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Why Microsoft Cozied up to Open Source at OSCON

This year at OSCON it seemed that you couldn't throw a stone without hitting someone from Microsoft (and in fact, I'm sure several people did). They were working very hard to make themselves known, and working desperately to change public opinion of Microsoft's involvement in the open source community. Linux.com's Nathan Willis took a look at what they were preaching, with a hefty dose of skepticism, and tries to postulate what the "angle" is. Of course, the powers that be at Microsoft may have finally seen the writing on the wall and felt the pressure from Google enough to alter their strategy a bit. For now I guess we'll have to wait with guarded optimism (or laughable contempt, depending on how old/jaded you are).

325 comments

  1. All together now: by MisterSquirrel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Embrace, Extend....

    1. Re:All together now: by corsec67 · · Score: 2, Funny
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    2. Re:All together now: by value_added · · Score: 4, Informative

      Embrace, Extend....

      No doubt that approach remains dominant, but it's too simplistic. The article seems to conclude that Microsoft is after hearts and minds, developers, specifically, but anyone else within earshot would help just the same.

      That would make the latest developments more akin to Walmart's "our valued associates" commercials, oil companies touting "green" initiatives, US car makers promising economic turnarounds with concept cars, or, if you're so inclined, presidential political political strategies that ranged from compassionate conservatism, to "restoring honor", to the latest "I'm Different (honest!)" by McCain.

    3. Re:All together now: by WankersRevenge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft cannot extinguish a methodology no matter how much they want to. Sure, they can manipulate the governing systems, they can sue people for "patent infringement" and other garbage, but at the end of the day, open source will continue to proceed unabated.

    4. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am lost. Just what is Microsoft supposed to do to make people who use (F)OSS happy? Not helping with open source didn't cut it. Trying to help open source, apparently, doesn't cut it either. What (realistic) thing is Microsoft supposed to do, anyway?

    5. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GPLing every piece of source code they ever wrote won't be enough for some. Others will say when they can't even sell one computer with their OS on it.

    6. Re:All together now: by alx5000 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Take two... Extinguish!

      --
      My 0.02 cents
    7. Re:All together now: by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No doubt that approach remains dominant, but it's too simplistic. The article seems to conclude that Microsoft is after hearts and minds, developers, specifically, but anyone else within earshot would help just the same. That would make the latest developments more akin to Walmart's "our valued associates" commercials, oil companies touting "green" initiatives, US car makers promising economic turnarounds with concept cars, or, if you're so inclined, presidential political political strategies that ranged from compassionate conservatism, to "restoring honor", to the latest "I'm Different (honest!)" by McCain.

      Right. That's step 1, "Embrace". I'm interested to see what "Extend" is in this context. Possibly a new open source license? They've made steps down that road, but not seriously.

    8. Re:All together now: by cyphercell · · Score: 2, Informative

      die? I think a lot of them would just like Microsoft to die. I mean I really don't want them developing shit, not if that means they can affect change within the community. Honestly, the one thing Microsoft wants (control) is the last thing FOSS was designed to provide. What can Microsoft do that will make me happy? Leave shit the fuck alone.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    9. Re:All together now: by corsec67 · · Score: 1

      Lol, I do like that one much better.

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    10. Re:All together now: by Thelasko · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Microsoft cannot extinguish a methodology no matter how much they want to. Sure, they can manipulate the governing systems, they can sue people for "patent infringement" and other garbage, but at the end of the day, open source will continue to proceed unabated.

      Really? It seems like it would be difficult, but taking out Linux would be the same as winning an election. You just have to introduce a new feature that's so spectacular, that over 50% of the user base will sacrifice the fact that it's not open source to have it. They will give it away, for free, as in beer. They will now have divided the user base and continue to do so until Linux has forked so many times it's unusable.

      Embrace, Extend, and Extinguish has a lot in common with another tactic.

      Beware of forks! You have been warned.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    11. Re:All together now: by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      What everyone seems to miss about embrace, extend, extinguish is the "extend" part. That means Microsoft improves over what was there before. Look at Schema as one example. It's just more useful.

