatriates the profit to the jusridiction of the vendor. That's before thinking about the fact that every dollar spent improving a piece of free software is a dollar that does not need to be respent by another department, or another government. Leaving all those extra dollars to improve other software or decrease the marginal cost of government, all of which improves net social utility.

    So without even considering the actual cost of the software, the economics of the public sector make free software make sense. I would go further and say that we must _demand_ that public institutions use free software since to do otherwise is fiscally irresponsible.

    Any proprietary organisation can pull as many TCO surveys out of their ass as they like, the issue issue, in my view, is not one of economic rationalism (well at least not short term economic rationalism becuase I think my argument is economically rational in the long term at least) but one of public policy. It is contrary to good public policy to pay for proprietary software. Once the problems that a public institution has to solve have been solved, those solutions (the software, and that is not the only example) should be available to everyone to increase the net benefit to society as a whole. That is what public institutions are for!

    --
    "The first thing to do when you find yourself in a hole is stop digging."
  213. There is open source employment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is being particularly disingenuous on this one. Plenty of people are paid to use open source software. Plenty of people are paid to do jobs that involve enhancing open source software. I've been working on a project for the past few months where I have been using Linux, Perl, GCC and a large number of other open source tools. I even have a couple of bugs I've discovered that I plan to go back and fix when I have a little spare time in a couple of weeks.

    Yes, I'm being paid to use open source. Assuming a typical morning, there are about 30-40 people in the cubes around me who can say the same thing. We aren't paying the M$ Tax for our tools, so the money is available for hardware, and salaries. And since the tools are built around open standards, we've tried 3 or 4 different tools for some of the pieces of this project and settled on the ones that meet our needs.

  214. Government greed? I'm a greedy taxpayer! by therblig · · Score: 1

    What is the "governnment entity" that is greedy? Last I checked, we're running a massive deficit. I'm a greedy taxpayer who is all for shrinking the size of govt and keeping as much of my own money as possible. If the govt spends less on the licensing merry-go-round, that's a win for the taxpayer. On another note, Microsoft's ads claim that their software saves money, partly by lowering personnel costs (jobs.) What's sauce for the goose . . .

    --

    I struggled for days and days and all I got was this lousy sig.

  215. Alternately by Rebel_Princess · · Score: 0
    What if he entered into OSS as a selling point to ultimately work at MS? Or MS recruited him to go into OSS with the ultimate goal of bringing him over to them so they can say "Look at all these OSS folk who saw the light!".

    Both those and your scenarios are equally as likely (that is to say, not at all).

    My personal experience with myself (Rebel_Princess) has noticed a tendency to shed ideals for a bigger paycheck. Example, I would never have used a chain to choked to death a giant slug while on Alderaan without cash/power incentives. And I looked good doing it! Win/Win really.

  216. Re:hurt their economies? hardly. by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    It's good for the economy when things like steel and coal and fabric gets cheaper, because it means a better standard of living for consumers.

    Except that cheap coal and cheap steel cause alot of un-captured expenses. Coal and Steel production / use are very high energy endevours, this energy is usually associated with a massive amount of uncontained pollution. This pollution causes sickness, plant/animal habitat loss, loss of food-supplies (fish-in-stream etc), human-habitat loss (areas rendered uninhabitable)... etc etc.

    while I do understand your point -- and I essentially agree -- it is incorrect to consider low-cost-everything being good. Low cost organic-hemp-cloth and low-cost-regionally-appropriate-organic-foods are VERY good, low cost Imported Nylon cloth and low-cost-Imported-GM-heavily-manufactured-food-thi ng is *not* as desirable....

    No market is free. FOSS and Closed Source software rely on IP Law to 'create and regulate' their markets. Auto Co.s rely on Government created infrastructure. Even in-house plumbers rely on the standards-compliant governmnet-created infrastrucutre....

    I guess my point is simple, that be carefull to not underestimate what the Market will do to EXTERNALIZE very real COSTS associated with a product. These costs are then abandoned onto the citizens of a community. No markets will ever be free of this reality. And a truely free-market (one where the market works to create 'low prices that benefit citizens') is an absolute myth -- it cannot be created.

    Taxes are always harmful (at least directly) to an economy, because it's wasted money...profit that didn't get reinvested.

    Well, except that taxes are spent to create every conceivable infrastructure. It is your taxes that create social infrastrucutre (schools, libraries, administration), production infrastructure (roads, rails, trades), market infrastructure (services, law/courts, research) -- all necessary to create a TRULY elevated standard of living for a community. The fictional free market (where *all* these things are for-profit, and no taxes exist of any kind) will only serve to destroy civilization -- a 'community' with unreal amounts of wealth held by the market-kings, slaves, chaos, danger, disease and uncertainty.

