Google Gives Reason Why it is Built on Linux
Rob writes "A common reason why more governments and enterprises around the world are moving to
open source software is unhappiness, it was revealed during a panel discussion at the
LinuxWorld Conference in San Francisco yesterday. Google Inc open source programs
manager Chris DiBona said the search giant has stuck with Linux throughout the company's
life, in part, because it
was unhappy with the terms of another software company. Which borgware company is he referring to?"
He was refering to Microsoft!
Which borgware company is he referring to?
It's Apple.
Surprise.
SCO OpenServer!
Seriously-- yeah it is MS, but the problem exists with any proprietary technology. The company doesn't need to be borg-like, just closed.
I've had plenty of jobs where we got locked in on the O.S. or on applications and it sucks. It is a rotten feeling when you want something changed but it is either impossible or it will cost you an arm and a leg. (Then you have to wait on their timing too)
I know throwing apple out there is a bit inflammatory around here but it proves the point. There are plenty of bad options out there without even pointing out Microsoft.
It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
Google does a lot of things differently than most OSes are meant for. It's only logical that they'd choose one that they can customize to their needs...
Join the Empire! http://www.empirereborn.net/
It was just cheaper.
He was refering to Microsoft!
The article seems to imply that. But on closer reading, it indicates that Microsoft was just used as an example. The same would have been equally true of Sun, SGI, IBM, etc. And when you really look at what they were doing with Google, I think that Sun is actually more likely to have been the target than Microsoft.
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
Why can't I run the really cool stuff like Google Earth on my Debian machine
I had a circuits professor who had either done some contract work or worked at Google back in 2000. He told me and a couple other students that they used Salckware and ran the entire site from RAM, OS and all. Before that talk I never new you could run entire systems directly from RAM. Wild.
Broken assumption: You assume everyone wants to profit from OSS... they dont. I've seen plenty of OSSoftware written for the mac that's free, usable and easy to work with.
Also, the freedom to change the bits that you need changed. Don't like that particular piece of software? Change it. Don't ask any other company - just do it.
You can't do that with most commercial products. All you can do is put in a feature request, and hope that it is implemented before the sun goes cold. (Yes, I know that some companies do, but some do not.)
In theory there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, however, there is.
if they've relied on it so much, it would be nice if some of their apps would run on linux.
When you look at copyrights like a government regulation that controlls how people use information, rather than some kind of "property" right. Then it becomes clear that Linux is truely more accountable to free market paradigms, and in the information age - as information becomes commoditized, that will be even more so - as the companies that treat unrestricted copying over the internet like a threat will loose, and those that treat it like an advantage will win.
It's good to see some company finally step up to the plate and publicly admits that free/open source software provides independence and freedom. IBM, Novell, HP always put out the "cheaper" argument which is seen as "less value".
Freedom is strength, Ignorance is peace, War is slavery.
This is offtopic, but because it didn't survive the submission I did I thought it would be best to post it attached to another Google story.
A few days ago I noticed several websites which are linked by default in the Google Personalized Homepage show staggering increases in web traffic and page views. According to Alexa.com Wired more than doubled and also Slashdot , the NY Times and the Washington Post show remarkable growth at the end of july.
Is this a redefinition of 'slashdotting' or is there something else going on?
Repeat after me: We are all individuals
Rubbish. If you make an open source OS that is blindingly simple to install and use, there are going to be some enterprises that STILL want to have the OS backed by a company for their own piece of mind, security, and as an outlet to yell at in case they have a problem.
READY.
PRINT ""+-0
Google can't pay $90 a CPU for Windows XP Professional Global Oppression Server or whatever. (I'm a Mac guy so I don't know exactly what Windows is calling itself now.) I bet both Microsoft and Sun are kicking themselves for not cutting Google a deal. Imagine the PR Sun could have gotten by using Google as a reference customer.
Tristan Yates
Even if he is referring to MS, it's not as if google can be considered impartial. They must have known they'd be competing with redmond on one level or another. How would it sound if someone said to them, yeah but doesn't your search technology run on Windows? Not horrible but not great either. Especially if the competition becomes even more heated.