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    12. Re:All together now: by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      You just have to introduce a new feature that's so spectacular, that over 50% of the user base will sacrifice the fact that it's not open source to have it.

      they already have that: it's called "It's from Microsoft." Remember, MS has a dominant position in the PC field, and most PC users don't even know there's a choice. What they need is a feature that will make over 50% of all Linux/FreeBSD users willing to ignore that it's not OS and that FOSS developers can't copy.

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    13. Re:All together now: by Zarf · · Score: 1

      Microsoft cannot extinguish a methodology no matter how much they want to. Sure, they can manipulate the governing systems, they can sue people for "patent infringement" and other garbage, but at the end of the day, open source will continue to proceed unabated.

      ... I agree ...

      How do you fight an idea?

      --Ben Hur (1959)

      --
      [signature]
    14. Re:All together now: by philipgar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think they have that feature already. There are a lot of FOSS people (at least on slashdot) who are also gamers. The ability to play almost every game in windows (combined with the fact that their video card drivers are generally more mature and offer slightly better performance) means that many FOSS people HAVE to have microsoft windows on their computers. Should microsoft care that they also have linux installed and use that sometimes, maybe even predominately? As long as these users have still purchased a legitimate copy of MS Windows, Microsoft is making their profits, regardless of how much their product is used on the machine.

      Of course, if the gamers are pirating windows, then that's a different story, and they have no right to complain about Microsoft's ethics.

      Phil

    15. Re:All together now: by sjwest · · Score: 1

      Microsoft extinguished a wga license on one of the bosses Vista laptops today it was only eight months old. Don't ask me why but i had an enraged boss to deal with why his computer would not work.

      I have 'ossed' the model - is this what Microsoft want me to do ?

    16. Re:All together now: by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And then the rest of us gamers either purchase games that work on Linux (I buy most id Software games, even if they aren't that great, simply because they support Linux natively. Same with the UT games.), or buy a console. I love my Wii.

    17. Re:All together now: by SL+Baur · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am lost. Just what is Microsoft supposed to do to make people who use (F)OSS happy?

      Open up their protocols/file formats so that non-Microsoft tools can interact with them. Otherwise, I really don't care. They've made too many mistakes in the past (Outlook, ActiveX, auto-executing document macros/email attachments/media) for me to ever trust them with anything important.

      I like Unix and the Unix shell. I like KDE. I like the way X11 networks. For any system that I rely on, I must have source code that I can fix and recompile. I see no reason to ever switch. One size does not fit all, and I'm O.K. with that.

    18. Re:All together now: by RCanine · · Score: 3, Informative

      No doubt that approach remains dominant, but it's too simplistic. The article seems to conclude that Microsoft is after hearts and minds, developers, specifically, but anyone else within earshot would help just the same. That would make the latest developments more akin to Walmart's "our valued associates" commercials, oil companies touting "green" initiatives, US car makers promising economic turnarounds with concept cars, or, if you're so inclined, presidential political political strategies that ranged from compassionate conservatism, to "restoring honor", to the latest "I'm Different (honest!)" by McCain.

      Right. That's step 1, "Embrace". I'm interested to see what "Extend" is in this context. Possibly a new open source license? They've made steps down that road, but not seriously.

      Possibly a new open source license?

      You mean other than these?

    19. Re:All together now: by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, my current game of choice is fairly new (Team Fortress 2), so I'm not even sure if it will run under Wine.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    20. Re:All together now: by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Gets a Gold and a Platinum ratings. TF2 is a big-name app that the wine community really works on supporting. Took me 30 seconds to google "TF2 wine" and look at the results. Try it sometime ;)

    21. Re:All together now: by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the editor for it has 4 Garbages... I downloaded the editor in Windows last night so I could tinker with it in my free time.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    22. Re:All together now: by freeasinrealale · · Score: 2, Funny

      M$ has lotsa loot. The lifeblood of open source is the development community. Paying them to NOT develop for open source might be a start... Just a thought....

      --
      A man spends the first half of his life accumulating stuff, the second trying to get rid of it all.
    23. Re:All together now: by p0tat03 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Right. That's step 1, "Embrace". I'm interested to see what "Extend" is in this context. Possibly a new open source license? They've made steps down that road, but not seriously.