    A Well Regulated market will (and has) created the opportunity for the greatest number to have an increased Standard of Living.

  217. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    interesting that I got modded as 'troll' for this. Perhaps the mod should check out the post to which I replied. I am not trolling, I am just replying to a post with which I did not agree. If you had to mod, off topic would have been appropriate.

  218. what do you mean "prefer" by uncadonna · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Economics 101 is wrong with its "Principle of Revealed Choice". Just because someone chooses A over B doesn't mean they "prefer" A. In fact, that's central to the Microsoft strategy, as well as that of several other companies.

    McDonald's has been known to advertise "America's favorite fries". I don't think there's any doubt that they sell more fries than anyone else, but I doubt that many fry eaters as individuals would list McD's as their preference.

    Frito-Lay (sorry to dwell on fried foods) does the same with crunchy snacks. Even more than McDonald's, and much like Microsoft, they achieve marketplace dominance by driving their competitors' products off the shelf, rather than by actually competing for preference.

    There's even a B-school concept of "hyper-competition" about how to own a marketplace. Basically by bullying the middlemen: highway planners, groceries, OEMs.

    The word "prefer" carries no meaning if there's a conclusion that I prefer McDonald's food when my choices have been limited to McDonald's and Wendy's. My choices have already been constrained. I *prefer* a competent local business to McDonald's, but non-chain budget restaurants are too marginal to afford both a location visible to non-locals and competence.

    I prefer corn chips that taste like corn rather than like construction debris, but most convenience stores don't carry them.

    Similarly, I have to go out of my way if I want to avoid Microsoft.

    My preference in a meaningful sense is only revealed when I accept some inconvenience to avoid the near-monopolist. Someone driving a half-mile out of their way to get some decent food reveals a preference. Someone not doing so just reveals that they are burned out and hassled, and lack the information to make a more satisfactory choice. In other words, the hypercompetition strategy (make everybody's life systematically worse and call it "great") is working.

    How many times have you used a Microsoft product and said to yourself "gee, I'd certainly prefer to be using X..." for some value of X?

    --
    mt
    1. Re:what do you mean "prefer" by Nate+Eldredge · · Score: 1

      In many cases even for X = X.

  219. actually... by fitten · · Score: 1

    An early one was that open-source software is anti-competitive!

    Actually, it sort of is, in a way. At least... when any particular product line starts to "own" a market, as MSOffice has, you can easily bottom out the market by funding or developing an OSS "alternative" to poison that market, thereby collapsing the market to non-profitability. When the market is no longer profitable, interest will leave it and you'll be stuck with software that has no interest in keeping it "current". The only jobs associated with it then would be the equivalent of blue-collar jobs where people just install or uninstall it (not including the people who use it - because they aren't deriving their income directly from the support of the software).

    Like this guy, I've worked (actually gotten paid) to develop OSS software in the past and I have also competed head-to-head against it in the commercial space. What I've found is that the majority of people who use OSS use it because it is free (as in beer) rather than because it is necessarily "good". They will settle for inferior products that do as much to hinder their work as improve it simply to save a buck. In many cases, it breeds mediocrity.

  220. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because ALL of them are utterly contemptible, nonsensical, backward superstitions unworthy of modern man and are a monstrous drag on human development.
    Both the beliefs and their adherents would be worthy of extermination if there were a practical way to do it.

  221. Microsoft is not all of the economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For Microsoft, yes, software is an end product and the reason for their being. For every other company however, and the number and value of those other compnaies dwarf even Microsoft, software is nothing but a tool that they use to do business. Decreasing the cost of those tools by using Open Source does nothing but make the production of everything except proprietary software more profitable.

    If you read Microsoft's arguments critically you can't help but realize that Microsoft is claiming that every other industry in the world needs to subsidize Microsoft in order to keep access to ever better software tools. This simply is not true! As a matter of fact, the argument can be made (and has been made here on Slashdot and many other places) that Microsoft has stifled the development of better software.

    A large part of the impetus to move to Linux and other Open Source software was provided by Microsoft themselves. Time after time over the last 20 years, companies that came up with brilliant new software ideas were driven out of business, had their ideas stolen or were bought out by Microsoft. Time has shown that creating new software ideas under Windows is suicidal: if you are successful, you will have to; a. sell out to Microsoft on their terms, b. have your IP stolen and be ground down to dust in the courts system or c. have the entire idea built into Windows and given away completely drying up your market.

