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MS To Become Open Source Friendly Post Gates

ruphus13 writes "Now that Gates has 'retired' from Microsoft, ZDNet is speculating that Microsoft will become much more Open Source friendly. From the article, 'We already see quite a different approach to dealing with OSS and OSS companies from Sam Ramji's group [which is] doing a great job in establishing dialog,' said Rafael Laguna, CEO of Open-Xchange and a former marketing exec at SUSE Linux. 'With Gates' departure, the only mammoth remaining is Ballmer. With him away in a near future, Microsoft will definitely open up. They have to.'" Microsoft could become the world's largest open source company; they've certainly made some concessions to it lately.

309 of 424 comments (clear)

  1. April Fools? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's a little soon (or late depending) but Where are my ponies?

    1. Re:April Fools? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Oh right, after rigging the ISO process with OOXML and their triumph over open standards they're going to go open source? Balmer is still in charge and despite "retiring" Gates is still the executive chairman at Microsoft. There's no evidence of change -- this article is ridiculous.

      So what would be evidence of change? Well, they'd need to move to an OSS compatible business model for starters but right now they're still mostly about selling boxes of software. They don't have a services-side in the same way that IBM do. They have some hardware -- the mouse/keyboard/peripherals sell well. The Xbox is about selling hardware below cost but they make it back in SDKs and licensing -- so they couldn't open that.

      So there's actually very little of the company whose business model is compatible with open source licensing. That's where you'll see change, if it happens -- not in Bill Gates leaving Microsoft.

    2. Re:April Fools? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh right, after rigging the ISO process with OOXML and their triumph over open standards they're going to go open source?

      Well, despite all the effort they put into getting OOXML approved, they will (theoretically) implement ODF in the next version of Office.

    3. Re:April Fools? by Statecraftsman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In addition, and I'm just paraphrasing a video I saw of "Maddog" Hall talking, their business model and the ecology of companies(i.e. the VAR channels) are incompatible with them selling services. In they did start selling services, they'd have one hell of an advantage and would be pissing off all the people who help to sell, install and maintain their software. So they're pretty darn invested in just selling those boxes. Piss off the VARs and there's a world of free software for those VARs to switch to.

    4. Re:April Fools? by Technician · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I suspect they will follow the customers and the money.

      So there's actually very little of the company whose business model is compatible with open source licensing.

      As they watch their pie slice shrink and then shrink rapidly as open source get a solid foothold, they will have little choice.

      I prefer legal software. In comparing licenses, the one that permits legal installation on all the machines in my home vs a one license one machine restriction, a slightly differing interface becomes easy to trade to reject BSA threats.

      MS will have to effectively compete, sue like crazy, or shrink.

      They are attempting to compete and lock-in, but are failing while OSS expands. It's not just the Unix servers in the target zone anymore. The battle for the desktop is beginning.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    5. Re:April Fools? by JohnVanVliet · · Score: 1

      [quote]"implement ODF" [/quote] oh yes but 1.1 the buggy version and NOT the current 1.2

      --
      "I don't pitch OpenSUSE Linux to my friends, i let Microsoft do it for me
    6. Re:April Fools? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Um.. Open Source friendly doesn't mean changing to an OSS business model. They are competing in with open source software, why should MS play nice? If you don't think EVERY DAMN BUSINESS is about making money and driving out competition, then you're clearly delusional.

      Every company cannot give away software and make money off support. Even redhat doesnt give away their enterprise branded linux for free. (i dont mean fedora, and not every person cares about the source code)

      Even if MS did give away all of their products for free and charged like hell for support, everyone here will be up in arms about how they purposely make their software defective so people will need support. (nice bait placed here to make fun about how their software is already defective.. LOLZZZ) .. ok last part was a rant but other things are true.

    7. Re:April Fools? by blind+biker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mod parent up to stratosphere!!!! Microsoft is the synonym of "Death of Open Standards". There's nothing Microsoft as a corporation hates more than Open Standards and as an extension, Open Source. And I don't mean the "Microsoft of the past", I mean the Microsoft right here and now, the behemoth with billions of dollars and tens of thousands of developers under its belly, the Microsoft that COULD change the world of computing, if it wanted to, due to it's enormous installed base.

      But no, THIS Microsoft is a company that has learned how to leverage that installed base, and closed or poisoned standards is what it thrives on.

      Sorry but the article is crazy talk.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    8. Re:April Fools? by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      No, in fact Microsoft is forced to surrender and stop with their idiological policy against openness.

  2. In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nazis to become Pro-Jew post Hitler.

    Christians to become Pro-Reason post Apocalypse.

    KKK to become Pro-Black post Hanging.

    1. Re:In related news... by mrbluze · · Score: 1

      Nazis to become Pro-Jew post Hitler.

      That's not as stupid as it sounds.

      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    2. Re:In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Christians to become Pro-Reason post Apocalypse.

      I know that this post was sarcastic and that the collective slashdot crowd is generally anti-Christian, but the sweeping generalizations are getting old.

      Repeat after me:

      Just because some Christians (albeit a very vocal group) seem to fear science/reason, doesn't mean that all Christians do (see biased sample, Composition, hasty generalization, and Straw Man fallacies).

    3. Re:In related news... by mcgeeb · · Score: 2, Funny

      Slashdotters to be come Pro-Sunlight post first date.

    4. Re:In related news... by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Har har. Fact is that one generation's Victory or Death struggle is often the next's What's the Big Deal. I work at Sun, and ten years ago, there really were people here who compared Microsoft to the Nazi party. Now we have OEM and Interoperability agreements, and there's no question in my mind that our partnership with the Dark Side^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H Microsoft is a Good Thing.

      And you know, in the past, many people at Sun have not been friendly to Open Source either. And I don't mean the distant past either. When the decision was made to open up our Java implementations, there were some fairly important people who quit rather than participate. I think it's a safe bet that the culture at Microsoft is undergoing a similar upheaval. They haven't been anti-open source because of Bill Palpatine's mind control, but because a lot of people thought it was a bad idea. I've seen exactly the same struggle at every company that ends up going Open Source.

    5. Re:In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Darn right. There's no point in having a "dialog". Microsoft's actions (ie their software, NOT EULAs/press announcements/legal maneuvering/"gentlemans' agreements") will readily demonstrate whether they're going to play nice with the OSS world or not.

      A "dialog" is just a stalling tactic, but it probably works a lot better against commercial rivals than an "insurgency" of various anarchic OSS projects.

    6. Re:In related news... by raving_genius · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Wouldn't that be "Atheists to become Pro-Reason post Apocalypse"?

    7. Re:In related news... by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      Companies do change, you're right. There are some companies now that ppl would praise because perhaps they have changed and are doing good things while before they weren't. Or, perhaps they just have discovered an effective way to keep secrets, and distance themselves from the bad while their PR department displays all smiles.

      Some choose to hold accountable those who have done wrong the best way they know how, which is to protest those companies. Sometimes labeled zelots by those who live the "forgive and forget" or "don't give a damn about anyone" philosophies, they deserve credit for sticking to their opinion of things that are wrong and denouncing support for them. At some point, it is justifiable to forgive and forget as long as those they want to forgive have changed for the better.

      I'm waiting on you, Microsoft. Less talk, more proof. How about start with helping strike down software patent laws, and publicly apologize for your earlier patent threat among other things.

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    8. Re:In related news... by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that be "Atheists to become Pro-Reason post Apocalypse"?

      No.

    9. Re:In related news... by fm6 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, speaking of zealotry. You're looking at the decision to go open source as a moral one. But it's always a business decision. Was at Sun, and will be at Microsoft.

      And try to remember that the people who work at Microsoft (or anywhere else) are not the same people working there 10 years ago.

    10. Re:In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Fellow AC, with all of the logic and reasoning that these other posters would like to convince you that they have, they have totally never even considered that God is something that transcends space and time. So how would human logic and/or reasoning at this point in time even apply?

      Keep the faith brother.



      -AC

    11. Re:In related news... by McGiraf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just noticed something weird.
      Why is everybody else on this thread an AC? What are you scared of?

    12. Re:In related news... by Toll_Free · · Score: 2, Funny

      Please read 1984 before you talk about 1984. Thank you.

      I'd go one farther.

      If you didn't LIVE 1984, don't talk about it.

      lol, rofl, ymmv, etc. :-o

      --Toll_Free

    13. Re:In related news... by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Moderation Comment Log x

      Starting Score: 0 points
      Moderation -1
          100% Redundant
      Extra 'Redundant' Modifier +1 (Edit)
      Anonymous Modifier +1 (Edit)

      Total Score: 1

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    14. Re:In related news... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      The difference is, while microsoft's entire business depends on selling software, and making people buy as much of it as possible by fair means or foul...
      Sun's business is far more diverse, and i doubt they make too much of their income from selling software. They make most of their income from support contracts and sales of hardware... They *need* to provide software too, but it's a costly component for sun rather than the end product. It's in their interest to outsource some of the development for free.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    15. Re:In related news... by fbjon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is, with Microsoft, the dialog is modal and has only one button.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    16. Re:In related news... by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      Yes, you are obviously the more open minded individual.

    17. Re:In related news... by JackieBrown · · Score: 1
    18. Re:In related news... by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      :) thanks.

      I know you meant the opposite of what you wrote. But in fact I am open minded. If a god (or Santa) came and spoke to me I would demand that it proves that it exist. If it manage to convince me of its existence I would accept it. But my opinion of practicing members of any organized religion (or shopping spree) would not change. Blind faith in anything, including science, is the worst of plagues.

    19. Re:In related news... by RWerp · · Score: 1

      Hmm. My PhD advisor, a brilliant mathematical physicist, is a devout Catholic.

      Just to make things clear, I'm an atheist. But I have the capability to understand how some people may be good engineers/scientists and at the same time believe in God. They don't believe in ghosts or angels visiting them, just in the existence of a Supreme Being which gives them moral guidance. In fact, what I abhorr most in religion is not its irrationality (we're all irrational anyway), but the fact that you have to submit your conscience and moral sense to what a robed priest tells you.

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    20. Re:In related news... by lafiel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      However, corporate culture has a funny way of infecting new employees and sticking around. A company might be filled with new grunts, but at the end of the day, the same set of values and ideals are passed from generation to generation.

      Those who disagree and would want to see change tend to leave (similar to attrition). Without a person at the helm who is very dedicated to steering the company away from its course, you won't see much difference between the company ten years ago and the company today.

    21. Re:In related news... by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      I'm OK with companies not open sourcing things actually, I didn't mean to give that impression. It's the licensing and all the legal moves and exclusive deals they pull that you have to be careful of from them. The decision to go open source certainly could be considered a moral choice though, since an open source company is capable of helping everyone more than a closed one, so the poor will have more software that way, not that they don't simply copy closed source any way, but this way it'll be legal among other things. But, you could argue any decision at all is a moral one, it just depends where and how strong your morals are. I'm OK with closed source companies because open source ones can and will compete with them.

      Oh, MS has done a lot of things recently that were wrong, I'm not talking about ten years ago, but you're right, those things were also wrong. I don't like them as a company, and thus I do not and will not support them. Their empire is built on things I disagree with. It's important to not forget.

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    22. Re:In related news... by linhares · · Score: 1

      You must be new here.

    23. Re:In related news... by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      But in fact I am open minded. If a god (or Santa) came and spoke to me I would demand that it proves that it exist. If it manage to convince me of its existence I would accept it.

      That's not open minded.

      You demand proof of existence from someone you are talking to because you previously didn't believe in them.

    24. Re:In related news... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      So only companies that have only a marginal interest in software can afford to embrace open source? If that were true, Red Hat wouldn't be so profitable.

      The economic model for open source says that you give away the software and sell your expertise with it. That model's been drastically oversold (literally thousands of companies with bust trying it during the dotcom bubble) but some people do make a living at it. Microsoft's actually pretty well set up to do that: their support and services organization is humungous.

      Of course, they have no incentive to open-source Windows, the single product that accounts for most of their cash flow. But that particular gravy train may not last much longer.

    25. Re:In related news... by canuck57 · · Score: 1

      I just noticed something weird.
      Why is everybody else on this thread an AC? What are you scared of?

      MS trolls have mod points too. To state you don't believe Micro$oft is going to be open source friendly could get your post set to -1.

      What I have noticed lately is a lot of stupid so called news stories from sources like ZDNet and others that are not worth the disk storage bytes. Conjecture, hype, self important journalists making ever more wild claims trying to revive an otherwise eventless week in desktop technology.

      The article is speculation, not about news.

    26. Re:In related news... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Just because some Christians (albeit a very vocal group) seem to fear science/reason, doesn't mean that all Christians do [...]

      Christianity requires you to believe in "god", for which irrationality and a lack of adherence to the scientific method are pretty much prerequisites.

    27. Re:In related news... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      And try to remember that the people who work at Microsoft (or anywhere else) are not the same people working there 10 years ago.

      Further, try to remember that not everyone working at Microsoft has the same opinions. Yes, this includes everyone, from CxOs on down.

    28. Re:In related news... by rts008 · · Score: 1

      No.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    29. Re:In related news... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      No kidding. A long time ago I was trading email with a guy who ran a music server I was using. At one point I realized he worked at MS, and I apologized for some anti-Windows remarks I'd made. He replied with good humor, pointing out that his server was running Linux!

      (Will Duke Nukem Forever run on WINE on HURD?)

    30. Re:In related news... by Slur · · Score: 1

      Well... if you're one of those sophisticated Christians who understands that the biblical Jesus was simply an enlightened teacher, and the teachings are the essential thing, you might have your reason intact. After all, Jesus in his admonishments to the Pharisees essentially said "your old testament is not meant to be used the way you idiots use it, it's outdated, tribal, and violent, and you guys are deluding yourselves and everyone else with your literal interpretation and basing your arbitrary Sabbath laws on it."

      A Christian who really groks and values the spirit of their teacher could conceivably have a clue and be a reasonable person. But, yeah, chances are they would not be any kind of traditional Christian, and most likely would be more inspired by Buddhism or Hinduism, which are certainly better elucidations of the psychological principles Jesus was promoting.

      On the other hand, there may be some hope yet for the Christians.

      --
      -- thinkyhead software and media
    31. Re:In related news... by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      The bigger question that comes to the forefront of my mind is:

      For how much longer can Microsoft afford to re-invent Unix (badly), rather then starting to embrace and switch to open-source software for the underlying systems? Is it really in their investors' best interest to keep re-inventing the wheel?

      Is the value of locking in customers to the Windows platform really worth what they're paying to write (poorly) operating systems like Vista?

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
  3. System complexity driving OSS? by blahplusplus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have to wonder if the complexity of modern software is part of the big reason driving OSS, it would seem to me as our systems get faster, we can increase the complexity of our programs ad infintum, and at some point it 'breaks the camels back' and no business can hope to maintain something so large and unwieldy.

    1. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by bsDaemon · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...at some point it 'breaks the camels back' and no business can hope to maintain something so large and unwieldy.

      So, you're saying that in the future, all programmes will be written in perl?

    2. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by CastrTroy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It seems to me that the only people making things large and unwieldy are large closed source software companies (like MS, but others exist), that believe they have to be the be-all-and-end-all, the "one software company to bind them all", that they end up creating giant monstrosities like Vista. Open source, or at least, the Linux way, is to keep things simple. Do one thing and do it well. Don't try to be everything to everyone. Realize that it's OK if somebody wants to use some other competing software product. Just because our computers are fast, and they do lots of stuff, it doesn't mean that we have to make it complicated.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    3. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have to wonder if the complexity of modern software is part of the big reason driving OSS, it would seem to me as our systems get faster, we can increase the complexity of our programs ad infintum, and at some point it 'breaks the camels back' and no business can hope to maintain something so large and unwieldy.

      Personally I thought that with increased complexity you'd want more coordination and centralized control, not less. With the OSS philosophy and bazaar model a lot influenced by "do one task well", cross-integration is usually poor. Like say building a great e-mail application and a great calendar application but neglecting how these work together to function well. I guess it depends on what you're looking at but at least in the software I see making that kind of modular approach with lasting interfaces and replacable modules would be a huge undertaking, compared to just saying that in version X.1 we change this interface slightly on both sides.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by erlehmann · · Score: 2, Informative

      I guess it depends on what you're looking at but at least in the software I see making that kind of modular approach with lasting interfaces and replacable modules would be a huge undertaking,

      Have you ever looked at DBUS ?