      As a college student nearing graduation (and thus target to a barrage of recruitment efforts), I don't really think MS is specifically after the classic "3E" method here.

      What MS realizes right now is that their company is staffed by a lot of career types - people who want to clock their hours, get their paychecks, and spend time with their family. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but they've also seen the effect of Google - a company full of people who would be willing to throw in insane hours and effort to get a cool, hip product out the door. Given MS's current obsession with *being like Google*, I suspect they want their share of the hip, dedicated, insanely motivated developer base... aka open source devs.

      My school is very pro-open-source (what college isn't?), and recently MS has been sending more and more "open source evangelist" types to recruitment talks. The whole point is to convince people to join MS, because they're no longer evil, and are now doing cool open source, innovative projects!

    24. Re:All together now: by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Microsoft has, what, 30 years of history? They earned their rep the old fashioned way, they worked hard for it, and now they are stuck with it. 30 years of Microsoft lies and thievery and fraud in general, and full time slander ("cancer", "fraud", you name it) since they first became aware of the GPL and free source software ...

      It'll take more than one convention to turn their rep around.

      And MS fan boys, don't accuse me of exaggeration with that "lies and thievery and fraud" until you can explain away their full history of lies and thievery and fraud.

    25. Re:All together now: by initialE · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Microsoft cannot compromise the ISO certification process no matter how much they want to." - Words to remember as well.

      --
      Starbucks, Harbuckle of Breath.
    26. Re:All together now: by pfleming · · Score: 1

      I am lost. Just what is Microsoft supposed to do to make people who use (F)OSS happy? Not helping with open source didn't cut it. Trying to help open source, apparently, doesn't cut it either. What (realistic) thing is Microsoft supposed to do, anyway?

      How about releasing source code to their orphaned products - DOS, Windows 9x under a OSI compatible license? How about not calling their "competition" a cancer? The thing is they disparaged, lied, cheated and stole at every turn. They did it to Apple, they did it to IBM, they did it to every little company that had a product that Gates didn't want to see in the market. If they couldn't crush a competitor by buying them for a pittance they announced vaporware that shriveled up demand for a real product on the shelf. They can't do that with FOSS. There is no company to buy. They can't hurt anyone by announcing vaporware. The only thing they had left was to call it a cancer, call in anti-American and threaten the nebulous "users" with patent lawsuits. Their attempt to crush or collect from FOSS/Linux through SCO has failed. Their patent threats may be mooted by the recent moves on the part of the USPTO and the recent "we won't sue you" overtones could prove meaningless.
      Microsoft has nearly always benefited from FOSS. I'm certainly not the first to point out the BSD network stack.
      You know Open Source is kinda like that Bruce Willis character in "The Last Boy Scout". All we want is to be treated with respect and just like with Willis, the thug (Microsoft) pulls the lighter away from our cigarette and punches us across the face. Says Willis, "you touch me again, I'll kill ya."

    27. Re:All together now: by nimbius · · Score: 1

      the pressing question is, how will microsoft "extinguish" a product with a so-called "viral" GPL license? the TCO smear campaign arguably hasnt worked.

      ballmer has done little to afford convincing reasons as to why linux is bad and MS is good, aside from his childish "communist-cancer" diatribe

      I dont think the answer is co-opting. many developers will fork. im sure a few developers (x-screensaver, im looking at you) would never ever shake hands with MS.

      poisoning? see above.

      --
      Good people go to bed earlier.
    28. Re:All together now: by pfleming · · Score: 1

      What everyone seems to miss about embrace, extend, extinguish is the "extend" part. That means Microsoft improves over what was there before. Look at Schema as one example. It's just more useful.

      The "extend" part is normally done by taking a standards compliant product and extending it into non-standards compliant territory. Extinguish is so much easier when only Windows will do the "standard".

    29. Re:All together now: by actionbastard · · Score: 1

      Embrace, Extend...

      Choke on it...Bitches.

      --
      Sig this!
    30. Re:All together now: by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      The "extend" part is normally done by taking a standards compliant product and extending it into non-standards compliant territory.

      True. But people are willing to make it work with that product because it's easier/faster/more powerful. It's not through evil hocus-pocus that everyone uses the non-standards complaint features.

