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Torvalds on Linux and Microsoft

Sniper223 writes with a link to an interview on the Network World site with Linus Torvalds. Linus goes through the usual spiel about stuff like why he released the Linux OS in the first place, and how the future is open source. He also has some interesting commentary on the Microsoft/Novell deal: "I actually thought that whole discussion was interesting, not because of any Novell versus MS issues at all, but because all the people talking about them so clearly showed their own biases. The actual partnership itself seemed pretty much a nonissue to me, and not nearly as interesting as the reaction it got from people, and how it was reported ... I don't actually personally think the Novell-MS agreement kind of thing matters all that much in the end, but it's interesting to see the signs that the sides are at least talking to each other. I don't know what the end result will be, but I think it would be healthier for everybody if there wasn't the kind of rabid hatred on both sides. Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting." An interesting contrast to our earlier conversation.

363 comments

  1. Discussion by WK2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I actually thought that whole discussion was interesting, not because of any Novell versus MS issues at all, but because all the people talking about them so clearly showed their own biases.

    That is what a discussion is. A bunch of people giving their opinions, or "biases" as Linus calls them.

    --
    Write your own Choose Your Own Adventure. http://www.freegameengines.org/gamebook-engine/
    1. Re:Discussion by PenGun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In no way are opinions and biases the same. I could go on but I'm pretty sure it would act like water on a duck.

    2. Re:Discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah. It's interesting to see Linus talking about someone else's biases. He's never been shy of showing his own, so it's pretty ironic to see him accuse others of showing their own biases.

    3. Re:Discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      In no way are opinions and biases the same

      That's just your bias.
    4. Re:Discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      It was just a lame attempt at a joke, hence my posting AC. You don't need to try to disprove it.

      On another note:

      It's been 16 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment

      Jesus, how long do I have to wait before I can post?
    5. Re:Discussion by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Funny

      Somewhere between 16 and 29 minutes? Just a hunch...

    6. Re:Discussion by revengebomber · · Score: 5, Funny

      Jesus, how long do I have to wait before I can post? I'm sorry, Shiva controls posting restrictions.
      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    7. Re:Discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, Shiva's a dick.

  2. Not interesting... Yeah right. by robvangelder · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting.

    "When Microsoft writes an application for Linux, I've Won." - Linus Torvalds

    1. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Vulva+R.+Thompson,+P · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Just curious, anyone have a link to a list or interview containing this quote? Google indexed a number of sigs, but not a published source.

    2. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting.

      "When Microsoft writes an application for Linux, I've Won." - Linus Torvalds


      I think Torvalds' opinions and weight on FLOSS is way too over rated. Even Linux isn't anything unreplacable.
    3. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Not interesting... Yeah right.

      I actually think adoption is going at a fairly high rate, but what people sometimes miss is that there's just a huge inertia in switching operating systems, so MS Windows has a big advantage in just the historical installed base...
      MS has a really hard time competing on technical merit, and they traditionally have instead tried to compete on price, but that obviously doesn't work either, not against open source. So they'll continue to bundle packages and live off the inertia of the marketplace, but they want to feed that inertia with FUD.
      - Linus Torvalds, from TFA

      Linus has no illusions about Microsoft's motives or ethics. He simply believes that Linux is the better operating system, and therefore adoption of Linux is a fait accompli, and is inevitable given sufficient time.

      That's a fairly typical engineer's attitude, and ignores the enormous damage Microsoft is doing to the computing community while "inertia" is taking its course.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    4. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's like people who say "I have no interest in politics, I just want to [do whatever]". In Linus' case it is "write software". To many altruistic people it is "help people". To astronauts is "fly". The thing about politics is, even if you're not interested in it, it is interested in you. You either play the game or you bury your head in the sand. If you do, don't be surprised if you don't get to do what you want.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    5. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 2, Funny

      Even Linux isn't anything unreplacable.
      That's funny, because I could have sworn that GNU was having problems doing that with Hurd.

      You could go use OpenSolaris, though. Tell me how it works out for you.
      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    6. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by 808140 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To be fair to GNU, the reason they couldn't get Hurd off the ground had next to nothing to do with producing a kernel being a hard problem -- it had to do with engineering ideals, and wanting to write a kernel that did everything the "right" way, instead of the fast way. Unfortunately, the "right" way changed with each generation of academics. If you look around, there are literally thousands of multitasking kernels written by hackers in their spare time. They lack features, they don't run on much hardware, sure -- but don't compare Linux today to those projects. Compare the first kernel released to the public. What makes Linux special is not Linus, smart as he is -- what makes it special is mindshare. His kernel filled a void and he was in the right place at the right time.

      If Linux were destroyed, another kernel would rise in its place, probably overnight. You can count on it.

    7. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

      The problem I have is that you're dismissing the one real world comparison we have, which is between Linux and Hurd, with theoretical comparisons between how hurd might have developed and linux. I'll take the real world comparison every time and, to be honest, it all comes out sounding like sour grapes anyway.

    8. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by sycomonkey · · Score: 1

      Those two comments are not mutually exclusive if the game itself is uninteresting to him.

      --
      --The universe will not be altered by forum threads, even those which are very wry. --Tycho Brahe (Penny Arcade)
    9. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by inca34 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. Ignoring MS because they're not that interesting is the way to go. Actively hating on them all the time just wastes energy. Do something cool like... write a kernel that does stuff well... and not bemoan MS at the lack of doing anything else productive. At least, that's what I came away with.

    10. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      It also ignores history. Ask Motorola about the 68000 microprocessor sometime.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    11. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by NickFortune · · Score: 1

      It's like people who say "I have no interest in politics, I just want to [do whatever]". In Linus' case it is "write software".

      I suppose that's always been the FSF view if Linus. I don't think it's particularly fair, myself. Linus's attitude has never really been one of disinterest. He believes that the best technical solution will win out, and he's doing his best to provide that best solution. He believes in share and share alike. He believes that manufacturers' abuse of DRM technology is a problem but the thinks that changing the licence is a poor way to address that problem. He believes in striking a balance between commercial and technical issues, (as he says in TFA).

      These are all political positions.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    12. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      He believes that the best technical solution will win out, and he's doing his best to provide that best solution. He's wrong. Look around.

      He believes in share and share alike. He just doesn't believe in defending it.

      He believes that manufacturers' abuse of DRM technology is a problem but the thinks that changing the licence is a poor way to address that problem. As opposed to just ignoring it and hoping it goes away.

      He believes in striking a balance between commercial and technical issues. I didn't know the two were in conflict.

      These are all political positions. Uhhh.. no. They're not. At all. They're all a-political opinions. They're all "I don't think I have the right to tell other people to do the right thing" attitudes.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    13. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They're all "I don't think I have the right to tell other people to do the right thing" attitudes. One of his best qualities, too
    14. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by donpeyote · · Score: 0

      Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting. well i agree, some people get to excited about MS, but really, when he says they are not THAT interesting? liar... Huge profits, Huge use in desktop, servers, huge share in web servers and other tech, with so much great technologies, exchange, sharepoint, virtual pc,etc, etc, well maybe many are kind of copy pasted but still. Maybe this is the worst part about MS, they copy and impose...shame on them, trying to increase their profits, dont blame MS, blame the government, economy asis, people, or dont blame at all, just go on with your life, create peace in your home and make the best of it, and hope,pray and meditate and actually do something, maybe some day we can all live in a OpenSource Society :D (wow were all this came from??) sorry english not my mother language..

      --
      sorry for eventual bad english, not my mother language
    15. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      "Uhhh.. no. They're not. At all. They're all a-political opinions. They're all "I don't think I have the right to tell other people to do the right thing" attitudes."

      Yeah in other words he doesn't act like a superior know it all holier-than-thou jerk.

      You should try it sometime.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    16. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by NickFortune · · Score: 1

      He believes that the best technical solution will win out, and he's doing his best to provide that best solution.
      He's wrong. Look around.

      I don't think we have the final results in for that question. In any case, it's still a political position. Just because you don't agree with his stance, that doesn't mean he's "burying his head in the sand". It just means he doesn't agree with you, which is allowed, I believe.

      He believes in share and share alike.
      He just doesn't believe in defending it.

      Really? How do you figure that, then? He likes the GPLv2 because it encourages people to share their source code.

      He believes in striking a balance between commercial and technical issues.
      I didn't know the two were in conflict.

      Tell you what - boot up a windows machine sometime and look at all the stupid design decisions that have been made because MS let their marketing department make technical decisions. Then come back and tell me the same thing, if you can do it with straight face.

      These are all political positions.
      Uhhh.. no. They're not. At all

      So for something to be a political opinion, you have to believe in it first? You don't think you're being just the teensiest bit dogmatic and inflexible here?

      They're all "I don't think I have the right to tell other people to do the right thing" attitudes.

      Better "I don't have the right to tell you what to do" than "I have the right to tell you what do, and I'm always right".

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    17. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That's a fairly typical engineer's attitude, and ignores the enormous damage Microsoft is doing to the computing community while "inertia" is taking its course.
       
      This is nonsense, pure and simple. While MS may not produce the best OS out there the "enormous damage" that the have committed was what? Bringing PCs to Joe Sixpack? What is better; to open home computing and the internet to the masses or to produce a free OS?
       
      While you guys sit around, patting yourself on the back, just remember to ask yourself where the fuck was Linus and his bunch of fanbois while Gates was moving technology in a direction few had ever considered.
       
      The cool kids must be cool because they act smug about bashing a company that did more for computing on the human level then what a bunch of fanbois could have even considered 25 years ago when Gates was actually out there working in the field.

    18. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, the incredibly successful one? Or is there some other 68000 that you're talking about?

    19. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...just remember to ask yourself where the fuck was Linus and his bunch of fanbois while Gates was moving technology in a direction few had ever considered.

      Grade school, I think. Where were Gates, Allen, Ballmer et al when Von Neumann was formalizing the concepts of code and data?

      Also, Gates was moving technology in a direction that Apple, Commodore, Atari and Tandy were all considering at about the same time. The just succeeded where the others failed because IBM clones made IBM- (and thus MSDOS- and later Windows-) compatible hardware cheap enough for nearly anyone to afford.

    20. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by 808140 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, I don't think Hurd would have ever made it, and I'm not saying that if Linux were gone, Hurd would take its place. Hurd wasn't designed with real world principles in mind -- it was a moving target, an attempt to be "perfect". Everytime the Hurd guys get something working, they decide there's a better way to do what they're trying to do (they're usually right about this) so they rip it up and start all over. While that's great for a CS project, it's shitty for something that's meant to be a real world solution.

      It's not like Hurd and Linux are the only examples of OS kernels out there. In the UNIX world, there are all the BSDs -- these are released under a GPL-compatible license, so if Linux were gone, for example, one of the BSD kernels could be retrofitted with drivers from Linux and released under the GPL.

      Or, take, for example, ReactOS -- those guys, with nothing like the support that Linux has had, have managed to create a working clone of the NT kernel. And they're not just doing the kernel, either -- their aim is to clone all of Windows NT, so they're also doing the GUI, the shell, etc, you know, the whole thing. There are only a few of them -- if that project had half the mindshare of Linux, you'd have all the bugs ironed out in no time -- as is, you can already install it, boot it, and run programs, and it's probably more stable than Linus' first releases of Linux were.

      Someone else mentioned OpenSolaris -- until it gets GPL'd I wouldn't really trust it, but if the kernel guys wanted to start from scratch it could be a good stopgap until a proper, GPL'd system is running.

      That's just off the top of my head, but as I said in my previous post, there are lots of free operating system shells out there that boot and are ready for hacking on. As long as Linux exists, they'll always just be some guy's pet project, but if Linux weren't around, there's no reason to believe one of them wouldn't get mind share.

      Don't act like Linux and Hurd are the only two examples of a kernel out there -- there are lots of them. And don't make the mistake of thinking that writing a bootable OS is hard -- I (and many others) have written bootable OSs with virtual memory and task switching entirely in x86 assembly, so I don't think the community of people hacking Linux today (which is made up of people far smarter than I am) would be hard-pressed to get something going again if Linux died.

    21. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where were Gates, Allen, Ballmer et al when Von Neumann was formalizing the concepts of code and data?
       
      You're missing the point. I'm sure that Gates and crew weren't sitting around slagging their forerunners while they were busy building a company. Competition with contemporaries? Absolutely. But while the Linux fanbois are busy talking shit (and probably never writing a line of published code, btw) there are people out there actually doing the real work and not just heckling from the dark corners. So while you sit there and bad mouth Gates just remember it's probably Gates and Microsoft that helped big a big part of your soapbox.
       
      This doesn't mean that they're owed anything. It's just the reality of it all.
       
        Also, Gates was moving technology in a direction that Apple, Commodore, Atari and Tandy were all considering at about the same time. The just succeeded where the others failed because IBM clones made IBM- (and thus MSDOS- and later Windows-) compatible hardware cheap enough for nearly anyone to afford.
       
      Either you didn't live through this era or you're really short on memory. It wasn't until after the demise of the Amiga* and Atari that PCs became cheap. At least as cheap as owning an Amiga or Atari was. Even by today's standards low end Amigas and Ataris would probably still be cheaper then the Intel PC we have today. These companies failed with a decent product on their hands because, frankly, Atari and Commodore were looked on as toy companies by guys who were working on IBMs in their offices. A Commodore 64 or Amiga 500 was great for the 8 year old son to beat on but the office worker of 1987 probably never gave Commodore or Atari a second glance when he went to buy his first PC. It had nothing to do with the price of the machines.
       
      I've never been a big Apple fan myself. Nothing personal but I used Amigas and Ataris back in the day. Apple always seemed like a fairly reputable home PC but as I recall it was somewhat cost prohibitive. Not as bad as the IBM compatible units of the time but close enough.
       
      And Tandy? You got to be shitting me if you thought that was competition in the PC market of the time. Maybe TRSs were a few year before but right around the time that home PCs hit the level right above the hobbyist set Tandy had little going for them outside of their IBM clones. The CoCo was close to dead and with good reason, eight bit was at an end. And it's not that the CoCo could compete with with most machines at the time anyway.
       
      * Amiga died when CBM died. To say otherwise is to deny what was really great about the machines.

    22. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Nibs+Niven · · Score: 1

      "it's probably Gates and Microsoft that helped big a big part of your soapbox."

      I've been using computers since the punch-card days, before personal computers even existed. I can assure you that Bill Gates and Microsoft had very little to do with the initial format of the PC - it was a little company called IBM. Gates was just lucky enough to be in the right place at the right time. He didn't even write MS-DOS 1.0 - he bought it.

      As for where things went from there, it was pretty much the consumer that decided they wanted "IBM compatibility", which meant DOS compatibility. By the time version 4 of MSDOS was being written, Gates and company had already begun building in code that was specifically designed to sabotage competitors' applications. I've been a Gates hater ever since - and anyone else who was around back then who didn't have his head up his ass (or was an unapologetic fascist bootlicker like yourself) hated Gates too.

    23. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 1

      That's a fairly typical engineer's attitude, and ignores the enormous damage Microsoft is doing to the computing community while "inertia" is taking its course.
      That IMHO has always been Linus Torvald's biggest weak spot, blind spot even. And if I may expand upon it, it also affects people who keep to the BSD license over GPL. In spite of all evidence to the contrary, these people keep thinking that if everybody was nice to each other everything will be alright. I'm sorry, but "turn the other cheek" or "can't we all just get along" don't work in the real world. You have to stand up and fight back.
      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
    24. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      I suppose that's always been the FSF view if Linus.

      I'm guessing Stallman doesn't want people to think highly of Linus. It becomes difficult to obtain a sufficiently high amount of narcissistic supply if people admire someone else. As a narcissist, that's the last thing you want. You want people thinking that you and you alone are God; nobody else must be allowed to enter that picture at all.

    25. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by e2d2 · · Score: 1

      or was an unapologetic fascist bootlicker like yourself

      Gee, I wonder if this is what Linus is referring too when he says something about bias?

      Keep "serving the community" with hyperbole and irrational statements, it works wonders.

    26. Re:Not interesting... Yeah right. by NateTech · · Score: 1

      He's probably saying he has no interest in the distorted and twisted "politics" we see today, mostly based on who's paying off whom.

      That's not politics, that's just a high-paid, but very unstable, job.

      --
      +++OK ATH
  3. can you read me the url please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if only it was a joke, then again any site called *world.com usually is

    http://www.linuxworld.com/cgi-bin/mailto/x_linux.c gi?pagetosend=/export/home/httpd/linuxworld/news/2 007/080907-torvalds-on-linux-ms-softwares.html&pag ename=/news/2007/080907-torvalds-on-linux-ms-softw ares.html&pageurl=http://www.linuxworld.com/news/2 007/080907-torvalds-on-linux-ms-softwares.html&sit e=lw_general

    1. Re:can you read me the url please by DaveG,+the+Quantum+P · · Score: 1, Interesting

      So Linus doesn't care about a company spreading FUD about systems based on his kernel so they can essentially elicit protection money? If so, then I am disappointed in him.

    2. Re:can you read me the url please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No offense, but that's why he's Linus and you're a fanboy...

    3. Re:can you read me the url please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No offense, but that's why he's Linus and you're a fanboy... Actually I believe he's Linus because of Linus Pauling, but you were right about the second part at least.
    4. Re:can you read me the url please by NoMaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And why should he care? He's the originator and technical lead of a project, albeit one with his name firmly attached to it. He shouldn't care about anything Microsoft says or does, except maybe if/when they present evidence of 'his' kernel infringing on Microsoft's patents or copyright.

      Linux vendors, on the other hand... they might have reason to care about the FUD.

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
  4. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Omeger · · Score: 5, Funny

    Richard, is that you?

  5. Not Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "I think it would be healthier for everybody if there wasn't the kind of rabid hatred on both sides. Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think."

    And here we have a perfect example of why Microsoft has spent the last couple of decades utterly dominating their two main markets:

    1) Competitors who want to prove to the world that 'reasonable guys' and forever falling all over each other with the same tired old "maybe Microsoft isn't ALWAYS evil" BS

    2) Microsoft execs with a laser tight focus to destroy all that lie in their path and merciless action against any who threaten their marketshare and cashcows

    Apple(in the desktop OS market), Linux, the myriad failed office software vendors, Microsoft doesn't hate you, they DESPISE your weakness. Reminds me of that Mars Attacks! movie where the humans are open source developers and Microsoft are the Martians, except grandma's record collection isn't there to save you.

    It is crap like Linus just spewed that lets things like the Mono fiasco happen to the open source world.

    1. Re:Not Again by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's a lot in common with Microsoft's upper management and the Scientology crowd. Both are very focused in what they do (mass walletectomies), and both are utterly ruthless when it comes to extinguishing opposition.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Not Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Linus is a developer, and doesn't try to be some sort of idealist or software messiah. If he was trying to beat MS and spent all his time hating them then he wouldn't have time or energy to actually write code.

    3. Re:Not Again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There's a lot in common with Microsoft's upper management and the Scientology crowd.

      Congrats! You have just realised that Scientology is a ruthless business! However, Microsoft do not kill people even through inaction so it is a pretty nasty insult to compare the two on any more than a superficial level.

    4. Re:Not Again by ScrewMaster · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      However, Microsoft do not kill people even through inaction ...

      You're sure about that? And I'm under no compunction to avoid tossing a little nastiness in Microsoft's direction now and then. Besides, they're big boys, I'm sure they can handle the implied insult.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:Not Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that will get business to warm up to Linux, accusing Microsoft of murder. Stability is important to business - that includes mental stability. What is the point of bashing Microsoft? You want more people to use Linux? Then don't scare people away yourself. For the average person or business, accusing Microsoft of murder and devil worshipping and whatever is like acccusing Coca Cola of the same, you just look like a retard.

    6. Re:Not Again by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      A religion that isn't ruthless doesn't survive. Go ahead, look around, you'll see what I mean.

    7. Re:Not Again by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      However, Microsoft do not kill people even through inaction ...
      Well, they might, but the EULA absolves them of any and all liability...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    8. Re:Not Again by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      No, miguel de icaza spews all the crap needed to allow mono to happen to get it done. Don't drag Linus into that mess. He's gone on the record saying that he doesn't like gnome, so he's innocent on this one.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    9. Re:Not Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The level of hate directed against Microsoft is only sustainable by college children. Once you get a real job, family, a life, etc... you see how pointless this is. What actually is the fucking point of hating Microsoft? Do you hate Coca Cola? Or is it Pepsi? It really doesn't help Linux's cause with all the people spewing hatred towards Microsoft. Do you buy Pepsi because there are a bunch of elitist college punks that say Coke murders thier competitors? WTF? Pepsi says they are "cooler" than coke; Linux geeks say Microsoft is the epitome of evil. Yeah, that is going to work. If you have a fucking product to sell, then fucking sell it. The world HATES whiners.

    10. Re:Not Again by swokm · · Score: 1

      Aww, you forgot the most important similarity:

      Scientology was run by some guy that tried to create the Anti-Christ by diddling his best friends girlfriend.

      Microsoft is run by Steve Ballmer who, of course, IS that Anti-Christ.

    11. Re:Not Again by killjoe · · Score: 1

      MS accused open source developers of being communist and it didn't seem to hurt their business.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    12. Re:Not Again by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      except grandma's record collection isn't there to save you.

      Maybe it's just that no one tried? Quick, take your grammophones and go to Redmont!
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    13. Re:Not Again by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

      Isn't it a bit of a stretch to call Scientology a religion?

      At best it's a cult.

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    14. Re:Not Again by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because those militant Buddhists are everywhere. Add the Buddhists to Hindus, Jains and Sikhs, and you'll see that religions don't have to be "ruthless".

