Microsoft To Open Source Some of Silverlight
Kurtz writes with word that Microsoft is about to follow in Adobe's footsteps by releasing the source code to part of its Silverlight technology. The news comes less than a week after Adobe announced plans to open source the Flex SDK. Microsoft is hungry to build the developer base for its rich Internet app tools, if it can.
So RTFA - but none of it's official, there are no details other then a little about the market space. In fact I suspect the discussion on Slashdot will be more interesting.
The rock, the vulture, and the chain
Call me cynical, but...
...
Then refuse to allow it on any operating system but Windows?
They..
Get behind their new technology and push
Use every leverage they can to promote it to their "partners"
Give away source code under a restrictive license
Give away development tools
Wait until it is a eb de-facto standard
Flash works, Flash movies work, Flash is ubiquitous, Linux/OSX support it, Everybody knows it. So why do we need anything else?
The underlying argument goes like this: when a technology is established and "good enough" for everyday use then nobody needs to fix what is not broken.
No, they will just open source the simple bits that Mono already has mostly sorted out, leaving a fairly small but extremely critical patent-encumbered bit (video codec, maybe) that prevents anyone else making a useful implementation.
The PR people will then jump around saying Microsoft==open!!!eleven!. Do you see?
"To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
Microsoft is anti everything the internet stands for.
.Net stacks and the dotcoms will laugh and fart in their general direction.
The Internet is for open, platform neutral communcation.
Microsoft if for closed source mono-culture.
The internet is for the creation of new tools, paradigms and technology by anyone for anyone.
Microsoft is all about where they think you want to go today.
Fact is, Microsoft has made it their mission to break everything they possibly can, whether it be standard, language or platform.
If it's not from microsoft, they want to kill it.
So any developer that sincerely uses MS in anything but their server-side stack is a user hating pro-MS pundit that wants to try to force their user base to use Windows and Windows related products. And personally, has no business whatsoever calling themselves a web developer. Anti-web developer is more like it.
So I don't care what MS does. A psychopathic culture can not be changed.
And MS has always been and always will be a psychopathic culture, feigning to be "nice" if it thinks it there is something in it for them.
Adobe has been quite sincere and has done some great things with Flex, Apollo and will also be creating some nifty webservices.
Buying Macromedia was a great move and wise to insure that technologies such as Flash, Flex and Director lived on and became more prominant.
Microsoft on the other hand is reviled and dying a public death in the online marketplace.
MSN and it's related services are a joke. Online music? maps? Online calender? Search?
MS will tie their apps to Vista Servers and
I am happy to see MS blowing wads of money on what is bound to be yet another failure.
Been there, done that. M$ is trying to do an ActiveX 2.0. Too late. I for one welcome our new Adobe overlords!
Microsoft has been using open source for some time, albeit sometimes with restrictive licenses, but rarely has any of it been useful for anything but developers already committed to Microsoft's platform.
... people are interested in what open source does for them. Open source frees them from dependence on a single vendor, it frees them from license fees and royalties, it allows them to share responsibility with a large pool of like-minded developers, and so on. Open source products tied to a single vendor, whether it's hardware (like a Linux-based set-top box or PDA) or software (one of Microsof's efforts was an open-source installer for Windows applications) is only going to be interesting if it's useful for the things they're already doing.
There are several reasons people may be interested in open source, but they all have one thing in common
Open-sourcing *part* of a product, when you're potentially going to have to pay Microsoft to use the rest (the price I read was the first million users free, then 25 cents per user after that), is a pretty obvious poison pill.
What unfettered arrogance on behalf of the publication that's hosting it in believing that their hack paragraph on a minor tech story is worth a piece of tree - presumably they have a deal going with HP to use up as much ink as possible.
Techworld - a website I will never, at any time, ever visit again. Makes Flash, or its MS competitor, look positively non-invasive.
The submitter linked directly to the printer friendly version of the page - notice the printerfriendly=1 in the URL ? It's hardly "unfettered arrogance" for them to assume that anyone who clicks on their "Printer friendly version of this article" link might want to, you know, print the article. The fact that a slashdot submitter bypassed that step is not the fault of Techworld in any way, and to suggest a conspiracy with HP is just ridiculous!
As opposed to Adobe, who opens the SDK and gives away the player for free, but charges six or seven times the actual value of the product for server software.
The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.