Besides being customizable, Google uses oodles of servers. At $300 / seat for something proprietary, they are saving ungodly amounts of money.
In the end though, it is always about control.
It is your personal duty to fight for what is right on a daily basis. Ignoring injustice is identical to approving
Open source can never be very easy to use and easy to run
Ever hear of a product called Tivo? Runs Linux. Or maybe a linksys router...
I guess those products are beyond your ability to use or run...
A few points:
Tivo is not open source. It runs Linux and you can get your very own version of Linux from the source code, but you do not have a Tivo when you are done, because that code is not open.
Linksys routers are an appliance, and not completely open as well. e.g. Broadcomm drivers are closed.
IDC predicts Linux revenues at $35bn worldwide within the next three years.
I wonder how much "Linux revenues" google has contributed to? How many Linux licenses have they purchased for their 100k machine farm?
Amiga?
No, no wait... DEC. Yeah! Google is so fast because it does NOT run on a PDP-10.
You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
Linux is successful many say because of Google- Google being the free 24/7 searchable customer support for your Linux problem. Somewhat ironic that Google's success is in part from using Linux.
Who the hell are you?
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
When a popular web site links to another web site, the link target gets a lot of hits.
Slashdot is one example of this. Fark is another. SomethingAwful's Awful Links of the Day are another. Netscape's "What's Cool" is one of the first. I don't see what the big deal is. Google could start soliciting payments to link more sites -- oh wait, as a company that makes nearly all its money from advertising, that's what Google always does!
For more information, click here.
In my 50-node-and-smaller networks, it's just so much nicer to be able to install the OS on the machines and not have to mess with licensing. I think that goodness would be that much sweeter on a 500-node network.
:-).
They could have used *BSD, but that would have been like Harvard boys using Yale locks. A bunch of Stanford grads use Berkeley-derived stuff? Get real
Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
The selection of Software available for Graphic and Media are simply pathetic for Linux.
Pathetic? You have got to be kidding. First off, video support sucks under Windows. Let's see... I need Windows Media Player for wmv and mpeg, Quicktime for mov, RealPlayer for real, a proprietary DVD-codec for DVD's, etc. etc.
Linux? mplayer
Let's go to the audio now. First, you get Windows Media Player that can play mp3 and wav. OK. Then, I need to search through the Internet to find codecs for all of my ogg's and numerous other streaming formats, etc.
Linux? gstreamer
Even the performance of Linux is vastly superior to Windows when it comes to audio and video. A whole flame war almost erupted on the kernel-mailing-list because Linus changed the hertz polling time to a sane value instead of 1000Hz. This caused some audiophiles to cry out because they would miss a couple frames every now and then. BTW, just for comparison, Windows is set at 100Hz.
If you want to flame Linux, do it based on its shortcomings (for example, Office suite, video drivers, games). But, don't do it in the area that Linux shines under - especially when so much development is ongoing with projects like amaroK.
- Stan
Wow, that sounded a lot like an employer that I had. For instance, there was an issue where a COM+ server was throwing access violations. After taking some time and using literally basic debugging tools, I found the problem in the disassembly and traced it back to something in COM+ constructor strings. My company still needed to open a ticket to Microsoft because "they were the experts". Low and behold, they found the same thing... five days later. The moral of the story is that no matter how many talented, well-qualified geeks we have, the business people still want the assurance of their vendor. Google, having engineered their solution on their own without a vendor, took the risks and was rewarded handsomely.
Coderz 4 Life
While showing a slide show of Google's hardware evolution, which began humbly with an odds-and-ends collection of "spare computers that were lying around Stanford" (hobbled together, literally, with pieces of Lego and duct tape) and ended with a present-day photo of Google's current server room (darkened to the point of being indistinguishable, for competitive reasons), DiBona said Google has used Linux all the way.
Forget software licensing, I just want to see the slide with their server room!
Any links?
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
The past is receding on me, too, it would seem. I meant 512KB, not 512MB. And it would take 64 DRAM chips!