      Disclaimer, I'm a mildly religious Hindu.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    15. Re:Not Again by AndyCR · · Score: 1

      ...to get sued by the RIAA for "public performance of a copyrighted work". You just can't win in this world.

      --
      If there's anyone I hate more than stupid people, it's intellectuals.
    16. Re:Not Again by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

      Stability is important to business - that includes mental stability.

      Really? Steve Ballmer's "I'm gonna fucking kill Google!" chair-throwing tantrums don't seem to have scared any businesses away from Windows/Office, and he's a top executive not just some semi-anonymous slashdot poster.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    17. Re:Not Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is crap like Linus just spewed that lets things like the Mono fiasco happen to the open source world.

      Because god forbid Linux have a compiler for a very nice C-like language (that isn't Java). I hate having my choice of (standardised) languages and tools, really I do.

      Don't like it? Don't use it; it won't affect you. If Mono is a "fiasco" for the open source world than so are a lot of other projects.

  6. Look it up by dbIII · · Score: 0

    It's irritating when Linus is given all the credit for the operating system
    Wow - another guy that thinks we are using hurd (the gnu operating system) with a different kernel. I suggest looking up the textbook definition of operating system instead of going by "gut feel" or anything anyone in this discussion (including myself) says. It isn't very hard to tell the difference between an application and something that talks to the hardware.
    1. Re:Look it up by Anarke_Incarnate · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hurd is the kernel, GNU is the userspace.

    2. Re:Look it up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I think you missed the point.

    3. Re:Look it up by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, for an (Unix-like) operating systems there are two vital parts: the kernel and the C library (few programs communicate directly to the kernel; even language support libraries for other languages tend to go through the C library on Unix-like systems; also the C library is probably the one userspace component which is the most OS specific). The kernel on Linux systems is Linux. The C library is glibc, i.e. GNU. Thus it makes sense to call the system GNU/Linux.

      If it were for all the userland tools commonly used, I guess many current Linux installations would be more properly named KDE/X/Linux (although those running GNOME as desktop would be properly named GNU/X/Linux, since GNOME is GNU).

      Ok, maybe make it KDE/X/GNU/Linux ... no, that's clearly to long. But then, Linux already has an x, so we can just make that uppercase to properly attribute the X part of it. Also, KDE has the history of simply adding a K to the beginning of everything it touches.

      Only problem: Should it now be KNU/LinuX, or GNU/KLinuX?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:Look it up by dbIII · · Score: 1

      If it were for all the userland tools commonly used, I guess many current Linux installations would be more properly named KDE/X/Linux

      Most people who are still debating this have not heard of the old LiGnuX suggestion that was in the gnu newsletters long ago which is the same sort of idea. I found the argument a bit weak at the time and still do - just as I find the gnu/linux renaming argument a bit weak. Your impression may vary but I suggest taking a look at the gnu webpage and reading those bits of those newsletters.

      As far as I see it whoever puts a distribution together gets to name it - and gnu did not put a distro together since they do other stuff. There is a debian gnu/linux though.

    5. Re:Look it up by kabz · · Score: 1

      Good luck selling this to corporate with a name like GNU/Clinic !!!!

      --
      -- "It's not stalking if you're married!" My Wife.
    6. Re:Look it up by C0vardeAn0nim0 · · Score: 1

      we should name it "find /bin -name *"

      --
      What ? Me, worry ?
    7. Re:Look it up by clayne · · Score: 0

      If it were for all the userland tools commonly used, I guess many current Linux installations would be more properly named KDE/X/Linux

      Most people who are still debating this have not heard of the old LiGnuX suggestion that was in the gnu newsletters long ago which is the same sort of idea.

      How about GNUKlius while we're at it.

    8. Re:Look it up by jwo7777777 · · Score: 1

      KMuch Kado Kabout Knothing.

      KWho Kthe Kfuck Kgives Ka Kshit.

    9. Re:Look it up by adah · · Score: 1

      The kernel on Linux systems is Linux. The C library is glibc, i.e. GNU. Thus it makes sense to call the system GNU/Linux.

      Only that the C library is replaceable (there are other free and high-quality C libraries), while the Linux kernel is not (Hurd, are you there?).

  7. Linus has no foresight by QuantumG · · Score: 1, Interesting

    News at 11.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Linus has no foresight by Omnifarious · · Score: 0

      Well, I wouldn't say that exactly. But he doesn't seem to really understand the philosophy behind free software. Of course, he would agree with me and be rather proud of the fact. Philosophy isn't very pragmatic and Linus prides himself on his pragmatism.

      But IMHO, it leads him to make some pretty stupid decisions and be blind to the implications of vendor lock-in and restrictive licenses. I also think it's the reason why I could care less what he thinks of the GPLv3 or the various patent issues surrounding Linux. He just doesn't seem to get it.

    2. Re:Linus has no foresight by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Those implications may look very important but others are likely to have looked at them and dismissed them - I'm assuming you are talking up a storm aout the bitkeeper teacup? As for the US patent system - it's really a gamble based on what a jury in a small town in Texas has for lunch in some cases. It's a big world out there so that balances out - there's plenty of places where copyright is what it is about and not software patents.

    3. Re:Linus has no foresight by nevali · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, if you read the stuff he says, it's clear that he does get it, he just disagrees.

      He doesn't think people should have some god-given right to roll their own kernels on Tivos, for example, and he doesn't want to be the one to dictate that right to the people producing the Tivos, either.

      On the other hand, though, he's perfectly happy with other people building their own alternatives to Tivos, complete with custom Linux kernels, if that's what they want to do.

      Really, though, I get the impression his focus is really on x86 servers, where the software freedom thing isn't remotely as complicated and doesn't extend past the kernel into the firmware.

      In all honesty, I can't help but wonder if Linus would've been happier with the MIT license.

    4. Re:Linus has no foresight by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But IMHO, it leads him to make some pretty stupid decisions and be blind to the implications of vendor lock-in and restrictive licenses.

      I won't comment on "stupid," but being "blind" is usually the folly of those who stick to philosophies. I don't think Torvalds was blind to the implications of vendor lock-in, rather he assessed it and accepted it. Just as you probably do when you fly on a Boeing or AirBus jet run by proprietary closed-source software, or any of innumerable other things you do in "civilized" life. You may believe that opening those sources would result in a better airplane, but you accept the risk differential and wait for your peanuts.

    5. Re:Linus has no foresight by iminplaya · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He just doesn't seem to get it.

      Now, I don't know him from Adam, but maybe, to him, it just doesn't matter. I mean, what were his intentions? World domination? Or was it/is it just a fun hobby? If Linux was to be declared illegal tomorrow, he might just think, "Eh", and do something else. He appears quite capable of that. I can only assume he has a nice nest-egg built up. So would he suffer any great loss that he really cares about?

      --
      What?
    6. Re:Linus has no foresight by Dhalka226 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      This is one of the problems of the Free software movement. It's true to some degree of just about any group, but it seems that arrogance is just part of the religion with most Free software zealots.

      Very few people here would claim that Linus is not a smart individual, but if he doesn't buy into every aspect of the dogma, it must be because he simply doesn't understand it. There's this "holier than thou" attitude about the whole thing that clearly if you disagree you're too stupid to understand the issue properly. It can't be that Linus simply has weighed the issues and disagrees with you; clearly he's ignorant and making stupid decisions that leave him so blind he simply can not make the "right" decision.

      Fuck! Give me a break. You're free to disagree about it, but the attitude that any smart person would have to side with you is pure arrogance.

      I like open source/Free software in general. I run linux. I run a number of these tools on my Windows box as well. I do not think it is the best solution to every problem. I do not like the GPLv3. I do believe there are a number of problems with the implementations if not the philosophy behind them. More than anything I believe that this sort of arrogance is probably the biggest obstacle to more widespread adoption. The bottom line is that nobody likes to deal with people who have attitudes like this.

      But I guess that just makes me ignorant of somethingorother. The availability of the Kool-Aid, probably.

    7. Re:Linus has no foresight by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      QuantumG makes another retarded comment then runs. Not News.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    8. Re:Linus has no foresight by Eighty7 · · Score: 1

      Philosophy isn't very pragmatic and Linus prides himself on his pragmatism.

      But pragmatism is philosophy. It's a philosophy that says "lets make decisions based on short term practical concerns." It's another way to disregard people's desires without actually saying you disagree. If someone can't easily quantify how much some freedom means to him, do you automatically disregard it?

      Linus doesn't believe people should be able to run code without artifical hardware restrictions and should be called out on that instead of being allowed a pass due to 'pragmatism'.
    9. Re:Linus has no foresight by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Thus the lack of foresight comment. Thanks.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    10. Re:Linus has no foresight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In all honesty, I can't help but wonder if Linus would've been happier with the MIT license.

      No - simply because then he wouldn't get the source code to any changes. The source code is what he cares about, not the (new in GPL3) rights to run different versions of the code (i.e. install a new kernel for tivos). If you change the source code and distribute the result, that you have to provide your changed source code, which ie exactly you get in GPL2.

      If you want a custom tivo, buy (and support) the corresponding unlocked hardware, and then use tivo's modified source code.

    11. Re:Linus has no foresight by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Going by the theo reference, I'm gonna guess:

      AQ = Asshole quotient?

    12. Re:Linus has no foresight by Omnifarious · · Score: 0

      No, if you read the stuff he says, it's clear that he does get it, he just disagrees.

      He doesn't think people should have some god-given right to roll their own kernels on Tivos, for example, and he doesn't want to be the one to dictate that right to the people producing the Tivos, either.

      Then it seems to me that Linus is not particularly interested in living in a free society and he would prefer to live in one in which nobody was allowed to do anything with their own stuff that wasn't approved by the appropriate authorities. Because a world in which you can't dispose of your property in any manner you see fit is just such a world.

      If, in fact, he claims he does enjoy living in a free society, then it seems to me that he doesn't get it because he seems incapable of spotting the contradiction. If a society is to remain free, certain freedoms must be protected, and the freedom to make their Tivo run whatever software they want is one of those freedoms.

    13. Re:Linus has no foresight by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You have the freedom to make your Tivo do whatever you'd like. Don't confuse the Tivo-imposed difficulty in doing so with the lack of a right to do it. Just because Tivo goes out of their way to make it hard does not mean you have no right to try. Why should Linus care whether that you aren't smart enough to work out a way to avoid the restrictions? You still have the source for the kernel that Linus wrote and that Tivo modified. That's all he's ever cared about. Why should he care about anything else just because you do?

      I suppose Linus's freedom not to care isn't as important as your freedom to be an asshole.

    14. Re:Linus has no foresight by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Pragmatism has nothing to do with short-term vs. long-term. You only put that in there because you think Linus is an idiot for not seeing things your way. Thus you think that in the long term you will be proven right and that Linus will find himself to have been wrong. That's as stupid as most of the comments in this thread. It's kind of funny how in a discussion on "freedom" almost noone will admit that Linus is free to have his own opinions and that they aren't wrong in an absolute sense just because you are all selfish assholes.

      I have never released *any* code under an OS license. Have you? I doubt it.

    15. Re:Linus has no foresight by Omnifarious · · Score: 0

      You have the freedom to make your Tivo do whatever you'd like. Don't confuse the Tivo-imposed difficulty in doing so with the lack of a right to do it.

      I have two responses to this. First, you're wrong. It is illegal to modify your Tivo in this fashion. One of the purposes of the GPL in general is to work around broken copyright law by using it against itself. So I think it's perfectly reasonable for the GPLv3 to work around the DMCA by essentially stating that if you design your hardware in such a way as to be able to invoke it when people modify it then you may not use software covered by the GPLv3.

      My second response is that you can say much the same thing about binary only distributions. Just because the company doesn't distribute the source doesn't mean that a bright person can't reverse engineer the software anyway. So that means the requirement that the source be distributed is superfluous and unnecessary by your definition.

      I'm not particularly concerned with the maximum possible freedom that an inordinately clever person can extract. I'm interested in the freedom the average everyday human being has on a day-to-day basis. It is clear to me that Tivo-ization severely restricts this in ways that are incompatible with the free software definition. And the link between the free software definition and living in a free society in general is fairly strong, especially as software is becoming an ever larger part of our society.

      The fact that Linus doesn't care about this either tells me that he doesn't care about living in a free society or that he doesn't really understand the full implications of Tivo-ization. Which do you think it is?

  8. I'm not a Linux fan, but... by istartedi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The one thing he's known for, the Linux kernel, isn't something I particularly like (BSD--more liberal license, Windows--better desktop, Linux? I only use it because of work); but I tend to agree with him on a lot of things. That he would downplay the controversy, and point out that it only illustrates bias doesn't surprise me. He seems to have a gift for cooling things down, for steering clear of immature games and sticking to a clear analysis of the situation.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Unless he is the one who started them...
       
      gnome vs kde
      gpl2 vs gpl3
       
      Not that I disagree with him, perhaps his Finnish-ness makes him more blunt than most people.

    2. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by istartedi · · Score: 1

      Good point about gnome/kde. Nobody's perfect. As for v2/v3, it seems like a classic "dammned if you do, damned if you don't" situation.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    3. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Cathbard · · Score: 3, Informative

      BSD license is more liberal? Try so liberal that it is useless. RMS's GPL vision gives us protection against corporate parasites and without it FOSS would be nothing. Just look at the Dlink case if you don't understand the strength and advantages of the GPL.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    4. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by commernie · · Score: 1

      The one thing he's known for, the Linux kernel, isn't something I particularly like (BSD--more liberal license, Windows--better desktop... Let me get this straight. You don't like the Linux kernel because Windows has a better desktop? Boy, are you confused.
    5. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Climate+Shill · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that the Windows desktop will not run on the Linux kernel. So the confusion would seem to be yours.

    6. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Wordsmith · · Score: 1

      The BSD license does what it intends to do. It says it's alright if someone wants to go off and make a closed-source fork; no skin off the original project's nose. If the developers are OK with that, what's the problem?

      If the goal is to ensure all third-party distribution of derived code releases source back into the wild, the BSD license is a poor fit. But that's not what the BSD license is about. Multiple licenses for multiple aims.

    7. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

      He seems to have a gift for cooling things down, for steering clear of immature games and sticking to a clear analysis of the situation.

      That's why he'd make a shitty slashdotter.

    8. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by ryanisflyboy · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think that depends on how many beers he downs in any given 15 minute interval. The question is, who is the nicer Linus? The drunk one, or the sober one? My money is on the former.

    9. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by moderatorrater · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A lot of people (myself included) hated what gpl3 was doing, Linus was just the man who was the most vocal about it.

    10. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by trifish · · Score: 1

      He seems to have a gift for cooling things down

      I don't think so. I watched a video with his presenation on the new Git software where he stated that "They [SVN developers] were complete morons." He even knew that some of the SVN developers were in the audience. Not really what I would call a dimplomatic talent, let alone "gift for cooling things down".

      PS - I agree with him that Subversion pretty much sucks.

    11. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      Try so liberal that it is useless.


      It depends on what your purpose is. Are you trying to release your software in the most open way possible, or are you trying to encourage companies to give back when they take?

      RMS's GPL vision gives us protection against corporate parasites


      So fucking what? You call them parasites, I call them users. You don't seem to grasp that code is not a limited resource. Microsoft using my code DOES NOT in any way reduce the availability or utility of my code in general.

      You don't like the fact that companies don't have to give back under a BSD license. I'd like them to give back, too, but I don't want to force them to do so.

      Everything open-source that I have ever written is now available under a BSD license (some things have GPL code from other contributors, so the entire project remains GPL). I am sick and tired of RMS telling us that HE knows what's right for my users.

      You can pretty much whatever the hell you want with my code. That's the way I want it.
    12. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      Then you license it that way, I'll use GPL. If everyone did it your way FOSS would be insignificant. RMS has proved that he has a better handle on how things work and how to protect the FOSS community than anybody. The success of FOSS under GPL is all the proof I need to confirm that. You continue to work for corporations for free and I'll work for the community, ok?

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    13. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Please...do us a favour. Don't quote what is purely your own pro-FSF brainwashing, and then try and pass it off as fact. A lot of people also think that Rael or Sun Myung Moon is the Messiah, that you can get emotionally and spiritally clear via Dianetics, and that you can become a billionaire from being a distributor in Amway. I used to believe in the Easter bunny before my parents told me the truth at a certain age, as well.

      You might not realise it, but you and the above groups of people have a lot in common.

    14. Re:I'm not a Linux fan, but... by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      Well that was a pointless load of gibberish. Comparing a scam like dianetics designed to con money out of people with the FOSS movement that has produced all it has in such a cooperative and charitable way. Why don't you just compare frogs with horses? Nice trolling there.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
  9. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by thePsychologist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To be fair though, Linux (the kernel) is what started it all: without the kernel, the GNU tools would hardly be as advanced as they are today, because the Linux attracted so many people. Without the GNU tools, well there would be other programs to replace them. There are a LOT more people who can write a userland tool than a kernel. That's why Linus gets a lot of credit, because there are few other people who could have done what he did.

    --
    "What lies behind us, and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." Ralph Waldo Emerson
  10. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 1

    Agreed. For the developer, the kernel is the operating system. For the user they have all sorts of apps and things but when developing a "userland tool" when you're trying to interface with the OS you're trying to interface with the kernel. It's the basis of the whole OS and every single userland dev has to be familiar with the kernel, not each others tools.

  11. Whether or not by Bullfish · · Score: 4, Insightful

    you like Linus, he is right that the hate for hate's sake between some (and I stress some) Linux and MS users helps nothing. Beyond that, as he is the creator of the kernel, I see him as a parent watching his kid grow up to be something he didn't envision or desire for it. He needs to learn to let go, Linux now belongs to the community.

    1. Re:Whether or not by GPL+Apostate · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the hate for hate's sake between some (and I stress some) Linux and MS users helps nothing.

      Actually, anything that keeps that group of people off on the side battling each other in their chosen little advocacy 'arenas' is good for the rest of us.

      In classic USENET lore, the alt.os.*.advocacy newsgroups were a dumping ground to push the tards onto so everyone else could hold grown up discussions.

      Thence we see one of the real problems with Slashdot. Where to park those folks so they're out of the way.

      --
      Microsoft says legacy (serial/parallel) ports are bad. They don't obfuscate the hardware enough.
    2. Re:Whether or not by debiansid · · Score: 1

      Linux now belongs to the community.


      Not really. You've probably forgotten that Linux is a trademark owned by Linus. Either ways, I don't think the kernel developer community (or the kernel for that matter) would remain the same without Linus.
    3. Re:Whether or not by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 1

      In classic USENET lore, the alt.os.*.advocacy newsgroups were a dumping ground to push the tards onto so everyone else could hold grown up discussions.
      Umm... you didn't just describe Slashdot, did you?
      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
  12. Discussion-Omission. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That is what a discussion is. A bunch of people giving their opinions, or "biases" as Linus calls them."

    Interesting how "facts" get left out of that definition.

  13. More whitewashing and fence-sitting by toby · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...which is just not helpful.

    Let's see them for what they are: Organised crime. One day justice will be done, Microsoft will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by Chineseyes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Let's see them for what they are: Organised crime. One day justice will be done, Muslims will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.
      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, America will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.
      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, Jews will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.
      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, Gays will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.
      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, Blacks will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.

      Extremism serves no one. And yes I do realize the discussion of Linux and Microsoft is not comparable to the examples above, but you sound no less ridiculous.

      --
      I think the invisible hand of the market has its middle finger extended

      --A wise old fart named SC0RN
    2. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not only ridicoulus but offensive...while it's 'only' software
      the whole situation is FUD'ded with one fanboy on the right and on the left..
      gee ... noone could tell me linux is not the perfect OS for
      my needs,desires and pleasures, i still would not go around
      spewing that as my one-fits-all philosophy as some MS fanboys do (and saddly, even them FOSS devs sometimes do).

      but Linus's right, who really takes MS seriously...
      well , ...maybe managers and the likes , e.g. those of minimal complexion and wisdom ;)

    3. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 1

      More whitewashing and fence-sitting ...which is just not helpful.

      Let's see them for what they are: Organised crime. One day justice will be done, Microsoft will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it. I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and assume your post is deliberately ironic. ...The other possibility is too depressing to contemplate.
      --
      Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
    4. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think it's ironic that so many people defend microsoft's illegal practices and policies. It's funny how people can see things in shades of grey when associated with a big entity (government or corporation) but everything is black and white when it comes to individuals. Just because MS products are more popular and it may seem easier to use/support MS in some cases doesn't make it more justified. They are a giant corporation who can afford to "lose" some money to competition which is why it's more outrageous when they break the law. Why is their management punished so much less than someone who robs a bank or sells drugs out of desperation? That person who robbed the bank/sold drugs is always considered a criminal eventhough they almost always had way fewer options than a big entity does, eventhough in the long run the robbery/drugs affects way fewer people and the criminal has way fewer options. Why does the big entity get defended more? Is it because the big entity is less criminal or because more people think it's in their own best interest to defend them?

    5. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      I *really* need to stop posting these so zealously and preview/format appropratiely, haha. Let's just pretend the paragraph breaks are there ;)

    6. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude - you are right on the money! I'm so sick of these retarded fanboi slugfests on /. Where have all the geeks gone? Nobody seems to have an informed opinion anymore! oh mods -- please mod parent way up!

    7. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      It's funny how people can see things in shades of grey

      But it is in shades of gray dude..