    5. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Personally I thought that with increased complexity you'd want more coordination and centralized control, not less.

      So did the former Soviet Union. Why do you believe that coordination requires centralizedcontrol?

    6. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by D-Cypell · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...one line of PERL!

    7. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by mikael · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As software modules get larger, eventually they split into separate modules. As hardware evolves much of the functionality of the driver moved into firmware eg. hard disk drives and graphics cards.

      The problem is that proprietary OS vendors don't have the resources to write drivers for every piece of consumer hardware. Microsoft relies on the hardware vendors to do this themselves, while the OSS community can do this providing the hardware specifications are freely available.

      Anyone else really loses out, because they don't have the financial resources to pay for entire teams of programmers to do this, and the hardware vendors can't afford development kits for every different piece of hardware.

      The only alternative solution is for there to be a standard device driver file format - NDISwrapper is one way of achieving this.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    8. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Drakonik · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Very insightful. I think this can be boiled down to:

      Businesses write closed-source software that becomes monolithic and unmanageable because they need to add features to remain competitive in a market.

      Open-source software stays small and relatively manageable (I'm sure the Linux kernel is still a bitch to sift through, as nice as it is compared to the Windows kernel) because developers know that if their code becomes unmanageable, they aren't going to be paid to manage it.

      Plus, I think it's got something to do with being available to the public. I mean, if there was a giant billboard over your head that counted how many days it's been since you last brushed your teeth, would you skip it as often as you do?

    9. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Hawke666 · · Score: 1

      I partly agree, but it seems to me that it's merely a question of which gets done first, and how important it is. Most people would rather have a good email client and a good calendaring program (and a good web browser) than a crappy email client, crappy calendaring program, and crappy web browser that worked well together.

      You see projects like freedesktop specifically dedicated to integration, but they started after all the good separate applications already existed.

    10. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Feature bloat, of the pointless variety, has very little to do with competitiveness and much more to do with marketing. It is the means by which, costly and productivity destroying upgrades are made more sellable but, of course everything comes to an end. So office 2007 and Vista have proven to be 'a bridge to far' that nobody wants to cross and a pointless waste of M$'s share holders money.

      Rather unfair to blame that failure on Bill as it was largely ballmer's fuck up, a trial run to see how the company would function under ballmer's sole control, as it pans out, not very well. As a result ballmer's position is under real threat and he feels it, which is why the defensive public announcement that he will not retire for 10 years, quite clearly he will not voluntarily leave the position regardless of the blunders he continues to make.

      M$ as it currently stands can not succeed in OSS as the most important part of generating a income out of OSS is customers service and support, of being able to establish and maintain a quality relationship with customers. Treating them like the enemy with bogus EULA's, licence audits, B$ marketing and some very public deceitful practices makes it virtually impossible to achieve success it what will be a very competitive market, proof of that is M$ continuing failure with MSN.

      M$ has no real public, no customer desire, a prime example of that is the complete failure of Zune, even the name shows the level of M$'s customer disconnect. M$ needs to undergo a complete personality transplant and lose the arrogance, ego and bullshit and that will only happen once current management has crippled it's value and made 1/10th of the company it is today, after a shareholder revolt.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    11. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      No thanks, reverse engineering is easier than reading Perl oneliners. Closed Source is definitely more open than Perl.

    12. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Poltras · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...one line of PERL!

      You know what they say. If it can't be done in one line of perl, it's not turing-complete.

    13. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Daengbo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that OSS has always been about standards. It started as an implementation of POSIX. Programmers are much more likely to write a Jabber-enabled IM client than to write one with its own protocol. Once there was an office document standard, OSS programs rushed to add compatibility.

      Freedesktop.org spends a lot of time writing specs which mean that desktops and programs can share data, configs, cache, or whatever is needed. Look at their attempts to modularize the XFree86 code, DBus, HAL, and XDG (which is attempting to get the user directory under control).

      What this all means is that if you install a compliant WM like OpenBox and Python bindings for XDG, your autostart programs from Gnome will also start in OpenBox (unless they were defined to only start in Gnome). Now that the FLOSS community has these specifications (more like RFCs, not standards), the desktop is seeing a level of integration which wasn't possible a few years ago.

    14. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      As hardware evolves much of the functionality of the driver moved into firmware eg. hard disk drives and graphics cards.

      I'm not sure I understand.

      Hard disk drive firmware is for low-level functionality of the device itself. The rest just is so the BIOS can interface with it via IDE, SCSI, or SATA etc. Regardless, the OS never talks directly to the hard disk chipset to perform read/write operations. This has always been the case to by knowledge with regards to x86 PC architecture.

      As for video cards; its firmware is only to support the most basic of VESA functions and pre boot POST. A software driver has and will continue to be needed for direct access to the advanced GPU feature sets. Again, nothing new here.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    15. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Vista is a sample size of one. Can you think of any counter-examples? OS X, per chance (the fact that it's "based" on Mach and BSD does not qualify, as the overall user-experience is proprietary)? IIS isn't all that small or simple, and it comes out as at least a workable product. AIX seems to be doing just fine. World of Warcraft (and the software/hardware behind it server-side) is easily as complex as Windows, and that seems to work.

      On the other hand...

      And how about large and unwieldy open source software? Surely you can think of at least one such example. Xorg and/or XFree86, per chance? I wonder how GNU/HURD is doing? How about OpenOffice.org (which is getting significantly better) but still will often crash during document recovery, and has a number of other problems with regard to corrupting documents and saving massive files (not just OOorg format, but DOC and PDF are all >100kb for a 1 page document, it seems!). Or how about KDE, which with version 4 is only slightly less bloated, sluggish, and so forth than Vista (and just as unusable as Vista on a 1.5GHz/1G system)? Or the wonderful mess that the Enlightenment project is - 10 years out from the last point release and 8 years from the last time anyone gave a damn, largely unusable and forgotten, but still in active development? And should I even mention what a stupid, stupid idea Avahi is, or the nightmare that having it an integral part of the major desktops/distros is? Or synergy, which is an awesome project with a lot of potential - but appears to have been abandoned and has some piss-poor security considerations?

      And I could keep going. I love open source, but let's not candy coat a turd or shit-coat candy. The point is, the fact that it's closed source has nothing to do with it.

      Vista is just Vista. Yes, they introduced some interesting concepts, but tried to stretch everything else too far, cut a lot of features, and left a lot of stuff half-done while ripping out most of those features. So it's a buggy, bloated, steaming pile of feces which won't work to an acceptable level for at least 3 years until after it was released - just like every other major MS product. That's just the way MS works; it's nothing inherent to large closed-source software projects.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    16. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Kensai7 · · Score: 1

      As software modules get larger, eventually they split into separate modules. As hardware evolves much of the functionality of the driver moved into firmware eg. hard disk drives and graphics cards.

      The thing is, although the above is "the way forward", it's not happening all the time and by all vendors. You still see cumbersome and difficult to tinker software [and hardware].

      --
      "Sum Ergo Cogito"
    17. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense. Turing completeness is a property of languages, not algorithms.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    18. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You know what they say? Humour is a property of people, not scientists.

    19. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by kdart · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As long as you have well defined, open and published interfaces that increase modularity you can scale to larger systems and still be stable. One of my biggest complaints about MS is that they don't do this.

      The open source community will ultimately prevail because they do good engineering (doing it the Right Way), whereas commercial software is often rushed out the door a big steaming pile with a nice coat of paint in order get market share from people that don't know any better.

      --

      --
      The early bird catches the worm. The worm that sleeps late lives to see another day.
    20. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      As others have written, OSS is more likely to work through standards than through "centralized control". Even if there are some exceptions, like Linux kernel development.

      I think that more complexity needs better modularity, which can in a sense be reached through standards:
      the standard describes the interface between programs, and programs conforming to the standard are the "modules" of the system. It will probably be a slower but more reliable process, because more people are involved. That means more eyeballs on the problems (good) but also longer discussions until a consensus is reached.

      Personally I suspect that Microsoft suffers from the attempt to integrate too much without well-defined interfaces between the parts. I have been on a few (smaller) software projects that were delayed, partly because of too much historically grown spaghetti code. The same thing on a much larger scale could explain the four years delay of Vista.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    21. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by jamesh · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense.


      You're not a Perl programmer then are you?

    22. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by mikael · · Score: 1

      3D graphics used to purely software implementations (Phigs). Wolfenstein 3D was software based, along with Quake. This created a demand for consumer based hardware based texture mapping (3DFx Voodoo cards) with vertex, lighting and clipping still done in software. Then those stages went into hardware.

      With hard disk drives, the controllers used to specify the track/sector/block directly. Now, it's just an arbitrary scheme to index data, as the number of sectors on each track of the hard disk drive increases with the radius of the track.
      There's also other functionality as hard disk drive caches (8 Megabytes) to improve performance.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    23. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      OpenOffice actually stems from what was originally proprietary code, and it has been improving steadily since being opened up...

      Mozilla is another example, when the netscape source was originally opened up it was a steaming pile of feces for quite some time.

      KDE aims to compete with vista, it's aimed at users who actually like the bloat. The advantage of open source is that it gives you a choice, there are a myriad of less bloated projects out there.

      HURD has largely become redundant, and thus doesn't attract much development...

      Xorg has just undergone major work to make it far more modular.

      Interesting you pick IIS, as version 6 is considerably simpler than 5 was... And as a consequence has had a massively better security/stability track record.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    24. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by LaminatorX · · Score: 1

      IBM went through the sort of personality transplant you describe, there's no reason MS couldn't. It probably won't happen with Ballmer at the helm though.

    25. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Well, cross integration of command line tools is very good (pipes etc), but they missed the boat a bit with gui based apps...

      Microsoft's approach is to stick everything together, but not publish how, such that you have programs that work well together but not with anything else...

      AmigaOS has a good idea with Arexx ports...

      What we really need, is some kind of standardization, like the cli has stdin/stdout, so that independently developed programs can work together well...
      We already have this to a small degree, with standard file formats, but that requires a save/open process.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    26. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that the only people making things large and unwieldy are large closed source software companies (like MS, but others exist),

      A comparable FOSS system is just as large and unwieldy. The key is that the FOSS system, because all the internals are exposed, is broken up into a vast array of separately manageable chunks. Each chunk looks relatively maintainable, but the whole system (that's Linux, GNU tools, X11, toolkits such as QT and GTK+, backend stuff like HAL and DBUS, libraries for this and that small function (zlib, jpeg handling, ffts, etc.), and then the new stuff coming in like Cairo; the list goes on) is huge and is unwieldy if someone is trying to maintain it as a monolithic whole. The GP's point is that FOSS allows you to open it up and not maintain it as a whole, and as the whole system gets more complex, the more appealing it is to open it up and farm it out as FOSS does.

    27. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Or standards for the hardware, eg OHCI/UHCI for usb, EHCI for usb2, AHCI for sata...

      If all hardware conforms to a standard according to it's device type, then it becomes necessary to write only one usb driver, one sata driver, one ide driver etc..

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    28. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by coaxial · · Score: 1

      Your analysis fails to take into account that these differing design philosophies predate the open source movement.

      The PC branch (for lack of a better word) of the philosophy tree came from a world of a single machine with a single user that could only do a single thing. Therefore, if you wanted to do multiple things, you had to have your programs do multiple things.

      On the other side we have the UNIX branch. This branch is dominated by two very powerful ideas since Thompson, Ritchie, McIlroy created UNIX back in the 60s.

      1. Everything is a file
      2. Lots of IPC

      So what does this mean? It means that it's incredibly easy for developers to manipulate hardware. Want to record audio? cat /dev/audio > myvoice.au. Want to play it back? cat myvoice.au > /dev/audio. Secondly, it means that you can create lots of very simple programs and use them in combination to solve complex problems. This is the reason you have lots of programs that simply read input from either a file or from stdin and output text to stdout. This also leads to the idea of "fail silently" since no one wants "Parse Error" to show up in their pipe chain. This gives you the rule of "One, two, or infinitely many" arguments.

      So why did the UNIX Philosophy dominate the open source world? Simple. Open source comes from academia, and researchers distributing source code, and all research was, and still is, dominated by UNIX machines. Eventually these practices became codified.

      But why was source code traded instead of just binaries? Ahh, not necessarily out of altruism, but out of pragmatism. See, UNIX machines differed wildly in their set ups. Different compilers, different libraries, different processors. In a very real sensed, no two machines were identical, and so you had to ship the code and have it compiled on the machine. Sometimes the code obfuscated, sometimes it just had a sign reading "Don't Look Here" hanging on it. Saying, "Go ahead and read it and modify it" isn't much of a jump when you're simply acknowledging that that it's going to happen anyway.

      It's all part of the "Unix Philosophy." Google it. So while what you say might be partially true, it's not the primary cause.

      Damn kids these days. They don't even know their own history.

    29. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Well, cross integration of command line tools is acceptable (pipes etc), but they missed the boat a bit with gui based apps...

      Fixed that for you. I'm a fan of the UNIX way of combining applications to make a "solution", but the standard approach is very limited. If you're transforming data and it's always representable as rowsets, piping works fine... but for advanced tasks, I always end up with a mixture of bash, awk or even XSLT processing. Sometimes I want more than just a sequence of streaming text processers, and IME there isn't always a consistent way to get that between processes.

      Incidentally, if you haven't already seen it, check out DBUS and DCOP. Those are both attempts at providing hierarchical attribute access and control (think "Firefox config") between processes. Not quite enough to replace the stdin/stdout paradigm, but it's a step in the right direction. Treat all of your GUI apps the same as network peers, and then the distinction between "desktop" and "cluster" get blurred real fast :)

    30. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      Indeed I am, for now.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    31. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      The key is that the FOSS system, because all the internals are exposed, is broken up into a vast array of separately manageable chunks. Each chunk looks relatively maintainable, but the whole system (that's Linux, GNU tools, X11, toolkits such as QT and GTK+, backend stuff like HAL and DBUS, libraries for this and that small function (zlib, jpeg handling, ffts, etc.), and then the new stuff coming in like Cairo; the list goes on) is huge and is unwieldy if someone is trying to maintain it as monolithic whole. The GP's point is that FOSS allows you to open it up and not maintain it as a whole, and as the whole system gets more complex, the more appealing it is to open it up and farm it out as FOSS does.

      Of course, GGP misses the point that as soon as you stop maintaining it as a whole, you end up with something that looks like a patchwork quilt and is generally less usable than their more coherent brethren.

      Vista is just as "modular" as, say, Ubuntu. The difference is that only Microsoft gets to work with it on a "modules" level.

    32. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      Just to nit-pic, *BSD kernels dont havethis problem. 30 years of development, *sigh* good things are to come

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
    33. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      is it just me, or is plan 9 from bell labs going to really expand sometime soon. seriously, you guys are talking about a distrbuted OS, great idea actualy, keep it goin'!

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
    34. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      Distributed operating system? Aps as peers, universal hierarchi? Plan 9 from Bell labs needs a facelift, me thinks.

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
    35. Re:System complexity driving OSS? by Poltras · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense. Turing completeness is a property of languages, not algorithms.

      Sorry, but the correct joke:

      You know what they say. If it can't be done in one line of perl, it's not computable by a turing-complete language machine.

      is really not as funny as the first one, and arrogant.

  4. Speculation means nothing by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'll believe it when I see it and not a moment before. With Microsoft's record anything short of unequivocal action should be treated with absolute scepticism.

    --
    Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
    1. Re:Speculation means nothing by antirelic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I find it questionable to believe that Microsoft would have any reason to support open source. According to Microsoft sales people (not very reliable, but only figures I care to research), Vista has sold millions of copies, providing Microsoft with massive amounts of revenue. Most of Vista sales are in the form OEM agreements, where microsoft continues to utilize its effective monopoly over the market in order to push a product that most people do not want, need, or are even ready to accommodate.

      Could it be that microsoft has spent most of its monopolistic capital pushing vista that they now need to seriously consider alternative routes? This is a serious question because I am in no position to where microsoft really stands in the market post vista melt down.

      --
      20th century Marxism is not progress...
    2. Re:Speculation means nothing by mrbluze · · Score: 5, Funny

      Microsoft will definitely open up.

      Or close down. I know which I'd prefer.