    As a result, innovation has moved to Open Source. How many file systems can you run under Microsoft? Two, the most advanced one is obscurely documented to be kept proprietary by Microsoft. Last time I looked there are more than 1/2 dozen that run under Linux; all thoroughly documented. Now, I don't want to get into a flame war on the relative merits of each file system; the point is that there is ongoing research into what makes a good file system for different purposes, but it ain't happening at Microsoft. There was an article posted to Slashdot yesterday that described Microsoft's move into supercomputing. Supercomputing clusters are an Open Source effort that grew up in the last 10 years with little to no activity on the part of Microsoft; they show interest only now that others have done the "innovating" (Microsoft's favorite catch-phrase) and proven that there is a market. The latest efforts in Gnome examine the very assumptions behind how and what makes a windowed environment work well for a user. Love it or hate it, Gnome is trying new things for valid reasons. What do we get from Microsoft? The playskool color scheme, lots of bigger, fancier icons and virtually no change in the way the GUI works! The list goes on...

    So this kind of nullifies Microsoft's argument. Innovation is happening exactly where Microsoft says it can't: Open Source.

  222. But all religions are false! by FatSean · · Score: 1

    I mean...you can't prove it's right...can't prove it's wrong...

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:But all religions are false! by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Irrelevant to my argument.

  223. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm assuming you haven't actually studied the religion you slander. Otherwise you would understand that those poor guys are taught from day 1 that it is their God-given responsibility to go out and convert people to the church. They leave their families, their jobs, their college, and pay their own way to spend 12 hours a day having doors slammed in their faces. Typically, they are never really informed that they have a choice - those who don't serve a mission for the church will be sigmatized from age 19 to 24.
    None of this has anything at all to do with the actual mormon religion, it's simply a result of a flawed culture of believing strongly in missionary work and teaching your children (and others' children) to believe the same, thus perpetuating the problem.
    If you don't understand why these people do what they do, the least you can do is show some empathy instead of blindly mocking them.

  224. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by CKW · · Score: 1

    > I don't know why it is that you feel it necessary to bash any
    > particular religion, especially one that you don't seem to like.


    I do. A lot of us do. They want to convert us, and we want to convert them and prevent conversions to idiotic belief systems that we think are steaming piles of shit.

    Not only that, but I thought his post was VERY entertaining. It was ENJOYABLE to read.

    We live in a free country. So they get to do what they do, and we get to do what we do.

    If you don't like it go to Russia.*

    > The goal of proselyting is not to _force_ an idea on anyone,
    > but to allow others to hear your view and hopefully off
    > them information that they did not previously have.


    Oh wait, it seems you do understand what I'm talking about after all!!!

    :-)

    (*) Damn it, Russia's a free country now, isn't it. But it still sounds so right, so I'm going to continue using it. God bless the Simpsons.

  225. Joey, this is your mother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Joey, please get off the computer and come up from the basement, honey. I'm so horny, today. I need your sweet, incestuous cock deep inside my wet hole. I'll be in the bedroom. Watch out for your sister's toys when you come up the stairs.

  226. Re:hurt their economies? hardly. by fajoli · · Score: 1

    Two rebuttals:

    When Linux competes with Windows on price, it's good. When Indian programmers compete with Americans on price, it's bad.

    This assumes the people making each arguement are one and the same. While there may be a few of these conflicted individuals on Slashdot, I believe the assumption is overly broad.

    But I will say this: if something has no upfront cost and there is still doubt that it is cheaper, then maybe it's worth paying upfront.

    If something has upfront costs and there is still doubt that it is cheaper, then why would one pay upfront?

  227. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by CKW · · Score: 1

    > While I can't agree with anyone sending you a hate mail, I do think
    > you are being excessively inflammatory, trollish, and otherwise offensive

    Oh wait, you're objecting to him coming back to flame the guy who sent him e-mail direct. Not objecting (at least not completely) to his original post.

    Uhhh, yeah, I can kind of see your point. But at the same time we don't know exactly what the Mormon sent to him in e-mail, perhaps it was a bit abusive. Perhaps he felt his privacy and time were invaded. Personally I'd be willing to do this to them just to make up for my time that they waste and annoy when they show up on my doorstep, just like I hate telemarketers.

  228. Mom, fuck off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really don't give a shit how horny you are. Go use the fucking vibrator.

  229. Great Point! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is Microsoft's bad words causing Linux coders to stop? No.