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
And the price of OSS is not its main draw. I chose to develop a number of projects with Java rather than Visual Studio because VS was expensive to buy, while Java cost nothing. But then I was frustrated by my dependence on Sun to fix problems in the closed VM and class libraries. So I'm now developing on an OSS language and framework.
What an annoying poke at Microsoft, but I suppose I shouldn't expect anything less from the ass-puppets at Slashdot. It must be nice to have all your worlds problems boiled down to one fucking target... a FUCKING HUGE target.
Chill, we would still be bitching about OS/2 or DrDos if they were around. But they are not. I bitch at the KDE/Gnome teams as much as I want too.
Linux works fine, but it doesn't allow me to be productive. I leave Linux to do its job where it really shines: Office labor, Servers, etc. The selection of Software available for Graphic and Media are simply pathetic for Linux.
Ok, its your choice. But if you really wanted quality sound you'd still be running an Apple 2GS with 32 simultaneous channels. If you really wanted quality video you would still be running that Amiga 4000 with a video toaster. Generic Dell/Gateway whatever Windows PCs wont give you either. Neither will generic Linux PCs.
My Wifes $200 Naked PC equipped with Audigy and ATI running SuSE gives me a little of both worlds without the cost of a Windows license. I invested a day to learn how Audacity and Broadcast2000 work. It took me two days to teach her how the programs worked. We do video/audio editing just fine.
I prefer to use a Mac or XP for that.
Knock yourself out. I have two Macs here at the compound (no XP). I was trying to be helpfull, and please don't trash what your not willing to experience yourself.
Enjoy,
It's just the normal noises in here.
This was at the bottom of the article when I read it:
/CBRincludes/related_news.asp, line 137
Microsoft OLE DB Provider for SQL Server error '80040e31'
Timeout expired
But! You would have the comfort of knowing that you are running a Certified Microsoft(R) Product!
Free software is a plot between godless communists and moozlim ayrab terrists who don't pray to jesus like we do here in 'marika to destroy capitalism and the entire western economy, 'specially 'marika's. That gul durn googley is in on it, so I uses Yahoo. Puh-raise Bill Gates! Puh-raise microsoft! /troll
How ya like dat?
Article mirror:
http://firepacket.net/mirror/unhappy.html
That one tripped me up. A communist nazi would be a very conflicted person indeed.
Let me help you out with some terms:
Communism -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communism
Fascism -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascism
Nazism -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazism
Stalinism -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalinism
All very similar but not all the same thing.
Yes, I know that some companies do, but some do not.
Look Bub, you don't know that at all. . .
The sun hasn't gone cold yet.
KFG
For some strange and unknown reason, you believe that the value is in your code and NOT in you. I suppose you are happy with the idea of being out sourced since under your definition of "cool" and not being a "nazi/communist" you have placed ALL of the value in the code. If this is what BSD is... then you can have it!
GPL protects ideas and people. Unlike BSD and other licenses which ONLY serve to support patent protected software farms. Rather than supporting the ideas of "dead projects" and "forgotten shelfware" and "replaceable people" (the BSD way you've defined here), the GPL ensures that good ideas, good people and good software do not go the way of the dodo.
Figures that you are a Microsoft...err.. I mean Solaris fan.
If there's any good news to your post.. its that not all BSD folks think like you.
I agree... 100% Google has a huge database of user info.
:)
The thing is, this is one time were I AGREE to it. Their services are good, and make me lower my walls a bit. I am generally very anal about companies collecting information, but this is one time were I am a hypocrite.
Google is just another company to me and their "Do no evil" policy is meaningless (I mean do other companies actually sit around in high backed chairs and think of how to "do evil"?) Unfortunately the provide great services, and their "spying" has little impact on me... so if they need to do it to survive and provide good things, then they can have it.
This once... period... you other fuckers be warned
If I can't smoke and swear I'm fucked.
Remember, they're running a cluster made of hordes of cheap, little machines -- vastly more machines than they have employees.
Also remember that they didn't always have that market cap, or any.
Thats part of what the GPL 3 is supposed to address- if you use modified GPL code to supply a web service to the outside, you'll have to release the modifications. The web service and patent holes are why they're writing version 3.