      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    3. Re:Speculation means nothing by maxume · · Score: 1

      Probably not. It will be clearer in ~12 months, but even if there is a significant drop in revenue for this year (they increased "client" revenues in 2007, client is how they report the majority of OS sales), it will be muddled by the current overall economic issues.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Speculation means nothing by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      I won't believe it when I see it. I'll need to see it many times, by all of their business units, over a significant length of time before I believe it.

    5. Re:Speculation means nothing by alexhmit01 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Vista financial success... Fortune has an article on Bill Gates and his next move, plus one on Microsoft. In the years that Gates has been transitioning out (about 10 years now, in 98 Ballmer named President, in 2000, named CEO, and the last 8 years Gates has brought people in for his other senior roles), MS revenues have increased 5-fold and the company has diversified.

      Microsoft's problem is that the stock is in the doldrums because they aren't seen as a growth plan, so their P/E ratio has dropped about as fast as they've increased earning. Their other problem is that their brand is tarnished... Original Xbox was a disaster, Xbox 360 had a good run but is being beaten by the Wii. The Apple commercials, while silly, are trashing Microsoft as old and lame. They are seen as part of the boring business infrastructure. They make plenty of money, but they don't have a good consumer brand right now. This isn't inherently a problem, plenty of companies have a lousy brand but sell industrial services... combined with monopoly rents, MSFT can remain a Fortune 500 company that way... however, that's a 10% growth, PE 12 story, not 25% growth, PE 50 story.

      Further, growth will get harder, Linux keeps getting closer to being good enough for more and more stuff. Apple is carving out an increasing niche... all of these slow MSFT's financial growth....

      Gates without Microsoft
      Microsoft without Gates

    6. Re:Speculation means nothing by HiThere · · Score: 1

      You're either an optimist, or you don't know your history. MS has a long history of backstabbing companies AFTER they've signed the contract.

      I won't believe this until they are using a license that I trust, and the company (not certain developers, as happened on a previous occasion) is releasing the software. (If the company doesn't put it's name to it, it might be able to argue that it wasn't bound by the license.)

      Skeptical? No. I'm just trying to rule out all the ways that they've previously used to backstab somebody. I'm certain that they're inventive enough to come up with new ones, though, so AFTER they've released code in a way that meets my requirements, I'll still wait a few years (5, maybe 10) to see who gets arrows in their back and how. Perhaps I don't trust them?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:Speculation means nothing by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Users hate Vista. I don't why because I think Microsoft really got Vista right.

      Your argument is right. It will be difficult to realize the growth in the future.

      In business and politics Microsoft always acts as a bully and now it needs to pay certain bills from the past.

  5. Ha ha ha ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ha ha ha ha
    Ha ha ha ha
    (catches breath)
    Ha ha ha
    ...

    1. Re:Ha ha ha ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      You must not be new here ;)

    2. Re:Ha ha ha ha by maestroX · · Score: 1

      Steve, is that you?

    3. Re:Ha ha ha ha by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      somebody got a dry pair of pants?! *breathless chukle*

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
    4. Re:Ha ha ha ha by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      Somebody got a dry pair of pants? *breathless chukle*

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
  6. The only way for MS to be open source friendly... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Insightful

    is if Ballmer and the Gates people are no longer at the top. And that ain't gonna happen.

  7. remember the OLD IBM? by phrostie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the term, FUD originated with IBM, not Microsoft.
    so i won't say it can't happen, but i'm not holding my breath either

    1. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      IBM though, has adapted. First with punch-cards then mainframes then to the PC. From being a MS ally to siding with the F/OSS people. MS has had 0 adaptation. They embrace the early '80s method of software development of closed-source programs that only get half the job done. MS has shown 0 innovation and 0 adaptation. If an organism can't adapt to a changing environment it dies, if MS can't adapt quickly, it will die. I think that MS is on the fast-track to destruction.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by thermian · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Don't you know the new required thought pattern? We aren't supposed to remember how nasty IBM were.

      They are meant to be thought of as the poor unfortunate victims of an evil Microsoft, not the over confident and arrogant giant company who's failure to understand the market handed the world of computing to a small company whose owner lived on junk food and didn't wash much.

      Being old I remember the time when Microsoft were this great company who liberated the computing world from the Unix wars. A company whose philosophy of getting their product out there cheaply and on everything meant I could finally afford a computer after several years of wanting, but not being able to buy, a Mac.

      There was a time when Microsoft were the good guys, where people suddenly found that they could write a product for DOS and it would run on almost any computer. That meant it was possible to become a software house with a lot less effort and money than before.

      I rather suspect people just don't realise what it was like before DOS.

      Ok it didn't stay that way, or didn't unless you're a big Microsoft fan, but when I were young it was true.

      Personally I wish they would get with the Open Source movement. I've been an open source developer for over five years, working with both Linux and Windows, and the lack of high level co-operation between the two camps is, in my opinion, is preventing a huge leap forward in computing.

      --
      A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
    3. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Toll_Free · · Score: 1

      There was a time when Microsoft were the good guys, where people suddenly found that they could write a product for DOS and it would run on almost any computer. That meant it was possible to become a software house with a lot less effort and money than before.

      DOS is the interface between the computer, the interpreter and the machine itself.

      I believe you meant BASIC... Oh, how I long for the simplicity, graph paper, and long nights of 'peek'ing and 'poke'ing.

      And I always wanted not a Mac, I went back to the ][+. The PET was so far of a dream, the C-16 was a decent trash box, but oh, the ][ series of Apples. That, and a HUGE pile (which was what, 4 months) of the old BYTE magazine. ./end_nostalgia

      --Toll_Free

    4. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by thermian · · Score: 1

      No, I meant DOS. You programmed using BASIC but it ran on DOS, therefore the statement writing a product for DOS was correct. Doesn't mean it made sense to anything else though...
      It was the introduction of an OS that was common between computers was the big breakthrough. That was my point.

      Ah BASIC, I had such fun with that language.

      --
      A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
    5. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      If an organism can't adapt to a changing environment it dies

      Unless they're power full enough to adapt^H^H^H fuck up the environment around them instead

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    6. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't you know the new required thought pattern? We aren't supposed to remember how nasty IBM were.....There was a time when Microsoft were the good guys,

      Wrong thread, we only remember microsoft as good guys when we talk about google.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    7. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      IBM though, has adapted.

      No, IBM after the PS/2 fiasco crashed, and then rebooted, focusing on overall customer experience and satisfaction (as mch as a big corporation can). Let's hope this also happens to Microsoft.

    8. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Toll_Free · · Score: 1

      All other BSing aside, try CPM. Older, cross platform, and did what you describe quite a few years earlier. Like, half a decade or more.

      Anywho, off to bed.... Again. lol.

      --Toll_Free

    9. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by thermian · · Score: 1

      yes, yes, but, and this a very important but, it *wasn't* installed on millions of computers now was it..

      Unix was superior to DOS too, didn't stop DOS from winning...

      --
      A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
    10. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Bert64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was not microsoft who did that however...
      It was IBM by basing their hardware design on off the shelf parts... Dos was just one of many components.

      Basically the hardware opened up, but the software remained closed. That was a good first step since hardware used to account for the majority of the cost, but now we've had open hardware for a few years and it's about time software went the same way. MS just rode the wave of open hardware, and their actions managed to largely go unnoticed.

      When it inevitably happens, software will fall a lot further than hardware did, simply because the barrier for entry and general costs are a lot lower.

      It's no longer possible for IBM for extract a monopoly rent on hardware, in a few years time it will no longer be possible for MS to do the same with software.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    11. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      DOS wasn't the breakthrough...
      The fact that the hardware was capable of running the same software (that includes DOS) was the breakthrough.

      It's not like you had multiple versions of DOS for multiple incompatible types of hardware that let you run the same software, maybe you're thinking of Java?

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    12. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      "OLD IBM," eh?

      While we're holding a grudge against IBM for decades-old transgressions, we'd might as well throw this one into the mix too.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    13. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by JohnBailey · · Score: 1

      Don't you know the new required thought pattern? We aren't supposed to remember how nasty IBM were.

      They are meant to be thought of as the poor unfortunate victims of an evil Microsoft, not the over confident and arrogant giant company who's failure to understand the market handed the world of computing to a small company whose owner lived on junk food and didn't wash much.

      Being old I remember the time when Microsoft were this great company who liberated the computing world from the Unix wars. A company whose philosophy of getting their product out there cheaply and on everything meant I could finally afford a computer after several years of wanting, but not being able to buy, a Mac.

      There was a time when Microsoft were the good guys, where people suddenly found that they could write a product for DOS and it would run on almost any computer. That meant it was possible to become a software house with a lot less effort and money than before.

      And now it has come full circle. Everything that was true of IBM is now true of Microsoft. And Linux is in the position that Microsoft was in at the time. But without the crafty business deals and underhanded tactics. Now it is possible to become a software house with some talent and no money.

      --
      It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his job depends on not understanding it.
    14. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I dealt with IBM (indirectly, admittedly) before DOS. They were inflexible, but not particularly litigious. They didn't may wholesale threats against their customer base. (Yeah, I know SCOX was even worse than MS...but then they were funded by MS.)

      I didn't like IBM, and I cheered for MS when it began to rise...and up through about MSWind98 I defended them as "Not as bad as IBM used to be." Afterwards, however, that stopped being true. I've READ the bloody EULA that came with MSWind2000, and that's what caused me to switch to Linux. Linux didn't even have a viable word processor at the time, and I switched anyway, and created documents using Netscape's (Mozilla's?) HTML editor. (I never managed to pick up LaTex. I kept meaning to find time, but then StarOffice 5.2 appeared, and I've never gotten around to it.)

      So yes, I remember the old IBM. MS is worse.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    15. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by Nicolay77 · · Score: 1

      Heh. I learnt LaTeX only because it was the 'Linux word processor'.

      --
      We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
    16. Re:remember the OLD IBM? by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      There was a time when Microsoft were the good guys, where people suddenly found that they could write a product for DOS and it would run on almost any computer. That meant it was possible to become a software house with a lot less effort and money than before.

      And then they got greedy and started competing in a lot of other markets (office software, financial software, bookkeeping software).

      Back in the mid-late 90s, ISVs lived in fear that Microsoft would decide to take an interest in their market segment. They'd come in with an inferior product, and keep throwing money at it until you went out of business. Or they'd buy you out and retire your product from the market, leaving only their solution.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
  8. It's like this every year. by twitter · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They are always becoming friendlier but somehow never quit the full frontal assault. Their arsenal includes a full spectrum of technical sabotage, PR, legal threats on top of ordinary competition. If this is a joke, I'm tired of hearing it.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:It's like this every year. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...legal threats...

      I am still waiting for that list of 235 patents.

    2. Re:It's like this every year. by JohnVanVliet · · Score: 3, Funny

      it has been so long that i forgot about those 235 patents

      --
      "I don't pitch OpenSUSE Linux to my friends, i let Microsoft do it for me
    3. Re:It's like this every year. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for truly open document formats.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    4. Re:It's like this every year. by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      one word sockpuppet

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
  9. Re:Balmer? by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Funny

    WARNING! Incoming chairs detected!

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  10. it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by Icy_Infinity · · Score: 4, Funny

    i would just love the day when i can just go to an MS website click a link download windows and be installing it when in minutes with out spending a dime.

    it could happen and very like will here's how:

    Microsoft has its fingers is A-LOT of things (X box, Zune, Internet Services) just cut one of them off:
    Windows, windows should be open source just the OS that way with proper guidance from the whole things like security bug ans flaws in the code will be ironed out in no time.

    its other applications could be rolled into its internet services (see google docs). and then Windows would be separate from MS and, MS could go about making money and forget about the OS market which is too unstable and Unwieldy. they like to say that they'll support there software LOL yea right if your pay extra and that ISN'T support
    support wouldn't be needed if there wouldn't be problems with your software and there wouldn't be problems if every one could just look at it and fix it.

    Also if JUST windows the OS and only the OS was made open source they could say goodbye to the Department of Justice for good and there anti-trust lawsuit woes would be over. Its kinda hard to have a monopoly when your not REALLY making money from it. (donations wouldn't count, but heck they probably wouldn't get one for awhile as many peeps as they have pissed off heh)
    Also pirates would become a non-issue when your just giving away your stuff for free they won't be pirates any more.

    I have one requests of Sam Ramji PLEASE make this world a better place and make your life much easier by spinning off the Windows OS into an open source organization, please.

    P.S. There is a reason why Firefox stomps IE and That's because WE made it good - Windows can be good too if you let us (the end users) make it that way

    1. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 3, Funny

      Dude, if Microsoft open sources anything, it will probably be "Bob".

    2. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by Khuffie · · Score: 1

      a ) Xbox, Zune et al barely make money. Microsoft's bread and butter is Windows and Office. b ) So why does Opera stomp Firefox then?

    3. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      That's pre-supposing there's something desirable to download. Ok, how about Vista? No? XP? It's going to be supported until 2015! No? How about MS Office? What, won't run on Linux? Hmmmm. It kind of runs on Macs.... maybe you need some Wine.

      Sure, mod me flamebait. I need to feel the heat of Microsoft's new OSS. Oh-- SUSE support? Great-- but not Red Hat/Fedora/CentOS or Ubuntu or 400 other distros? Gosh.

      Gates leaving changes nothing. Time to short the stock before it rides down with the rest of the market. Make sure you do it in Euros.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    4. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by kesuki · · Score: 1

      "P.S. There is a reason why Firefox stomps IE and That's because WE made it good"

      No, the Netscape guys who took AOL's money and ran, with the requirement of setting up the Mozilla foundation are the ones 'who made it great' remember, Netscape practically invented the browser, or at least stole it from mosaic.

      Sure, IE was eroding Netscape user base through illegal browser bundling and other evil practices, but Mozilla was made great by the smartest guys out there, not only did the cash in, but the ensured their product wouldn't be destroyed by acquisition by AOL by forcing them to start up the Mozilla foundation.

      when firefox was starting to get really popular, mozilla started a risky ad campaign to 'switch' to firefox, with newsprint ads etc, and the endorsement deal from google, has padded the pockets of the mozilla foundation, ensuring that mozilla will be producing the best FOSS webbrowser for the next hundred years, if internet tech lasts that long.

      Because of what mozilla has done it's probably a lot less likely that anyone else who gets the chance to 'sell out' will be able to force the creations of a FOSS company based on code they developed. anyone who watched what netscape did, basically shafting AOL who got NO VALUE for acquiring netscape, and creating a massive multimillion dollar foundation thanks to google...

      true, a LOT of AOL acquisitions have resulted in 'no value' but they've got to be pretty sore about firefox. all googles money goes to Mozilla, not AOL because even AOL users want firefox not 'netscape'

    5. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      P.S. There is a reason why Firefox stomps IE and That's because WE made it good - Windows can be good too if you let us (the end users) make it that way

      By 'stomps' you mean 'still has less market share than'? I'm just saying.

      FF is great in the sense that it's ridiculously customizable. I've got add-ons installed to make my Firefox exactly what I want it to be for the things I use it for, and that's great. . . but I question whether that's what the mainstream audience will ever really want.

    6. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by CycoChuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I not so sure that M$ will ever give Windows away like Linux. I can see them start using an open source kernel like Linux and put a pretty proprietary GUI on it just like Apple did with OS X; mainly because Vista shows what happens when M$ tries new code that isn't left over from their OS/2 days.

      --
      Windows is as solid as quicksand.
    7. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      What are you, like, 12?

      Windows + Office are the only thing which has kept MS afloat for the past decade. Almost everything else (as far as I know, it really is everything) they've tried has failed - ie, it's been a net financial loss. I think they eventually broke even on the Xbox, and they're close to breaking even on the Xbox2, but c'mon. They've been around since the 1970s.

      And Firefox wasn't made good by the end users. It was made good by the developers.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    8. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by ya+really · · Score: 1

      "P.S. There is a reason why Firefox stomps IE and That's because WE made it good"

      I wouldn't have so much of a problem with IE if it were forced to always run in "sandbox mode" (only available in Vista as well) and also conformed to W3C standards.

      The fact it's tied in directly to the kernel of every Windows OS otherwise just makes it unusable. Mostly, I just hate it (like most web developers) because I'll write some html or javascript that conforms to standards and works perfect on opera/firefox/safari and then totally breaks in IE, forcing me to spend extra time fixing a broken browser.