      Firstly antitrust law is actually very murky territory. Prior to the antitrust cases, expecting the execs and sales people to be aware 100% of the time that some (potentially dirty tactic) is an antitrust violation isn't realistic IMHO. For example, if Apple has a monopoly of the MP3 player market and they refuse to license FairPlay, thereby leveraging their monopoly to expand into the online music sales market, is that illegal or not? Maybe it's illegal when iPods have 80% of the market but legal if they only have 65%?

      Next, many countries don't even have antitrust laws. And even in the US, a company actually getting hauled up for anti-competitive behavior tells you more about the lobbying dollars spent by its competitors to get congress to ask the Justice Department to look into it, than anything else.

      I don't mean any of this to condone M$ actions - penalizing a vendor for offering alternatives to windows is not nice. (though with over 30% of windows copies being pirated - IMHO they do have a limb to stand on when they say "don't sell a PC without an OS on it". Not a strong limb, but a limb nonetheless).

      I don't even mean this to be a defense for any of their subtle protocol-changing dirty tricks etc. But the fact remains that all companies do nasty things like this all the time. That's why it's all shades of grey.

      Why does the big entity get defended more? It doesn't! Quite the reverse from what I see on this thread..
    8. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by Almahtar · · Score: 2

      Why is their management punished so much less than someone who robs a bank or sells drugs out of desperation? Because they're rich.
    9. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, Organized Criminals will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.

      That is all, nothing more.

    10. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by swokm · · Score: 1

      How is asking MS to be a good citizen 'extreme'? Why SHOULD the community accept someone that is so active anti-social?

      That would be 'extremely' stupid. Anyone here could give a million examples of what MS has done in the past, but most would work with them right now if they committed to acting properly. Being silly with OpenGL on Vista (initially), the whole OOXML thing, the SBA and the way they treat their own customers -- it still goes on and on...

      I think I have an open mind and forgiving heart, but I'm not an idiot. I don't trust them yet just because some PR agent or even Linus says I should. How is that extreme?

    11. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by a.d.trick · · Score: 1

      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, Extremists will be obliterated and the world will be a better place for it.

      :head asplodes:

    12. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

      Seriously, it's because the laws and policies of American society are built upon the premise of class warfare. Rich individuals use corporations to shield themselves from the repercussions of their actions. It's a feature, not a bug. It's that simple: a wealthy and powerful elite using a political and economic system that allows them to exploit the lower classes with impunity. It's all about power, and who's wielding it.

    13. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      Do you know how many times I've heard LEO or judges say "ignorance of the law is no excuse" or some such? I suppose that only applies to petty/poor criminals as well. All though I don't feel it is an exactly fair outlook I do believe the law should be applied fairly to everyone regardless number of lawyers, total income or position in society.

      It doesn't get defended more? How many of the people who so passionately defend M$ would even think twice about or feel sorry for a drug dealer who gives a small few the option to hurt themselves rather than intentionally lie to/mislead great masses into hurting themselves or forcing them out of business (and their employees out of income)? Because they are rich the completely apathetic/complacent beliefs our society has come to embrace pretty much gives them right to get away with whatever they want? Because a bunch of people got screwed repeatedly growing up it becomes an accepted fact of life to be embraced as long as you are doing the screwing or someone else is getting screwed? This endorsement of abuse of authority will screw everyone in the long run, not just the few you hear about. We are all be silently screwed whether we like to admit it and defending it only exacerbates the problem until enough people voice their opinions and demand action.

      In the mean time, MS and the like are helping to create more individuals who are more likely to become desperate to the point of committing crime (just look at the piracy caused by overpriced software and the potential poverty inflicted on the families of employees of businesses they screwed). Since they are more desperate and have fewer options they seem more likely to be indiscriminate and therefore more of a personal threat which I suspect is why so many people who dismiss MS's more harmful actions hold the petty crooks with such contempt...

      The simple fact of the matter is such monopolistic practices cost way more damage and affect way more people than the crimes of many people who are spending decades in prison and it's a total injustice for so many people to defend them.

      The guy who started this thread may be modded as a troll, but he isn't the one who burned most of the bridges, charges $200 tolls for the one he lives under and attempts to kill anyone who tries to build more

    14. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      A feature to the wealthy 10-20% of the population, a bug for the rest. It will become more apparent as the rich percentile gets lower and wealthier, forcing the rest to suffer more. I hope that by the "feature" statement you weren't indicating approval. Hopefully it won't take *too* much longer for everyone to get fed up enough to start protesting/boycotting more, thereby helping to fuel competition while concurrently informing monopolistic/criminal companies that their actions aren't tolerated and that their client base cares more about credibility and technical innovation than marketing schemes and business size.

    15. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify: no, I certainly didn't mean to imply approval! What do ya think I am, a libertarian? ;) I was just trying to point out that the differences in punishment meted out to petty criminals versus white collar criminals is an intentional element of a system that rewards and protects the upper classes in exploiting the lower. It's doing what it's meant to. I'm not so sure, however, that merely boycotting certain companies is much of a solution. If people want change, they will have to pursue it at least partly in the political arena, I suspect. The elite have no problem fighting in that arena. What's needed is a sustained critique and challenge to (the contemporary construction of) capitalism itself, I suspect. I don't know exactly what shape or form that movement will take, but I personally doubt we'll see it within the US anytime soon at all. Change is much more likely, I think, to originate in other parts of the world where US (and capitalistic in general) ideology and exploitation is not so ingrained. I think the US is more likely to collapse into something unrecognizable than to transform itself into a more just and egalitarian society. Political and economic power may be too firmly intertwined and entrenched for moderate reforms to stand a chance.

    16. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      ...the law should be applied fairly to everyone regardless... Strongly agreed. I didn't suggest that the outcome of the antitrust cases should have been different. M$ violated whatever laws, got it's ass hauled into court, and got penalized.

      My point was: Every business leverages everything it can for an advantage (synergy between product lines, undercutting competitors, exclusivity contracts, negative advertising etc. - it's all fair game). After you cross a certain market share threshold, there's this code of ethics that is supposed to apply to you, but not to your competitors. This 'code of ethics' isn't always clear because there are many arguments that can be made about what constitutes 'leveraging a monopoly' -- that's why it's shades of gray -- I belive that's what you mentioned: "it's funny how people can see things in shades of grey".

      It doesn't get defended more? No, it doesn't.. just tally up the pro-MS, anti-MS stuff in the thread. Public opinion is strongly against MS. I'm not saying it shouldn't be. I get the feeling you're passionately anti-MS so you're getting annoyed a lot more by the pro-MS posts and taking more note of them (no offence - if I'm wrong, I apologise). But again, the antitrust issue has shades of grey -- to expect zero posts supporting MS is unrealistic. To expect a minority (say 30%) is much more realistic.

      How many of the people who so passionately defend M$ would even think twice about or feel sorry for a drug dealer That's completely unrelated, and no point continuing down that thread.. There are all kinds of drug dealers - some you can feel sorry for and some maybe not. There are arguments for legalizing all controlled substances, and arguments for banning them all.. More shades of grey here as well..

      We are all be silently screwed whether we like to admit it and defending it only exacerbates the problem How so? If you don't like windows don't use it. The common response is, "your average non-geek buys a budget PC for email and net use -- and has to get windows on it". Well, I don't see that as people "getting silently screwed". This budget PC will do what it's supposed to do. The cost of windows on that PC was about $50 -- so nothing took place that bears comparison with drug peddling/killing/whatever. OEM's haven't offered linux as an option -- that's on them (or on Linux for not appearing to be a viable alternative). For the last 7 years (since the antitrust judgement) MS has not had the ability to penalize OEMs for offering alternatives to Windows. If Apple was historically absent from the budget PC segment -- well -- that's on them.

      In the mean time, MS and the like are helping to create more individuals who are more likely to become desperate to the point of committing crime (just look at the piracy caused by overpriced software and the potential poverty inflicted on the families of employees of businesses they screwed). That's overly dramatic. People don't pirate stuff because they are 'desperate to the point of committing a crime'. Like getting that latest song using a P2P app (instead of getting the single from iTunes) was an act of desperation. And why do you not feel that, say, Apple charging $1500 for a laptop drives people to poverty? You give MS too much credit -- in the big picture of US/world poverty, Windows license fees are just noise.

      The guy who started this thread may be modded as a troll, but he isn't the one who burned most of the bridges, charges $200 tolls for the one he lives under and attempts to kill anyone who tries to build more Parent was indeed a troll. (for calling for MS to be obliterated). And when you say MS "...attempts to kill anyone who..." you are trolling as well.
    17. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      Your point about businesses law being a bit harder to interpret and varying more is relevant to some degree but doesn't really address *my* point. MS screws over 10 million people and costs people/businesses like $500k in one swift blow (as a hypothetic example). This damage is the result of their [feigned] ignorance of some law/regulation. For retribution, they are forced to pay .005% of the profit they make in 1 month. If a hypothetical drug dealer gets busted selling selling a gram of crack to a crackhead, he is only costing that one crackhead like $50 (or however much a gram of crack costs) and is only directly hurting that one individual as far as can be legally proven/known. However, the crack dealer is automatically taken to jail no matter what and, if he cannot afford bail, will very likely have to spend at least a year incarcerated in most jurisdictions and pay like 10-50% of his entire monthly income. This also affects his family by removing whatever income he might have provided.

      Why do MS and other white collar criminals get penalized so little for causing so much more harm? In my mind intentional deceit and apathy makes their crime 10x worse than the drug dealer's crime or any crime of desperation.

      "No, it doesn't.. just tally up the pro-MS, anti-MS stuff in the thread. Public opinion is strongly against MS. I'm not saying it shouldn't be. I get the feeling you're passionately anti-MS so you're getting annoyed a lot more by the pro-MS posts and taking more note of them (no offence - if I'm wrong, I apologise). But again, the antitrust issue has shades of grey -- to expect zero posts supporting MS is unrealistic. To expect a minority (say 30%) is much more realistic."

      Well, this is slashdot you're talking about, I'm thinking more of society in general and in business. Despite being directly lied to and misled repeatedly for decades most people or businesses (including many on /.) would trust MS over a majority of other entities. This whole notion that "anything goes in capitalist businesses/society" is no excuse IMO, and it's destructive both in the long and short term. People need to overcome this whole survival of the fittest ideology. It doesn't apply to everything and is mostly only applicable to nature and *gasp* humanity is the most unnatural thing in nature. We need to grow a pair and start living up to our human values rather than ignore them and attribute some unalterable cycle of repetition based on the past and other animals. We aren't those animals and the past doesn't have to repeat. We are ultimately responsible for our future and what happens to our society and that doesn't change all at once but it also doesn't change from accepting/supporting it.

      "That's completely unrelated, and no point continuing down that thread.. There are all kinds of drug dealers - some you can feel sorry for and some maybe not. There are arguments for legalizing all controlled substances, and arguments for banning them all.. More shades of grey here as well."

      It is relevant/related IMO. Society shuns one offense and punishes it more despite causing much less damage. That is the entire basis of my post. That shade of grey surrounding a dealer who gives freedom (from pain, reality, monotony and of choice and because of desperation) is much lighter than the shade that surrounds the giant company that intentionally deceives everyone and tries to force all competition out of business without regard for those it's hurting or their freedoms. Pointing that out is my entire point in posting. There is nothing wrong with calling MS criminal when they are committing more harmful crimes (in so far as the number of people they affect but also the degree of harm in many cases) than most of the people currently incarcerated.

      "How so? If you don't like windows don't use it. The common response is, "your average non-geek buys a budget PC for email and net use -- and has to get windows on it". Well, I don't see that as people "getting silent

    18. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by dhavleak · · Score: 1
      Sinthetek,

      The MS/white-collar-crime/drug dealers thread is really difficult to agree with. It's impractical for me to refute everything, so let me summarize by saying you draw too many conclusions based on hypothetic situations, and take too many things as being absolute that are far from it.

      Let me just concentrate on this instead:

      Hrm... you dont' see perversion of standards as being screwed? What about the resulting lack of software choices that result? Perhaps the choices that might have been provided by one of the companies they put out of business? Maybe I miss the ability to buy hardware that is compatible with my os. I consider all of that being screwed because they are all freedoms that would exist (or at least be a lot more likely to) if MS or other giant corps didn't exist or engage in their current practices. I also consider being forced to work in POS MS environments to pursue my career being screwed (and trying to work out the problems they introduce with their products because their own development teams apparently cant).

      No. Whether its blue-screens, poor standards compliance, philosophical difference about proprietary software, any other problem -- everybody has a simple choice -- don't run windows if you don't like it. The lack of compelling alternatives is not MS's fault. It is the fault of their competitors.

      You have choices for all the things you're complaining about. You can choose to be a dev for a FOSS project, or work on J2EE related technologies, or Apple/IBM/Sun/whatever technologies. Like it or not, if MS is present everywhere it simply means that they're doing a good job. This answer might upset you, but it's the simple truth. Nobody used to use IIS as a webserver in critical scenarios until a few years ago -- because it sucked. IIS adoption is on the up now, because it doesn't suck now. Nobody used to use SQL server until 7 or 8 years ago because it sucked. Nobody used to use Macs 9 years ago because they sucked. People don't like things that suck.

      I don't even understand what you mean when you say you "miss the ability to buy hardware that is compatible with my os". By OS do you mean windows or linux? Even with the current issues Vista is going through, windows hardware support is phenomenal. MS has done a fantastic job of keeping their driver model stable over the years, working with vendors when there are changes, etc. And with windows being present on 90% of machines, it's obvious that any vendors 1st priority is windows drivers. There's no blame to assign for this, and no apologies to be made.

      Now, if you're complaining about lack of Linux drivers -- well, by what logic can you blame that on MS?

      Even when you talk about poverty inflicted on families of companies forced out of business by MS, this is completely non sequitur on your part. By that logic, any time you interview for a job and succeed in getting it, you are inflicting poverty on those who didn't get it. Or the Japanese car makers are inflicting poverty on the employees of GM/Ford/Chrysler. Companies don't go belly-up overnight. They know when they're making crap products, and they know the competitive landscape and what it means in terms of how long they can survive if they don't get their stuff together. Nobody is *entitled* to having 'x' slice of a market so they can survive no matter how non-viable their products are.

      Nothing illustrates this example better than Firefox. They came into a market which was pretty much owned by IE (90%+). IE already shipped with windows, and was set as the default on virtually everyones computer. Yet they have been gaining market share for the last 4 years by making a superior product.

      Now when Netscape started getting challenged by IE, at that time Netscape had 90% of the market already. Even if IE shipped as a part of windows at the very least Netscape was already the incumbent. How come Firefox can thrive from such a disadvantaged position whereas Netscape sank from such an advantageous position?

      The

    19. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      "No. Whether its blue-screens, poor standards compliance, philosophical difference about proprietary software, any other problem -- everybody has a simple choice -- don't run windows if you don't like it. The lack of compelling alternatives is not MS's fault. It is the fault of their competitors"

      That is somewhat debatable. Whether it was legal for them to do so or not, it is still wrong/unethical IMO for them to ever force OEMs to sale only Windows and by doing so it has tainted the entire industry, over time, for most of it's competitors. MS may have originally gotten to number 1 because of the quality of their software but that quality quickly deteriorated and it has since maintained itself primarily on it's own past popularity, marketing and questionable/unethical business practices. The lack of compelling alternatives most certain is MS's fault if/when those alternatives *did* exist and MS intentionally went of their way to squash them by other means than technical merit (ie patent-squatting, exclusive contracts, closed protocols, coercing higher-education institutions to incorporate MS-only curriculums in their science and business departments, etc).

      "I don't even understand what you mean when you say you "miss the ability to buy hardware that is compatible with my os". By OS do you mean windows or linux? Even with the current issues Vista is going through, windows hardware support is phenomenal. MS has done a fantastic job of keeping their driver model stable over the years, working with vendors when there are changes, etc. And with windows being present on 90% of machines, it's obvious that any vendors 1st priority is windows drivers. There's no blame to assign for this, and no apologies to be made."

      Sorry, I meant for Linux although the same problem exists for any non-Windows OS on PC hardware, AFAIK. No blame to assign? That is debatable when there are literally hundreds of FOSS developers who are eager to develop the drivers if they could get decent specs and not have to reverse-engineer all of the drivers from scratch so often. I don't necessarily blame that on completely MS (although I wouldn't be surprised if they offer hardware vendors "incentives" for not aiding the FOSS community) but I don't doubt that the 90% of windows machines you mentioned would be considerably lower if they hadn't forced OEMs to use MS only, which caused most people to become familiar with MS and nothing else. This familiarity influenced future purchases that didn't consider quality, only marketing/branding and gave little incentive for OEMs to develop drivers for other platforms. This problem is slowly getting better but it would never have gotten so big if not for MS's monopolistic practices/strategies.

      "By that logic, any time you interview for a job and succeed in getting it, you are inflicting poverty on those who didn't get it. Or the Japanese car makers are inflicting poverty on the employees of GM/Ford/Chrysler."

      Not exactly... When I interview for a job, I pretty much *need* that job to support myself and/or my family and I am trying to do so based on my own skills and credentials. I am not trying to stop the other guy from ever being able to compete with me or get another job in the same field. I am not trying to remove his only means of supporting his family, I am just trying to support my own. Now if I already have a giant trust fund and there is a very limited opportunity for that career field in that particular reason and I don't have a family to support and intentionally do things to try to make the other applicants look bad, *then* I'd be doing what MS does (which is criminal and immoral, IMO).

      "Companies don't go belly-up overnight. They know when they're making crap products, and they know the competitive landscape and what it means in terms of how long they can survive if they don't get their stuff together. Nobody is *entitled* to having 'x' slice of a market so they can survive no matter how non-viable their products are."

      If 'x' is a fair ch

    20. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      it is still wrong/unethical IMO for them to ever force OEMs to sale only Windows

      These allegations were not proved during the antitrust cases, so MS was not penalized for this. In any case, for an OEM, offering an OS choice has a cost associated with it. They need to validate each model with each OS, and then automate the install process for all options the customer might choose. If that costs 'x' dollars, they generally spend that 'x' on windows and get 90% of the market. After that do they spend 'x' to get another 2% of the market? The economics don't add up, so usually OEMs don't give you an option. There have been exceptions of course. This isn't the first time Dell is flirting with Linux -- it started selling Linux on the precision line around 2000. HP has had free dos as an option on many machines for a long time now. For many years now there have been countless OEMs (mwave, discount laptops to name a couple) from which you could buy machines without an OS installed. The fact that windows adoption hasn't changed means that the alternatives have not been compelling to customers.

      ...patent-squatting, exclusive contracts, closed protocols, coercing higher-education institutions to incorporate MS-only curriculums...

      Patent-squatting: this is when you patent something, wait for somebody to release a product and make big bucks, and then you sue them for patent infringement to get a slice of their pie. MS doesn't do that. They actually make and sell products that are protected by thier patents. Their patent strategy has historically been defensive (read this memo by bill gates for details: http://www.bralyn.net/etext/literature/bill.gates/ challenges-strategy.txt)

      Exclusive contracts: these are a part of any business. You sign an exclusive contract everytime you renew your cell phone contract. Apple and AT&T have an exclusive contract for the iPhone. There are countless examples -- this is the norm in the business world.

      Closed protocols: If you're complaining about NTLM/MAPI/SMB -- well these things were designed by MS. Why should they allow others to profit from their work? In any case since the antitrust ruling they have had to license all thier protocols and APIs. That ruling expires in 2007. MS has stated that it will not object to extending that ruling to 2012. So again, if there are no compelling alternative implementations, that is not MS's fault. Where there are good alternatives (for example Samba for SMB), people can and do use them. I fail to see the issue.

      Coercion, cirriculum, etc: This is unfounded. I have two degrees in Engineering and save CS101 I have never taken an MS-specific course. CS101 had a whole bunch of MS Office stuff in it. Makes sense -- that's the most common productivity s/w used. As a teacher I'd want to give my students the best chance of success possible -- that means exposing them to tools they are most likely to use in the real world. Similarly the media labs were full of Macs w/ Photoshop. No conspiracy. Success begets success -- that's life. OTOH, during all my CSE courses, I cannot begin to count the number of Solaris and Linux machines I used. Aside from hobby stuff, school was the last time I coded on those platforms. I've coded J2EE web apps that have run on Tomact/DB2/Linux in production -- but when developing the app the entire team used Eclipse/Tomcat/MySQL/Windows. Our CVS was on Ubuntu. So people basically use what's most convenient for them. If cost is prohibitive they find alternatives. The cost of windows is worth it for what we needed to do. If a team member didn't think so (or just wanted to be different) they were free to switch to Linux or OS-X or whatever.

      there are literally hundreds of FOSS developers who are eager to develop the drivers if they could get decent specs and not have to reverse-engineer all of the drivers from scratch

    21. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by sinthetek · · Score: 1

      Exclusive contracts etc: Because they are part of "any" business doesn't necessarily make them moral/ethical. They are robbing the consumer of freedoms they should have and often expect when they pay for something.

      Coercian/Curriculum: I've been to three different colleges (although I admit they were community colleges) and *none* offered *any* form of *nix in any of their curriculums. IIRC, even the universities in the areas didn't offer it (which was one of the main reasons I quit). The entire CS curriculum was nothing but Business classes, VC++, java and windows networking stuff. I've also heard students who help manage departments at other colleges say that MS offers them various incentives for offering MS curiculums.

      Driver Development: When I mentioned eager driver developers, I didn't mean "for hire". There are plenty who would do it for free if only they had the proper specs. I've read of plenty of offers to do just for various hardware vendors and they are repeatedly rejected. They refuse to even hand over specs, let alone the code for Windows drivers.