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    31. Re:All together now: by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, I mean other than those. That crap came under my "made steps down that road, but not seriously" part. They have to be more clever than that if they expect to start co-opting the open source community.

    32. Re:All together now: by prockcore · · Score: 0

      Open up their protocols/file formats so that non-Microsoft tools can interact with them.

      They did that. Next?

    33. Re:All together now: by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My school is very pro-open-source (what college isn't?), and recently MS has been sending more and more "open source evangelist" types to recruitment talks. The whole point is to convince people to join MS, because they're no longer evil, and are now doing cool open source, innovative projects!

      Oh, to be sure, they like that. But that's only part of it. This is much bigger than just hiring entry-level devs - this is about combating the toehold open source has in the business market. They see how Google is propping up the Mozilla foundation and Sun OpenOffice to combat MS, and they'd like to turn the tables.

      I could see them doing a lot of things. I could see them funding a few initiatives that compete against rivals where it makes sense. I can also see them trying to wheedle themselves in so they can attempt to splinter the community. And history has shown the best way to do that is with the one thing MS has a lot of: money.

      MS has gotten where it has by being ruthless. I don't see that changing, and to think otherwise might be a little naive. Money and incompatible licensing is the best way to fracture the community. If I were MS, that's what I'd try.

    34. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People ask for more open source oportunities. Then when they get it they complain. I struggle to understand this logic.

    35. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except OSS cant do shit.

    36. Re:All together now: by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not through evil hocus-pocus that everyone uses the non-standards complaint features.

      *cough*Internet Explorer*cough

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    37. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, are you saying that the specifications to the Exchange (ie. Outlook) protocol are open? If so, do any FOSS email clients exist which implement this?

    38. Re:All together now: by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

      The closed nature of that wretched program makes my life miserable at the moment. The calendar stuffs in Outlook are not even compatible with other Microsoft Windows mail programs[1], let alone stuff like Scalix[2].

      [1] So I was told this morning.

      [2] Which I am most unfortunately forced to use at times.

    39. Re:All together now: by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Microsoft cannot extinguish a methodology no matter how much they want to.

      Contrary to popular belief, you can kill an idea if you can get people to stop believing in it.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    40. Re:All together now: by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      IE is actually a terrible example of successful E/E/E.

      The extend/embrace parts (proprietary HTML, ActiveX) failed badly and have no market-adoption outside of specific intranet sites.

      The non-compliant features are mostly stuff that's either buggy or half-done. Stuff that doesn't work right and doesn't make things easier for anyone.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    41. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Novel, Sony, Netscape, IBM, Sun, Oracle, ... it seems a lot of big names in Linux wound up there as a (partial) result of dealing with Microsoft. It seems to me that if Microsoft wants to contribute to open source without drawing more blood, they ought to offer a service to the FOSS *industry*.

      Of course, this falls back under the well known mantra of Embrace, Extend, and Extinguish.

      Embrace, extend and extinguish,"[1] also known as "Embrace, extend, and exterminate,"[2] is a phrase that the U.S. Department of Justice alleged[3] was used internally by Microsoft[4] to describe their strategy for entering product categories involving widely used standards, extending those standards with proprietary capabilities, and then using those differences to disadvantage its competitors.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend_and_extinguish
      Basically, nothing Microsoft has done with FOSS has been inconsistant with this strategy. A service that does not significantly affect current FOSS standards (documented as well as unwritten), might work. I guess they could release their own code, accept user feedback, and audit the services required. Of course it's nice if their code is cross-platform, which is also semi-consistant with their current strategy. Then again, Microsoft hasn't released much more than code that extends the typical FOSS stack.

      Then they go on marketing tirades claiming FOSS is a cancer, later declaring they want cancer.

      i just don't know which way to go.

    42. Re:All together now: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, most "oldish" games run very well in Wine. And the latest game I bought was NWN, after they released their Linux client (well, no, I did buy TES4 - and thankfully it runs in Wine).

    43. Re:All together now: by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, Microsoft eee with a product that generates virtually no profit and has better competitors. A single one, Opera, even lives on selling its alternative.

      That they don't open source IE is plain ideological stupidity.