    9. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by paratiritis · · Score: 1
      You know it is relatively easy to create a sandbox type scheme as well:

      1. Create a limited permissions user.

      2. Create a shortcut to run IE as that user, and use that to surf.

      In practice it is simple to do, but creates all sorts of problems with file ownership of downloaded stuff. You have to remember to change the owner every time you download something.

      I wonder why MS didn't make something like this available on XP automatically since the essentials are there. I can't think of any reason other than marketing.

    10. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      ReactOS already exists

      and it also boots. That is the least (and very nearly the most) that you can say for it.

    11. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by chefren · · Score: 1

      I understand SharePoint is doing pretty well.

    12. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Sure, IE was eroding Netscape user base through illegal browser bundling and other evil practices [...]

      No, it was "eroding Netscape's user base" because it was better . It was the "unbundled" IE4 that "eroded" (=destroyed) Netscape's marketshare.

      Netscape "lost" because their product at the time sucked. Which anyone who actually had to use Navigator >=4.x would be well aware of.

    13. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      The fact it's tied in directly to the kernel of every Windows OS otherwise just makes it unusable.

      In no version of Windows ever released, is IE "tied directly to the kernel". It is, and always has been, a user space application. It's no different to its various equivalents in KDE, GNOME, OS X, etc.

    14. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by ya+really · · Score: 1

      Sure it is. Just try typing in a web addy in windows xp at the explorer bar. Iexplore.exe doesnt launch, but the internet sure does (this computer has IE6 on it if you care, though I don't use it or allow it on the net). Try uninstalling IE in windows, it's also near impossible because it's so closely tied into the windows kernel.

    15. Re:it won't be a bad thing to have an Open Windows by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Sure it is. Just try typing in a web addy in windows xp at the explorer bar. Iexplore.exe doesnt launch, but the internet sure does (this computer has IE6 on it if you care, though I don't use it or allow it on the net). Try uninstalling IE in windows, it's also near impossible because it's so closely tied into the windows kernel.

      You are clueless.

  11. I suppose... by taupin · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... Microsoft _could_ become the world's largest open-source company...
    ... Apple _could_ become the world's largest producer of low-cost laptops...
    ... China _could_ become the world's largest anarchy (by population) ...
    ... Jupiter _could_ turn out to be the solar system's second Sun...
    ... Hell _could_ freeze over...

  12. Yeah right by NoobixCube · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ballmer has a severe case of verbal diarrhea, so we know how he feels about open source software. "Open source is a cancer...", "Linux infringes on over 200 Microsoft patents" (as-yet undisclosed patents, I might add). I can only see Microsoft going Open Source when they finally glue Ballmer's hand to a chair. Then he'll follow it out the window when he throws it.

    --
    Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
    1. Re:Yeah right by syousef · · Score: 1

      Ballmer has a severe case of verbal diarrhea, so we know how he feels about open source software. "Open source is a cancer...", "Linux infringes on over 200 Microsoft patents"

      That's not how I saw it phrased in the MS propaganda^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hress release:

      Open source cancer causes severe case of verbal dihorrea, infringes over 200 patents.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    2. Re:Yeah right by ChrisMP1 · · Score: 1

      Holy crap the chair-throwing jokes are old!

      (Yes, I know, you got +5 Funny. This only means that 4 mods felt sorry for your lack of humour - not that anyone thought it was really funny)

      --
      <sig>&nbsp;</sig>
  13. OpenSource friendly? by FudRucker · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I will believe it when I see it, with microsoft's track record during its entire existence I wont hold my breath, respect and trust is something that must be earned and not given out like halloween candy, lets see them actually change = not with lip service and press-release/FUD, I want to see real change...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  14. Skepticism aside... by Sun.Jedi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How many would actually embrace an open source Windows, extend the code, and extinguish the bugs?

    1. Re:Skepticism aside... by timmarhy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      lots of people would drop linux like a hot potato if windows had the same level of openess. face it, windows is the standard and has all the vendor support and all the market share. if it was open, linux wouldn't have much of a reason to live.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:Skepticism aside... by erlehmann · · Score: 1

      lots of people would drop linux like a hot potato if windows had the same level of openess.

      Yeah, because somehow, if it suddenly were open source, it would stop being retarted (read: inconsistent and unsafe for general use) ? I somehow doubt that.

    3. Re:Skepticism aside... by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      Thats interesting and I have an hypothetical question for you:

      Being the case that Microsoft applies a new business model and gives away Windows for free/"free" JUST if you buy the Office suite.. I mean, buy Office 2011 and get Windows 7 for free, Would you buy it and use it?

      If Windows turns Open Source, can Linux use parts of the Windows kernel to patch hardware issues? Is this possible?

    4. Re:Skepticism aside... by Bandman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Lots of people would spend the better part of a year reading and rewriting code. By the end of that year, wine would be nearly complete, Windows and Linux would support each other's binaries (probably with a patch to the linux kernel, as I'm sure Linus wouldn't include it with that little testing). and the more broken part of Windows would be fixed. It's hard to tell whether XOrg would include Windows code, or whether they'd fork off another project to support the API. The windows code would fragment into dozens of distros, almost immediately. Of these, maybe a couple would last longer than a half year. There would be lots of interpretations of how to fix or change the windows code to bring it more inline with the linux philosophy. Eventually, I think most people would come to accept Windows as a separate end-product, but that wouldn't stop some people from working on combining them.

      It would be a couple of years before the first solid Linux distros started shipping which included support for Windows programs (and actually worked)

    5. Re:Skepticism aside... by Gabrill · · Score: 1

      Oh please. Windows wouldn't work if you removed the bugs!

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
    6. Re:Skepticism aside... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I mean, buy Office 2011 and get Windows 7 for free, Would you buy it and use it?

      No. Do you know how much Office costs? I could buy a laptop for that much.

      Windows 7 is going to have to be a radical transformation (you know, like Vista only in the direction of "better") for me to even consider using it. By then (then being 2012 or whenever it will actually ship), I doubt there will be anything that you could do with Windows that couldn't be done as well or better on Linux. Heck, right now that list only includes games and very little else.

      Besides if Microsoft totally turns it around and produces a lean, mean, sleek OS... and it could happen... Windows 7 will still be shackled with tremendous amounts of rights-infringing, temper-shortening, interoperability-breaking, freedom-restricting functionality.

      I mean, if Vista worked perfectly today, i.e., no bugs, including being as fast or faster than XP in all it does, I still wouldn't have a reason use it. Would you?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    7. Re:Skepticism aside... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      I agree this would wipe out Linux, provided it is "open" in such a way that popular changes can be added to the "main distribution". What will then happen is full Unix compatibility, by default, will be added to the kernel, probably so fast it will make Ballmer's head spin, such as within weeks.

      Unix compatibility, not "freedom" and/or "stick it to Microsoft", is the real reason Linux is popular. This change will delete Linux's advantage. After that I think Linux is doomed, except it is possible that the easiest way to fix Windows would be to replace the kernel with Linux. Still the user space stuff (KDE/Gnome/X) is going to be abandoned. Some Linux ideas will probably be saved (/proc, fuse, some of the file systems). One Unix thing that is sure to disappear is mounting as an application, the drivers will be able to cause their device to appear in the filename space themselves.

    8. Re:Skepticism aside... by mikesd81 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure it would, and maybe fairly quickly (~5 years or so?) as developers start sifting through it.

      --
      That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
    9. Re:Skepticism aside... by mikesd81 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know. I think this would probably force companies to start open sourcing drivers. And we'd see things ported over to Linux. And we'd probably finally have linux on the desktop. Developers would take what they like from windows and pretty much salvage what they want instead of actually rebuilding Windows and taking out the bloat.

      --
      That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
    10. Re:Skepticism aside... by JohnBailey · · Score: 1

      lots of people would drop linux like a hot potato if windows had the same level of openess. face it, windows is the standard and has all the vendor support and all the market share. if it was open, linux wouldn't have much of a reason to live.

      That would assume everyone had the same reasons for using Linux.. And that there has to be one platform.

      Personally, I came to use Linux as a way of being able to add and remove hardware at my discretion, not the WGA's. I'm staying because I honestly like the way it works.

      So if Windows was made 100% open tomorrow, just speaking for myself, I might have a Windows box hanging around for games or something, but I would still be using Linux on my main system. Nothing wrong with using both is there? The more OSs there are, the more cross fertilisation of ideas, and the better the final result.

      --
      It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his job depends on not understanding it.
    11. Re:Skepticism aside... by Nightspirit · · Score: 1

      Vista is already far better than XP IMO (with the exception of network file transfer). IMO the only real challenge to MS is OSX, which is in most ways a superior OS, but in a few ways incredibly annoying. Make windows 7 just like vista but much faster, add expose and OSX-like install, and you have a killer OS IMO.

    12. Re:Skepticism aside... by manwal · · Score: 1

      I don't know either. Since having an open source Linux isn't forcing companies to open source their (Linux) drivers, why would an open source Windows do that?

    13. Re:Skepticism aside... by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      If Windows turns Open Source, can Linux use parts of the Windows kernel to patch hardware issues? Is this possible?

      It depends on the lisence. Yes it it is GPL-compatible, no otherwise.

      My gut reaction is that in this scenario it is best for MS to make it really open (no terms grabbing ownership of others' contributions or other sneaky stuff) but NOT GPL-compatible. This would force a separation that would stop MS form being assimilated (for a change).

    14. Re:Skepticism aside... by dominious · · Score: 1

      windows is the standard? for the love of god no!

    15. Re:Skepticism aside... by mikesd81 · · Score: 1

      Considering if MS went open source with Windows, their would surely be pressure on nvidia and ati and other companies to open their drivers. How could you not think there would be?

      --
      That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
    16. Re:Skepticism aside... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Network file transfer was a huge thing for me. My "main" machine is a laptop and I spend a fair amount of time organizing my music archives (legal stuff... I have about 1000 ripped CDs and several thousand tracks from eMusic and Mindawn), photos (I've scanned several thousand slides and photos, plus the output from the family's digital cameras), the "wallpaper" I collect from Flickr, NASA, Webshots, etc, and my subscription to Digital Blasphemy and plenty of other things as well. Since finances restrict me to using a large number of relatively small harddrives I've bought over the years, I move stuff around a lot in an attempt to keep it well-organized and backed up. In the short time I used Vista, I found the network file transfer performance to be ghastly. There's no excuse for screwing up such a fundamental part of the OS.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    17. Re:Skepticism aside... by Nightspirit · · Score: 1

      We'll, supposedly they reworked the network stack, and it is faster since sp1, but I agree they dropped the ball. I bought a 200gb 7200rpm hard drive for my laptop as I rarely spend time on my desktop, so I figured I'd move most things to my laptop.

    18. Re:Skepticism aside... by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      It's the same thing I was thinking and just wanted and outside insight. by your words we can assume that Windows it's death appart from the market share. I have no doubt that Linux will made it's way to the desktop (tm) It's really too hard to get a central coordination for Linux Desktop? I mean SETTING OBJECTIVES so everyone can work for the same aim .. it's really that hard?

  15. Why would they open up? by shadylookin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    why would MS open source their software? If they open source it that means it can be ported and people will be more likely to leaving windows if they can use their windows apps on another operating system. Open source code does nothing to benefit MS especially when 99.99% of their customers don't even know what source code is. Sure it would be nice, but I just don't think it stands a snowballs chance in hell.

    1. Re:Why would they open up? by caffeinemessiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If they open source it that means it can be ported and people will be more likely to leaving windows if they can use their windows apps on another operating system.

      Good point -- it would one hell of a Wine release when they can add a full layer of Windows functionality on demand. When you can run every single Windows app on a stable, secure FREE OS, suddenly Windows doesn't seem like such a necessary evil anymore. Of course, access to the Windows source would also mean that eventually Windows drivers could be natively supported on any other OS.

      --
      An old-timer with old-timey ideas.
  16. Open source could hurt Microsoft long term. by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Microsoft embracing open source would allow it to hurt them in the short term too. Remember how tolerable XP was? Well open source hacker A has made XP no longer need online registration. XP is free now! So is every Microsoft product. Maybe if the first hack everyone did wasn't to make the software free, companies may think about open sourcing their software to get a superior product in the long term. And you know what the second hack would be: Halo 3 cheats. With the whole code open to look through, cheating video games gets easy.

  17. Yeah... by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    Because with their CEO, Steve Ballmer, calling OSS cancer, I can really see Gates's departure as allowing the company to become more involved in OSS. Involved in trying to derail it, perhaps.

  18. Is it April already? by jollyreaper · · Score: 2, Funny

    I hear Ballmer is really into poniez.

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  19. "Not Invented Here" by NotInfinitumLabs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft would first have to get over its "Not Invented Here" syndrome. One of the things that has driven Microsoft to try and achieve domination over all things software is the belief that everything they shit out is GOLD, they can do it better than everyone else, and the other guys's stuff is crap and deserves to fail. They pretty much believe that they're the center of the computing universe. Opening up and embracing FOSS would mean that other people are LOOKING AT and TOUCHING their code, submitting PATCHES, who do these people THINK they ARE?! This is high-quality Microsoft code, mister! Keep your grubby hands off of it! Oh god, I feel so unclean, the stink won't come off!!

    1. Re:"Not Invented Here" by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 2, Funny

      wait did you say Microsoft or sun?

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    2. Re:"Not Invented Here" by rajafarian · · Score: 1

      I disagree with this part of your post, mister:

      ... and the other guys's stuff is crap and deserves to fail.

      More likely is that they know THEIR software is crap but it will crammed down people's throats anyway. How can they not know? Don't they test other stuff?

  20. Bitch, bitch, bitch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft could give each open source developer a wheel barrow filled with gold and they would bitch about having to push it to the car. Why does anyone post any MS related article on /.? I just love it when MS is compared to the Nazi party and Bill Gates is called Hitler. It is as clear an indication as any just how out of touch the Open Source community is. Hitler murdered over 6 million people and Bill Gates ran a software company...? I am not seeing the comparison.

    1. Re:Bitch, bitch, bitch by pdusen · · Score: 1

      Microsoft could give each open source developer a wheel barrow filled with gold and they would bitch about having to push it to the car. Why does anyone post any MS related article on /.? I just love it when MS is compared to the Nazi party and Bill Gates is called Hitler. It is as clear an indication as any just how out of touch the Open Source community is. Hitler murdered over 6 million people and Bill Gates ran a software company...? I am not seeing the comparison.

      I made this very same argument on another story not long ago and actually had people argue with me that Bill Gates is as bad as Hitler. How fucking out of touch is that?

    2. Re:Bitch, bitch, bitch by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I think that is primarily the reasoning behind Godwin's law. When someone is that disconnected from reality, there really is nothing that facts and reason can do to persuade them over anything.

      In the other hand, I can see Microsoft playing the part of a wolf in sheep's clothing where the wheel barrel has something insidious attached to it. It isn't like MS hasn't done something like that in the past. Anything they give me, I am going to proverbially look the gift horse in the mouth. I wouldn't want someone's diseased gift ruining my own stock. With Microsoft's history, I think a thorough examination of any offered might be warranted.

    3. Re:Bitch, bitch, bitch by spitzak · · Score: 1

      Please provide links to the posts before I believe you.

  21. Say it with me, everyone... by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1
  22. I see a trend here by Whuffo · · Score: 1

    Let's see - at this point we've got 20 comments that basically say "we don't believe anything Microsoft says" and one guy that's still sucking his thumb. I think maybe the majority have a valid point here...

  23. Re:MSFT free of Gates/Ballmer sooner than you thin by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    My point was that Ballmer obviously set up people he trusted below him. And you know how this goes.

  24. Shareholders by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates has left the campus but he still owns a large number of shares. About 857,499,336, says Yahoo Finance.

    Microsaur stock is still a good value with over 80% of the market using its products. The shareholders are not interested in ideals that don't create stock value.

    El Presidente Generalisimo Lanzero de SillÃnes Ballmero (408,252,990 shares) represents these people. He's the kind of leader that the shareholders want... They just wish he wasn't such an embarrassment. (As erratic and blustery as Khrushchev, but dances like a monkey instead of banging his shoe on the table.)

    If the company can cut costs by having individual software enthusiasts give away bug fixes to Microsaur on the company's terms, of course they will do that... and call it "open source".

    --
    Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    1. Re:Shareholders by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      Microsaur stock is still a good value with over 80% of the market using its products.