      Job thing: In that context I was speaking of myself specifically. If I had a decent job I could support myself on and liked OK, I wouldn't bother trying to get a second one, and if I give up the first there is still going to be something for whoever my competition is. This isn't what MS does by completely depriving large numbers of people unnecessarily (which is more harmful than most criminally prosecuted crimes).

      Web Standards: I believe you have to be crazy to think the perversion of standards didn't contribute to Netscape's demise. I've pretty much been a diehard Linux user for years and even *I* have been tempted to use a windows box on occasion just to see what a given site was about or how it looked when displayed properly. When suddenly half of the web is using protocols your current browser can't interpret properly and you don't have any sort of allegiance or care about computers/computing, your natural reaction is going to be to just go with whatever seems to work right and generally don't switch without a compelling reason.

      Availability: Yes, Firefox is distributed the same now, but it doesn't take 5 hrs of phone/connection-blocked download time for most and *everyone* has cdroms. It was available back then but it wasn't *as* available as IE and not worth the time since it quit working with a lot of sites anyway.

      Netscape Quality: Thanks for letting the comment slide. I remember it being a bit slower since it wasn't integrated into the OS but it (Communicator, which is what was "cutting edge" when I came around) seemed to have some decent features of it's own and seemed to work for most sites I used frequently. They seemed to be doing what they could to compete with IE. IIRC, they made more frequent releases/updates at any rate.

    22. Re:More whitewashing and fence-sitting by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      Exclusive contracts etc: Because they are part of "any" business doesn't necessarily make them moral/ethical.

      Doesn't make them unethical either - ethics is a complicated subject - hating MS for doing what every other company does is quite pointless.

      Business classes, VC++, java and windows networking stuff

      Business classes are not an MS technology. Teaching VC++ is good. Java is not an MS technology. Windows networking - not sure what you mean: if you mean administering a windows AD-based network, that's good. If its protocol-level stuff it's quite impossible to do that without starting at TCP/IP which is not a MS technology. None of this is unjustified.

      I've also heard students who help manage departments at other colleges say that MS offers them various incentives for offering MS curiculums.

      This is a vague unsubstantiated claim, and hating MS for that makes it sound like you just hate MS period, and will use any reason, however unfounded, to back that up. This way anyone can say "I've heard that Sun/Apple/Google/whoever offer incentives.....".

      I didn't mean "for hire". There are plenty who would do it for free if only they had the proper specs

      Not MS's fault! Take it up with the vendor. The specs are their IP (Itellectual Property), the code for the windows drivers is their IP. There is no law, or code of ethics that says they should hand it over. There are good reasons for them to not hand it over (because of the information that their competitiors get from the specs and driver code). The only thing that will work is pressure from customers, and that will take time. MS has no voice here.

      If I had a decent job I could support myself on and liked OK, I wouldn't bother trying to get a second one

      What about if your spouse is earning enough for your family? What about all those families where both parents are working? Are they depriving other families by holding two jobs when there is so much unemployment out there? The analogy stands. MS will continue to do the best it can, and will always assume that the day it stops doing that it's competitors will make it irrelevent. All business operate on that principle -- some forget it when they taste success. You can't blame MS for it's competitors shortcomings.

      I believe you have to be crazy to think the perversion of standards didn't contribute to Netscape's demise.

      I lived it, and I explained what happened. If you refuse to accept that, I guess we should agree to disagree.

      I've pretty much been a diehard Linux user for years and even *I* have been tempted to use a windows box on occasion just to see what a given site was about or how it looked when displayed properly

      And now you can on Firefox. At least FF on windows is perfect and FF on Linux is pretty close to it with a few exceptions. There's no reason this could not have been done earlier. As usual you blame MS for the lack of a compeliing alternative when there is nothing MS can do about it. FF adopted IE's defacto standard. This could have been done by any browser a long time ago. If the Linux folks could not make a compelling browser, why blame MS? Until Konquerer/Safari there has been no such thing as a browser that comes even close to standards compliance. This is such a complicated topic - your view of 'MS subverted the standard and killed everyone' is so simplistic when you consider the fact that there has never been a single browser ever made that is completely standards compliant. Your complaint is also invalid that 90% of the people designed websites for IE only -- well what are they supposed to do? No coercion is necessary for them to see that 90% of traffic needs thier site to be IE-compatible. And after that any effort only gets them a small gain, so usually they don't bother. Success begets success -- that's life. If you don't like anything from MS and chose to use alternatives, that your choice. But if you think

  14. Not twisted... Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He also talked about "World Domination" as well. Are you all going to twist that as well?

  15. A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    [Linus has a gift for] steering clear of immature games and sticking to a clear analysis of the situation.

    Linus's analyses are usually clear, indeed, but almost always short-sighted. He doesn't seem to notice anything beyond the end of his nose, and so doesn't recognize the potential for bad things to happen as a result of people being bad.

    It was so with BitKeeper. It was so with TiVO. It is so with Microsoft.

    Linus treats everyone as if they were fair, generous, and cooperative. Unfortunately the real world is not like that. It's full of deceitful, self-serving, and non-cooperative people and companies who talk nice but do evil.

    If all of FOSS and not just the Linux kernel were in Linus's hands, we'd be in trouble. Fortunately almost nobody else in the community is that naive.

    Linus's genius is in design and coding (and in herding cats). It most definitely is not in foresight.

    1. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      It was so with BitKeeper.

      Was it? Linus has said that Linux is far ahead of where it would be had they not used Bitkeeper even for the few years they did.

      Without BK, would Linus eventually have given up with the system he was using and written Git? Maybe, maybe not. I doubt he would have done anything else though. And if he had written Git, would it be as useful (to him at least) as he claims it is? Again, maybe or maybe not, but probably not.

      So, no, it probably wasn't so with Bitkeeper.

    2. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by swokm · · Score: 1

      Linus treats everyone as if they were fair, generous, and cooperative.

      Linus's genius is in design and coding (and in herding cats). Hmm... I think you've addressed your own complaint of myopia. Perhaps that is all he is doing with this statement (herding cats).

      I view learning to 'manage' the Redmond Beast as an intelligent, far-sighted goal.
    3. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      If Linus had used one of the many tools available at the time instead of ignoring them for his friend Larry's proprietary solution, the free tools would have quickly improved to meet the needs of the community. Instead, he snubbed the community and did his part to set back distributed revision control systems for years. And he's still doing it. In most every way bzr is superior to git but Linus refused to be a part of the community and toots his own horn instead. The result is projects like WINE who use git for revision control but don't have even slightly the same workflow as the Linux kernel, so they rampantly complain about contributions not being manageable (just try to contribute something to WINE and you'll see what I mean). Linus has no just wasted his own time by flirting with Bitkeeper and rolling his own solution (that is good for only his needs) but he's also wasted everyone else's time because, for some unknown reason, people keep listening to him.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    4. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was it? Linus has said that Linux is far ahead of where it would be had they not used Bitkeeper even for the few years they did.

      Without BK, would Linus eventually have given up with the system he was using and written Git? Maybe, maybe not. I doubt he would have done anything else though. And if he had written Git, would it be as useful (to him at least) as he claims it is? Again, maybe or maybe not, but probably not.
      You're assuming the worst here --- that NO existing solution would have allowed the same speed of progress, that NO other tools would have been as useful to him as BitKeeper if he'd given them a real chance, that he would NOT have improved any shortcomings in existing version control systems, that he would NOT have written as good a tool as Git without the hindsight of knowing BitKeeper, etc etc.

      There is no reason to assume the worst at all. Quite the opposite, Linus and the whole community have a superb history of doing what needs doing, and doing it well. If there truly was a major hole in the needed toolset, it would have been filled in, or built from scratch as it finally was.

      Unless there is good reason to believe otherwise, BitKeeper is very much another example of Linus's myopia, and general stubborness once his mind is set in a belief or on a particular course of action.

      He takes good advice on technical issues and sees the wider picture himself on technical matters, because that's his forte. But on non-technical matters, he's extremely poor at taking good advice, and doesn't see the wider picture at all.
    5. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by naapo · · Score: 1

      Linus treats everyone as if they were fair, generous, and cooperative. Unfortunately the real world is not like that. It's full of deceitful, self-serving, and non-cooperative people and companies who talk nice but do evil. I guess you're right. Maybe that's why his little hobby operating system project failed so miserably. Had he treated everyone as a potential enemy, he'd probably been able to keep the project completely as his own.

    6. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      Does not Linus have the right to decide which tool best fits his needs? Oftentimes different people have different ideas of what tool is "best" (which is why some of us drive a Prius, some drive a F-150 truck, and most drive something in between). Software is no different in this sense.

      If people want him to use a given tool, ask him why he uses his current tool and then improve your tool to meet those needs better. If it's a sufficient improvement over his current tool, then he'll probably switch. But complaining that somehow he "set back" revision control systems by deciding Tool X didn't meet his needs seems rather unfair to me. Linus's responsibility is to the projects he oversees, not to arbitrary other projects that would enjoy having him use their software.

    7. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      How many of you idiots that mention the BK incident are even aware of why he stopped using it? He stopped because assholes like you complained ad nauseum on LKML. There were *NEVER* any legal or technical issues with BK. He stopped because he couldn't take the whining anymore. So many selfish, SHORT SIGHTED assholes spammed the list with so much useless whining that he had to stop using BK just to get work done. His stopping was yet another pragmatic decision that you all seem to hate him for. It seems that no matter what he does he is wrong, only because he did something you couldn't even though he's not a Stallman zealot.

    8. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You are a fucking moron that deserves death. YOU set back distributed revision control by not asking every developer in the world what they wanted and going off to write the perfect tool.

      Linus wrote a tool that worked the way he wanted it to. Isn't that what you idiots claim open source is about? Scratching the itch? I guess it's only good when normal people do it. When someone famous does it, he's being bad by not playing with someone else. I suppose you are too much of a hypocrite to feel the same about GNOME.

    9. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      ..that NO existing solution would have allowed the same speed of progress, that NO other tools would have been as useful to him as BitKeeper if he'd given them a real chance, that he would NOT have improved any shortcomings in existing version control systems, that he would NOT have written as good a tool as Git without the hindsight of knowing BitKeeper, etc etc.

      The first three I have evidence for: even years AFTER they decided to go to Bitkeeper, they were still true. Linus probably wouldn't have given the other tools a real chance, and he probably wouldn't have improved any of the shortcomings in the existing version control systems, because he didn't do it when he lost Bitkeeper support.

      The last suggestion is much more questionable. However, Linus has also said that Git's workflow is based off of Bitkeeper's. Without the Bitkeeper experience, would he have known what he wanted? I don't know.

    10. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Dog-Cow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If BK was a symptom of his myopia, it was that he couldn't imagine shits like you making his working life miserable. He dropped BK because assholes couldn't leave him alone long enough to get anything done. LMKL became a flame-fest between Larry and developers who couldn't handle being wrong.

      He tried BK because he liked the idea. He stayed on it because he could alter his then-current work flow to match how it worked. He left it because whiny shits couldn't shutup. And somehow it's all his fault.

      The sad thing is, he could have used a proprietary tool for revision control from day one and the issue would never have come up. For some strange reason, everyone else seems to believe they have a right to Linus's personal development tree, which was the ONLY tree ever in BK that people complained about.

    11. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 1

      You're taking this into a *very* wrong direction. It's not about butting into Linus's personal development tree, nor what particular versioning system he uses or anything like that. It's about the fact he thinks he can work in a crystal tower, away from all the worries and politics. And he can't, nobody can, this isn't a fairytale, it's the real world and bad guys come at you.

      If he can't or won't deal with the real world then he should delegate to someone who's able, willing and ready. The FSF seem to fit that description pretty damn well. Linux going GPLv3 is the mandate they need in order to be able to go on fighting so that Linus can still have a crystal tower tomorrow.

      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
    12. Re:A *myopic* analysis of the situation? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Wow...watch the GNU/cultists pour in droves out the woodwork. The thing that's truly depressing is how many of you zombies are apparently left in existence.

      Linus's analyses are usually clear, indeed, but almost always short-sighted. He doesn't seem to notice anything beyond the end of his nose

      Let me guess. He's short sighted because his opinions aren't in slavish conformity with the decrees of your Messiah, RMS?

      If all of FOSS and not just the Linux kernel were in Linus's hands, we'd be in trouble. Fortunately almost nobody else in the community is that naive.

      True...Most people prefer to swallow the rampant, baseless fearmongering that gets propogated by a certain aspirant cult leader and his lackies. No points for guessing which side of that particular fence you happen to be on, eh?

      Also...just a thought. If you're so sure of the validity of your beliefs and your position, why are you posting as an AC?

  16. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because you disagree does not make this a troll, mods.

  17. Embrace Your Buddha Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both sides are as bad as each other. Change the world? The truth is that the GPL mob have become the enemy. If you can't see that you're blind or don't have the guts to admit it. Microsoft worships the almight dollar. Slashdot worships Stallman. Run through the patent and copyright routine that follows on from that, whether it's for and against, and you wind up in the same shithole. The world's been like this since before man and, most likely, will be that way after we're gone. It's how things are built. Don't blame me, I didn't make the world.

    Can't say I care anymore. I've got burned trying to help people out or encourage them. People don't listen or get their panties in a twist. It's difficult but I'm really inclined to just shrug and let people get on with it. People don't listen or give a damn, and only seem to care when things hurt them. Leave them alone with reality for long enough and they'll choke themselves or get a clue. It may sound cold and callous but it saves me hassle. While people fight among themselves I get more shit done.

    Repent and ye shall inherit the earth? There's a lot of truth in that. Try it, sometime.

    1. Re:Embrace Your Buddha Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot worships Stallman.

      This is false, although after making an obvious allowance for exaggeration and caricature it might hold true for a minority.

      Quite a few posters on these boards are wary of Stallman and some of his pronouncements.

      Now, if you say that Slashdot hates Microsoft, you'd be much closer to the truth. IMO disgust and distrust of Microsoft certainly helped fuel the growth of the free software community.

      As for Torvalds, I've noticed he likes to tack back and forth on controversial subjects like Microsoft and the FSF, perhaps so that nobody will be able to pin him down. This is perhaps a tendency he shares with US presidential candidates :)

    2. Re:Embrace Your Buddha Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Slashdot worships Stallman.


      This is false, although after making an obvious allowance for exaggeration and caricature it might hold true for a minority.

      Quite a few posters on these boards are wary of Stallman and some of his pronouncements.

      Now, if you say that Slashdot hates Microsoft, you'd be much closer to the truth. IMO disgust and distrust of Microsoft certainly helped fuel the growth of the free software community.

      As for Torvalds, I've noticed he likes to tack back and forth on controversial subjects like Microsoft and the FSF, perhaps so that nobody will be able to pin him down. This is perhaps a tendency he shares with US presidential candidates :)


      I seriously can't see any difference between Microsoft and the OSS community. This and most of the comments this topic has thrown up suggest that's a fair enough view. Certainly, it's a good enough view and I can't be bothered much with it beyond that point. It's pretty sad when fundamentals like this have to be discussed. This sort of stuff should be sorted out by the time most people reach adulthood.

      Microsoft has done some good and so has Linux et al but neither is unalloyed perfection. This should give people something to think about, and instead of picking sides and revving the engine taking time out to soberly reflect could be a smarter course of action. There's plenty of books on stuff like this and examples abound. As I said before, so what? People don't listen or give a damn. Best let them learn on their own.

      Nothing lasts forever that is not of the Tao. Nothing. Certianly, not arrogance and vanity, and there's a lot of that flying around with Microsoft and OSS. Windows and Linux are, merely, shadows on the wall. Ghostlike images, flickers of nothing compared to the eternal. Is it pathetic that such things are so concrete in our minds and demand so much loyalty? One day they will be as the idols of old - long forgotten dust. Same shit, different day.
  18. Linus, Linux by breman · · Score: 1

    He probably hit on the topics that needed to be public most, for him, and the project. He is very blunt. He probably wants to concentrate on Linux and he's probably tired of people coming to him with fud. I don't think he is scared to say what he feels, he just wants to use his time on what he loves, family and programming.

  19. Amen Linus by xednieht · · Score: 0

    I don't think they are that interesting.

    So true.
    --

    Hope is the currency of fools
  20. Now, now... by Opportunist · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    MS may be much and some of their tactics aren't what's considered fair competition, but they are not criminals. A criminal is by definition someone who breaks the law. Umm... well, they made some decisions that weren't completely in sync with some monopoly laws in some countries, but that doesn't make them criminals. It's not like they've done anything that hasn't been done before. It's been quite common e.g. to make retailers sell only your product if they want to sell it, or at least offer them more favorable conditions if they do.

    Some of their tactics smell a bit like extortion, but putting MS into the organized crime corner goes a bit too far.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Now, now... by setagllib · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What, falsifying video evidence for court isn't illegal? Surely you jest.

      --
      Sam ty sig.
    2. Re:Now, now... by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They broke monopoly laws. By your own definition, that makes them criminals. Calling them organized crime is entirely accurate. I personally think every exec of MS should have been barred from ever working for a public corporation the minute MS was found guilty. We treat white collar crimes far too lightly- if a person steals $100, they go to jail for years. Someone makes decisions that costs the country millions if not billions, and they get a slap on the wrist and a fine for their company. Its fucking ridiculous- every corporate crime should require jail time for the CEO.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    3. Re:Now, now... by DougReed · · Score: 0, Troll

      I would disagree. M$ is and always has been basically a criminal organization. They started out selling something that they did not have to IBM, then cheated someone else out of the pieces they needed to cover their lie, put illegal bits of code in their operating system to break their competition (Digital Research's DR-DOS, being the one they actually had to admit to and pay for). They stole the Windows concept from Apple, and ended up having to pay royalties after they were caught again. Their entire history has been one of corruption, bribes, extortion, and criminal behavior. Indeed much of the business world has become morally bankrupt by following M$'s lead and saying .. hey can do it.. How one can say that making decisions that were not "in sync" with the law is not criminal is simply a whitewash of the facts. Today, they are basically engineering criminal extortion out of every person on earth by maintaining an illegal monopoly and forcing people to pay their excessive ransom for an inferior product that could be had cheaper if proper competition was allowed to exist.

    4. Re:Now, now... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, what would jailtime for the CEO get us? Given the dog-eat-dog world of corporations, a lot of Vice-CEOs that drive their company deliberately into shady and outright illegal deals to get the CEO out of the way.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Now, now... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I doubt MS invented shady business deals. I think they existed since the time when Grog made Brok give him a gazelle for a piece of rock since he was the only one who knew how to make that rock sharp.

      That doesn't make it right, of course. But here's the problem: What should be done about it? What can be done? When a corporation gained a certain size and weight, they cannot be touched by the law anymore. Horrible, ain't it? What do you want to do about MS?

      What could be done? Well, you could tell them they're no longer allowed to do business in your country. Nobody may use MS products anymore (because, in turn, that's what MS will demand). What does that mean for your economy? Your game stores can close their doors. Companies would have to switch to another OS and Office product. And while Linux is IMO quite capable of making that transition easy, at the very least you have to retrain and/or rehire your IT staff. Compatibility of the companies in your country with foreign companies suffer. And so on.

      What country can afford that?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Now, now... by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      but they are not criminals We'll just cross reference that with the rest of your quote.

      A criminal is by definition someone who breaks the law. Umm... well, they made some decisions that weren't completely in sync with some monopoly laws in some countries, So what you're saying is they broke the law.

      It's not like they've done anything that hasn't been done before Yeah, since rape, murder, extortion, etc haven't ever been done before I can see why you make the exception.
    7. Re:Now, now... by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      Accountability, and someone at the top who acts to stop corporate abuses, because its their ass if they don't.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    8. Re:Now, now... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Informative

      Last time I checked, violating anti-trust laws is a criminal act. Last time I checked lying under oath is a criminal act. What's your definition of a "crime"?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    9. Re:Now, now... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      You can fine them vast amount of money, through their executives in jail, force them to provide source to competitors, and generally make their life hell until they co-operate. They can, if they want, pull out of your market, but they won't unless it's a rather small one like Romania. They'll behave themselves if they are made to. They will of course, try to push the boundaries, but as long as there is a powerful legal system that will severely punish them for every single attempt to get past the law, they will have no choice but to behave.

      This should apply to all corporations, and not just to Microsoft, and it should be swift justice. The crapola nonsense of the SCO trials is a good example of how the legal system has failed. The very moment in SCO vs. IBM where SCO attempted to alter their claims, the lawyers should have been disbarred and sent to jail, and SCO should have been shown the door and forbidden to ever petition the courts again.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    10. Re:Now, now... by swokm · · Score: 1

      What, falsifying video evidence for court isn't illegal? Surely you jest. Of course not if you work for large company! Surely YOU jest!

      If you or I do that, it is perjury, and we do jail time. If Allchin does it, it is called a "controversy". Allchin wasn't even FIRED, in fact, I think he got a raise.
    11. Re:Now, now... by bombshelter13 · · Score: 1

      >I doubt MS invented shady business deals. Microsoft may not have invented the shady business deal, but that doesn't mean they don't own the patent.

    12. Re:Now, now... by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      What's your definition of a "crime"?
      • Sharing any kind of music, even your own without paying big corporation first.
      • Rape.
      • Watching (non-bootleg) DVDs under FreeBSD.
      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  21. Exciting by tripppy · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I've never met anyone that was excited about windows. Open source and windows are going to live side-by-side ?
    If you look at the main sections to the left. There is no "windows" or "microsoft" section.
    GNU/Linux comes in so many flavours you can get a *nix OS for pretty much anything.
    I still use windows, I use *nix's aswell.
    But I've always hated windows.