    44. Re:All together now: by fbjon · · Score: 1

      But how would you co-opt the community with an open-source license? I mean, if it passes OSI's criteria, then what leverage would that give?

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    45. Re:All together now: by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But how would you co-opt the community with an open-source license? I mean, if it passes OSI's criteria, then what leverage would that give?

      I don't have this completely thought out yet, but imagine something more restrictive than BSD (like GPL), but incompatible with GPL (like that should be hard). Even if it passes OSI requirements, having multiple incompatible licenses would hurt. Now, at least GPL can take BSD code, if not vice versa.

      Not sure how they'd get people to use a new license; ideology isn't likely, but what if they made a good toolset open source? What if they heavily funded some Open Source projects with the requirement that they use the MS license?

      To me, one effective thing to do would be to make some good tools open source, but include algorithms or whatnot that MS almost certainly has patents on. That would make it impossible to include in GPL projects. They could make it so that the patent encumbrance didn't hurt redistribution much, but made it hard to merge with other projects.

      Just a thought. If they're smart, they could try something like that.

    46. Re:All together now: by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but IE's broken standard is something everyone has to work towards and test against. It's certainly better than it used to be, but it is a perfect example, if not of e/e/e, then of people being forced to jump through hoops to support a clearly inferior product that cannot compete on functionality and stability.

      It's like to 2004 election where the editor of Newsweek suggested that media bias automatically gave Kerry a 15% boost at the polls. Not to get too far into political analysis (and the minefields surrounding it), but Bush barely scraped by over a candidate that was totally uncharismatic, uninspiring and too far politically afield (left field) for the populace.

      Of course, Bush is no Firefox (much more like IE), and you may disagree with the premise of my rather tenuous analogy, but IE starts with about a 95% popularity by default because it's on almost everyone's computer, and the clearly superior Firefox has been scraping by with a small percentage of users for years even though it blows IE out of the water in every measurable way.

      On the other hand, the tide is turning and Firefox is increasing slowly but steadily. However, web developers still have to contend with the nightmare that is IE6 if they don't want to risk losing eyeballs because their sites simply don't work.

      So this is more like embrace/extend/fail, but the fact that IE survived as long as it did in the truly horrible state that it was in, one that Microsoft clearly was happy with because they didn't even consider improvements until Firefox reminded them that they have almost never truly innovated*, merely copied, acquired or pretended "obsolete and broken" was the same as "innovative".

      *Actually Microsoft Research innovates all the time, but their stuff never seems to make it into actual products.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    47. Re:All together now: by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Oops! In my last message wanted to give you props for your cool Kraftwerk reference! Mine's a cool music reference too, but I don't expect too many people to get it.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    48. Re:All together now: by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should tell Valve that you run Linux, and you want to play their games, then? They won't know unless you do.

    49. Re:All together now: by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1

      Not that there's anything wrong with that, but they've also seen the effect of Google - a company full of people who would be willing to throw in insane hours and effort to get a cool, hip product out the door. Given MS's current obsession with *being like Google*, I suspect they want their share of the hip, dedicated, insanely motivated developer base... aka open source devs.

      That is pretty funny. Since you are young, I'll let you in on a secret. Microsoft used to have company full of people who threw INSANE hours and effort to get product out the door, just like Google is doing today.

      I, myself, used to put in 70-80 hour work weeks and have spent the night in my office countless times during the early 90's. And that is VERY EASY to do when you are making 6 figures a year just from your stock options. Which is exactly what had been happening with Google.

      As Google's stock stagnate and the effective employee wages come back down to earth, you will see that Google's legendary work hours will come down as well.

      Working insane hours is not sustainable, unless you want to burn out your employees within 5 years. Working evironment at MS today is much more preferable, if not exactly as profitable.

    50. Re:All together now: by guisar · · Score: 1

      What college isn't? Ummm. Most colleges outside perhaps the CS and Physics departments. Many colleges mandate the use of MS products and most, so far as I can tell, use it more or less exclusively for their infrastructure and operations.

    51. Re:All together now: by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      They'd need a bit more than 50% of the users, in fact, they'd need to convert 100% of the users, otherwise the old system would stay alive, and play catch-up or haunt them until the desired feature stops making sense.