    Is MS FUD causing us to change focus? No.

    Is MS FUD doing anything at all to change the direction of Linux? Not Really.

    Like a religious cult that needs to continually brainwash it's members, Microsoft needs to say these things to keep hardcore Microsoft zealots on their side.

    It's going to get worse before it gets better!

  230. Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Do you know I was paraphrasing a famous quote, "Linux is free only if you do not value your time?"
    So fucking what that you've quoted XEmacs contributor Jamie Zawinski--it's still a troll and you know it.

    Here's a clue for you: Just because one person said so doesn't make it Accepted Wisdom of the Ages. You were rightfully modded down as a troll and I wouldn't expect it to be reversed in metamod (your posting history supports this).
    1. Re:Uh by bonch · · Score: 1

      My posting history supports what I said. Go ahead and keep stalking my posts. ;)

  231. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

    Are you a big enough company for MS to care? Companies with several thousand Windows licenses get decent support from them. MS doesn't support the little guy much, but bigger companies do all right.

    --
    We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  232. Re:And the Asian government reps just nod and smil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This is funny? You sir, are a cad. You did indeed bring religion into the discussion, and did so using terms that are the moral equivalents of racial epithets. Your comment was only periferially related to the topic at hand, and you used this forum to vituperate against a religion dear to some millions of people.

    When somebody had the decency to point out your lack or manners in private you rupidiate and ridicule him in public forum. <SARCASM> Bravo, good show!</SARCASM> In addition, you have announced your intention to attack him in the only way a festering pustule like yourself is able to, by loading his inbox with garbage.

    Sir, you have the morals, ethics and integrity of a bulk-emailer. The Mormon (or LDS) faith, may or may not be correct. However, based on your vicious, vindictive, and arrogant behavior you must be atheist or at best agnostic, since any concept of decency, karma or universal justice (common to almost every religion) would consign you to eternal misery.

  233. MS Greed by fireman · · Score: 0

    That should read MS greed.

    --
    M.
  234. Chris Sharp is PR fodder, not talent by horza · · Score: 1

    Enough with the "Microsoft recognising talent" crap, hiring someone as PR fodder simply isn't the same thing. He may or many not be talented but I doubt that was the primary drive for hiring an ex-RedHat employee.

    As for quoting "even companies that support open source are just as motivated by commercial interests as any other commercial software vendor", without putting any context around that it doesn't make any sense. If it means "all companies want to make money" then duh. If it means that every company will throw away its ethics and even act illegally (such as the company 'Microsoft') to make a profit then that simply isn't true.

    Phillip.

  235. The very best? by sartin · · Score: 1
    Those programmers that do continue to work will be only the very best.

    While I hope that is true, I wonder if it is? Are "the very best" really required for the task at hand? If the farmer analogy really applies, there might be some lessons. Family farms are nearly dead. People who continue to operate small farms, do it because they are committed to the lifestyle, either through lack of alternatives or through love of the job. Large corporate farms have taken over much of the market and they focus on automation to reduce the required skill (and pay) level of employees.

    Is this the future of programming? If it is, I'll probably become the analog of the very active and productive home gardener. I'll develop software on my own for my own use. I'll share it with my friends. I might even sell some for extra money on the side. It won't, however be my living. I don't know if that idea scares me or excites me; it certainly causes a strong adrenalin reaction.

  236. The Irony by megarich · · Score: 1

    Sorry if anyone commented on this already, I don't feel like reading through a gizillion posts ;). Isnt it funny how ms is calling a waste of money and idea that a good part(yes, part, I know not all of it) of it is build upon FREE. It's funny how some people will react when there scared and under pressure, eh bill.

  237. Not in Brittish Columbia by Psymunn · · Score: 1

    In BC, if there was a group who where willing to work for free for any basic service (i.e. plumbing) school teachers and nurses would strike and the old plumbers would end up with a significant raise. Yesiree Bob, in the great white North, the money is in Unions, not software (closed or open source)

    --
    The Neo-Bohemian Techno-Socialist
  238. Re:Not really by symbolic · · Score: 1


    First thing that comes to mind is, "sellout". Almost anyone can be bought if the reward is great enough. The exceptions are those who truly live by their convictions.

  239. Uh, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, your posting history most certainly doesn't support what you said. But keep on lying anyway. ;)

  240. Re:You know, it occurs to me Microsoft is un-ameri by juan2074 · · Score: 1

    Here is an opportunity for parallel importing.