      Wasn't that ~95% not so long ago?

  25. Not if Ballmer is still at the helm by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    If he's gone, we can see what happens. Until then, no, its not going to happen as they are still at war with everyone else on the software planet. Especially OSS.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  26. Re:And I have this bridge for sale by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 1

    I was actually looking for swampland. Might you have some nice swampland for sale? Something with a great view?

  27. Mod parent up! by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From the article: "... the only mammoth remaining is Ballmer."

    You can certainly tell the mindset of the article author, Paula Rooney, and the person who was quoted, Rafael Laguna. Their idea is that it is entirely acceptable and useful to call Ballmer a "mammoth". As in "woolly mammoth" who will go extinct soon, I suppose.

    It makes a far better contribution toward showing why Microsoft's management policies should be disrespected if there is some logical substance to what is said.

    In my opinion, both Gates and Ballmer make money by being aggressive. That's what they know. That's how Microsoft has made most of its money, by taking advantage of the fact that most of the customers 13 years ago had little understanding of the computer systems they used. They established closed file formats. The managed using the policy of "embrace, extend, extinguish".

    Their business management emphasis is away from making money by contributing something positive. For example, Windows Vista is little more than another version of Windows XP that has been modified to require more CPU power so that Microsoft's principal customers, the manufacturers, will be able to sell more powerful computers.

    Quote from the parent: "Oh right, after rigging the ISO process with OOXML and their triumph over open standards they're going to go open source?"

    MOD PARENT UP!

    1. Re:Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      what alot of people need to remeber ( and i am all linux) is that microsoft is a huge employer. before they just open everything they need to think about there employees. imagine if they just rush into something and have to layoff thousands of people. it would be a blow to the local economy not to mention "Microsoft is now evil for laying people off and it is all because of open source" tweak the business model dont just up and change. i know it is hard to believe but there are alot of people all around microsoft that depend on money comming from them.

    2. Re:Mod parent up! by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      As in "woolly
      mammoth" who will go extinct soon, I suppose.

      As opposed to the mammoths around today?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammoth

    3. Re:Mod parent up! by chefren · · Score: 1

      No, as opposed to the Mammoths!

  28. here's the justification in the article... by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 2, Insightful

    'There is no doubt that Microsoft has no choice but to acknowledge that the closed development model for building software doesn't work any more.'

    Their reasoning is circular. It will happen because it will happen and they have no choice but to acknowledge it.

    An incredibly flimsy argument at best.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
    1. Re:here's the justification in the article... by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it seems like extremely wishful thinking to me.

      I think Microsoft will probably be more open sourcey in areas where it makes sense, and continue business as usual where that makes sense. By makes sense, I really mean, makes sense for them financially. Open sourcing Windows doesn't make sense for them financially. Relying on the community to troubleshoot and improve something like device drivers that isn't exactly their core business I can easily see.

  29. Well... by T3Tech · · Score: 1

    I for one welcome our new evil Open Source friendly Microsoft overlords.

    --
    Of course I didn't RTFA... why would I do that? You really are new here aren't you? Don't let my UID fool you.
  30. I think they'll do it... well sortof by click2005 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think Microsoft will end up announcing that Vista will be free for non-commercial use.

    They wont release the source code but Windows will end up being free. They spread enough FUD that it wouldn't be hard to to convince a lot of people that free=open source. But better than open source because you don't have to set-up complex compilers and development environments you just need the binaries (yes i know but its FUD remember). Better because it stops someone inserting malicious code into the source.. the usual FUD.

    They sell Windows to schools so cheap just to stop Linux getting much of a foothold anyway that giving it away wont make that much difference. They'll still charge for Vista Ultimate/Pro/Uber-bloat or whatever its called but tie it in with online services.. for a small monthly fee. Vista for free and get Office/their gaming gaming thing/online media services for $15 per month.

    --
    I am a free slashdotter. I will not be modded, blogged, DRM'd, patented, podcasted or RFID'd. My life is my own.
  31. Microsoft competes for Brainpower by et764 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I feel like Microsoft has taken some important steps towards playing nice with Open Source, and encouraging interoperability. Some examples include projects like IronPython, the WIX Installer tools, the fact that Silverlight actually supports at least one non-Windows platform, and the extremely detailed communications protocol documents recently released on MSDN. Sure, part of this has been for legal compliance reasons, and it turns out customers value things like interoperability.

    I think there's a subtler reason that will become more apparent in the coming years. Microsoft needs to hire new employees if it wants to stay relevant, and it competes with the likes of Google and others for these new hires. It also happens that probably the very best college candidates are the ones that have contributed to open source projects. These are the students that went beyond what their curriculum required of them, and showed the drive to understand and contribute to a real-world project on their spare time. This kind of experience is valuable in a new hire, but many of them would be turned off by an anti open source attitude and look for more open source-friendly employers. In other words, to attract the best young minds (which is crucial to Microsoft's long term success), Microsoft is going to have to become much more friendly to open source projects.

    1. Re:Microsoft competes for Brainpower by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft needs to hire new employees if it wants to stay relevant, and it competes with the likes of Google and others for these new hires."

      Stay relevant to what or whom?

      "It also happens that probably the very best college candidates are the ones that have contributed to open source projects."

      What do you base this on?

    2. Re:Microsoft competes for Brainpower by et764 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stay relevant to what or whom?

      Staying relevant as in staying an industry leader in computer software and remaining competitive in the industry.

      "It also happens that probably the very best college candidates are the ones that have contributed to open source projects."

      What do you base this on?

      I already mentioned that college students who contribute to open source projects are going above and beyond their school's curriculum, which gives them experience that a student who doesn't contribute to open source project won't get. Chances are these projects will require them to work in a geographically diverse team on an ongoing project. These skills are also valuable to large software companies. Granted, doing summer internships could give you a lot of the same kinds of experience as well, and you might contribute to crappy open source projects and get no useful experience, so as with most things, it's not an absolute advantage.

      I'd also say that most people in computer science programs fall somewhere on the line between "I'm just doing this because then I can get a good-paying job/my parents made me do it/I didn't have anything better to do" and "I'm doing this because I really love computer science and am driven to excel at it." Guess which end open source contributors are probably closer to. This mindset is also something that employers will value.

    3. Re:Microsoft competes for Brainpower by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "Staying relevant as in staying an industry leader in computer software and remaining competitive in the industry."

      Ok, but how is this goal unmet by hiring experienced developers rather then entry level graduates?

      "I already mentioned that college students who contribute to open source projects are going above and beyond their school's curriculum, which gives them experience that a student who doesn't contribute to open source project won't get. "

      They could be going "above and beyond" or they could be contributing to open source projects instead of fully meeting the requirements of their school's curriculum. In the real world many of your choices end once you agree to work for someone else - open source projects might not be the best place to learn that.

  32. Do You Really Want MS Programmers... by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Working on Linux?

    1. Re:Do You Really Want MS Programmers... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would love to see MS programmers working on Linux, they would be freed of the crippling bureaucratic management that has done nothing but reduce their efforts to a thick, oily, billowing cloud of pure FAIL rolling across the fields of technology.

      I worked with an ex-Microsoftie who'd been part of the NT kernel and SQL Server teams and he was incredibly knowledgeable and really sharp. I'm sure Microsoft has its share of loser programmers, but they are far outweighed by its loser management which is drenched with the stink of FAIL all the way to its chair-throwing. triple-Y chromosomed, chrome-domed top.

      Ever been to MS Research? They are on to some really cool stuff. Too bad all the neat stuff they make never makes it into a shipping product, because it doesn't further upper management's goals of tyranny and world domination. Remember, the user experience is irrelevant to management, it's all about lock-in and unfair competition. If it was about making a better product, Vista would still be in development.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  33. Re:MSFT free of Gates/Ballmer sooner than you thin by Bandman · · Score: 1

    I'm just not seeing Ballmer as being actually qualified for the job. When he was put in place, I really thought it was a temporary measure to try to strong-arm internal departments through bullying. them, but he's been in place so long that I'm either completely underestimating him, or someone has plans for him that are yet to come to fruition.

  34. They only embrace to kill by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1
    They will only become involved with open source insofar as it suits their ends (At minimum) and dilutes or destroys open source software as a category of human endeavour.

    They are not to be trusted. Proof? Bob.

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:They only embrace to kill by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1

      not that bob was open source, but that it was a POS beyond human imagining, but it was a boondogle tht served them. Until it didn't.

      --
      Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  35. Imaginary Support by twitter · · Score: 1, Interesting

    In theory, M$ Office has support for Word Perfect. In reality, M$ Office does not support M$ Office and this is why OOXML is such a mess. The kind of support they are talking about is just another weapon to them. The sum of their anti-competitive efforts against others is something that does not work for their own customers.

    IBM, Sun and others have made real moves to free software. M$ does not have the technical expertise or confidence to do the same. As Steve Ballmer said back in 1995:

    "It doesn't matter if we bang our heads and fail," says Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's executive V.P. for sales and service. "We keep right on banging and banging and banging and banging and banging."

    You can translate that as they don't care if something does not work for you and you don't want it, they are going to shove it on you anyway. There's nothing new here and no change should be expected.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Imaginary Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Calling Microsoft "M$", or microshaft, or microshit pretty much destroys any credibility your argument has.

    2. Re:Imaginary Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It destroys the credibility of the person but -- thankfully - not the argument :)

    3. Re:Imaginary Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I tend to judge people on how they act in addition to what they argue for/against. On another note, whoever modded me troll - I have no idea what you're thinking.

    4. Re:Imaginary Support by pdusen · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Don't worry, you replied to Twitter; I'm sure he dug up one of his sockpuppets to mod you with.

    5. Re:Imaginary Support by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      so that's why he wasn't talking to himself in this thread! I was shocked tbh, I thought maybe all his imaginary friends had ditched him!

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    6. Re:Imaginary Support by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Umm, the culture that rebranded Microsoft as M$ isn't that popular.

      --
      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;
    7. Re:Imaginary Support by RWerp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "One, their love for money trumps their customers interest."

      And how is it different from any other company?

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    8. Re:Imaginary Support by turgid · · Score: 1

      Most companies realise that customers are the source of their wealth, i.e. they need to provide the customers with something worth paying for.

      Microsoft doesn't have to suffer this minor inconvenience, since all new PeeCees come with Windows whether you like it or not, business has been well-and-truly locked in for fifteen years, and most people don't even know that there are better and free alternatives.

    9. Re:Imaginary Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And how is it different from any other company?

      Monopolies treat their customers very differently. They have their customers and now they squeeze them. Contrast this to a company that still actually has to work for their money.

    10. Re:Imaginary Support by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesn't have to suffer this minor inconvenience, since all new PeeCees come with Windows whether you like it or not, business has been well-and-truly locked in for fifteen years, and most people don't even know that there are better and free alternatives.

      1998 called, wants its comment back.

      I mean, really, nowadays you can get both desktops and laptops with Linux pre-installed... Linux is becoming a viable alternative, and in certain markets it's threatening Windows so much that Windows is becoming the alternative (eeePC et al.).

      Even Dell offers PCs with pre-installed Linux. Somehow, I think the lock-in is getting weaker by the day.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    11. Re:Imaginary Support by turgid · · Score: 1

      A lot of people (5% or so) have heard of Linux, but all the ones I've spoken to recently trot out a big list of myths and excuses why it isn't good for anything and they have to stick to Windows. There's a long way to go.

  36. Which of course is bullshit by gelfling · · Score: 1

    MS has to get away from code as product altogether. No one cares what's open and what's not in the business market world. Look to MS to buy Amazon or eBay.

  37. Here is my take... by Osrin · · Score: 1

    ... it really has nothing to do with Gates moving on, MS learning how to understand OSS and work with it has been happening for a while.

    http://osrin.net/2008/06/im-a-believer/

  38. Green envy and spam by NZheretic · · Score: 4, Funny
    First posted in 2002 : What's the Business Case for Microsoft and Open Source?
    Green envy and spam

    With apologies to Dr "Suse", to the tune of "Green Eggs and Ham".

    Linux can. Linux can. Use Linux.

    That Linux can! That Linux can! I do not like that Linux can!

    Do you like open sourcing plan?

    I do not like that Linux can. I do not like the open sourcing plan.

    Would you like to free source share?

    I would not like to free source share. I would not like it anywhere. I do not like open sourcing plan. I do not like that Linux can.

    Would you like it very stable? Would you like it to enable?

    I do not like it very stable. I do not like it to enable. I do not like to free source share. I do not like it anywhere. I do not like the open sourcing plan. I do not like that Linux can.

    Would you use it in a X-Box? Would you use it if it ROCKS?

    Not on X-box. Not if it rocks. Not if very stable. Not to enable. I would not let them free source share. I would not let them anywhere. I would not allow open sourcing plan. I do not like that Linux can.

    Would you? Could you? In your biz? Use it! Use it! Here it is.

    I would not, could not, in our biz.

    You may like it. You will see. You may like it if it's free!

    I would not, could not if its free. Not in our biz! It should never be!

    I do not like it on the X-box. I do not like it that it rocks. I do not like it amongst our biz. I do not like it that it is. I do not like they free source share. I do not like that anywhere. I do not like that Linux can. I do not like you Linux man!

    service! service! service! service! Could you, would you, as a service?

    Not as a service! Not if it's free! Not in my biz! Man! Let not it be! I would not, could not, on a X-box. I could not, would not, if it rocks. I will not use it if its stable. I will not use it even to enable. I will not let them free source share. I will not let them anywhere. I do not like open sourcing plan. I do not like that Linux can.

    Say! if in copyleft? always free copyleft! Would you, could you, copyleft?

    I would not, could not, in copyleft.

    Would you, could you, why so nervous?

    I would not, could not, I'm NOT nervous. Not as copyleft. Not as a service. Not in my biz. Not if it's free. I do not like that it can, you see. Not if it's stable. Not on X-box. Not to enable. Not if it rocks. I will not let them free source share. I do not like it anywhere!

    You do not like open sourcing plan?

    I do not like that Linux can.

    Could you, would you use what we wrote?

    I would not, could not, use what you wrote!

    Would you, could you, to avoid your bloat?

    I could not, would not, avoid bloat. I will not, will not, use what you wrote. I will not compete with them as a service. I will not because it makes us nervous. Not in our biz! Not if it's free! Not if it is! You let me be! I do not like it on the X-Box. I do not like it that it Rocks. I will not use it if it's stable. I do not like that it does enable. I do not like they free source share. I do not like it ANYWHERE I do not like open sourcing plan!I do not like that, Linux can.

    You do not like it. So you say. Try it! Try it! And you may. Try it and you may, I say.

    Man! If you will let me be, I will try it. You will see.

    Say! I like open sourcing plan! I do! I like that, Linux can! And I would use it because it's stable. And I could use it to enable...

    And I could charge for providing a service. And I could copyleft without being nervous. And in my biz. And still source free. For you can still charge for a service fee!

    So I will use it on the networked X-box. And I will promote it because it ROCKS. And I will use it because it's stable. And I will use it to enable.

    And I will use it here and there. Say! I can use it ANYWHERE!

    I do so like open sourcing plan! Thank you! Thank you, Linux man!

    By The Cat with the Red Hat

  39. Re:And I have this bridge for sale by superslacker87 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and it has a castle on it, built four times over! Move-in ready!

    --
    I run Ubuntu skinned to look like a Mac on a PC. Go figure.
  40. Re:Balmer? by superslacker87 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just when are we going to have a Steve Ballmer/Bob Knight chair throwing contest?

    --
    I run Ubuntu skinned to look like a Mac on a PC. Go figure.
  41. Business model and revenue by Herby+Sagues · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They will certainly have to adopt the open source business model and make money by selling low margin services without any moat or competitive advantage, instead of selling highly demanded software programs on which they have a monopoly with obscene operatring margins. If they do it right, one day they will make as much money as Red Hat! http://finance.yahoo.com/q/is?s=RHT&annual Hey, wait, they ARE making as much money in one day as red hat makes (in a year)!

  42. Of course by SleepyHappyDoc · · Score: 2, Funny

    Cuz we all know that Bill Gates was at the forefront, standing fast on the thin red line between Microsoft and the open source hordes. Now that he's out of the way, I'm sure there'll be no other obstacles.

    --
    Stasis is death. Embrace change.
  43. Saturday night humor by LordMyren · · Score: 1

    Wanna see something funny?
    hardware specs page.....

    rriiiiiiggghhhhtttt clearly open source. we'll know exactly how to use this.