I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
It's a little more thana kernel really. Only the OSX GUI is really closed.
But Google would not need that part for a million headless boxes in a rack. Being able to modify Darwin would let them do as much customizing as they have done with Linix.
However of course when you have a million boxes any licencing fee is too much, so they are really better off with Linux anyway as it's been hammered on a lot more, even though they could have just grabbed Darwin and gone with it.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Like whoever moderated your comment as Insightful?
If you take away your flamebait tone and your off-topic remarks about graphic and media software support which are not relevant for Google's server farm it sounds like the point you're making is to "use the right tool for the job". From this article for Google it looks like the right tool for their purposes is an OS that lets them make their own customizations.
If that is an annoying poke at Microsoft and other proprietary vendors then so be it. For this particular job they aren't the right tool.
Transmitting energy without a license.
Perhaps the whole reason Google was created in the first place was someone sick of trying to find how to change resolutions in X-Windows for Linux using only AltaVista wanted a batter way.
I could see that being possible...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Yes, Borgware. Microsoft crushes both its competitors and its 'partners' alike. What's really cool about the success of Google is that, first, it comes on a non-Microsoft platform, and two, Google's success comes at the expense of Microsoft. Google is taking business that Microsoft wants.
Google is doing this by using a business model that is orthogonal to Microsoft's model; Google is open, non-proprietary, platform agnostic. Google does not restrict browser traffic, does not exclude 'competitors' sites, browsers, platforms, etc.
Google helps provide more for less. If Google helps bring Microsoft to heel, that's a good thing.
Best regards.
Given that the nature of F/OSS is to assimilate things, wouldn't that make it the real borgware?
Erm... ALL of it?
there something else going on?
Google has a very different model then the traditional news sites.
Remember how the News companies work: Traditional news websites & TV stations, like CNN, MSNBC have news editors who pick their news tidbits as they see fit, either subconsciously or purposely, regardless of what the viewers find interesting. They pick the stories based on how much ad revenue the story will bring. This can be a very flawed analysis-- Sometimes they are right on, other times they are way off the mark. Do you ever watch the news and wonder why they spent 30 seconds on an important news story while discussing Star Wars for 3 minutes?
There is a disconnect between what the viewers find interesting, and what the news editors believes that the viewers will find interesting. It's a somewhat flawed model.
News.google.com and the Google Personalized Homepage works differently--there is no news editors. The top news stories make it to the top of the list because people find the stories more interesting, and click on those links more often. Google analyzes the viewer's behavior to determine which headlines should be at the top of the page. Everything is done programmatically, and some people claim it's more democratic.
For instance, the morning of the Spanish Train Bombings the Spanish Government first blamed the bombings on the Basque separatists. As such, the news was not very interesting to the news editors at CNN, MSNBC, Good Morning America, etc. The big news stations and news websites were mostly discussing results of American Idol and the Laci Peterson Murder Trial. Later, when Al Qaida entered the picture, the news stations started covering the Train Bombings nonstop. All of a
On the other hand, News.google.com always had the headlines in the correct order-- as the visitors selected the news-- Spanish Train Bombings were top topics, Laci Peterson & American Idol were way at the bottom of the list. Google's model works pretty well.
I remember this pretty clearly-- I could not find any news on the Train Bombings for an hour, except for one line of scrolling text at the bottom of the screen.
"Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
The guys at Google did stuff differently from the way you'd have done it if you had been in charge.
The only thing I take from that is, they were monumentally successful, and you're talking down to them about "putting food on the table."
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
This is probably the most ignorant post about Linux I have ever read. I love the way he bashes the GPL for not generating money when the philosophy of the GPL is not to just make money, but to better society. I also love how he ignores that most GPLed software is written by coders who are paid to write it. Remind me where in the GPL it says that you cannot sell a product under the GPL? It is possible to release source and make money. Damn flamebait.
-Glitch "We all know Linux is great...it does infinite loops in 5 seconds." - Linus Torvalds
It's Berkeley Software Distribution. Stanford would rather jump off a cliff....
First, do you have some magic method you want to share for automatically logging into, and staying logged onto, an account-based service w/o cookies?