  241. Building codes etc. by J053 · · Score: 1

    In my county (Hawaii, USA) and, I believe, the entire state, you are supposed to have a licensed plumber to repair/replace a fixture, install a garbage disposal, etc. You need a licensed electrician to do virtually anything other than change a lightbulb. You need a licensed contractor for any construction or repair costing more than $1000. We also probably have the highest number of unpermitted and uninspected dwellings anywhere - mostly for just these reasons.

  242. Hippocrites! by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

    Considering Microsoft have recently released stuff under open source licenses recently they can hardly go creating FUD about open source .
    Methink this employee should have the sack!

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  243. Job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You make very nasty assumptions about greediness when you don't even know him.

    Your comments are fuelled by emotion & anger towards a guy who is just doing his job. We live in the real world where unfortunately money makes it go round. Money pays for your rent, puts food on the table; you need money to support a family. Who ever heard of someone getting so castrated like that for doing his job?

    I bet if you were offered a job at Microsoft you would jump at the chance.

  244. Sharp is Dull by Dekortage · · Score: 1

    governments that standardise on open-source software are hurting their local software vendors as they can't make the money needed to invest in their own software products.

    I suppose his point was: if the Chinese government standardizes on Linux and OpenOffice, then word processor software developers in Beijing will suffer. Huh? How is this different from standardizing on Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Office? If anything, OSS is better: the open source market is still relatively nascent, so there is greater opportunity for products to compete with each other on more level ground.

    And developers will never be short on work as long as the government needs work done. Even today you can see a software industry that caters specifically to government needs. This will only increase with time.

    Microsoft is just afraid that some day it will have to advertise that Windows integrates seamlessly into Linux environments.

    --
    $nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
  245. OSS != communism by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    My hosting business started as a web collective. Everybody was gonna pay for his percentage of the server, and we were going to be a non-profit. For art! For software!

    I'm not sure what your web commune had to do with Open Source. Nothing about open source prevents or discourages you from charging for goods and services. You'll find just as many freeloaders eager to take "free beer" from the closed source camp.

    The alternative to OSS is Trade Guilds. OSS is a necessary foundation for a free market in the software industry. What Microsoft is promiting is the Trade Guild model - where all the information needed to create and use the underlying technology is carefully guarded and available only to guild members (those who work for Microsoft).

    Outsiders might be able write a few scripts to customize things (after registering them with the Guild so that the Trusted Computing Architecture will load them). But the only source for the software infrastructure is the Software Guild, known as Microsoft in the early 21st century. The Theives Guild might offer some alternatives, but with its own costs and risks.

  246. I'm just wondering... by Captain+DaFt · · Score: 1

    What exactly he will be saying _when_ he leaves Microsoft?
    He strikes me as the type of evangelist that fervently espouces the party line of whomever happens to be paying him at the moment.

    --
    The U.S. really needs an English to Wisdom dictionary.
  247. Pot calling the kettle black by rixstep · · Score: 1

    This is really too much - a representative of Microsoft claiming something else is a waste of money.

    Most of you steal your software.
    - Bill Gates

  248. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 1

    Let me guess.
    Your name is Brown, you run the Marquis de Sade Institute and you just wrote a book on a related subject which no-one seems to be taking seriously.
    The point of your posting was so that you could say: "the well known and prolific Slashdot poster, Mr A. C., agrees with me in all points".

    --
    Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
  249. Re:Wanna cyber? by DixieFly77 · · Score: 1

    LOL This is the funniest thing I've seen on here in a while. Thanks for the laugh!!!

  250. Re:to the contrary, it's a more efficient use of $ by sparkz · · Score: 1
    Sorry to hear you've given up ...

    http://www.sun.com/service/support/sunspectrum/pla tinum.html

    Two-hour on-site service with 24/7 coverage
    (The footnote mentions a difference based on locale - here in the UK, it's 4 hours). For phone support - phone through, give serial number (eh? I obviously own one!), describe problem, get put through to an engineer.
    Sometimes I get through to voicemail (if they're on the line already) - get a call straight back.
    I don't phone with trivial problems, obviously (I'm sure you don't, either) - normally some strange combination of sw/hw/etc - get through to someone who knows the technology, and at least understands the questions immediately - THAT'S A BIGGIE - and so can find the answer, even if it's not immediately to hand (if it were, I should know it, too, if I'm doing my job right).
    If needs be, they'll replicate the config in the lab.

    I suspect we're dealing with different scales of problems - not "how do i?" questions - you should be googling for that, it's your job, not your vendor's - but "it's not doing what it should", which is when you need to go to the vendor.

    --
    Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re