    1. Re:Exciting by everphilski · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've never met anyone that was excited about windows.

      Talk to some directX nuts sometimes. They get pretty excited about it.

    2. Re:Exciting by bcmm · · Score: 2, Funny

      I saw people get excited about Vista.

      I think they'd got bored and forgotten about it by the time it was actually released though.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    3. Re:Exciting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never met anyone that was excited about windows.

      Funny, I've never met anyone that loathed and despised Linux as much as some Slashdotters with excellent karma hate Windows.

      Just saying.

    4. Re:Exciting by GPL+Apostate · · Score: 1, Informative

      Well, it should be a given for us to accept that Microsoft marketing types are gonna fein excitement about 'the product.'

      --
      Microsoft says legacy (serial/parallel) ports are bad. They don't obfuscate the hardware enough.
    5. Re:Exciting by svunt · · Score: 3, Funny

      I've never met anyone that was excited about windows.
      Excited doesn't mean that same as enthusiastic, or thrilled, it can refer to negative feelings as well...I think MS cause a great deal of excitement among the Apple crowd (sorry, the Mac Community) and the OSS crowd..I get excited, but not in a good way, by Windows all the time, so excited I could put my fist through the monitor sometimes. I'm pretty sure Torvalds was using 'excited' as an antonym of 'calm' or 'bored'.
    6. Re:Exciting by CannonballHead · · Score: 1
      Interesting, though, regarding the "happy" sort of excited - we rarely get excited about much at all. How many people really get excited about their high school or general ed undergraduate classes? Does that mean they are necessarily bad, no good, etc.? No, I don't think so. Windows isn't something poeple typically get "excited" (in a happy way) about because ... well it's not really new. XP compared to Windows 98 or Windows 2000 wasn't THAT much different. Whether or not it was better or worse... well, it was significantly more stable than my version of Windows 98. I luckily avoided Windows ME entirely. But, frankly, unless you're kind of an OS geek, I don't know many people that get excited about Linux, either... any more than they'd get excited about having an Atari. It's new, different, but eventually... well, I've known people to try Linux, but it's too difficult and doesn't support their hardware well enough for them to use; they went back to using Windows because it worked easily.

      Regarding the Novell-MS stuff though... if MS wants to somehow support an open source operating system, for whatever reason; well, is that a problem? As long as Novell is careful and whatnot. Nobody seemed upset about Dell offering Linux boxes, even though Dell hasn't appeared to care all that much until it was somewhat financially profitable for them to care.

      So, I agree with Linus that these sorts of situations DO show biases.

    7. Re:Exciting by jiushao · · Score: 2, Interesting
      There's a lot more to be excited about when it comes to DirectX than when it comes to Windows though. DirectX really is, in a sense, in the forefront of an exciting field of technology. In fact, if the Windows monopoly falters it would be nice to see Microsoft reinvent its primary business as a DirectX platform vendor; Considering how they have already extended it to consoles (the 360 SDK and DirectX 10 are fairly closely related, and Microsoft appear to be working hard on unifying the technology for Windows and console gaming) and it is for the most part platform-agnostic enough to be ported to any other number of OS's and devices. Which would, most importantly, be a good thing, since DirectX really is actually a very nice platform, probably the best one Microsoft has ever designed (and this counts .NET, which has made a fair splash even in the OSS community).

      I guess I may be called a DirectX ntut for that, despite the fact that I spend most of my time coding on SDL+OpenGL, but hey, a risk I am willing to take :)

    8. Re:Exciting by everphilski · · Score: 1

      No, not marketing nuts. Programmers. Its a 'free' as in beer API. I've programmed in it on and off over the past two years or so, and if you hang out at the usual places (gamasutra, gamedev.net, the official mailing list, etc.) you will find lots of users, most hobbyists and garage type programmers, who love the stuff and are digging deep into the API's and gladly help out the new comers. Just go look at the width and breadth of tutorials, sample code, etc. generated by non-Microsoft employees out there. It really is a community, in the truest sense.

      If OpenGL could drum up the kind of community, you could generate some kind of seague into open source. But what do they have, really, beyond NeHe? a few college classes, really. Try comparing Riemers XNA Tutorial to say NeHe. IMO, Riemer is more in-depth, he goes over the derivations more than NeHe does (no offense to NeHe, I've drawn a lot from his work too learning OGL). And at the end you have a simple, functional game. Stuff like that, I think, is all the difference.

    9. Re:Exciting by everphilski · · Score: 1

      Carmack has reversed prior statements about OGL being better than DirectX. He now seems to prefer DirectX. It would be infinitely cool if DirectX could become a platform unto itself, with implementations for Mac and Linux. Then you would have a universal gaming language, per see, and they would (essentially, as if they don't already) have an exclusive lock on PC gaming, and be able to leverage that towards XBOX gaming.

  22. Re:Now, now... a bit is not that much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's half of the system , ... e.g. they're 50% over the red line anyways

  23. oh dear!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now that Linus doesn't find Microsoft bashing 'cool' and 'fun', does this mean there's no life's purpose for all the slashdot nerds? What will they do?

    1. Re:oh dear!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same thing we do every night, Pinky. Try to take over the world.

  24. Exciting-Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I've never met anyone that was excited about windows. "

    And I've never met a double-jointed woman. Doesn't mean they don't exist.

    "If you look at the main sections to the left. There is no "windows" or "microsoft" section."

    There's no "Hurd" or "BSD" section either. So what's your point?

    1. Re:Exciting-Yawn! by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      yet bsd.slashdot.org does still exist... I wonder what's up there.

  25. Kudos for the conservative approach. by pravuil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Know the battles that need to be fought and disregard the rest. It's a good way to lose precious energy and resources if you fight against everything without knowing what you are really fighting for.

  26. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by xouumalperxe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Arguably, as neat as Linux might have been at the time, it would *never* have picked up speed without a solid set of userland tools on top, so there would never have been a set of tools specifically written for it. Sure, people could've used a BSD toolchain rather than the GNU set, but ultimately the Linux kernel was always dependent on somebody else's userland to carve its space in IT.

  27. ...our earlier conversation. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    With whom?

    --
    What?
  28. Good for him by jorghis · · Score: 4, Insightful


    You mean Linus isnt a rabid MS-hating fanboy? I feel so disillusioned.

    In all seriousness though it is nice to hear someone who actually matters in the open source community coming out against fud that comes from his own 'side'. (as if open source was about taking sides) The zealots who spread fud on the pro-linux side get way too much publicity and really make everyone associated with them look foolish.

    1. Re:Good for him by inca34 · · Score: 1

      What FUD, exactly? I'm curious...

    2. Re:Good for him by Ikester8 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's bad when you can't open up a newspaper or turn on the TV news shows without seeing some long-haired smelly dude going on about Linux and World Domination or some crap like that.

      --
      That's the last time I run code posted in somebody's sig...
    3. Re:Good for him by jorghis · · Score: 1

      Here is a totally random example: http://badvista.fsf.org/what-s-wrong-with-microsof t-windows-vista

      From that page they express anger that when you sign the license you agree to the following "ridiculous" item:

      "You give Microsoft the right, through programs like Windows Defender, to delete programs from your system that it decides are spyware."

      I mean what on earth is it supposed to do? They act as though Windows Defender is deleting competing products or something. (obviously false) Deleting spyware is a "good thing". Yet they are clearly implying that "Oh, that sneaky windows defender, Microsoft must have some list somewhere of programs it doesnt want you to have and is covertly deleting them!" Talk about spin, yeesh. The entire rest of the page is arguably fuddish as well, but I dont really have the time to argue over ever single sentence on there. And this is just one quote out of a gazillion from people who will interpret everything MS does as being evil and sneaky.

      Do you think that post makes the free software foundation look good?

    4. Re:Good for him by Khaed · · Score: 1

      You feel disillusioned? Imagine how poor Twitter feels right now!

  29. Seems to be a Linux problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux users may or may not hate MS, but for 99% (pretty much everyone who doesn't dev software or hardware for a living) of MS users, asking them how they feel about Linux would probably garner a response like:

    Linux? What the hell is Linux?

  30. Book of Dick by WED+Fan · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. And it came to pass that the Prophet, Holiness and Peace be upon him, did rise up in the morning and despaired.

    2. Behold, a vision I have had, he spoke.

    3. God has shown me a terrible vision of heretics and wolves amongst the fold, those who deny his Holy Word the Third GPL.

    4. And the Prophet went out unto the People of GNU and raise up his hand from the holiness of his loins, for he had been chatting, and said, I declare a holy fudwah upon the heretic Linus. From this point hence, he shall suffer the wrath of the /. masses.

    5. And it came to pass that they rose up, worshiping his glory, and put on their AC guises and did post great numbers of words.

    --
    Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
    1. Re:Book of Dick by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      This is one of the funniest things I have ever read on slashdot. Did you come up with fudwah yourself? It is a most excellent phrase.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    2. Re:Book of Dick by WED+Fan · · Score: 1

      Coined "fudwah" in another stallman, all holiness to his name, post.

      --
      Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
    3. Re:Book of Dick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck You

    4. Re:Book of Dick by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      ROFL.

      "Can I get an AH-MEN, brothahs and sistahs?"

  31. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Is that you RMS? still pissed off some student stole your thunder?

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  32. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I heard that you never finished Hurd.

  33. Re:Linus has a massive ego by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ditto that.

  34. credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias is by 3seas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft is credited with breaking anti-trust law and this is not just one case...

    The Rieser (sp?) file system creator is credited with what, besides the file system? Killing his wife?

    I think it shows Linus's bias to dismiss the illegal activities of Microsoft and to hide it by saying it is the rest of us showing bias.

    Linus is not the only one outside of Microsoft doing kernel work, there are plenty others. BSD flavors, BeOS, ReactOS, AROS, Dragonfly (kernel changed enough to not really be tagged with BSD flavoring), Minix, MacOSX, etc...

    For those who want to credit Linus with the kernel being used by a lot of Free Software, the fact is that had Linus not done so then somebody else would have, perhaps even the Hurd would have had better development and focus. And not to forget that the same Free Software is being run on other systems with kernels created by others.

    If there is anything to realize here it is that people moved away from Microsoft for any number of reasons, I have my own user frustration related reasons and have additional frustration with the industry as a whole. When something better comes along I will move to it, as will others too. It might just be DragonFly.

  35. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by dhavleak · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh no, here we go again..

    "Linux just made the kernel; it's irritating when he gets credit for Linux"

    "Yeah, but at least he made the Kernel -- Gates just made the Basic compiler"

    "That's news to me - have you ever heard of this guy called Paul Allen?"

    "Doesn't matter - personally I think the Linux kernel isn't all that - I use BSD"

    "Screw Linus -- he was wrong about Bitkeeper and Tivo so he's wrong about MS & Novell"

    "Yeah, well at least he's not a convicted monopolist"

    "Yeah, until M$ stops treating me like a criminal I refuse to buy their software"

    Also insert random quotes and mis-quotes such as:
    "When Microsoft writes an application for Linux, I've Won." - Linus Torvalds
    "640kb ought to be enough for everybody" - Bill Gates

    That about cover it? Can we have a non-childish discussion now? If there's any other slime to be thrown, just reply to this post -- let's keep the forum clean for an actual discussion.

  36. Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Nazlfrag · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "MS has a really hard time competing on technical merit"
    "Microsoft simply isn't interesting to me."
    "I don't actually personally think the Novell-MS agreement kind of thing matters all that much in the end"
    "Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting."

    Why anyone thinks this means he's pro-MS beats the hell out of me.

    1. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by ozzee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why anyone thinks this means he's pro-MS beats the hell out of me.

      They're very kind things he said about MS compared to what he could have said, things like:

      • Microsoft is a convicted criminal monopolist
      • Microsoft commonly uses money to extinguish competition in destructive ways

      ... and he would have been correct.

    2. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, Linux people are starting to look like UFO people. The moment that someone says something that contradicts what you want them to say, they start calling him a government plant even though he has been one of the movements strongest supporters. Linus is a guy with a life, hating Microsoft just doesn't help the cause.

    3. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by swokm · · Score: 1

      Of course. But I think that he used less emotional words to signal that he is ready to work with M$ anytime they stop 'knifing babies'.

      Linus is apparently a very patient man.

    4. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Bluesman · · Score: 1

      "... and he would have been correct"

      Other than not knowing the difference between criminal and civil court, I guess so.

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    5. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These four quotes say it all to me, just take a moment to let it sink in.

    6. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by ozzee · · Score: 1

      Other than not knowing the difference between criminal and civil court, I guess so.

      Last time I looked MS was convicted of being a criminal monopolist.

    7. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Bluesman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Go read the wikipedia article about the case.

      Search for the word "conviction." You won't find it. Why? Because it was a civil trial, not a criminal one, and civil courts do not "convict" anything.

      Go find a historical record of a corporation being tried in a criminal court in the U.S. Have fun.

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    8. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      They're very kind things he said about MS compared to what he could have said, things like:

      Go and crawl back under your rock. This is the usual cultic line of, "It doesn't matter what someone does; if they're not conforming with the groupthink that I've bought into to the last possible degree, then anything they do is entirely worthless."

    9. Re:Beautifully backhanded compliments. by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      While those are good points, to launch into such vitriol at the first mention of Microsoft would have turned the interview into an offtopic rant. There were only two questions mentioning Microsoft, and one of those focussed on Novells betrayal. For the other question about the 235 patents I think his reply was more than adequate, dismissing it as FUD while bashing their technical competence. There was simply no need to bring up the two points you made, and they would have been out of context.

  37. I TOTALLY agree with you by RudeIota · · Score: 0

    Whenever Linus gives his two cents about these kinds of things, his analysis always seems somewhat hollow and short-sighted. He often times sounds like he's just flapping his gums about something he doesn't understand, even though he may very well understand whatever it is in its entirety.

    Linus has played a recognizable role in global technology and he's a person of importance, but I think he should focus less on press and more on his next great projects. Much like said above, he's not an analyst, he's a programmer.

    --
    Fact: Everything I say is fiction.
  38. Re:credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias by Cathbard · · Score: 1

    Hans Reiser has been convicted of nothing and that is a personal case that has nothing to do with the software world. That case is as wierd as a case can get so where do you get off assuming that he is guilty? How can you compare that to the plethora of convictions that M$ have received for unethical business practices around the world? Are you dissapointed when an apple doesn't taste like an orange?

    --
    "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
  39. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That could be true, except that most GNU tools were written before the Linux kernel was even usable.
    If it weren't for the GNU project, Linus ("the guy") wouldn't have released the kernel under the GPL (as he says, it could have ended being just another one of his pets projects).
    BTW, Linus gets all the credit for the kernel too, but there's actually an army of people working on it. Linus is no longer the irreplaceable hacker you seem to believe (if it ever was).

  40. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by HermMunster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You don't win by sleeping with the enemy.

    I disagree with Linus. I think the whole partnership is an extremely negative thing and falls into the same trap that Microsoft pursued through partnerships of the 80s and 90s. The end result was/is always bad for everyone but Microsoft.

    In fact, I believe we should be significantly more hostile toward Microsoft because Microsoft is a convicted predatory monopolist that has claimed earlier this year that every user has to pay some dues to Microsoft and they also threatened to kill Open Source, with one of their representatives stating that 2007 was the year of the death of Open Source.

    I think Linus is falling into a trap, by virtue of his relationship to many high end corporates, particularly those paying his bills. This is a tremendous influence on him and it is beginning to clearly show.

    Microsoft is not the "necessary evil" of the computing industry. I fervently believe that the industry has been stifled in the long run because of what Microsoft has done in being predatory and killing off competition while being a monopoly. It used its power in a criminal way and has created a path down which we may never be able to recover. The hopes are that we can branch and have a 50-50 choice in software or even a 30-30-30. But being 90-10 is not the way to go for any industry. Only through competition with lots of car companies have we been able to produce some exceptional cars that are praised world-wide. Having only one software company essentially stifles all that.

    The good thing is that in the short and long term IP will eventually begin to stifle Microsoft because clearly their employees can only produce so much IP each year. The rest of the industry is producing against them in a significantly greater amount, though, maybe not through IP filings but at least through prior art and obviousness. This means that either Microsoft will hit a wall on IP because there are millions of programmers world wide while there are only so many people at Microsoft capable of producing IP worthy of being patented. They also only have so many employees and only so many of those have the jobs doing the development and only so many of those have the skills to create new IP that can be patented. The rest of the world has vastly more people all capable of competing on the IP front.

    The other thing that will kill some of their hopes is Vista. Recent, and past, denunciations of that OS have come down hard branding it world-wide as a product that is hostile toward the customer--an adversary of the customer. It can't long endure. The next piece is that DRM in some media is going out the door which was an important locking technology to lock you into Windows. The next bit are that Linux and OSX are growing considerably. This means that people are understanding that there is a choice.

    The key to winning this is to educate the people about the fact that there are some solid and wonderful alternatives to Windows. The other thing is to educate them about the DRM, spying, manipulation, and generally bad faith in which Windows has been built to hide the fact that so much spying is going on on the user. Listen, your computer is an extension of your home. You would no more allow Walmart to put a hidden camera in your home to monitor to ensure you are not using stolen merchandise--and hence you should not be allowing Microsoft to install 47+ program on your computer to monitor your usage to determine if you are using stolen merchandise.

    When people are educated and understand we all will have a much safer and more protected world free of the nasty privacy stealing immoral and unethical software being installed.

    Be loath to accept SP3 for XP as I am sure it also has a slew of technologies to force you to give up XP and move to Vista or live with the same spying nastiness that Microsoft has incorporated into Vista. Be forewarned.

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  41. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by HermMunster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am no fan of Stallman and I have some gripes with him about demanding only and all free software. But he clearly had created GNU before Linux (the kernel) was introduced and they were working in that direction. Clearly Linux (the kernel) was better than what they were working on and it was adopted by the industry, but let's not forget to give credit where credit is due. Stallman and his followers were the ones that created this whole thing and it would be unfair to put the credit in someone else's lap.

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  42. Always been non-chalant... by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's basicly "I'm over here doing Linux, and I'll keep improving Linux regardless of whatever Microsoft does or doesn't do." That's not just in relation to MS, but seems to be the general case with tivoized kernels, DRM, patents and everything else that's not about improving the code. It's like an athlete saying he's competing against the clock and himself, constantly improving regardless of whether he's far behind or far ahead of the competition.

    Usually, that's a very healthy attitude. And if everyone was running their own race, it would be. But Microsoft has proven time and time again that if they can't provide a superior product, they throw all kinds of dirt on the competition. He might not care if Linux is competition to Microsoft or not, but Microsoft certainly does. That's not to say he should start fighting FUD with FUD, but it'd be nice if he showed that he at least understands the game being played.

    Microsoft can not kill Linux the kernel, because of the GPL. But there are many ways to kill Linux the market, and Microsoft is an expert at it. Again, I think Linus doesn't care all too much about that, or assume that if only Linux gets good enough the other "distractions" won't matter. Well, I care that Linux can be a mainstream OS that can handle mainstream media, interact with Windows networks and protocols, use common document formats and in general function like a first class citizen. If it's a stunning good kernel too, that's good but it's no good being exceptional at everything but the things I want to do.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Always been non-chalant... by lprechan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I believe Linus not only understands how the game is being played, but also has a firm grip on what truly does and doesn't matter.

      To help put the preceding sentence in proper perspective, I should tell you that I began using Linux as my sole desktop OS at home and as my sole OS at work in 1995 (anyone remember RedHat 4.1?), although, I am not what most people would call a Linux-fanboy. I do prefer using open source solutions, but to me it's simply a personal decision, nothing more - nothing less.

      Linus' original objective, as I understand it, was to provide an alternative, and that he did. Should you use it? Should it be easy enough for Grandma to use? Should everyone throw Microsoft out the window (no pun intended, but I will be here all week) and drive MS from the marketplace? Should Linux be as easy (or easier) to use for newbies as Windows? It really doesn't matter. The important thing is that an alternative exists for all who really want one.

      Even though I can't imagine running a Microsoft OS today for any reason, I readily admit that I owe Microsoft a debt of gratitude as Windows (we're talking 3.0 here) eased my entry into the world of computers. I had no previous computer experience and clicking on pretty graphics was the upper limit of my technical skills. Over a short period of time, I began to see the limitations of the Windows OS, and the cost of frequently upgrading the underlying OS, not to mention MS Office and other applications, was certainly not a welcome addition to my budget. I began to search for an alternative, and certainly found Linux to be a workable solution for me.

      It was a time consuming transition. First, I needed a replacement for the MS Office suite. KOffice, I don't believe, was even on the horizon back then, nor was StarOffice, OpenOffice, or the myriad of choices available today. I discovered Applixware, purchased a copy, and began the ardous task of converting files. No longer could I rely on Quicken for my banking records, so I tried several open source solutions before finally developing a spreadsheet that was easy to use, accurate, and could be sorted in more ways than I really needed. I could go on and on listing how I made the conversion, but the point is that Linus was already successful - an alternative existed for those who really wanted one.

      Each day I read comments by rabid Linux fanboys who despise Microsoft, everything it stands for, and anyone who claims it is a good solution for their needs. While I myself am definitely not keen on Microsoft's software, corporate culture, business practices, lack of cooperation with the open source community, or even their name or logo, it really doesn't matter. All open source operating systems and applications exist to prove a viable alternative - and, as Linus understands, that's all that really matters.

      I care that Linux can be a mainstream OS that can handle mainstream media, interact with Windows networks and protocols, use common document formats and in general function like a first class citizen.