Wow! The 1K max size cookie on my computer stores the IP and info of every single search that is done on google?
Forget search revenues, they need to patent and sell that compression algorithm!
Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
I don't think "$300 / seat for something proprietary" really matters that much. Even if they re-bought that license every single year, it is less than $1/day to match whatever they are paying the butt that sits in the seat.
I think you are missing a couple of things. First off, Google wasn't always a multibillion dollar company. They were a startup first, and when you are a startup with no revenue, capital is damn scarce. In that environment, avoiding the cost of software licenses is an obvious way to economize.
Fast forward to the day you start earning some revenue, and maybe even an operating profit. You have lots of demands for reinvesting the money for further growth. You could put some of it into software licenses for a commercial OS, and the costs of converting your infrastructure and porting your code, or you could put it into more hardware (for the cost of OS licenses, google could probably have bought 20-30% more capacity), to handle more customers, and more engineers, to improve your product, and marketing/sales to keep stoking your growth.
The biggest reason to go with a commercial vendor is that you can take advantage of the investment they are amortizing over a large sales volume. This can be a good thing if you have rather ordinary problems you are trying to solve, but someone like google (or amazon, etc) doesn't have ordinary problems, so they are forced to create their own solutions (which also gives them a competitive advantage). Overtime, the rest of the world might catch up to the point that commercial vendors now offer solutions, but again, the value you gain from replacing your existing solutions has to be weighed against the other things you could do with the money.
People *think* that when you type in a search and the previous search history comes up is a cookie. We know better of course :)
I had a mate who I convinced to use firefox and he complained that these "cookies" were staying there even when he told FF to remove them! Heh, the public have no idea sometimes :)
Can your karma go above being Excellent?
Is this why Google Earth, Google Desktop Bar, Google Web Accelerator all support Windoze only ? Google might be harnessing the power of Linux behind the scenes, but all of its innovations for desktop users are on M$ only. Granted, that they are Beta/Preview versions .. but Linux could be a great candidate too !
I did a contract job for Google over the past four days. There is a silver BMW M5 in the lot over by building 42 that has a license plate that says:
I[Heart]LINUX
I should have snapped a picture of that car with it's two little penquins in the back window. Poor little things are being subjected to 368 lb/ft of torque on a daily basis.
Storm Shadow "The Hook Up" http://www.pe
The history of your searches are not in the cookie. The cookie is a key to some data structure in a hash table or tree that resides in the server, which stores further information about you.
Please look into how this stuff works before you start posting.
The history of your searches are not in the cookie. The cookie is a key to some data structure in a hash table or tree that resides in the server, which stores further information about you.
And this key works even though I set Firefox to delete cookies at the end of each session and I regularly obtain a new IP from the DHCP server?
>>
I am the director, and this is my movie
And content rating preferences and so on. Or would you rather reset them each time? But unless you signed up for an actual account (e.g. gmail), Google had no idea who you were dispite the cookie. All it knew was that someone, somewhere, kept looking for free porn.
And I know how cookies and servers work. It's my job. But read the sentence, "...the same cookies [sic] that store the IP and info of every single search that is done on google."
Given that sentence, is it obvious that the OP understands these things? For that matter, was it not obvious from the tone of the reply that I was being just a little sarcastic?
Please reread the posts before responding to them...
Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
The formatting is screwed up, but it would take too long to fix it. All the information is there. You can see that Microsoft's own site won't stay up as long as the sites listed running Linux (those with known uptimes). There could be a lot of reasons for that, however; I'm sure Microsoft has some extra troubles just because it's so huge. Also note that not all Linux-run sites stay up much longer than Microsoft-run sites, but on average they seem to win hands down.
Esoteric reference.
I believe that it's different because they're not trying to hide what they collect, and why, from anyone.
I almost got my ass kicked for using the word "borgware" today.
Prior to my getting hired by the company I presently work for, there was a painful BSA audit. I can say with 100$ certainty that the BSA is the main reason for our migration to Linux.
There are *noone* sitting in the "seat" infront of 99% of Googles machines. That's the point you're missing.
We had a Google rep. come visit us at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm in April or so, to round up fresh engineers.