      That is Microsoft's problem, FOSS doesn't react to bad monetary incentives (just god ones), is quite immune from blackmail, buying initiatives, bribery, FUD and every other tatic they tried up to now. FOSS also doesn't completely die until everybody stop using it and delete every piece of free code they have.

    52. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      Extinguish.

      One of the main tenants of their business tactics against any type of competitor. This is a proven tactic that they have used year after year on company after company.

      There is no place for Microsoft in the open source movement. This is an attempt by them to grasp a hold of the concept in an effort to redefine it and eliminate it. This is something none of us should want.

      Open source is changing the way the software world works. It is having tremendous positive effects with little to no detrimental effect.

      A couple years ago Microsoft declared open source dead. Shortly after that they had a representative publicly state that by 2008 Microsoft's long term strategies would kill open source. Shortly after that Microsoft began it's accusations that Open Source violates 235 of their patents. Within a year they claimed to have their own open source initiative and tried to get college students among others involved. In short order they then declared their attempts to embrace Linux distros willing to enter into IP sharing agreements with them. Now they invade all things Open Source.

      Their goal? To get you to think that Open Source is what it is due to them and by virtue of their definition.

      Today is the day when everyone should understand that embrace, extend, extinguish is a real tactic used ceaselessly by them.

      They never gave into Open Source, they never adopted the goals or follow the definition of Open Source.

      Open Source was defined many years ago with the hopes of ensuring that it would not be subverted. Those attempts at subversion are happening now, today. Let's be diligent and guard the gates and ensure that we protect that which is the future of all software.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    53. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      The Extend portion is an attempt to get you to accept their definition of what Open Source is. When businesses accept their definition they'll accept fewer and fewer products created with any other definition. They'll have effectively obfuscated what Open Source is thus enabling them to control it's future.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    54. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      To have isn't enough. It must also have the mind share. You must think Windows for it to have the power it has.

      Linux allows others to think alternatively. Linux is now successful in acquiring the mind share of 30,000,000 people world-wide. Today that number could be even higher.

      Using Windows to play games isn't gaining mind share. Add complexity to the OS, make it hard so that you don't want to learn another and get people involved at an early age and you have your next generation of mind share even if it somewhat cancerous.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    55. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      Those paying would probably wind up in jail as Microsoft is a convicted monopolist and being a monopolist they can't do things that a non-monopolist could do.

      I'd say people would wind up in jail for paying others to not develop for the competitor, if it ever could be proven.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    56. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      I meant they are a convicted criminal monopolist.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    57. Re:All together now: by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      It is easy to fight an idea when your target audience isn't quite sure about what it is. You simply obfuscate the idea and then substitute your own definition of it. Essentially, you take ownership of it.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    58. Re:All together now: by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, Microsoft eee with a product that generates virtually no profit and has better competitors. A single one, Opera, even lives on selling its alternative.
      Nah they live on selling browsers for non-pc platforms (either direct to users or to the developers of the platform). A few years back they decided the revenue they got from thier PC version was worth less to them than the web developer mindshare they would get from giving it away.

      That they don't open source IE is plain ideological stupidity.
      ROFL, there are lots of IE specific intranet websites and it is microsofts interest to make it as difficult as possible to use them on anything other than windows.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    59. Re:All together now: by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of sites that work fine in IE but not in firefox. Mostly intranet sites but a few internet sites as well. The annoying thing is most of them could probablly be fixed relatively easilly but the authors just don't care.

      Hell plenty of places can't even upgrade to IE7 because of such sites.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    60. Re:All together now: by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Speaking for myself: Just make quality software, and compete on quality rather than rely on strategy to compensate for lousy quality.

    61. Re:All together now: by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      That's true, but it's mainly because developers were targeting a buggy and incomplete version of W3C CSS, not because they were targeting MS proprietary features.

      Recall that MS had a "working" version of CSS on the market 5 years before anyone else. People simply didn't know better.

      The fact that these sites don't work in IE7 just proves it wasn't E/E/E.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    62. Re:All together now: by Zarf · · Score: 1

      It is easy to fight an idea when your target audience isn't quite sure about what it is. You simply obfuscate the idea and then substitute your own definition of it. Essentially, you take ownership of it.