  44. "They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's Internet Bubble talk.

    There's still no definitive evidence that there's a viable business model in an open source, software only company.

    Most profitable "open source" companies are in the closed hardware business and just use Linux inside.

    It's still an open question whether traditional companies who buy open source companies like MySQL will ever see their investment pay off. What is the balance sheet for Sun with respect to Star/Open Office?

    If you had inside information that MS was going to make all their products open source, that would be a great time to sell the stock short.

    1. Re:"They have to" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Red Hat comes to mind.

    2. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Although Red Hat has made contributions to Linux, the OS was fundamentally done by the time Red Hat became invovled. There may be room for one company to be successful holding the corporate hand as they venture into Linux, but as corporations become more comfortable with Linux they may begin to question if Red Hat is adding any value they should be paying for.

    3. Re:"They have to" by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      Completely agree. A lot of companies buy Red Hat Enterprise for their servers and workstations outright (it is probably the most well-known Linux) and I think soon enough (and what frightens Red Hat) is that these companies may find their own 'support personnel' and use something completely free like Ubuntu or even Fedora Core (based on Red Hat).

    4. Re:"They have to" by the_womble · · Score: 1

      There's still no definitive evidence that there's a viable business model in an open source, software only company. Most profitable "open source" companies are in the closed hardware business and just use Linux inside

      Firstly, there are profitable open source companies like Red Hat. MySQL was probably profitable or close to it, as were many others. Secondly, even when the revenues come from hardware or services, it makes open source economically viable.

      Businesses open source because there is money to be made by doing so, but just to be nice.

    5. Re:"They have to" by Pastis · · Score: 2, Informative

      "There's still no definitive evidence that there's a viable business model in an open source, software only company."

      * jboss
      * mysql
      * mozilla
      * exo platform
      * ...

    6. Re:"They have to" by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Although Red Hat has made contributions to Linux, the OS was fundamentally done by the time Red Hat became invovled. There may be room for one company to be successful holding the corporate hand as they venture into Linux, but as corporations become more comfortable with Linux they may begin to question if Red Hat is adding any value they should be paying for.

      What a load of drivel you do write. Red Hat are profitable and have expanded every quarter for at least the past 4 years, and we're selling RHEL licenses in spades, many to huge companies that have advanced in-house Unix/Linux teams. The operating system was not "fundamentally done" when Red Hat came around. Otherwise we'd just still be shipping RHL 1 to everybody. In fact we consistently top the list of kernel contributions, that kernel scaling up and down in ways that no one could even foresee 15 years ago when RH was founded. So stop trolling nonsense and pay attention.

      Rich.

    7. Re:"They have to" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's still no definitive evidence that there's a viable business model in an open source, software only company.

      Of course there's evidence - just look at around at all the companies that DO base their business models on FOSS and still rake in a pretty penny. That's not proof, you say? They still might go bankrupt some day? Well, yes, they might, but so might every other company - in EVERY sector, one might add. The fact that car companies are not guaranteed to stay in business forever doesn't mean cars can't be the basis of a viable business model, either.

      Heavens, if you're going to astroturf, at least get a clue.

    8. Re:"They have to" by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      the OS was fundamentally done by the time Red Hat became invovled.

      What is gone are the days when the company owns it all. Do you also see a problem with the Microsoft OSs networking since they use IP that is not owned by MS?

      These days every company (but M$) needs to borrow from the software noosphere. And copylefted licences force them also to put stuff back. Soon this will be true for M$ as well (we hope).

      This is what RedHat does. It took Linux, but also gave back to Linux. And it survives very well selling support to its customers.

    9. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Since companies want to make a profit, they'll always go for the low-hanging fruit.

      There are many companies that make specialized Linux "appliances" without modifying Linux, without paying for Linux, and without contributing to Linux.

      They don't do it because there's something about Linux that they can't get elsewhere, they do it because it's cheaper than paying for a license.

      What these companies are really selling is proprietary software that could run on any Linux PC, but they bundle it with a closed box so they can charge more money for it.

      They could do the same with Windows (and historically people have) but then the cost of a Windows license would come out of their profits.

    10. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "Of course there's evidence - just look at around at all the companies that DO base their business models on FOSS and still rake in a pretty penny."

      I'll let you do the looking and get back to me.

    11. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      A lot of these companies "succeed" because they were purchased in an Internet-Bubble-Mindset at absurd prices.

      Jboss falls in this category and is not living up to expectations at Red Hat.

      Since Sun bought mysql for 1 billion dollars, it's going to be a very long time before you could prove it was a good deal.

      Anyway, I'm not going to address every example. The point is that the examples are few and far between for profitable open source companies who write their own original applications and don't bundle them with hardware.

    12. Re:"They have to" by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      What is the balance sheet for Sun with respect to Star/Open Office?

      When they bought StarOffice, it saved them a ton of money versus buying licenses for their employees. Whether those savings are now spent, or how the community good-will from giving out OpenOffice has paid for the pretty cars and fast women I do not know though.

    13. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "When they bought StarOffice, it saved them a ton of money versus buying licenses for their employees."

      Actually, no. Prior to buying StarOffice, Scott McNealy forbid his employees to use a word processor with more than 4 features (i.e. a text editor instead of a word processor), so there were no licenses to save money on.

      Mysteriously, after Sun bought StarOffice, McNealy stopped talking about how evil office-type applications were.

    14. Re:"They have to" by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      there were no licenses to save money on.

      They saved the money on not buying the licenses they had intended to buy. So says a Sun employee when interviewed by lugradio. I can't remember which episode, but grep for sun on http://www.lugradio.org/episodes/ and filter out the obvious non-sun related items. I'm thinking it's in season three or four.

      (Yeah, crummy reference; I don't have the time to make it better than that, though).

    15. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Well, given the fact that McNealy did a 360 on the value of Office suites, who knows what is true?

      He made a big deal in the media about handing out white boards and markers to his employees in liu of using Powerpoint, that was widely reported at the time (probably 1997 or so).

    16. Re:"They have to" by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      Since companies want to make a profit, they'll always go for the low-hanging fruit.

      If you mean that to be the strategy that maximizes their profits, I agree. And if a licence that has the goal of free software, it should allow for that.

      There are many companies that make specialized Linux "appliances" without modifying Linux, without paying for Linux, and without contributing to Linux.

      First they do not make Linux appliances. They make router appliances, portable media player appliances etc. that have Linux based software. Clients of these companies don't care (most don't even know) this.

      Second you can say the same thing for users that install Linux in their PCs. They get Linux without modifying Linux, without paying for Linux, and without contributing to Linux.

      You can say that also that derivative distros do not contribute to their "parents", so CentOS does not contribute to RedHat, gOS does not contribute to Ubuntu etc.

      These are all true, but so what? These are the rules of free software. The contributions or non-contributions are all available to anyone for use or redistribution.

      They don't do it because there's something about Linux that they can't get elsewhere, they do it because it's cheaper than paying for a license.

      Sounds good to me. It makes business sense and is within the rules. Why are they morally inferior to Joe User who downloads the latest Ubuntu version for his home PC?

      Of course I am not talking about violations like quite possibly this one. These are a nuisance but the courts eventually deal with them.

      What these companies are really selling is proprietary software that could run on any Linux PC, but they bundle it with a closed box so they can charge more money for it.

      Now you are WAY off base. You got carried away by your Linux "appliances". They not only charge less for it, they are also obligated to help their competitors in the same market.

      First of all whether they make extensive changes or just change the compilation options they have to provide full source, build scripts and build instructions by the copyleft provisions in the GPL license. They must also allow anyone getting them to use them for anything, including a competing product.

      Now about cost and effect on the market. Let's take PMPs as an example (if you feel I am wrong in some other appliance please say so). Without the open source available today only companies the size of Sony would be able to make PMPs (you have to build a complete embedded OS, support all sorts of audio/video codecs, write a media player, a UI etc). These PMPs would of course come at Sony prices.

      Now though any small company can buy the latest RISC/DSP/whatever CPU and compile Linux for it, as well as GPLd media players and codecs. Result: Much lower development cost -> more companies can develop similar applianxces -> more competition -> much lower prices for the consumer.

      They could do the same with Windows (and historically people have) but then the cost of a Windows license would come out of their profits.

      They could NOT do it for the OEM prices Microsoft charges without a huge price hike. The cost would come out of our pockets. There would also be less competition meaning more price hikes. Again coming out of our pockets. This goes for both the Media Center Edition and the various WinCE/embedded versions.

      And I fail to see the reason for your moral outrage. If they make a legal use of a successfull operating system what is the problem?

      This is particularly interesting now because with the cheap EEE-type netbooks the exact same thing is happening to mini-notebooks. This has caused Microsoft to bring XP back and offer it for prices like $3-$20 to stem the tide. It will be interesting to see what happens. But as you ca

    17. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      You're wrong about many of the Linux appliances. They don't change anything in the OS and thus aren't obligated to provide their own source to anyone.

      What they do is take a standard PC platform, install a standard Linux distro, install their proprietary software and sell the system for hundreds or thousands of dollars more than the hardware costs. Thus they make a good profit and recoup their investment in developing their software.

    18. Re:"They have to" by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      You're wrong about many of the Linux appliances. They don't change anything in the OS and thus aren't obligated to provide their own source to anyone.

      You are wrong. Even if they change the building process to fit their hardware that's a change. They have to give full source for that one line in the build file, even to competitors.

      Even if it could be done it's not illegal and makes for a cheaper product.

      What they do is take a standard PC platform, install a standard Linux distro, install their proprietary software and sell the system for hundreds or thousands of dollars more than the hardware costs. Thus they make a good profit and recoup their investment in developing their software.

      Huh... Examples please, or quit trolling. There are no examples for two good reasons you sweep under the table:

      1. A x86 CPU would be no good in an appliance, and so it is not used. You have to compile the source to a new chipset. You can outsource this, but then that company has to provide the source. So you can always get the source, even to compete with them.

      2. If you overprice your product your competitors will get the source and make cheaper products. So you have to price competitively.

      In the end it's a win/win for everyone. More and cheaper products for consumers, more opportunities for companies to create new and innovative products. The software gets developed and improved a lot better, and you are freed from essentially paying a tax to some huge company just to use their copyrighted stuff.

      It's also completely legal, so why the outrage? Companies and consumers choose it of their own free will and get a better deal. What is the problem?

    19. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      You don't understand that an appliance doesn't necessarily mean an embedded system. It's just a product that performs a specialized function.

      To the customer it's just a box.

    20. Re:"They have to" by paratiritis · · Score: 1

      Any example of what you have in mind?

      And why is it so bad/illegal/morally wrong that you have such a big problem with it?

      BTW, an appliance must be instant on and instant off. A PC does not make a good appliace.

    21. Re:"They have to" by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I'm not against it, I'm just saying that it's not an example of the feasibility of open source.

      As for an example, check out Cast Iron systems.

  45. Re:has done more?! by ClosedSource · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It depends on your definition of "thriving". Without Wintel (or some other standard platform), most of us couldn't even afford a computer.

    Obviously Crays and Connection Machines were never going to be home computers.

    Although the design legacy of the x86 still sucks today, their really isn't a microprocessor significantly faster. Also keep in mind that Windows NT ran on the Alpha as well as x86 and the marketplace couldn't care less.

  46. Give me a break by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "Remember, the user experience is irrelevant to management, it's all about lock-in and unfair competition."

    Sure, all the money they spent on usability studies for Windows 95 was just for show.

    "If it was about making a better product, Vista would still be in development."

    And you'd be saying that Vista was vaporware.

    1. Re:Give me a break by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Windows 95 was 13 years ago. Sure they did lots of usability studies. They still do, but the vast majority of the effort that goes into Microsoft products these days seems to serve Microsoft and its media buddies, not customers. Oh, well, there's that butt-ugly Aero stuff, which doesn't look at as good as KDE did years ago, or OSX when it first came out.

      Or are they retiring XP because the user base has clearly abandoned it in favor of the new replacement, to which they are upgrading in droves, and there's no more reason to keep it around. I mean, sure, businesses exist to make money, but _idea_ is to make money by making happy customers and selling a superior product.

      Meanwhile, if Vista still weren't out it _would_ be vapor, because it was promised in 2003. QED.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    2. Re:Give me a break by flnca · · Score: 1

      Windows 95 was 13 years ago.

      It came 10 years too late. Ten years after AmigaOS provided a similar (and sometimes, better) functionality in 1985 with far less system resources. Windows 3.1 already should've been 32 bit, with a pre-emptive multitasking, because the 286 and 386 had been on the market for years already (and compatibility could've been maintained by using V86 processes, just like in Win95 or NT). Why didn't Microsoft look at their competitors when they developed 3.x?

    3. Re:Give me a break by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      You're preaching to the choir. I had an Amiga, and almost wet myself laughing when Gates made the claim you couldn't multitask with less than a megabyte of memory, although maybe that was another of those "apocryphal" quotes, even though Gates never made a non-trivial prediction about technology that was anything near reality.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  47. in regards to your first suggestion by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Resurrected Hitler has in fact made clear that he is now "down" with the Jews

  48. It's already been done by RMS by ClosedSource · · Score: 1, Funny

    "They spread enough FUD that it wouldn't be hard to to convince a lot of people that free=open source"

    RMS already confused the issue by calling his open source projects "free".

  49. Not true. by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny

    So there's actually very little of the company whose business model is compatible with open source licensing. That's where you'll see change, if it happens -- not in Bill Gates leaving Microsoft.

    Actually, Microsoft is quite compatible with open source. There is a lot of open source built right into the OS. The integration of data with internet programs has allowed for the open sourcing of your address books, and vulnerabilities in the mail and web clients have led to the open sourcing of plenty of personal data.

  50. Don't get too excited by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Funny

    This just means they're buying some NetGear wireless routers.

  51. From my perspective they are getting better... by adamkennedy · · Score: 1

    Certainly, I know I'm planning to announce a new (admittedly minor) Microsoft Open Source initiative at the O'Reilly Open Source Conference this year...

    But I can't talk about it yet (sorry) until after I've been to Redmond to get my implant :(

  52. Re:has done more?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Without Wintel, most of us couldn't even afford a computer!?!?

    You do know that there were plenty of affordable, powerful (for the time) computers before they got squeezed out by Wintel, right? Amiga ring any bells? Atari ST? MacOS?

    Computers became affordable due to Moores Law. Don't kid yourself that Gates and Co. had much to do with that. If anything their bloatware kept the cost of a computer that could run current apps *more* expensive than it should have been.

  53. Re:The only way for MS to be open source friendly. by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1
    Did you even RTFS? I quote, from the summary:

    With Gates' departure, the only mammoth remaining is Ballmer. With him away in a near future, Microsoft will definitely open up. They have to.

    Emphasis mine.

  54. Given Microsoft's history, I'll wait and see by Dwonis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Given Microsoft's scathing history, including its tendency to promise lots of wonderful things it never delivers, I'll believe it when I've seen it happen for a few years. Microsoft has a lot to apologize for, and I certainly wouldn't be making any concessions for them for at least the next 5-10 years.

    This is not the time to be giving MS representatives positions on the boards of say, the Free Software Foundation or the Open Source Initiative.

    Microsoft is not a leader in the world of free and open-source software. It is a latecomer---a very late comer. Having a large pile of money doesn't change that, and it's perfectly reasonable to ask Microsoft to prove itself over the course of years before it is to be trusted.

    Microsoft could just as easily be using Gates' departure as yet another opportunity to try to fool us all. If that's true, I hope people don't fall for it.

  55. Evidence. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It did, however, answer your point:

    There's no evidence of change

    It's not conclusive evidence, but it is evidence.

    Also:

    Well, they'd need to move to an OSS compatible business model for starters but right now they're still mostly about selling boxes of software.

    Seems to me they get much of their money from hardware vendors (like Dell) and from large corporations (volume licenses). How many people do you know who've actually bought a boxed copy of Windows?

    And because of that, it seems like neither of those customers would stop buying from them if their product could be had for free. After all, Dell pays Canonical for support...

    Just guessing... maybe the secret is that Microsoft doesn't actually offer any support?

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Evidence. by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      From what I heard (admittedly anecdotal evidence) the Microsoft support that is included with the purchase of the license is rather crappy. As in, some guy in a call center who looks for the solution in a database (MSDN??). For that alone, I doubt many customers would pay them.