      Whoa, Nellie! Function like a first class citizen? Linux already functions like a first class citizen by adhering to open standards. Any interoperability difficulties with Windows networks and protocols, common document standards, and mainstream media are caused entirely by Microsoft's failure to function as a first class citizen and their desire to maintain dominance in the marketplace through actions best associated with a schoolyard bully. Linux is, and always was, a first class citizen through constantly promoting open standards and the resolution of interoperability difficulties.

      If it's a stunning good kernel too, that's good but it's no good being exceptional at everything but the things I want to do.

      What does the Linux kernel prevent you from doing? The Linux kernel does not prevent you from handling mainstream media, interacting with Windows networks and protocols, and using common document formats. The only reason peop

    2. Re:Always been non-chalant... by DaveCBio · · Score: 1

      I just use what works, involves the least amount effort on my part and is the most readily available. For video/audio production on a small scale right now that isn't Linux or any other OSS solution. At this point in time it's Mac and Windows that fit the bill. If Linux ever gets to that point I'll consider it seriously, but every time I put my toe into the water Linux is still lagging in terms of the applications I need and their maturity. Sure, there are Linux video and audio editing applications out there in the OSS/Linux world, but they aren't anywhere near the polish and maturity as commercial apps on OSX and Windows.

    3. Re:Always been non-chalant... by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Whoa, Nellie! Function like a first class citizen? Linux already functions like a first class citizen by adhering to open standards. Any interoperability difficulties with Windows networks and protocols, common document standards, and mainstream media are caused entirely by Microsoft's failure to function as a first class citizen and their desire to maintain dominance in the marketplace through actions best associated with a schoolyard bully. Linux is, and always was, a first class citizen through constantly promoting open standards and the resolution of interoperability difficulties.

      It doesn't matter how much of an upstanding citizen you are, if you're still being asked to go to the back of the bus like Rosa Parks because of who you are. There's absolutely nothing wrong with what Linux or what it's doing and I didn't say it was. Mictosoft acts exactly like a first class citizen from the segregation days and Linux is being treated like a second class citizen. And unless someone stands up to that, Linux will be relegated to the academic "ghetto" again only using their own incompatible "bus seats". You do know "linux" is going DOWN on google trends?

      If one wants to do things only possible under proprietary operating systems, they must run the operating system that enables them to accomplish their goals. (...) In an ideal world (for users), there would not be any proprietary code and with Linux there is not.

      Again it's the "all or nothing" argument... as long as you run Linux, Linux apps, Linux networks, Linux formats, only work with Linux-compatible documents and so on everything is fine. You know what? Almost everyone needs in some way to work together with the rest of the world, and the rest of the world runs Windows (so mostly). So if there's no interoperability, it's not a meaningful alternative to Windows to most people. Maybe you don't care, and Linus doesn't care. But "most people" care whether it's usable to "most people", aka themselves. If not, Linux is an exotic alternative for the fringe.

      And I don't think letting Microsoft do whatever it wants to make sure it stays that way is ok, because Linux is better than that and could be usable for a lot more people, in particular me. I run two desktops, and often I find that I have to use Windows, which is why I say it can't win if it can't do what I want it to do. And the answer to that isn't "You shouldn't be trying to do $foo, because it can't be done on Linux". Failure to do what I want doesn't mean I'm wrong, it means my desktop has failed. If my desktop fails, I can't use it. Which means I can't use Linux. Is that the conclusion you want me to reach, that I should just wipe it and install another Windows box?

      Because I'm already considered it since Samba doesn't seem to share files well with XP, and the only help I got didn't help along with some advice that it was probably my "Winblows" box. Which may or may not be true, but it doesn't help me run a mixed environment and if one has to go, it's the Linux box. I'm sure Microsoft would love it that way, make people choose one way or the other because I bet most would have to fall down on the Windows side, like it or not.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:Always been non-chalant... by catman · · Score: 1

      Amen to your last paragraph. To me, Microsoft is still irrelevant. That might change if they could in some weird twisted way force me to buy their products, which I don't need and don't want. (The Windows-only software I might want isn't made by Microsoft anyway.) I have no need or desire to attack Microsoft; however, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance, and I'm really happy that there are people like PJ out there working as sentinels.

    5. Re:Always been non-chalant... by lprechan · · Score: 1

      Because I'm already considered it since Samba doesn't seem to share files well with XP, and the only help I got didn't help along with some advice that it was probably my "Winblows" box. Which may or may not be true...

      You see, this is the major failing of your argument. You are speaking in generalizations without the actual facts to back your position. Sure, there admittedly are problems such as "Samba doesn't seem to share files well with XP", but when you hit the "which may or may not be true..." part, you prove you haven't done your homework.

      Linux has consistently throughout the years worked to affect interoperability with other file systems and operating systems. Microsoft has not. In actuality, Microsoft has repeatedly tried to hamper Samba developers. (Do a google search and see what you find.) The facts of the matter are that Samba developers are working hard to provide file and print services to all manner of SMB/CIFS clients, including the numerous versions of Microsoft Windows operating systems and have been doing so since 1992. Microsoft, on the other hand, has blatantly attempted to block their efforts. This does not translate into a failure of Linux, but instead is simply the result of Microsoft's attempt to lock-in their user base.

      Let me see if I can make this clear for you. Let's presume you own a company that manufactures square holes, and I own a company that manufactures pegs. I want my pegs to fit any hole the marketplace produces, and am more than willing to fabricate pegs to fit the holes you manufacture. Unfortunately for the buyers of the holes, you try to frustrate my efforts by not readily releasing the specs of the holes you manufacture and through legal devices designed to prevent me from building pegs to fit your brand of holes. The ensuing inability of my company to fabricate pegs to fit the square holes you manufacture is not a failing on my part, it's the result of your actions to prevent me from building a solution. In this case, I am acting like Linux, and you are acting like Microsoft.

      the only help I got didn't help along with some advice that it was probably my "Winblows" box

      I'd be willing to bet the reason you're getting blown off like that when you're looking for help has a great deal to do with your position that it's a Linux problem. If you want to blame the wrong team, how can you then expect that team's members to help you out? That's just silly.

      Is that the conclusion you want me to reach, that I should just wipe it and install another Windows box?

      To quote Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind, "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a d***." If you feel driven to "install another Windows box" because the Linux community won't accept the blame for Microsoft's actions that you feel it should, go right ahead. The only one you hurt that way is yourself. The only thing that really matters is that an alternative exists for those willing to take responsibility for their own computing experience rather than trying to blame others for their lack of success.

    6. Re:Always been non-chalant... by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      I should tell you that I began using Linux as my sole desktop OS at home and as my sole OS at work in 1995 ...

      No longer could I rely on Quicken for my banking records, so I tried several open source solutions before finally developing a spreadsheet that was easy to use, accurate, and could be sorted in more ways than I really needed. You were doing online banking in 1995? And you were running a version of Quicken in 1995 that was able to connect to your online bank?
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    7. Re:Always been non-chalant... by lprechan · · Score: 1

      Nope, not at all. I used Quicken in '95 solely as a standalone checkbook application. I believe (but can't remember for sure) that it was shortly afterward that Quicken gained the ability to interact with the online banking world, but I have no experience with that.

      The spreadsheet that I currently use does not interact with online banking institutions either. It simply replaces a paper check register.

  43. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Eighty7 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The irony is it's your freedom at stake here with the GPLv3. RMS doesn't care much about credit. You're biting the hand that feeds you because it has a beard & is slightly overweight. It would be a joke of cosmic proportions if it weren't so tragic.

  44. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 1

    If you're going to go by LOC, then the operating system should be called "Sun/Linux" because Sun contributed a lot more code than GNU. OpenOffice dwarfs the GNU toolchain in terms of LOC.

    --
    Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
  45. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because you disagree does not make this a troll, mods. Then what is the point of moderation on Slashdot if you can't punish those you disagree with?
  46. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

    at the very least you generally need the GNU tool chain to have something usable The Mac OS X version of World of Warcraft advertises itself as being built by GCC. Do you suggest it should be called GNU/World of Warcraft or World of Warcraft/GNU? Just asking.
  47. What more do I need? by bl8n8r · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "I live in a good-sized house, with a nice yard, with deer occasionally showing up and eating the roses (my wife likes the roses more, I like the deer more, so we don't really mind). I've got three kids, and I know I can pay for their education. What more do I need?"

    ...What more do I need?

    In a culture dominated by the words "I need more", this question looks erroneously out of place. Greed is so commonplace that to see such an authentic lack of it is refreshing.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
    1. Re:What more do I need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a culture dominated by the words "I need more", this question looks erroneously out of place. Greed is so commonplace that to see such an authentic lack of it is refreshing.


      Confucius valued contentment above all things. I think, I'm beginning to understand the old boy. At the risk of having the whole world snicker down their sleeves, it is written that Jesus said the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Indeed, many Buddhists believe that Nirvana is, merely, a change of perspective away. While many Muslims remain closed to much the consumerised West stands for, the consumerised West is a little blind to spiritual fundamentals. Many of the wisdoms embraced by famed commanders of war are similar. The underlying problem isn't advertising, religion, or guns. As always, the problem is people.

      In words people might understand: Want a better system? Be better engineers.
    2. Re:What more do I need? by astrashe · · Score: 1

      Your post reminds me of my favorite king arthur quote -- "Enough is as good as a feast."

  48. Well... by Almahtar · · Score: 1

    Why should we care about what you think about it, Linus? Erm... well, the interviewer did ASK him. That's a good reason for him to think his opinion was wanted.
  49. I wish I had mod points by Almahtar · · Score: 1

    you are so right. Hans's guilt or innocence has NOTHING to do with reiserfs.

  50. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Hobbs0 · · Score: 1

    Let us go further than that. OS X is built with GCC. And (with GCC installed) it has quite nearly as many pieces of GNU software as your average linux distro does. Do I need to start calling my operating system GNU/OS X. No. It's fucking stupid. It's fucking stupid with Linux too.

    And I know I'm probably either not going to be modded at all or modded -1 troll, but the fact is linus is pretty much right, and you rabid gnu fanboys are wrong. He may be wrong about some predictions, which is obviously a terrible, terrible crime, but his stance on the Microsoft vs. Linux "war" is pretty much correct. And for all those who say he isn't qualified to talk about the subject, piss off. You (or I) are almost definitely no better qualified to speak about it than he is.

    Face it people, Microsoft is a company. A company that produces pretty shitty software, but has risen to glory by marketing. And like most companies they have bad ethics. And if truth be told you hate Microsoft because they don't follow your software idealism (and the belief that all software should be Free is idealism if there ever was any, but we won't talk about that today), and you hate them because they make a successful product that is sub par. And neither one is a valid reason to hate a company, to wage "war" on them, or any other such nonsense.

  51. Stop your hero worship... nothing to see here... by borgheron · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Just more of Linus running his mouth.

    Stop your sycophantic hero worship.

    GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  52. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    7 digits... that's all I have to say!

  53. Re:credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias by 3seas · · Score: 1

    Knock it off!

    Its about people and what people do. The Rieser file system is on hold as the legal system is crediting Hans with a crime, guilty or not, which will be decided in a court room (perhaps regardless of what ever really happened).

    The point is, it is not unjust bias when one considers facts of criminal activities, it is caution.

    In the case of Hans, it is fact that he has been charged with a crime and as such the software is on hold.

    Linus dismissing the wrongs of Microsoft is even more wrong then those who doubt Hans, as MS has been found guilty and Hans has yet to be judged.

    Need another example of the reaction of people to criminal activity stated..... Michael Jacksons trial or Bushes war on Iraq and the Dixie Chicks comment and reaction by the music industry.....

    Careful of the media mouth of the beast of man....its rather convincing, right or wrong...

    Now do you really want to distort the point and in the process say something about your bias?

    Linus shows indifference towards the MS/Novell deal and he also disagress with the GPLv3, and he is free to do so, but he should see his own bias rather than claim he has none while placing judgement on the nature of others bias.

  54. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Cherita+Chen · · Score: 1

    excellent argument. I was getting ready to say the same thing... Mirroring what anonymous said before, the seven digits (UID) say it all.

    --
    I'm not fat, just big boned...
  55. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by aichpvee · · Score: 1

    Let's just call it "Linux" as Linus does and we can start calling the toolchain the "GNU/Linux toolchain"? This seems the most appropriate thing to me.

    --
    The Farewell Tour II
  56. A hobbyist with a TiVo by Slur · · Score: 1

    The TiVo is sitting on the dresser. It's the old one, the hobbyist has a newer one too. So he decides to try and get Linux to talk to the TiVo hardware by shoehorning. Lo and behold, he can get most of the hardware - the network ports, the hard drive (of course), and the video input hardware too after a bit of fiddling. The system it turns out is fairly easy to control.

    If it's possible, the hobbyist will try to do it, and why shouldn't he? After you get a shoe box at the shoe store, you can take it home and mark it up inside, cut holes in it, use it how you like. I see no moral or ethical difference between the shoe box and the TiVo. And I wonder if the TiVo company is worried about it, really. Every device can be used for evil, potentially, but I don't see bands of pirate TiVos marauding across the Internet ... yet.

    By our right of free expression and free exchange, given that no harm is done, once Linux kernels for TiVo exist, people must be free to share them with their friends. Let the chips fall where they may... call it an experiment.

    If the hardware vendor is concerned he can attempt to prevent access by technical means - for example using an exotic processor architecture with elaborate fail-safe devices. Smart hobbyists will overcome the countermeasures inevitably. The manufacturer ought to accept such events gracefully.

    I just don't see how courts would ever prosecute people for spawning shells on their household appliances. It sounds too much like the movie Brazil. (Damn, but that movie is prescient...)

    .

    --
    -- thinkyhead software and media
    1. Re:A hobbyist with a TiVo by Omnifarious · · Score: 0

      I just don't see how courts would ever prosecute people for spawning shells on their household appliances. It sounds too much like the movie Brazil. (Damn, but that movie is prescient...)

      But it happens, witness the way Microsoft is going after people who make mod chips for the X-Box or who own a mod chip for their X-Box.

  57. Re:Linus has a massive ego by pembo13 · · Score: 1

    It's not like anyone asked him a question or something.

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  58. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Mukunda_NZ · · Score: 1

    UID digits don't mean too much, unless they're really low. I've been around this site for a long long time, just never signed up. Now off that topic.

    How I feel about this could be perhaps put like saying that World War II was won just by the Americans, and that the British had nothing to do with it. The British had done most of the work, only for the Americans to then enter at the end when most of the battle had been fought... Thankfully we don't just credit the Americans with winning the war... Same with GNU/Linux, at least that's how I feel about it.

    --
    Free software, free thought, free society.
  59. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by UserGoogol · · Score: 1

    GNU was a project to make a free operating system. "Linux" is a free operating system based in part on most of the GNU components. Therefore, "Linux" is a fork of GNU. To contrast, World of Warcraft is not, because it used GNU components for a fundamentally different purpose: an MMORPG. I think it's somewhat silly to get worked up over the semantics of GNU/Linux, but the overarching principle behind it is right. Linus just finished what GNU was working on.

    --
    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
  60. Servers? by msimm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think Linus is just happy doing what he's doing. He didn't seek fame (or infamy). But if his focus *really* was servers with absolutely no biases we'd have a stable api allowing proprietary vendors to develop closed drivers for Linux servers and then more or less forget about them.

    I don't know what your relationship with Linux is but I work professionally as a server admin for a mid-sized company. Proprietary driver updates with each kernel release is a major pain in the ass and often requires you use older kernels while you wait for your vendor (EMC/Oracle/etc) to release an updated module.

    I'm not making a political statement here one way or the other. But as the benevolent dictator this is something he could make happen if the server market was his only concern.

    --
    Quack, quack.
  61. Blinding hatred. by Hairy1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In martial arts one must keep ones mind clear and focused, free of hatred and emotion. Open source ideology is about embracing freedom, not hating Microsoft. Sure Microsoft are currently a barrier to freedom and by no means should we embrace them like long lost children just because they say something or act a little enlightened. But by the same token we should not shoot friends in the head just because the deviate from our ideology.

    By letting an irrational hatred of Microsoft sour the relationship between Novell and the community we face a danger that the newly confirmed copyright ownership Novell has in Unix will be used by them the same way SCO did. Instead of finding a way to educate Novell we have taken a extreme and non productive approach which will tend to alienate not only Novell but any other companies considering working with the open source community.

    The fact is that there are many companies out there which may make deals with Microsoft for their own reasons. We cannot expect companies to make a black and white decision about what "side" they are on. IBM for example is acting in its own self interest amd while that self interest is in the interests of the community all is well. But lets not deceive ourselves that they would fight for open source to the bitter end. They would settle. They would make a deal if it meant survival.

    Novell may have been in a similar situation, and while I don't like these deals being done its a reality for companies in a way that it isn't for individuals. Microsoft won't sue you for personal use of a patent without a license, but they will sue Red Hat into the ground given the chance. Red Hat may yet need to make a deal if Linux does end up infringing, even if the Linux community can remove the infringement in quick order.

    In truth Microsoft is USING our hatred against us. Already the Novell deal may have driven a wedge in the open source community between GPL 2 and GPL 3. Once again we see reactionary actions being driven by Microsoft to their advantage. Linus sees that hating Microsoft is no way forward. We need to examine, evalaute and develop strategies which allow us to define the ball game. Microsoft won when they turned the conversation to Total Cost of Ownership. They won when they got CEO's concerned about legal issues around Linux.

    To win we must be more clever, less reactionary, and keep a clear head with a focus on what important; bringing open source to the world.

    1. Re:Blinding hatred. by swokm · · Score: 1

      Microsoft won when they turned the conversation to Total Cost of Ownership. M$ has lower TCO?

      Hmm... a martial artist named "Hairy1"... Chuck is that you?! But... but... I thought the chief export of Chuck Norris was pain?
    2. Re:Blinding hatred. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To win we must be more clever, less reactionary, and keep a clear head with a focus on what important; bringing open source to the world.


      You were doing reasonably well up to that point then talked about winning. You cannot win. Not today, not ever. Winning and losing is not of the Tao, Buddhism, or martial arts. This is difficult to understand and see, especially in the world as it is but by letting go of arrogance and vanity one may allow enlightenment to develop. There is no substantive difference between marketing, religion, or warfare. They are all the same ways with different names. What matters is correctness, or what some might call god nature or, possibly, professionalism.

      My apologies for the egotistical intrusion into your otherwise sound presentation. Words are so imprecise and speaking is so clumsy. Conveying the brightness of a summers day, or the freshness of a cool breeeze is hard enough. It's all so much wind and flim flam when compared to perfection. Maybe I'm getting sentimental but the mechanics and dreariness of business bores me in comparison to the nearly forgotten days of childhood. Perhaps, by developing more of this spirit inside one might begin to develop better ways and unsettle the world less.

      Ah, listen to me??? I'll be raving about God next. I'll quit now while I'm ahead.
    3. Re:Blinding hatred. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In martial arts one must keep ones mind clear and focused, free of hatred and emotion.

      True, but you must always be prepared to flip out and kill people. Most important.

    4. Re:Blinding hatred. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Open source ideology is about embracing freedom, not hating Microsoft.

      That's like saying doctors are about 'embracing healthiness', not hating disease.

      By letting an irrational hatred of Microsoft sour the relationship between Novell and the community we face a danger that the newly confirmed copyright ownership Novell has in Unix will be used by them the same way SCO did.

      A lot of us have seen the fate of companies that did deals with Microsoft, and think that chiding anyone who does the same is both good (in the long run) for them, and for the community. It's not just done out of zealousness; we don't want to see Microsoft's embrace, extend, extinguish disease infect Linux in any way.

    5. Re:Blinding hatred. by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have a doctor who embraced healthiness, thus helping me obtain a better quality of life and reduced chance of disease, than one who was so focused on fighting a specific disease after it occurs that he forgot about prevention. Or whose cure was worse than the disease itself.

      Of course if there is a disease in the community you need to fight it. If you view proprietary software as a disease, by all means fight the good fight for free software. But I think the point of the post was that you'll achieve more by showing people the benefits of freedom, and improving free software, than by bashing Microsoft. The latter is unlikely to persuade anyone and just makes the speaker sound like a religious zealot. Religious zealots are rarely viewed as credible by anyone other than religious zealots.

    6. Re:Blinding hatred. by Hairy1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not into Buddhism, so cannot comment about whether winning is not of it. However in martial arts winning is the goal. What I should be clear on is what "winning" in this context means. It means bringing freedom to people, showing them that there is a way that we can allow creative freedom, and not lock the right to be creative away in corporations. It doesn't mean bringing down Microsoft. Putting Microsoft at the centre of our definition of "winning" gives them far too much credit.

      Today our freedoms are under attack, with increased "security", control of media concentrated in a few corporations, our politicians giving away basic rights, encouraging torture, and making a mockery of democracy. Open source is growing out of a very old concept; Freedom. Stallman understands the importance of freedom, but insists on assigning it to software. Open source does not give software freedom; it gives people freedom! Now we see the creative commons, sites like flickr, youtube, myspace, and yes Slashdot are growing all because they embrace freedom of creativity. This new freedom is threatening the old order. Music companies, traditional media, movie companies, all sources of traditional creative enterprise are giving way to creative individuals empowered by the global network.

      Microsoft are but a small part of a far larger vista.