      Show me an idea with a bloody eye and I'll believe you.

      --
      [signature]
  2. I for one welcome ... by hachete · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... nah. No I don't.

    --
    Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  3. This should be obvious... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Since Steve Ballmer isn't a programmer, there's no geek pride to be stepped on here. Just watch out for the chairs. :P

    1. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Since Steve Ballmer isn't a programmer, there's no geek pride to be stepped on here. Just watch out for the chairs. :P

      Ho ho ho! The chairs! Will that joke ever stop being funny? Oh, hang on, it did... about two years ago, at least.

      Listen, I hate to break this to you and *every damn person* (nothing personal, you're far from the only one) that thinks the mere mention of chairs whenever the topic of Steve Ballmer- or even just MS- comes up is funny... it's not.

      The incident was in the news almost three years ago. The novelty's worn off.

      Secondly, most of the "jokes" aren't; they just mention chairs.

      It's as if the subject is deemed to be automatically "funny", not because it's actually funny any more but because its "funniness" is a self-reinforcing classification. People think it's funny, so people make jokes about it, which make people think it's funny, so more people make.... you get the picture.

      This shouldn't be mistaken for true group-shared humour. Whether it's funny is irrelevant. People don't even bother making true jokes about it any more, they just mention chairs as a shortcut. It's canned humour... it's cargo cult humour, because most of those jokes have lost sight of what was meant to be funny in the first place. They just go through the motions of mentioning Ballmer on the assumption that it's "funny".

      Do we actually think it's funny any more? Do we actually think that others find it funny any more? Or do we just all know that everyone else has implicitly agreed that this topic is considered funny?

      What was I talking about.... oh yeah, chair jokes. They're so 2005 :-P

    2. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recommend decaff.

    3. Re:This should be obvious... by TheDarkener · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Listen, I hate to break this to you and *every damn person* (nothing personal, you're far from the only one) that thinks the mere mention of chairs whenever the topic of Steve Ballmer- or even just MS- comes up is funny... it's not.

      Yes it is.

      Secondly, most of the "jokes" aren't; they just mention chairs.

      Which is all that's needed to rekindle the fire that apparently got Ballmer's ass so hot he had to throw it.

      This shouldn't be mistaken for true group-shared humour. Whether it's funny is irrelevant. People don't even bother making true jokes about it any more, they just mention chairs as a shortcut. It's canned humour... it's cargo cult humour, because most of those jokes have lost sight of what was meant to be funny in the first place. They just go through the motions of mentioning Ballmer on the assumption that it's "funny".

      Actually, something that's "funny" is based purely on individual perception. Given that most people around SD *still*, after 3 years, mention the Olympic event of chair-throwing (ha ha!), they still find humorous value in it. You can't tell someone that something isn't funny if they think it is. That's like telling someone "You don't like cheese." If they actually do like cheese, you're just trying to tell them what they like. Which is exactly what you're trying to do in your comment.

      Do we actually think it's funny any more? Do we actually think that others find it funny any more? Or do we just all know that everyone else has implicitly agreed that this topic is considered funny?

      Yes, yes, and no. Again, something is funny to someone when they think it's funny. Obviously, a LOT of people think that a balding, fat billionaire throwing a chair and screaming like a toddler because someone left their company for another, more honest and progressive company...well sh*t yeah, that's funny as hell!! Hahahahahaha!

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    4. Re:This should be obvious... by Etienne+Steward · · Score: 1

      Hey, why don't you shut up and go find some chairs or something?
      No matter how much your great role model chants "developers," we know he can't fucking wait to offshore all those development jobs to India.

    5. Re:This should be obvious... by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd say the joke served its purpose here. Got an MS fanboy to blow his cover and raised his blood pressure to boot.

      If you are a fangirl instead, it still applies. If you are a fanvampire, sorry for the blood pressure joke.