      Alternatively, there is a more professional support which will bill you per incident. Those guys have a better reputation, and I guess it would make sense for hardware vendors to work with them. But that won't give Microsoft much money:
      If a hardware vendor spends a few thousand dollars on support to fine-tune an installation image, and then sells a few thousand units of that type, Microsoft ends up earning something like one dollar per machine ;-)

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    2. Re:Evidence. by DougInKY · · Score: 1

      Over the years I expect that I have purchased 3 or 4 boxed copies of one of another of Microsoft's systems including Windows 3.11, Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows XP. All of these were for personal use. I would hate to think that I am not the rule for a citizen of the U.S.

      --
      Nothing remains as constant as change.
    3. Re:Evidence. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Over the years I expect that I have purchased 3 or 4 boxed.... I would hate to think that I am not the rule for a citizen of the U.S.

      I have had one purchased for me, for work.

      For personal use, I very much doubt you're the rule. Even ignoring piracy, I have one legitimate copy of Vista (came preloaded on the laptop), one legitimate copy of XP Home (came preloaded on an older laptop), and one of XP Pro (college site-wide license/subscription/deal -- all CS students can burn their own copy, legally) -- and a copy of 3.1 (came on a Pentium-1-era machine), and a copy of 98 SE (came on a desktop).

      None of these came in boxes. I only purchased one of them directly, even -- that was the one preloaded on that laptop.

      I think the only people I know of who have bought Microsoft software in a box did it on behalf of a small business.

      Let me put it another way -- the average US citizen only has a dim concept of what an OS is. They buy computers, not operating systems. They buy Macs or PCs, not OS X or Windows. They have never heard of Linux.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    4. Re:Evidence. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      From what I heard (admittedly anecdotal evidence) the Microsoft support that is included with the purchase of the license is rather crappy. As in, some guy in a call center who looks for the solution in a database (MSDN??). For that alone, I doubt many customers would pay them.

      No, I suspect what they'd pay for is the fact that they can then say to their boss that they have support, and that the support didn't help. Why do you think people buy RedHat Enterprise Linux, when CentOS is available for free?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  56. I might be wrong, but.... by MonsterTrimble · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I said this before and I'm sure that I got modded an idiot or something, but...

    I think Windows 7 is BSD based. Look, Vista crashed and burned with everything. It's buggy, has crap for drivers support and they've known this for ages, I mean, it was two or three years behind schedule? Meanwhile Apple built an excellent BSD-based OS and wins approval from everyone. Don't believe for a second that Microsoft hasn't been watching. I think they see where BSD is the strong backbone and that Apple basically poached a lot of the Gnome interface (rebuilt for ergonomics, etc). It would not surprise me at all that Windows 7 follows much the same pattern except that the GUI will follow Vista/KDE much more. And because Microsoft will not have to worry about the backend they can concentrate on the GUI and the drivers and be able to turn it around for early 2009.

    That is my opinion. I would like to see differing opinions on this, actually.

    --
    I call it 'The Aristocrats'
    1. Re:I might be wrong, but.... by Tatsh · · Score: 1

      I think Windows 7 is BSD based.

      What? Windows 7 M1 was leaked and given to reviewers/testers whom confirmed that it was after-all based upon Vista or Server 2008's code. It requires Vista SP1 to install (at least the current version), and the DVD is 2.9 GB. It is nothing but another crap pile of 20+ years old code. That is not to say old code is bad, but in this case, it is.

      Now, maybe in the future Windows will be BSD-based, but for the moment Windows 7 looks like it is heavily Vista-based, especially since it requires Vista SP1 installed as a prerequisite.

      See the review.

    2. Re:I might be wrong, but.... by uffe_nordholm · · Score: 1

      Maybe some time in the future Microsoft will release an operating system based on BSD (or on something else non-Microsoft), but for the foreseeable future I don't think they will. The reason is quite simple: if Microsoft were to radically change the base of their OS, the end-users would be forced to change all their applications.

      Either get a newer version that works on the new OS, or change to a completely new application. Either way, I think this forced application change is perceived by Microsoft as incentive for the end user to change to an application from a manufacturer that does not help Microsoft maintain it's monopoly.

      And if you are going to consider an application from a 'hostile' manufacturer, what's to stop you from considering a non-Microsoft OS?

      As long as Microsoft can keep the end user from even thinking about changing to another application manufacturer they can remain in control of the majority of computers in the world. And for Microsoft, being in control means they make money. If they loose that control, they stop making money.

      As a side-note, I fear Linux will not grow much every year, just continue a slow growth as it has the past years. However, soon Microsoft will see Linux as a genuine, existing as opposed to potential, threat. Once this happens, Microsoft will dig into it's vast monetary reserves and market their latest OS as the greatest thing ever. And they will probably start releasing new versions of OSs and applications faster than they have done recently.

    3. Re:I might be wrong, but.... by kklein · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean "BSoD-based"?

  57. Re:has done more?! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "You do know that there were plenty of affordable, powerful (for the time) computers before they got squeezed out by Wintel, right? Amiga ring any bells? Atari ST? MacOS?"

    The Mac of course, had its own niche and was orginally marketed as the "computer for the rest of us" which didn't position it well for corporate use.

    The Amiga and Atari ST had some definite potential, but suffered from the shaky condition of the companies that produced them (ironically the Amiga was really a 3rd generation Atari design and the ST a 3rd generation Commodore design).

    "Computers became affordable due to Moores Law."

    Moore's Law is not about cost, but performance. Although prices dropped significantly after PC clones were introduced, the average cost of a PC hasn't changed that much over the years - just their computing power.

  58. Re:The only way for MS to be open source friendly. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    Oops :P

  59. bullshit by speedtux · · Score: 1

    Anybody who talks about "an approach for dealing with open source" is never going to be open source friendly. Companies are open source friendly if they see an intrinsic benefit in using and supporting open source software, and if they see it as an opportunity to save money and outsource costly development. Companies that think of open source software as a threat to be dealt with will never succeed with open source.

  60. OSS? by Fri13 · · Score: 1

    Yes, Microsoft can come world biggest open source company, but it will never come world biggest free software company.
    Open Source and Free Software are two different things and Gates is again talkin only about Openess, not about Freedom.

    Even that Microsoft has license what has aproofed on FSF, it does not mean that MS would use those.

  61. "I will f***ing kill Linux" by Hymer · · Score: 1

    are Ballmers words, not Gaes. So, no, Microsoft will not become more FOSS friendly.

    Microsoft will probably go the same way Apple went after Jobs left... both companies are very much defined by their front figure.

  62. hmmm.

    God, maybe?

    roll ... roll ... roll ............ rimshot

  63. Re:has done more?! by Nightspirit · · Score: 1

    Dude, I bought mediocre 486 IBM-clone in the 90s for over 2k. Now I can get a fully functioning dell with a monitor for $350. Unless you're going for the very high-end, computer prices have plummeted over the years.

  64. Saving Microsoft by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1, Interesting

    If I were in charge of Microsoft and interested at all in saving the company, here's what I'd do.

    Split the company into three parts. Hmm. No, make that four. Five.

    One company handles the legacy junk. Maintains it under current licenses (sans enforcement machinery) in more or less the way it is being maintained now. Maybe some necessary incremental improvements when there's no way to fix a vulnerability in the legacy framework. This company will ultimately be absorbed by the fourth company, but it is necessary for a few years.

    Another company focuses on the various problems of open sourcing all the "IP" and "technology" in Microsoft's legacy products. This is important in establishing a way out for all of the customers Microsoft has locked in. This company also consults with the other companies to keep the whole operation clean on licensing. It will probably remain independent, to help it keep the other companies playing fair.

    The third company focuses on hosting repositories of foss projects and on building Microsoft-specific distributions of Linux, BSD, maybe Plan 9, Apache, the Gimp, Open Office, PostGreSQL, and many other open source offerings. Oh, Wine, et. al., of course. But no funny business with the licenses. All strictly according to the open source rules, and all regularly feeding funding upstream from that huge capitalization. This company will also remain independent.

    The fourth company puts the legacy stuff as unmodified as possible on top of solid foundations culled from open source. Again, no license shenanigans. Nothing from legacy is allowed here until the IP/tech group clears it. And it is kept as cross-platform as possible. This company will be absorbed into the the fifth company in twenty to fifty years.

    The fifth company hunts for anything that was actually good from the legacy stuff and implements blue-sky projects to see what shakes out. The products will be primarily released under GPL3 or higher or Apache 2 or higher when implementing stuff that's really new, merged upstream or forked appropriately and without license conflicts when they borrow.

    The bulk of the new income stream will be service agreements on the stuff the fifth company produces.

    Why should they do this? Because it's their mess and they ought to clean it up, especially since they have all that money from making the mess.

    1. Re:Saving Microsoft by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      And they will make even more money by making even more mess, why would they bother cleaning it up?

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  65. no wai by SurNim · · Score: 1

    I GOT 4 WORDS FOR YOU: DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMU0tzLwhbE seriously though, Microsoft would NEVER go open source, snowballs chance in hell sounds about right

  66. Re:looking towards the future... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

    Google

    --
    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;
  67. Re:WiX by flnca · · Score: 1

    It's not THAT bad! ;-) If you understand the MSI database system, and use Orca frequently to verify the results, WIX can be quite useful for batch creation of MSI databases. The problem with MSI is that it's a database-based install system, and it's not really suitable for programming (although SOME things can be implemented in DLLs or scripts). WIX is only an XML encapsulation of the MSI database format, it does not provide any functionality beyond that.

  68. What would the long-term strategy be? by Kjella · · Score: 1

    One is the embrace, extend, extinguish - pretty poor strategy as you can't extinguish OSS, it seems to thrive even when there's very little market share and income. What would happen if Microsoft bought out Red Hat, Ubuntu, Suse, Mandrake etc. today? Tomorrow there'd be new distros with even more ridiculous names looking for Microsoft money. Making Microsoft products more compatible with open source is like opening a big flowgate you'd never get to close again.

    The other would be assess, adapt and aquire (hey, I made that up on the spot) where you just figure this'll be important in the future and just buy it up to stop it from becoming a threat. Particularly if you have the market force to *make* them successful. Again, though to do since with a regular company you buy all their assets and that's that, with open source you can't buy and control the source code. Sure you could be the copyright holder but if you tried to bury it or make it part of your closed-source product lineup people would continue using the GPL sources.

    In short, I think open source doesn't allow for very many dirty tactics except FUD. If you contribute to OSS, it's designed to remain free and open so you can't pull any funny bait-and-switches. Sure, you can make products that claim to be OSS compatible but in reality aren't (the Java srategy) but it's also a blameshifter - if some reverse engineered format doesn't work right it's poor reverse engineering, if they claim to support something but fail to do so it's Microsoft's fault. At worse the OSS community would have to continue reverse engineering what Microsoft is doing, but I don't see how it could get worse than before.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  69. In other news... by Timosch · · Score: 1

    Hell to freeze over...

  70. Re:Balmer? by Zantetsuken · · Score: 1

    You're not using a HawkEye system to determine the probable path of those chairs are you? If so it's gonna tell you "You'll be fine not moving" and BAM! a chair in the face!

  71. It will be a smart thing to have Open Windows 98 by paratiritis · · Score: 1

    That's pre-supposing there's something desirable to download.

    I always thought it would be very smart to open source Windows 98 with a licence that forbids commercial distribution. Many people still use it, and are forced to abandon it because of lack of support. And since cost is for them usually an issue they end up trying Linux and never going back.

    Open sourcing it would keep outside support coming, and keep these people in the Microsoft universe. On the other hand it will not cut into their current OS revenue because it will not allow commercial distribution, making it a win/win for them.

  72. MULTI HEAD HYDRA!!!! by kipman725 · · Score: 1

    Ms already has a large linux lab that frequently contributes code. I see M$ as a company that so huge different bits of it are doing different things and therfore wheras parts of it are undoubtedly anti opensource never mind anti free software other bits are helping the free software comunity.

  73. MS To Become Open Source Friendly .. NO ! by rs232 · · Score: 1

    No they won't, it's a deeply embedded corporate culture and of course MSs definition of 'open source' is different that everyone elses. What will do is continue to pollute and subvert legitimate Open Source through tactics like the Novell/MS covenant and signing patent protection deals with the others. Ultimately buying up Novell and licensing the one true IP protect open source.

    Q: Is this Promise consistent with .. the GPL? And can anyone implement the specification(s) without any concerns about Microsoft patents?

    A: .. We leave it to those implementing these technologies to understand the legal environments in which they operate. This includes people operating in a GPL environment "

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  74. Re:It will be a smart thing to have Open Windows 9 by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    A nice idea, but it has drawbacks, like lack of 64-bit support, unprotected registry, user-is-root, weak malloc support, 4gb drive limitations, and so on. It might be cute as a VM, but sadly it would go into the deadpool ranks of BeOS, and other 16/32-bit OSes. I'm reminded of silk purses and sow's ears.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  75. a sample of MS open source .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "Ms already has a large linux lab that frequently contributes code .. other bits are helping the free software comunity"

    "OpenSSH on Linux using Windows/Kerberos for Authentication .. This paper will show how to use OpenSSH with the Kerberos portion of Active Directory to automate authentication"

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  76. Re:It will be a smart thing to have Open Windows 9 by paratiritis · · Score: 1
    Of course this won't be for power users but it will add support to those users for free and keep them for exploring alternatives.

    Not to mention that with open source a lot of things will be added such as: NTFS or any linux FS support (getting rid of the 128GB per drive limitation) good SATA support, IPv6 support, having a lot of things ported from WINE etc.

    It would be very useful. And STILL not a threat to MS business models. After all I am saying that this is a good idea for users AND Microsoft.

  77. what it was like before DOS .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "Being old I remember the time when Microsoft were this great company who liberated the computing world from the Unix wars"

    I can remember going from VAX/VMS and Apples to Win3.11 and Novell, then to WinNT, each progression being worse than the one before. In terms of usability it's total stagnation.

    There was Osborne computers, Eagle computers, Atari, Columbia Data Products the one that managed to clone the IBM BIOS, that allowed the rest to mass market clones, that ultimatly ended up running WinDOS exclusively. Doesn't anyone find such a market a little strange. The 'poor unfortunate victims' are us who spent years getting payed peanuts to fix bills crappy OS.

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  78. Re:And I have this bridge for sale by paratiritis · · Score: 1
    If Microsoft ever approaches you tread softly and carry a v2 (or v3) copylefted shield.

    This has always worked so far. The most you can fear is having a "viral lisence" insult hurled at you. No big deal.

  79. Irrelevant what M$ does by MrKaos · · Score: 1
    This is not the first time a IT behemoth has dominated the market place and I doubt it will be the last. Every company has a marketing bell curve - what makes Microsoft any different, the question is "Will Microsoft be able to adapt it's business model in an open source marketplace". There is no question anymore about Open Source being viable in the market place, certainly with Wall St being users of Open Source products it's speaks volumes about the financial sense of OSS.

    Microsoft has never played with any of the other kids in the sand pit, they will do what is best for them and the market will do what is best for themselves. I can't remember the last time I spoke to anyone who actually loves Microsoft, they use it because they have too and even if I feel pampered using VS the reality is the market place is waking up to the fact that they don't *have too* anymore.

    Doing I.T means doing business, business ain't dumb, Vista didn't cut it - end of discussion. This is the first time business has NOT implemented a Microsoft product in the enterprise and shifted from a pro-M$ stance to a wait and see stance. This is because business has the perception that they *need* Microsoft, once that perception is gone what is left? No company is bigger than the whole market and especially a market that is looking for a reason to become hostile towards a company that has been holding them for ransom for years. After all you know what the say

    You can fool some of the people all of the time or all of the people some of the time but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    1. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      I can't remember the last time I spoke to anyone who actually loves Microsoft,

      Right here. I still love Microsoft. I think they build fantastic products. (Sharepoint, CRM, MOM)

      But alas we have another kid who thinks they know how the business world works, and they spew out some nonsense about M$!!! (Don't forget the cliche $ for the S)

      Doing I.T means doing business, business ain't dumb, Vista didn't cut it

      There is nothing wrong with Vista. The only problem was that there was driver support problems, and that's not Microsoft's fault if HP doesn't make a Vista driver for a printer. Vista is fine, people just love to jump on the Anti-MS bandwaggon.