As far as I remember it, they are now on version three of their cluster design, and today it is simply rack mounted machines like you find in any cluster, but up until and including version two it was simply motherboards stacked on top of each other. And like the grand parent said, they were never replaced simply because you couldn't get them out of the stack. So the dead ones were just sitting there.
He showed us a few photos of it, it looked worse than any geek closet I have ever seen.
And many of those people would be Linux zealots.
And many of them would just be professionals with their feet on the ground. As surely as many Windows defenders are nothing but ignorant zealots. So what's your point ?
The "zealot" argument for dismissing some mass opinion doesn't hold ground for long now.
Their ingenuity lies both in being able to pick the right OS to go with and in being able to turn it to really suit their needs. Choosing Linux (or almost any free OS of that thime) let them have the right environment for customization and development. That's all that counts.
plenty of reasons for them to use Linux (or a BSD) without invoking massive technical superiority
I've always found the argumentation about Linux being only "good" because it's "free" absolutely ignorant. And besides that yes, there are plenty of professional and technical reasons to choose Linux/BSD/etc. for such a task over Windows or any/some closed sourced OSes of that time.
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
For bringing more people to Linux, I saw Hooray for unhappiness. here's how I think the whole process works:
Step 1 - Cluelessness - Buy Windows 95
Step 2 - Anger - Buy Windows NT
Step 3- Unhappiness - move to Linux
Step 4 - Confusion - move to Macintosh
Step 5 - Bankruptcy - move to Tibet and become a Buddhist monk.
You heard it hear first, folks. move to Tibet now before the rush comes in!
What is this gmail system? You mean you don't have your own email system on your own website? What, has Slashdot been taken over by a herd of little old ladies in flower hats?
"Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
I wouldn't say a world of search features but it's definitely handy.
Are you telling me that a webserver actually logs a requesting IP address? Does this apply to all websites?
Man, I'm trading in my computer for an abacus.
BTW, what does a webserver logging IP addresses have to do with the CEO's personal information?
"Teleporting Rodents with D-Cell Battery Displacement" theory -- IgnoramusMaximus (692000)
If you look, most BSD's have a "lite" version, and a pro version, and you get the lite for free, and the pro version requires money.
What. Mind pointing out evidence of that? Because I've used FreeBSD and OpenBSD and there's absolutely no mention of free and pro versions of it. Well, I've heard of a free version, and a pro version, but since they're the same thing, I don't think you can really call them versions. You want a BSD? You go download it. You want to support the developers? Buy the CDs, but remember that you're getting exactly the same OS as you would if you'd just downloaded it.
Free and Pro versions of "most BSD's"??? Have you even gone to their websites, much less used them?
Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
They're required by GPL to distribute the kernel mods if they distribute the kernel.
Somehow I doubt they need to give away the software, and as GPL allows, use the modified version "only internally" at the company.
That everyone with a net access over the planet can benefit of those "mods" is irrelevant. They aren't redistributing nor selling their modified kernel.
Simply store the one TRUE cookie in the login context and use that cookie to 'bind' them all or to replace as necessary.
One Cookie to Rule Them All
One Cookie to find them
One Cookie to bring them all
and in the OS bind them.
"I drank what?" - Socrates
I really can't wait for the day when you don't have to justify why you use anything other than Microsoft's products.
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
We have found that regular chairs work fine for this.
WWJD for a Klondike Bar?
OSS Software's advantages are often cited as being 1: free, and 2: Open. Both of these are strong advantages in some situations, but not necessarily in all. Most companies aren't firstly concerned with direct purchase price. In fact, many OSS projects have commercial components that provide custimization and support for a fee. Open software is a strong pull for those of use in the software field, but usually doesn't translate for the end user of software directly.
For me, the biggest advantage of OSS is that of availability and access. If I need a widget right now to solve a problem, I don't have to go through a formal purchase process with PO's and the like, I can just find what I need NOW. Then the other advantages kick in, because I can now modify it to exactly meet my needs. Yes, this translates to price via time saved, but not actual dollars. And yes, we do support OSS project with cash.
}#q NO CARRIER