  62. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by swokm · · Score: 1

    You use GNU tools? Yeah, I hate badge-ware too. :rollseyesoutofhead:

  63. Re:Embrace Your Grammar Checker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing lasts forever that is not of the Tao. Nothing. Certianly, not arrogance and vanity, and there's a lot of that flying around with Microsoft and OSS. Windows and Linux are, merely, shadows on the wall. Ghostlike images, flickers of nothing compared to the eternal. Is it pathetic that such things are so concrete in our minds and demand so much loyalty? One day they will be as the idols of old - long forgotten dust. Same shit, different day.
    Perhaps, you could, run Microsoft's, grammar-checking, feature on future, posts of yours, guru, to see if, perhaps, you have, placed too, many commas, in your sentences. It makes them UN-FUCKING-READABLE! And then you don't sound erudite; you sound like a moron -- which I'm hoping is not really the intent.
  64. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

    Amen! to your first two paragraphs, but not to the last one. Last weekend I went out to buy a notebook computer and the only way I could buy one without buying a Microsoft license was to get a Macintrash. So, I did. I live in the San Jose, CA area, it's not like I'm in a first world country like Japan or something.

    I want to run Unix and when I ask for a command line I want zsh, be it Apple OS X, or Linux. Answer me this, Microsoft fan boys, why do I have to buy a computer with an O/S I will never use? (The Mac Powerbook Pro is a nice machine, I have to say ... it plays WoW in a way I never dreamed was possible and it runs circles around Microsoft Windows XP in terms of usability and speed and stability. Now if it only installed XEmacs by default ...).

  65. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    He made the kernel, at the very least you generally need the GNU tool chain to have something usable, plus a couple of other little things.

    The term "GNU toolchain" usually refers to their compiler stack (gcc, as, make, autoconf, etc.) rather than their regular userland tools, aka coreutils (ls, cp, du, stty, su, etc.), or other stuff that are more than just "little things", like init and sh. I usually wouldn't nitpick, but you seem way too sure of what you're talking about.

    And yes, I believe the original discussion centered on Linus's credentials as kernel author and made no claim that he wrote coreutils or anything else. Writing a functional coreutils isn't that amazing of an achievement, actually - take a look at BusyBox, a single binary that does all the useful coreutils plus (working imitations of) init, sh, insmod, ifconfig, dpkg, wget, etc., so that, "To create a working system, just add some device nodes in /dev, a few configuration files in /etc, and a Linux kernel." Notably, you need nothing from the GNU project, just the two binaries (Linux and busybox).

  66. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't win by sleeping with the enemy.
    Well I guess you do if the enemy is the hot girl next door ;)
  67. Re:Embrace Your Grammar Checker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing lasts forever that is not of the Tao. Nothing. Certianly, not arrogance and vanity, and there's a lot of that flying around with Microsoft and OSS. Windows and Linux are, merely, shadows on the wall. Ghostlike images, flickers of nothing compared to the eternal. Is it pathetic that such things are so concrete in our minds and demand so much loyalty? One day they will be as the idols of old - long forgotten dust. Same shit, different day.


    Perhaps, you could, run Microsoft's, grammar-checking, feature on future, posts of yours, guru, to see if, perhaps, you have, placed too, many commas, in your sentences. It makes them UN-FUCKING-READABLE! And then you don't sound erudite; you sound like a moron -- which I'm hoping is not really the intent.


    I was more bothered by misspelling "certainly". People find fault and push agendas that fall in line with their habits and prejudices. You don't need to build a multi-billion worth operating system, spray millions of comments on Slashdot, or build universities when so little contains so much. The Tao mocks us both. Who is the guru? Who is the moron? I suppose, this depends on your point of view. Only the Tao really knows.

  68. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

    I would never use OS X, so why should I buy one of their computers with an operating system I'll never use? Or is it just wrong when Microsoft does it?

  69. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by kestasjk · · Score: 1

    My freedom to use Linux the way I want is indeed at stake. At the moment I can do what I want as long as I distribute the code (if I choose to distribute it at all). If the GPLv3 takes there'll be some ifs and buts added to that, which I don't want and which won't stop software being improved and passed on.

    --
    // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
  70. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by moderatorrater · · Score: 2

    Linus just finished what GNU couldn't. There, fixed it for you. When RMS can install a hurd based machine one hundreds of production servers without a problem, then I'll consider listening to him on which parts of an operating system are the most important.
  71. Linus, you have to stop this now! by angrykeyboarder · · Score: 1

    Stop being logical. It's got a lot of the fanboys of that big unkempt hairy guy upset.

    --
    Scott

    ©20014 angrykeyboarder & Elmer Fudd. All Wights Wesewved
    1. Re:Linus, you have to stop this now! by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Stop being logical. It's got a lot of the fanboys of that big unkempt hairy guy upset.

      Linus isn't a terminally narcissistic, wannabe cult leader. Stallman is. Therein lies the key difference. ;-)

    2. Re:Linus, you have to stop this now! by angrykeyboarder · · Score: 1

      That and he's got the relatively "normal" look down. :)

      --
      Scott

      ©20014 angrykeyboarder & Elmer Fudd. All Wights Wesewved
  72. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by angrykeyboarder · · Score: 0

    If Stallman weren't so "odd" (to put it politely) he might be taken more seriously and thereby getting more credit then he has.

    Linus rules.

    --
    Scott

    ©20014 angrykeyboarder & Elmer Fudd. All Wights Wesewved
  73. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I want to run Unix and when I ask for a command line I want zsh, be it Apple OS X, or Linux. Answer me this, Microsoft fan boys, why do I have to buy a computer with an O/S I will never use?

    You seem to be confused. Microsoft don't sell laptops. Your complaint is with the PC hardware vendors that won't sell you a laptop without Windows.

  74. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by angrykeyboarder · · Score: 1

    What about the barefoot presentations and knowingly dropping his hair in his soup?

    "Free" Software doesn't feed me.

    It's a nice idea, I like it and I use a lot of it, but it's by no means the best option out there.

    Just look at how many Linux distros include non-free software.

    Why? Because there's no decent "free" equivalent.

    Why limit yourself?

    --
    Scott

    ©20014 angrykeyboarder & Elmer Fudd. All Wights Wesewved
  75. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by kestasjk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most people use userland libraries and don't interface directly with the kernel. glibc, GTK+, lib*, etc. GNU isn't "just" tar, grep, sed, etc (i.e. coreutils), it really does provide a large chunk of the system and I think anyone in a GNU dev's shoes would be a bit annoyed about the credit Linus gets. Also don't forget that Linux, and just about every FOSS app, is built using GCC.

    To be honest I think it's just down to the naming, and not any misconceptions about importance or quibbles about the mission of free software. I've never heard anyone say GNU correctly in person (it's always G.N.U.), because it's such a terrible name and doesn't roll off the tongue like Linux. "Debian Sarge Guh-noo slash Linux", "Fedora Core Guh-noo slash Linux", "Damn Small Guh-noo slash Linux".
    If they had put a few moments thought into the name, perhaps an acronym that describes what it is instead of what it isn't, and perhaps an acronym that can be pronounced. Off the top of my head perhaps Onix for open unix, or instead of the arbitrary 'G' in GNU they could have chosen a vowel; ANUs Not Unix, ENUs Not Unix, INUs Not Unix, ONUs Not Unix, UNUs Not Unix. "Freeax" was only marginally worse than "Guh-noo".

    --
    // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
  76. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by SL+Baur · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You seem to be confused. I don't want Microsoft Windows. Most other people wouldn't either if they had any clue what they were buying. My mother (who is computer illiterate) used a Linux box for years to do her stuff on the internet.

    The big lie you and all the other Microsoft fan boys are propagating is that Linux isn't ready for the desktop because no one uses it. If Linux distros were sold like Microsoft is sold, the world wouldn't end and Linux would have a similar market share.

    Linux was ready for the desktop in the last millennium. Plain and simple.

  77. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually if you wanna draw the parallels with the WW II victory it was more like this: Russians were the kernel - where majority of the battles were fought, while the Brits and Americans were the userspace - providing Russians with utilities like supplies and intelligence.

    Ach, and to go completely OT - USSR would have won the war without the landing in Normandy - by late 1943 the Soviet industry and army had gained an unstoppable momentum.

  78. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by cp.tar · · Score: 1

    And if you're a hot girl, too, then everybody watching wins as well.

    --
    Ignore this signature. By order.
  79. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by TheSeer2 · · Score: 1

    Everyone always calls MS a convicted monopolist... however, based on what I know the conviction is unjust. How is putting I.E on by default ... bad? The same kind of people that use I.E because it's already there would complain that there was no browser if there wasn't a default browser.

    (This may be entering the realm of logical fallacy here, not intended) Imagine if the penalty for abortion was jail time. Would you agree with it? Would you go around labelling those who had abortions as "convicted abortionists"?

  80. Re:credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bias.
    Let's call TS the Typical Slashdotter.

    TS knows about petrol companies misdeeds but uses its gas powered car anyway. TS knows Nike and others uses underpaid minor's work for their own profit but buys its shoes anyway. TS knows about Monsanto and Pfizer experiments and, basically, he couldn't care less about those. No need to go on with the rest.

    But hey! MS has been credited with breaking anti-trust law!!! SOOOO EEEVIIIILLLLL.....

    Beside, Intel has broken them too but TS doesn't care.

  81. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by imroy · · Score: 1

    If you're going to go by LOC, then the operating system should be called "Sun/Linux" because Sun contributed a lot more code than GNU. OpenOffice dwarfs the GNU toolchain in terms of LOC.

    But I don't think anyone in their right mind would consider OO.o a part of the Linux "operating system". Even desktops like GNOME and KDE are pushing the definition, but OO.o is definitely an application suite.

  82. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by MooUK · · Score: 1

    The changes can be summarised reasonably well by altering your sentence to say "as long as I distribute the code and don't do anything else to stop people using it".

  83. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by twistedcubic · · Score: 1

    "...without the [Linux] kernel, the GNU tools would hardly be as advanced as they are today..."

    C'mon, everybody was using GNU tools on SunOS back in the day. You might be wrong.

  84. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by spacebird · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Answer me this, Microsoft fan boys, why do I have to buy a computer with an O/S I will never use? Not a Microsoft fanboy, but shouldn't you be asking the hardware manufacturers who aren't selling Linux-based computers this question? Seems kind of odd to go up to a software manufacturer and yell, "Why is everyone using your product?!"
    --
    What, me? Never.
  85. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seem to be the confused one - you're arguing a point that the GP never made.

    Your argument is still with the laptop manufacturers for not selling a laptop without Windows.

  86. Playing it cool? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people get a bit too excited about MS, I think. I don't think they are that interesting.

    Linus doesn't see the threat from DRM and he doesn't see the threat from Microsoft. That's fine and he's lucky there's an entire community to fight these battles for him, otherwise his kernel would be rapidly reduced to just another commercial venture. There are always those looking to steal or destroy what you build, it's unbelievably Naïve not to see that, even if you choose not acknowledge it publicly.

  87. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by jimicus · · Score: 2, Informative

    You seem to be confused. Microsoft don't sell laptops. Your complaint is with the PC hardware vendors that won't sell you a laptop without Windows.

    Are those the same PC hardware vendors which Microsoft has systematically browbeaten into offering Windows? The ones which (at least until recently) were almost to a man terrified of offering you something with any OS other than Windows lest some Terrible Beat of Redmond descent upon them?

    Things are changing - Dell's recent foray into Linux systems demonstrates that - but to imagine that the Windows monopoly is entirely down to PC hardware vendors simultaneously, independently deciding to ship Windows and nothing else is pure folly.

  88. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You seem to be confused. I don't want Microsoft Windows.

    I don't recall saying you did.

    Most other people wouldn't either if they had any clue what they were buying.

    Given how trivially simple it is to buy a computer without Windows, I'm afraid harsh reality blows your fantasy out of the water.

    My mother (who is computer illiterate) used a Linux box for years to do her stuff on the internet.

    Personally, I bought my mum an iMac. Sadly I was unlucky enough to do so only a month or two before Apple switched to x86.

    The big lie you and all the other Microsoft fan boys are propagating is that Linux isn't ready for the desktop because no one uses it. If Linux distros were sold like Microsoft is sold, the world wouldn't end and Linux would have a similar market share.

    I don't recall ever making those arguments either.

    Linux was ready for the desktop in the last millennium. Plain and simple.

    The market does not agree.

    If people disliked Microsoft or Windows anywhere near as much as zealots like you thought they did, Apple would own the home PC market and Linux on the desktop would be csondiered even more of an oddity than it is now.

  89. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by mrsteveman1 · · Score: 1

    The real pronunciation sounds ridiculous, thats why no one uses it, and im not quite sure why they insist on saying it that way.

    As far as i am concerned, an acronym like Gnu's Not Unix, should be spelled out when speaking.

  90. Re:Stop your hero worship... nothing to see here.. by olehenning · · Score: 1

    Agreed. All hail RMS!

  91. Same thing could be applied to Linux vs BSD by Calyth · · Score: 1

    "Some people get a bit too excited about MS"

    Same thing can be applied to the Linux vs BSD debate, shown by the debates followed the report on systrace.

  92. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by realdodgeman · · Score: 2

    Well he said he made Linux, not GNU/Linux, so you should be happy...

  93. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

    I've never heard anyone say GNU correctly in person (it's always G.N.U.), because it's such a terrible name and doesn't roll off the tongue like Linux. "Debian Sarge Guh-noo slash Linux", "Fedora Core Guh-noo slash Linux", "Damn Small Guh-noo slash Linux".

    You can shorten it to just "GNU" or "Stallmanix" if you want.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  94. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Safiire+Arrowny · · Score: 1

    Well that's news to me. It's irritating when Linus is given all the credit for the operating system. He made the kernel, at the very least you generally need the GNU tool chain to have something usable, plus a couple of other little things. Do we all have to have the same conversations about this naming thing all the time?
  95. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by G+Morgan · · Score: 1

    They were sued because you could not remove IE from the system.

  96. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by G+Morgan · · Score: 2, Funny

    You've obviously not seen any films about WW2. America did indeed win the war single handedly. They are famous for things like the victory in the Battle of Britain.

  97. I wish you guys would be more candid by Eighty7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Credit is at best a secondary concern. The real issue here is the technical lead of this OS's kernel gets credit for the movement but doesn't care about your freedoms as much as you might wish. And you can't do anything about it except talk about the guy who's really been fighting for you all along. I find myself almost wishing for a Bitkeeper-like debacle this time involving the GPLv3.

    1. Re:I wish you guys would be more candid by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2

      Wow! Way to rip the lid off the simmering resentments within the FSF! Do we really want want that pot to boil over? =)

      I've noticed over the long term that the FSF has been engaged in a campaign against Linus. They get in snarky comments about him trying to take too much credit. They send people over to the LKML to troll him, then when he makes a comment in a heated exchange, it gets reported in the news and on blogs.*

      Linus and Linux where the best things that ever happened to the FSF, and it is absolutely killing RMS to face that fact. Maybe someone should develop F/OSS Pepto-bysmol? Sorry, I meant GNU/ Antacid.

      *Example: After the 3rd draft of GPL 3, Linus was asked and made some placatory comments about how the 3rd draft was a big improvement, satisfied some of his concerns, etc. For the good of the group, he held back his basic criticisms, and said that it would be difficult to change Linux from GPL 2 to GPL 3.

      So the FSF sends someone to troll the LKML, start a flame war, repeatedly ask the same question (why not release Linux under the GPL 3) after it has been answered in many ways, etc., basically baiting Linus. Linus then makes some comments that get reported out of context here and elsewhere, and the FSF rank-and-file get all pumped up and start in with the character assassinations and allegations.

      It's become clear that the FSF has put its battle against the external "enemy" on hold and is focused on destroying internal enemies, i.e., those who dissent from the party line. Reminds me of Stalin and his betrayal of International Communism in favor of destroying any and all rivals and potential rivals within the movement.

      This is why I don't like the FSF. They talk a good game, but watch how they actually operate.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    2. Re:I wish you guys would be more candid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

    3. Re:I wish you guys would be more candid by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      It's become clear that the FSF has put its battle against the external "enemy" on hold and is focused on destroying internal enemies, i.e., those who dissent from the party line.

      You must have missed the memo; the FSF have been engaging in their own ideological answer to the Purges for a while now. And yes, RMS does have more than a few things in common with Uncle Joe, when you look beneath the surface. There are those of us who think that the degree of similarity between the names "Stallman," and "Stalin," isn't pure coincidence. ;-)

  98. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Conor+Turton · · Score: 0

    Things are changing - Dell's recent foray into Linux systems demonstrates that -

    That'll be the same Dell that sells Linux boxes for £50 more than the same spec Windows boxes so people buy the Windows boxes, which adds another to the Windows sales tally, and then shove Linux on. Way to go Dell.

    --
    Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
  99. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Funny

    ANUs Not Unix Are there rings around ur operating system?
    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  100. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't win by sleeping with the enemy.

    You do if you've got HIV!

  101. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by rapidweather · · Score: 1
    There are a LOT more people who can write a userland tool than a kernel. That's why Linus gets a lot of credit, because there are few other people who could have done what he did.


    Well said. and don't forget Klaus Knopper. Without his contribution, the world would be minus about 200 or so interesting and useful distros.


    The list of dedicated, talented contributors goes on and on.

  102. Don't hate Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...says the guy who is not wasting his time solving MS shit. We who have to work with it know better.

  103. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    Some might say the same thing about the majority of the GNU userland...

  104. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Writing an efficient compiler is also a very difficult task like creating a kernel, but I don't see any gcc developers like RMS credited for technical ability like Linus is. RMS is always associated with politics. It's a bit unfair methinks. I think it has a lot to do with public image building.

  105. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Taagehornet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stallman and his followers were the ones that created this whole thing

    Stallman and his followers (diciples?) have indeed contributed significantly, but claiming that they created the whole thing is probably stretching it a bit too far. Assuming that you by this whole thing refer to the various Linux distributions, then none of them would have gained any momentum if it wasn't for (ignoring Linus for a moment) Apache, Mozilla, PERL/PHP/Python/Ruby, the Eclipse Foundation, OpenOffice.org, ect.

    I'm not trying to downplay the importance of the GNU toolchain, but personally I actually consider the GPL to be Stallman's most significant contribution.

    I'm however not so sure that he still has any role to play in this story ...besides perhaps as the comic sidekick ;-)

  106. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    I've never heard anyone say GNU correctly in person (it's always G.N.U.) Sez who?

    Stallman, who ought to know, does not spell it out, so why do you think it needs to be?

    when it's the name of our system, the correct pronunciation is
    "guh-NEW" -- pronounce the hard "G".
    Free Software: Freedom and Cooperation
    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  107. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    My freedom to use Linux the way I want is indeed at stake. At the moment I can do what I want as long as I distribute the code Do you really think "distribute" is part of the definition of "use?"

    If you mail a book to someone, are you using that book?
    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  108. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Takumi2501 · · Score: 1

    And if Linux hadn't been created, they would have made or found another kernel. I think that the point is that GNU and Linux have a symbiotic relationship.

    --
    Sent from my computer.
    Now GET OFF MY LAWN!
  109. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by rtb61 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Linux is the work of hundreds of thousands of individuals, code, installations, support, marketing, lobbying etc. etc. etc. As for Richard Stallman he is certainly fully and totally entitled to his opinion and to push and promote his stance, as much as he chooses to do in what ever way he chooses, just as those people who seek similar ideals are free to also promote and support their own opinions regardless of whom they share them with.

    The whole Linux thing was driven by choice and the freedom to choose, so GNU or Kernel or Open Source, it was all about individuals working together in what ever capacity they choose to achieve a wide range of shared goals.

    In a manner of speaking every one involved was a sidekick to Tux, a symbol representing a shared ideal, and what ever that ideal was, it was left up to each and every individual own interpretation.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  110. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Stallman, who ought to know, does not spell it out, so why do you think it needs to be? sigh!
    He doesn't, he's saying that that's how he always hears other people say it!!
  111. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be honest I think it's just down to the naming, and not any misconceptions about importance or quibbles about the mission of free software. I've never heard anyone say GNU correctly in person (it's always G.N.U.), because it's such a terrible name and doesn't roll off the tongue like Linux. "Debian Sarge Guh-noo slash Linux", "Fedora Core Guh-noo slash Linux", "Damn Small Guh-noo slash Linux".
    Perhaps you are not saying it correctly anymore? Perhaps the acronym has evolved into a word as so many have? I doubt when the guys came up with Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation for the name of their new fangled technology they where worried about how it would roll off the tongue, but everything seems to have worked out.
  112. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by magores · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Parent is a damn dirty hippie.

    At the abstract level, I happen to agree. But, I'm a damn dirty hippie, so what do I know?

  113. Re:Linus has a massive ego by goldn_64 · · Score: 1

    No one said you should care, but if the interviewer ASKS him his opinion... And ehm... you accuse him of accusing people who disagree with him of being biased or idealistic, but then in your last sentence you imply that YOU don't agree with him, and he should therefore shut his mouth. nuff said

  114. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by someone1234 · · Score: 1

    Not entirely true. I saw GNU stuff on Solaris, and it was far better than the original stuff provided by Sun. What is true, that Hurd is nowhere and wouldn't get anywhere as far as Linux has gone. I think Linus found the right path between zealotry and pragmatism because his only goal was to create something working.

    --
    Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
  115. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by cytg.net · · Score: 1

    ... ms not that interesting ? what was it .. something along the line "The devils biggest achievement was to convince man that he did not exist" ... rock on!

  116. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slime? That's what you want, isn't it, bitch? Having other guys' 'slime' shot all over you?
    You fucking cum-guzzling faggot, you make me sick.

  117. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by rhaas · · Score: 1

    The list of dedicated, talented contributors goes on and on.

    Bingo. And that's why this argument seems so stupid to me. It's impossible to credit every person (or even organization) who deserves credit in the name of the operating system. That's why the kernel has a CREDITS file.