      Your post was an obvious troll, so I made sure to mod it as such.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    2. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Right here. I still love Microsoft.

      Good for you, I'll probably be overwhelmed by responses from people who love M$ real soon now.

      But alas we have another kid who thinks they know how the business world works, and they spew out some nonsense about M$!!! (Don't forget the cliche $ for the S)

      I'll remember that next time I'm addressing a Chamber of Commerce or a Business technology forum and I've used every M$ O.S product since DOS on 8088 and implemented multi-user accounting systems on character terminals in the eighties, I'll say M$ if I want to especially if it bothers you, shill boy - now get of my lawn ;-).

      There is nothing wrong with Vista...Vista is fine, people just love to jump on the Anti-MS bandwaggon.

      Riiiight

      Your post was an obvious troll, so I made sure to mod it as such.

      Ok, Naughty Bob

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    3. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      I'll remember that next time I'm addressing a Chamber of Commerce or a Business technology forum and I am god and can make stuff up because this is the internet blablablabla

      Sure thing kid. Hey I was president once. True story...

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    4. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Sure thing kid. Hey I was president once. True story...

      Amazingly witty retort, sorry it took me so long to respond but I've been beating back a torrent of people who just love M$ products such as yourself, oh wait it was just you. Only you love M$, I'm sure M$ loves you too.

      My existing technology career is now over 20 years and while I'm well built, good looking and look younger than my years, I'm hardly a kid, but thanks for the complement M$hill boy (I made that one up just for you - clever isn't it - I will be using it in the future to address shill'$ of your ilk M$ M$ M$ M$ see how mature it is M$ M$ M$, winblow$, windoze, Me$$yDo$, Me$$yDog$, M$-Orifice, M$-PowerPointless - I could go on and on)

      Whilst mildly amused by your response, I understand, and it immediately strikes me as you displaying your deep seated sense of powerlessness about your place in the world. I'd suggest you get yourself a copy of Ubuntu as a first step to dispelling such feelings. Oh and welcome to slashdot Mr Bush Snr.

      Kind regards

      MrKaos

      P.S M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$ M$

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    5. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      I'd suggest you get yourself a copy of Ubuntu as a first step to dispelling such feelings.

      Sorry I like working in an environment that actually makes me money. I guess that's what the $ means in M$.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    6. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Sorry I like working in an environment that actually makes me money.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA, just you go on believing that point and click boy, that's why business uses UNIX machines for mission critical applications, you know like banks and mining companies and linux based systems for a significant portion of e-commerce the internet.

      I guess that's what the $ means in M$.

      Well you guess wrong, it's because they use vendor lock in to keep their customer base and make it a nightmare to interoperate with any other platform your business may choose to implement.

      why do you think the term 'Microsoft Tax' comes from.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    7. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      Whatever helps you sleep at night kid.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    8. Re:Irrelevant what M$ does by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Riiiighto Mr Purchasing clerk.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  80. Not all functionality migrates to firmware by Sits · · Score: 1

    As hardware evolves much of the functionality of the driver moved into firmware eg. hard disk drives and graphics cards.

    Well I think only things that do not change, require speed or reduce costs migrate their way into hardware firmware over time. As a counterexample to the above quote note that most modern soundcards no longer do hardware mixing (instead leaving the job to the operating system which can sometimes be desirable as you know the feature will be supported everywhere). Another example is hardware encryption on wifi cards. Once upon a time encryption like WEP was done on the hardware. These days it is cheaper to build cards that can pass frames to the host OS to encrypt and then send those (plus it means new encryption can be supported by upgrading the OS rather than the card firmware (assuming the card had the power to do the new type of encryption in the first place)). Also see how winmodems took off once CPU speeds became high enough.

  81. MS: 10 Steps to a better business (w/Open Source) by jvin248 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft will fail if it doesn't embrace Open Source. The original Microsoft model was to offer low-cost alternatives to the competition and become the standard. Now Open Source is providing equally good (or frequently better) products for free.

    Legions of programmers are coding for fun what Microsoft employees do for their mind-numbing work while having to deal with middle-management political games and all that other day-to-day dribble that makes working only valuable for a paycheck. Those Open Source programmers actually have a reason and find meaning in what they are doing!


    How can Microsoft turn things around? By getting involved with Open Source. I blogged about the 10 major details they need to consider a while back: Discretionary Thoughts

    For some additional insight on getting Microsoft to help itself, here is another article. Microsoft needs to embrace Lean Manufacturing to get projects completed earlier and ultimately with more commercial success: Microsoft Ignores the Lean Manufacturing Model & how Vista became a Problem

    The most successful Open Source Linux version right now is Ubuntu (especially when combined with its related forks like Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Mint, and others). A major reason is Shuttleworth has kept the project on a six month schedule. It's easy to forecast and incorporate consumer feature requests with that kind of upgrade cycle (and it helps focus the programmers and beta testers). Can Microsoft launch a new Windows every Six Months? And continue doing so for over three+ years?

    Challenging... But not impossible.


  82. The kernel probably wouldn't need a patch by Sits · · Score: 1

    This is pedantry but the Linux kernel supports registering interpreters with different types of binaries already (look for binfmt_misc ). It is already possible to execute a Windows program on the command line (e.g. by doing ./notepad.exe ) and have it quietly start the program using wine... You can do similar things with Java or Mono.

  83. And also now 20% less felonious!!! by mkcmkc · · Score: 1

    'Tis true--I swear! (*)

    (* offer void where we can prohibit it by law)

    --
    "Not an actor, but he plays one on TV."
  84. Free/open source will not help them... by zerofoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is a current movement underway to slowly replace Microsoft at many companies.

    At my company, we are slowly rolling out Macs, Google apps, and Linux. Sure, we still have Active Directory, Exchange and SQL, but they are of the 2003/2005 variety. We have NO plans to go to Vista, 2008 server, Exchange 2007, or SQL 2008.

    Gmail will eventually replace our Exchange 2003 server, and the ONE application that needs SQL 2005 is running on a terminal server.

    Even if MS gave their products away, we still would not consider them. They offer nothing in terms of usability, functionality, stability, or security over their competitors.

    MS right now is fucked (they may be starting to realize this). I've been to a couple new product launch events for Microsoft recently, and I can't see one reason to buy their new stuff. ISVs are starting to make their products OS independent (or, at least, support multiple platforms) - thanks to Apple's desktop market share.

    Companies will keep the old stuff and when it is time to replace it, MS will probably not be considered. It won't happen overnight - it will take a decade or so.

    -ted

  85. Re:has done more?! by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    And I can get a RISC-based machine with wireless networking, two cameras and a decent multitasking OS for pennies these days. They are called mobile phones.

    The price of a home computer is, more or less, constant - it's not how much it costs to build, but how much people would be willing to pay for it. Without wintel we would have a lot more options to chose from and so would the natural market evolution. The way it is, your next computer will still be a wintel box. Faster, but no revolution will ever occur again in this front. And it won't because Microsoft and Intel don't want it to and pretty much nobody else has a vote. Including you.

    The only arena where there is still some evolution (and a revolution every once and then) is the videogame console market precisely because being wintel does nothing to help their sales.

  86. Re:MS: 10 Steps to a better business (w/Open Sourc by zeroword · · Score: 1

    I think the most feasible way for MSFT to go open source and still keep a decent revenue stream is to deliberately enter the hardware business in a manner similar to Apple. One way to do this would be to keep the Operating System open and Direct X closed. Then they can enter the business of selling the premiere gaming systems with their OS while allowing the open source community to improve the operating system.

  87. Re:has done more?! by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    "Obviously Crays and Connection Machines were never going to be home computers."

    Funny you say that, because I could swear my son's videogame console outperforms a supercomputer built just a few years earlier than it. And, of course, it does not use an x86 CPU. And while a CM-2 would never be a home computer, we never again saw custom-designed (read: designs that push the envelope of what's possible) CPUs in supercomputers. The TOP500 is full of racks of x86 boxes (and a couple x86/Cell setups).

    I would love to have a cheap and capable Cell-based desktop (specially IBM's new generation Cells) or a machine with hardware assisted garbage collection (like lisp machines had in early 80s and Azul systems seem to have today). Lots of nice inventions got lost in this tsunami of mediocrity.

    "Without Wintel (or some other standard platform), most of us couldn't even afford a computer."

    Enter the C-64, initially priced at US$600 with more memory than any competitor at the same price point. In its end, you could buy a perfectly capable 8-bit computer that ran a whole lot of software for US$200. And it ruled for games.

    Oh... And the Amiga, the first home computer to provide real multitasking and decent multimedia capabilities. It double-ruled for games, but also grew into a very capable high-end multimedia platform. The first season of Babylon-5 special effects was rendered on one.

    And the Atari ST that, while more limited than the Amiga, was the first computer to break the US$1/KB barrier (the 1040). It was also the first under US$1000 32-bit computer with a megabyte of RAM. Under US$600, if you count the 520ST (which had 512K).

    And, in the UK, the Archimedes: An inexpensive RISC-based PC that, without any floating-point acceleration, outperformed a 386/387 PC in... floating point. Its processor still lives today in just about every smartphone.

    And, still from the UK, the Sinclair ZX series. the first computers to be sold under US$100. And the QL, probably the first 32-bit home computer.

    So, of course, nobody had home computers before wintel... Really.

    As for the NT on Alpha, PPC and MIPS, they were victims of the wintel dominance. They could run Windows, and Write, and Solitaire, and Minefield and sometimes even Office, but would not run any software built for wintel (unless under emulation). When the wintel standard got dominant, pretty much every other architecture was doomed in the desktop segment.

  88. Re:has done more?! by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    Well. the Mac was never affordable (no Apple ever has prior to the current crop).

    But the Ataris, Commodores really were outstandingly powerful boxes at bargain prices.

  89. Microsoft should attempt... by linhares · · Score: 1
    to keep windows, office, & outlook servers under its control, but it should give up everything else.

    It should give up IE, media player, and other junk to the better OSS alternatives.

    Of course, in the long run, windows will have to have more and more OSS inside it.

    Microsoft is already being forced to bring down the windows price to $30 because of the EEE crowd; and as more millions and millions of OSS Netbooks find their way to users, it won't be an ubergeek thing to use linux after all. Perhaps because of all these pressures, Apple has refrained from attacking the Hackintosh crowd. As one commenter mentioned, the battle for the desktop is only starting.

  90. Microsoft proof or STFU! by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    Open source Windows 9X and Windows 2000/XP and MS-Office 2002 and under in order to prove to the world that Microsoft is finally embracing open source licensing.

    If Windows Vista and MS-Office 2007 are so superior that Microsoft is no longer selling older versions, then just open source the older versions and let others work on them.

    Also open source Xenix and make a deal with SCO to stop the Linux lawsuits of which SCO Unix is based on Microsoft Xenix.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  91. You haven't been paying attention either by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    I didn't say anything about a lack of profit at Red Hat, I just stated that the day may come when corporations ask themselves why they should pay for something that is available for free.

    As far as credit for Linux is concerned, I'd put Thompson and Ritchie at the top of the list and Linus second. I leave the rest of the ranking to the Linux community (of which I am not a part).

    My broader point, however, is that Red Hat isn't a good poster boy for the business viability of open source and in particular not an example of how MS could succeed at it.

    There's a big difference making a product open source that you've already spent millions of dollars on for a decade without help (e.g MS Office), and making contributions to an existing product (however limited it may have been) that was somebody else's idea.

    Does Red Hat have any brand new product ideas that aren't part of the Linux OS that they'd like to spend a few years developing and release version 1.0 under the GPL license?

    1. Re:You haven't been paying attention either by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 3, Informative

      I didn't say anything about a lack of profit at Red Hat, I just stated that the day may come when corporations ask themselves why they should pay for something that is available for free.

      You clearly have no idea what Red Hat's model is. We don't sell bits on a CD. We sell support. We sell the ability to call us and (in some cases) talk to the original kernel developer who wrote the code. I'm sorry but support is not "something that is available for free" to any user of Linux.

      Does Red Hat have any brand new product ideas that aren't part of the Linux OS that they'd like to spend a few years developing and release version 1.0 under the GPL license?

      Yes, absolutely dozens of products. Off the top of my head, Red Hat MRG (developed for years and just released, GPL, version 1.0 last week), ClusterSuite, LVM and all the Sistina stuff, FreeIPA, all the ET virtualization tools, all my stuff, virtio, JBoss (bought, already open source), RHN (recently open sourced), Netscape Directory Server (bought and open sourced), and probably 10 more that I can't even remember now.

      Rich.

    2. Re:You haven't been paying attention either by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine what an average user would require for support. Do they ask questions like "Where's the start menu" or "the dir command is broken".

      Surely Linux isn't so crappy that people have to buy the "extended warranty" of support.

    3. Re:You haven't been paying attention either by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine what an average user would require for support. Do they ask questions like "Where's the start menu" or "the dir command is broken".

      No, troll, they ask questions like "the HPET timer on my 16 core Dell with 128GB of RAM loses synch by a couple of nanoseconds every day and we are assured by Dell this is a software issue. Please talk to the kernel developers to identify possible sources of lost ticks in the 2.6.18 kernel."

      Operating systems are fantastically complex beasts with odd bugs and strange interactions with hardware, and for serious high end use require advanced levels of support that Red Hat provides.

      Rich.

    4. Re:You haven't been paying attention either by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I guess you missed the word "average". If the only customers who bought Red Hat were customers who asked questions of that low-level type, you'd be out of business rather quickly.

  92. I don't think so. by WhiteFluffyChest · · Score: 1

    Microsoft sell software, you can't really do that with open source software. But if things get desparate, they may keep lowering their prices like they have done recently with Vista.

    They still have a big market. One thing that will be hard to beat for the next few years is "Outlook". And they will never sell it for Linux. Just imagine if they did. That would be the end for Windows. Businesses would immediately start switching to Linux with Outlook and Open Office. That would become the standard office setup.

    Bill Gates has stated that they have succeeded with other peoples failures and he is right. Outlook is a real killer application for the office and there is no decent competition for it.

    Therefore I will conclude that Microsoft can keep selling Windows + Office (including Outlook) because there is nothing to match it.

    Good old Outlook, that is their real strength in my opinion.

  93. TTY lessons by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

    I just thought you might like to know; you can use ^W to erase a word, rather than ^H to erase each character in it.

  94. MS Open Source? Not Likely by stanjam · · Score: 1

    There is a huge difference between being an "Open Source Friendly" company and an "Open Source" company. MS is making sounds about moving towards a friendly stance towards Open Source, however no one, and I mean NO ONE, should expect them to become an Open Source company in and of itself. This company has had a very long history of being very ANTI open source. Gates himself started his business attacking the Open Source community (or what would eventually become the community). Microsoft DOES need to change. They know now they can not destroy Open Source, so they are starting to work with it. This would be a blessing. MS needs to start embracing Open Source simply because they are the current standard in business. To remain on top (and yes, they aren't going to always be the defacto top dog) they will need to be able to work with all the other systems that are making ground. If they fail at that, more and more companies are going to go with systems that can operate with the majority of other systems out there. Our way or the highway will not work in the future. Open Source is gaining, and will continue to make inroads as it gains popularity.

    --
    Open Source: Eroding the Digital Divide
  95. Re:has done more?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Depends on your definition of "Computer"

    Many large companies don't sell computers to buisiness (or governments) anymore. they sell "Solutions".

    "Computer" has become synonomous with an x86 compatible running Microsoft windows. People have come to know the strengths and limitations of that model quite well.

    IMO, the most successful computer world-wide is the basic calculator: it just works.

    The same can be said for the computer chips embeded in your toaster, microwave and car.

    DRM is sort of hurting the functionality of computer chips in Audio-Visual equipment, IMHO.

  96. Re:it's JUSTIFIED bitching by spitzak · · Score: 1

    You are the deluded one.

    According to you that post also equated Microsoft to pigs.

    You are not doing a service for Microsoft by making their apologists look so stupid.

  97. Re:has done more?! by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Moore's law increases complexity and performance, but what happens to the superceded hardware?
    It gets considered obsolete, and becomes available very cheaply. End users don't have cutting edge hardware, the likes of IBM and Cray use that to build supercomputers.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  98. NEWSFLASH! by galanom · · Score: 1

    ``Microsoft [post Gates] to donate $50 to FSF for every copy of Windows sold''