    In the end, people usually get to name the things they create. So Linus gets to call it "the Linux kernel" because he wrote the first version of it. And whoever the people were the packaged the first distributions called them "Linux distributions". Stallman has no more right to rename Linux to GNU/Linux than he does to rename Microsoft to StallmanCorp or my son Mike to Harold. Of course, he can SUGGEST to Microsoft that they start calling themselves StallmanCorp, or to me that I start calling my son Harold, but he shouldn't be too surprised if he gets a lot of "no" answers...

  118. Yeah, it is not as if... by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

    The GNU system started a decade before Linus wrote the first version of his kernel.

    Also, the GNU system was widely used with proprietary kernels by that time. In fact, most Unix systems were based on the GNU userland because of their quality.

    And GNU already had a kernel at the pipeline when Linux was released. And just a few years later it was as functional as Linux 0.1. Linux just being out a little earlier gained the advantaje of having all developers working on it, but things probably wouldn't be much different if that didn't happen.

  119. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or perhaps the acronym was chosen purposely like the USA PATRIOT ACT...

  120. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by AndyCR · · Score: 1

    I've never heard anyone say GNU correctly in person (it's always G.N.U.) Sez who?

    Stallman, who ought to know, does not spell it out, so why do you think it needs to be? You misunderstood. He was saying, to put it differently, "I've never heard anyone pronounce it correctly - they always pronounce it G.N.U. instead."
    --
    If there's anyone I hate more than stupid people, it's intellectuals.
  121. Re:credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias by 3seas · · Score: 1

    only an Anonymous Coward would presume to speek for the typical ST.

    Additionally and in consideration of the unique tool computers are, suppression of human advancement with computer technology is by far more evil than even suppression of honest observation (re: catholic church and the suppression of galileos observations).

  122. Re:Linus has a massive ego by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    No one said you should care, but if the interviewer ASKS him his opinion...

    Just because a reporter asks you something doesn't mean it's always wise to give a full answer. It's called "restraint". Heck, in many cases, it's called "not breaching your confidentiality agreement" or "maintaining the privacy of your customers' information" (not that this applies here).

    And ehm... you accuse him of accusing people who disagree with him of being biased or idealistic, but then in your last sentence you imply that YOU don't agree with him, and he should therefore shut his mouth. nuff said

    Did you read the Groklaw comments where Linus spouted off about the first draft of GPLv3? He was straight-out asked what his legal objections were to the draft, and his answers showed that he didn't have the first clue about that law (U.S. law, anyway). He knows he's not a lawyer, and he has no interest in studying law, but he was perfectly willing to blabber on about the "problems" with the GPLv3 draft. It was embarrassing.

    There are people who have put in a lot of time and effort to learn the minute details about things like the Novell-Microsoft deal. Linus has not, but he has no qualms about, on the one hand, knowing very little about the subject, and on the other hand, denouncing these peoples' work as "unimportant".

    I'd rather listen to RMS talk about why Debian isn't free enough. At least he's put in the time and effort to try to understand the issues.

  123. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

    Given how trivially simple it is to buy a computer without Windows, I'm afraid harsh reality blows your fantasy out of the water. How is this a valid answer to the GP's conclusion that people wouldn't buy Windows if they had a clue WHAT they are buying?

    The market does not agree.

    If people disliked Microsoft or Windows anywhere near as much as zealots like you thought they did, Apple would own the home PC market and Linux on the desktop would be csondiered even more of an oddity than it is now. The market, the market, the market. Standard fanboy corpspeak without a factual base. A free market still exists in IT, but it is a rather small niche outside of the Microsoft monoculture. The average user isn't so political. His laptop comes with Windows, but it doesn't really matter to him. If it breaks down, it is replaced or fixed by a friend. The majority of end users don't have the competence to decide for quality software, they just want the "standard" software they know. So Microsoft and friends can happily continue to shovel stuff down their throats. That's your beloved market: Powered by Dumbness(tm).
    --
    Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
  124. Mod this up, it is a *REAL* example by spitzak · · Score: 1

    It is certainly a pleasure to see *somebody* who still knows what "FUD" means. I clicked on your response, expecting to find a link to a "microsoft sucks", but you actually limited yourself to a real example of Linux FUD.

    Unfortunately far too many people seem today to think FUD means "lie", or even "anything negative said about the competition".

    In fact FUD could be perfectly truthful or a fabrication. What it means is spinning some fact (or falsehood) into *fear*, where you say "yea that might seem ok, but just maybe, in the future, it could change into this horribly contrived scenario that I will now state...". Saying anything bad about *right now*, whether it is true or false, is NOT "FUD".

    If you limit to true examples of FUD, Microsoft is way ahead in number of statements. In particular almost everything they say about the GPL is FUD, and the patent stuff is FUD. I don't think most of what they say about Linux itself is FUD, even the cost arguments, as they typically just state the immediate cost of changing from Windows to Linux (obviously non-zero), rather than any kind of prediction of future costs, which would be FUD. Sometimes they insert the cost of switching back from Linux to Windows as a cost of using Linux, that just maybe is FUD.

    Best example I think of FUD on the Linux side is the dire warnings about what DRM will do. It probably is not going to be anywhere near as bad as stated, worst is that it probably means you have to buy Windows and new hardware if you want to watch any popular entertainment. Your example is also quite good, saying that this feature of Windows could be used for evil purposes, is certainly FUD as well.

  125. Re:Linus has a massive ego by goldn_64 · · Score: 1
    Okay, good point well made :)

    And i wasn't trying to defend him, just merely making a point. I really don't care for what he says/thinks. But he indeed shouldn't talk about stuff he doesn't fully understand.

  126. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Goaway · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Personally, I bought my mum an iMac. Sadly I was unlucky enough to do so only a month or two before Apple switched to x86. Why is that so unlucky? Does it really bother your mom that her computer's running on PPC?
  127. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    Lol, it's been years since I've heard someone spell it, everyone I know says it. I guess I don't hang with enough microsoft users.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  128. militants are everywhere by feepcreature · · Score: 1

    Yes, because those militant Buddhists are everywhere

    Actually, you do get some pretty militant Buddhists in Sri Lanka. And a few years ago there were, well, difficulties with Sikh militants in the Golden temple in Amritsar. I'm not here to criticise Sikhs or followers of the Buddha - I'm just pointing out that pretty much any cause attracts some militant folk, somewhere. For goodness sake, you get holy wars about the right source code editor, or the correct place to put curly brackets in C.

    It's human nature!

    --
    Paul "Say no to feeping creaturism"
    1. Re:militants are everywhere by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because those militant Buddhists are everywhere

      Actually, you do get some pretty militant Buddhists in Sri Lanka. And a few years ago there were, well, difficulties with Sikh militants in the Golden temple in Amritsar. I'm not here to criticise Sikhs or followers of the Buddha - I'm just pointing out that pretty much any cause attracts some militant folk, somewhere. For goodness sake, you get holy wars about the right source code editor, or the correct place to put curly brackets in C.

      It's human nature!

      Oh, I totally agree that the religions I mentioned have their problems, as you said, it's human nature. However it'd be a bit of a stretch (as the post I was replying to implied) to call Buddhism in general "ruthless", the majority of Buddhists, Jains etc. (especially Jains) are peaceful in the extreme.
      Sikhism and Hinduism have had more problems, but again to call them "ruthless" would IMO be wrong, yes there was the fiasco at the Golden temple, but by and large Hindus and Sikhs have now gotten over their differences. Of course there's still tension with Muslims, but this isn't the place to open that Pandora's box; even if it is the 60th anniversary of partition in India\Pakistan\Bangladesh.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    2. Re:militants are everywhere by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      By some formal definitions it's a bit of a stretch to call Buddhism a religion, it's arguably more of a philosophy than a belief in supreme beings (Obviously, YMMV). Jains, OTOH, I know nothing about so I'll reserve judgment.

  129. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You left out the idiots like yourself that always come back and repeat what's been said in a childish way... as if you are above everybody else.

  130. Same thing I've been saying since the deal by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "The actual partnership itself seemed pretty much a nonissue to me, and not nearly as interesting as the reaction it got from people, and how it was reported ... I don't actually personally think the Novell-MS agreement kind of thing matters all that much in the end..."

    Right on, Linus. It was a tempest in a teapot, mostly stirred up by FSF fanatics who wouldn't think twice about sinking the second most important Linux distro just to prove they're more "moral" than everybody else.

    I kinda disagree about Microsoft not being "interesting", though. I understand what Linus is saying because he's focused on his technology and isn't interested in Microsoft. So for him, they're not interesting. Plus, he's confident OSS is the way to go and thus will inevitably take over. I think Microsoft are assholes and a major impediment to improving computer use worldwide - which makes them "interesting" at least.

    Which is not to say that Linux wouldn't be the impediment if the market share were reversed - but at least Linux is making improvements. Vista ain't an improvement to Windows and definitely isn't an improvement in the OS space.

    In the end, though, we need a serious reevaluation of how software is developed. Because right now EVERYTHING IS CRAP - including Linux. But Linux is at least FREE crap.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    1. Re:Same thing I've been saying since the deal by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Right on, Linus. It was a tempest in a teapot, mostly stirred up by FSF fanatics who wouldn't think twice about sinking the second most important Linux distro just to prove they're more "moral" than everybody else.

      The only really big mistake Linus has ever made, IMHO, was getting into bed with the FSF in the first place. It continues to hold Linux back as far as adoption is concerned, because the FSF aren't a group that people who live above ground tend to want to have anything to do with.

  131. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "It's irritating when Linus is given all the credit for the operating system."

    It's irritating to me when FSF fanatics think a tool chain makes an OS.

    It's irritating to me when they want their tool chain name tacked onto the OS name - when KDE and GNOME have just as much right to ask for that since nobody uses an OS today without a desktop. Yeah, yeah, some bozos may be CLI only - lots of luck. And the choice to run servers without a GUI is not relevant to the issue.

    What part of "Linus" in LINUX don't you understand? You want it called GNUOS - be my guest. Come back when somebody cares.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  132. Who does CRIME serve then? Why do we have laws? by toby · · Score: 1

    "If you're not outraged [about the harm MS is doing to society] then you're not paying attention."

    Get the facts. Start here...

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:Who does CRIME serve then? Why do we have laws? by Chineseyes · · Score: 1

      Outraged? Put down your pitchfork and torch there are much worse issues in the world that are much more worthy of being fought for.

      I consider Microsoft's transgressions a large annoyance but outraged? Did Gates, Allen, and Ballmer run a train on your mother or something?

      --
      I think the invisible hand of the market has its middle finger extended

      --A wise old fart named SC0RN
  133. I'm not a code fan, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BSD is about the spread of ideas. GPL is about the spread of code.

  134. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Why is that so unlucky? Does it really bother your mom that her computer's running on PPC?

    Because the intel iMacs were twice as fast as the PPC iMacs. Given OS X's thirst for hardware, that's a non-trivial difference.

    This is before getting into things like being able to boot to Windows. An intel Mac is much more flexible piece of hardware than a PPC Mac.

  135. I see what he's talking about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So the linux posterboy says "you're a bunch of douchebags for hating MS so much" and nobody even pauses for a moment of thoughtful reflection, it's counteroffensive time!!! Linus isn't really responsible for this, Linus wasn't so great, Linus is selling out.

    Perhaps you need to sit back and realize "hey, does he have a point? Am I just making myself look like an unemployable zealot toolbag?"

    Something to ponder, Fanboy.

  136. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    How is this a valid answer to the GP's conclusion that people wouldn't buy Windows if they had a clue WHAT they are buying?

    Because for the vast majority of people using computers, the last one they bought wasn't their first exposure to Windows.

    Like I said, if "dumb" people hated Windows anywhere near as much as "smart" people like you thought they do, Microsoft wouldn't own 90% of the market.

    The market, the market, the market. Standard fanboy corpspeak without a factual base.

    What "facts" do you feel are lacking ? Buying computers without Windows is easy. Apart from a few niche areas, there has always been at least one near-drop-in replacement for a Windows machine for the last couple of decades.

    A free market still exists in IT, but it is a rather small niche outside of the Microsoft monoculture.

    The free market in IT includes the "Microsoft monoculture".

    The average user isn't so political. His laptop comes with Windows, but it doesn't really matter to him. If it breaks down, it is replaced or fixed by a friend.

    I'm glad you agree that issue is not one of functionality. Now, why do you feel you shoudl be able to tell people what computers they should use ?

    The majority of end users don't have the competence to decide for quality software, they just want the "standard" software they know. So Microsoft and friends can happily continue to shovel stuff down their throats. That's your beloved market: Powered by Dumbness(tm).

    Standard anti-Microsoft superiority complex. How unsurprising.

  137. Re:Stop your hero worship... nothing to see here.. by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    Dare I ask whether or not you think "sycophantic hero worship" of Stallman is acceptable? Chances are it's never even dawned on you at all...in fact, if you're like a lot of people, you probably worship the ground Stallman walks on without paying a lot of attention to the fact that you do.

    I mean, it's just so completely normal to mindlessly idolise Stallman, (but nobody else, of course) that why on Earth would you bother to reflect on it at all? It's a lot like questioning why the Sun comes up in the morning. Pointless, and entirely unthinkable.

  138. Re:credit where credit is due.... Bias where Bias by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    Good grief, there are some mentally diseased freaks among the Linux users of Slashdot.

    Sometimes when a Linux related story comes up, and I read some of the replies, I honestly find myself wondering...Who the hell left the basement door unlocked? ;-)

  139. Re:Stop your hero worship... nothing to see here.. by borgheron · · Score: 1

    Yes, you may dare ask. Sycophantic hero worship of any person is wrong. Period.

    GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  140. Re:Stop your hero worship... nothing to see here.. by borgheron · · Score: 1

    Haha. Read my reply to the previous post.

    GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  141. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    I appreciate the fact that you were down-modded into oblivion, as is only right and proper. There are times when the bias of the moderators distresses me, but others where I am given cause for optimism. This is evidence that the system does work the way it's supposed to, at least some of the time.

    I've said it before, and I'll say it again. FSF cultists, please do not attempt to pass the basis of your mind control off as fact.

  142. Mod me down, but first? PROVE ME WRONG, lol! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First? See my subject-line above... Then, go ESPECIALLY here:

    (That's in the "hardening linux" topic today, mind you)...

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=267599&thre shold=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20203061

    OK?

    Challenge to ANY *NIX User (FreeBSD, Linux variants, Solaris) - Beat the score I can obtain using Windows, of 84.735/100!

    (It was done on a multiplatform test for security called CIS TOOL that runs on numerous *NIX's & Windows NT-based OS of modern varieties(such as what I use, Windows Server 2003 SP #2 fully custom hardened for security))

    CIS TOOL has been recognized by SANS as a legitmate program, not malware etc. & that website's respected enough & often referred to in reports here @ /., site that specializes in SECURITY TOPICS...

    So, instead of these "mod downs" in my posts, when I see Linux "F.U.D." great spread around, & I challenge someone to show me their "(Insert *NIX variant here) is more secure than Windows is" IS TRUE... beat my score, that's all.

    APK

    P.S.=> (Visible proof goes a LONG ways, such as this below)

    http://img.techpowerup.org/070618/APK14SecurityPoi ntsCISToolResult84735.jpg

    apk

  143. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    Heard of b/pmake, or nbtar, as but two examples? I'm guessing not.

    I'm talking about the BSD userland; one that to a very large extent has been written entirely independently of the GNU project. The only real element of the GNU toolchain that the BSDs haven't replaced is GCC.

    Stallman's minions are not merely obnoxious in continuing to promote the lie that the GNU system is the only toolchain in existence, but they're also wrong. As I said, GCC is the only critical element. Everything else is entirely replaceable, and has been re-implemented several times, under open source licenses.

    Your adamancy would not be so grating if it was not based in such unbelievable ignorance.

  144. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Are those the same PC hardware vendors which Microsoft has systematically browbeaten into offering Windows?

    No, they're the same PC hardware vendors who don't see any profit in not selling Windows.

    The ones which (at least until recently) were almost to a man terrified of offering you something with any OS other than Windows lest some Terrible Beat of Redmond descent upon them?

    The only thing a business is terrified of is going out of business. The only reason they'd go out of business if the "Terrible Beat of Redmond" comes knocking is if there was no money to be made selling non-Windows PCs.

    Things are changing - Dell's recent foray into Linux systems demonstrates that - but to imagine that the Windows monopoly is entirely down to PC hardware vendors simultaneously, independently deciding to ship Windows and nothing else is pure folly.

    To think PC hardware vendors wouldn't be selling Linux PCs if there was profit to be made in it is sheer stupidity. Even dumber than thinking they're all part of some huge conspiracy against Linux on the desktop.

    If there's money to be made selling Linux PCs to home users, then they'll do it. If there isn't, they won't. It's that simple.

  145. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    RMS doesn't care much about credit.

    Do you really believe that? Really?

    Most of the time, I can take the brainwashed utterances of Stallman's footsoldiers in stride, but every so often one of you comes out with something that truly makes me gasp.

    How can you be so deluded? How is it possible?

  146. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    The other thing is to educate them about the DRM, spying, manipulation, and generally bad faith in which Windows has been built to hide the fact that so much spying is going on on the user.

    I can just hear the mental chorus which is accompanying this post. It starts off quietly, but gradually gets louder until it's at the level of shouting.

    "Fear...fear...fear...fear...fear...fear...FEAR!"

  147. None of those are organizations by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

    And you, sir, are a first class asshole for comparing the Microsoft with the victims of racism.

    1. Re:None of those are organizations by Chineseyes · · Score: 1

      It is obvious this went completely over your head

      Let's see them for what they are: Organized crime. One day justice will be done, $some_entity will be obliterated and the world will
      be a better place for it.

      Does it make sense now or should I break it down even further?

      Here is a hint, the comparison wasn't between victims of racism and Microsoft. The comparison was between people who spew extremism of any form. Anyone who believes microsoft, linux, freebsd, blacks, jews, homosexuals, dolphins, ants, trees, oxygen, arm pit hair, etc... Should be obliterated off the face of the earth has serious issues and should probably seek psychological counseling.

      --
      I think the invisible hand of the market has its middle finger extended

      --A wise old fart named SC0RN
  148. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by Goaway · · Score: 1

    All true, but the machine was good enough when you bought it. Does your mom have such a tech-lust that it's no longer good enough now?

  149. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    All true, but the machine was good enough when you bought it. Does your mom have such a tech-lust that it's no longer good enough now?

    No. Nor is it relevant to my comment that buying a machine that was replaced only a month or two later with a vastly more capable one is quite reasonable cause to be disappointed. One does not need "techno lust" to wish they'd gotten a better deal.

  150. Not just in the newsletters by hawk · · Score: 1

    There was a major release of emacs (19? something in the mid 90's) in which "linux" had been replaced with "lignux" in the shipped version. leading to the big commotion.

    hawk

  151. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by hawk · · Score: 1

    It wasn't even the unremovability. They put time and effort into destroying netscape (resources offered to make sites not work with netscape), java, and so forth. They were *not* sued for including IE, and the difficulty removing it wasn't a major issue. It was the actual use and abuse of monopoly power.

    hawk

  152. Re:Linus released the 'Linux' OS? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

    Not sure why I'm responding to such a clear troll (you didn't even call the MacBook Pro by its correct name) when I have mod points, but what the heck.

    1. You don't have to buy a computer - even a laptop - with *any* OS. You can also, with some vendors, refuse the MS license and demand a refund for the OS if you format it off the hard drive. Finally, there are a couple companies selling Linux laptops (System76 sells nothing else).

    2. Although I personally rarely interact with Macs except when my computer-illiterate friends and family members need me to troubleshoot theirs, one source I've found for installing a lot of great F/OSS programs is NetBSD's pkgsrc, a package management tool that can work with either binaries or (more often) build from source. Although not the same as the Ports system found on other BSDs, it has a similar ability to almost completely automate the whole installation and updates process, including configuration of source packages. More importantly, it runs on a wide variety of platforms, including Interix in Windows (see #3) and Darwin (Mac OS X). It's pretty easy to install and generally works well.

    3. In Windows, if you want a POSIX environment and shell (I prefer bash but zsh is also available) you can install the Services for Unix (SFU, WinXP and earlier NT versions) or Subsystem for Unix Applications (SUA, Server 2003, Vista, and above), which will install what I guess could be called a "parallel OS" called Interix. The only particularly noticeable lack is that it still goes through the NT kernel for device IO (using the POSIX subsystem rather than the Win32 subsystem, but the same at the kernel's lowest level) which offers no direct block device access. You don't have to worry about finding compatible drivers though. It's not fantastic but it makes the XP machine I'm forced to use at work usable. I haven't managed to get a native X server running, but there are Windows-based X servers and they work well enough for a desktop environment, let alone XEmacs. In theory it should be possible to install KDE or similar, although you'll need to compile from source. All the common Unix shells, including zsh, are available (although only csh and ksh are initially installed). You can get more software for it either from Interopsystems.com (binaries built specifically for SUA/SFU) or NetBSD pkgsrc (will require building most packages from source).

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  153. Interesting interview on openITis.com by gjanani · · Score: 1

    You might also want to check out Linus' latest interview on openITis.com ahref=http://www.openitis.com/openitis/comment_art icles.php?cpath=25&a_id=306%23rel=url2html-4727htt p://www.openitis.com/openitis/comment_articles.php ?cpath=25&a_id=306#> He answers 35 questions put forth by the Indian FOSS community. Super questions, BRILLIANT answers. The interview ROCKS!