    6. Re:This should be obvious... by pfleming · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A reporter is visiting a prison in order to do a story. She notices during lunch that people occasionally yell out numbers and everyone else laughs. "47!" (laughter). "25!" (laughter).
      Curious she asks her guard escort the story behind the numbers and laughter. The guard tells her, "these guys have been here so long they don't even bother with the jokes anymore. They just yell out the number and everyone laughs because they know the punchline."
      Amazed, she watches a while longer. Another inmate stands up and yells, "13!" but gets no response.
      The guard casually says, "old Sammy. He never could tell a joke."

      "Chairs!"

    7. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, 90% of the people here are linux shills. I have yet to see anyone admit to the problems with OSS model and/or Linux in general.

    8. Re:This should be obvious... by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      you must be new here
      or
      citation needed

      Take your pick.

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    9. Re:This should be obvious... by JohnBailey · · Score: 1

      Do we actually think it's funny any more? Do we actually think that others find it funny any more? Or do we just all know that everyone else has implicitly agreed that this topic is considered funny?

      Yep.. Its funny. Kind of in the Monty Python quote funny, or the "In soviet Russia, * * you. This really seems to bother you.. why not sit down and have a quiet moment to compose yourself.. I'd have a chat and see what the root of the problem is but I've got to go recompile my kernel..

      Can someone get AC a chair...

      Not you Steve..

      --
      It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his job depends on not understanding it.
    10. Re:This should be obvious... by rmdashrf · · Score: 1

      Yep, Linus is topping up my bank account on a monthly basis... and seeing all the other linux shills around SD, he must be doing quite well with all this 'free' linux.

      --
      Nihil in publicum sputa.
    11. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'm pretty sure Steve Ballmer 'chair' jokes are posted on /. more frequently than 'nigger' jokes on 4chan.

      And both instances are pretty sad...

    12. Re:This should be obvious... by houghi · · Score: 1

      Do we actually think it's funny any more?

      Yes, we do.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    13. Re:This should be obvious... by remmelt · · Score: 1

      They just go through the motions of mentioning Ballmer on the assumption that it's "funny".

      Have you ever SEEN the man? The developers developers developers bit? The sweat? The monkey boy routine?

      This man is entirely made out of funny! He is one 100% fun.

      P.S. the chair is funny, too.

    14. Re:This should be obvious... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      It certainly is funny. Especially the hilarious responses from the M$ fanboys, such as the above, their feelings so hurt that they can't type straight and they can't realize that it would be far more effective to shut up.

      Also funny is how they go crazy if you say "M$" in a post. "Oh that's so childish! I'm going to tell my mom! You are a little little child! Childish! Childish! Childish! Because I say so you are a little child!" As though saying it enough times will make their dreams come true.

      If you check my posting history you will see I used to write "Microsoft" but I always try to remember to type M$ nowadays, just because of the hilarious immature responses from them...

    15. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, something that's "funny" is based purely on individual perception.

      Is it?

      Given that most

      Most? Some.

      people around SD *still*, after 3 years, mention the Olympic event of chair-throwing (ha ha!),

      "Ha ha!" indeed.

      they still find humorous value in it.

      Or perhaps they understand that it's supposedly funny, and that merely by mentioning it they can supposedly get a.

      You can't tell someone that something isn't funny if they think it is.

      Yes, but the question was whether they found it genuinely funny.

      Have you never seen a child- or indeed *anyone*- laughing at something they probably wouldn't find that funny on their own. Or maybe don't even understand...

      Have you ever heard of the No soap radio phenomenon?

      That's like telling someone "You don't like cheese." If they actually do like cheese, you're just trying to tell them what they like. Which is exactly what you're trying to do in your comment.

      Not really; at most I'm *questioning* whether people actually find it that funny.

      And really, what I discussed originally was more focussed on the perception that everyone thinks that everyone else finds it funny.

      Obviously, a LOT of people think

      "Obviously" you missed the point I was making and I'm going to disagree here(!)

      It *isn't* necessarily (let alone "obviously") that everyone finds it hilariously funny, so much that the *perception* that most *other* people find it funny is driving and reinforcing that same perception via weak "jokes" or references made on the basis that the poster thinks most people find them funny.


      These are easy- and lazy- jokes because the chairs topic is *apparently* accepted as "funny", and so don't require people to think up anything original or even consider whether they're funny any more. Hence the self-reinforcing nature; no-one considers or needs to consider whether it's actually funny, it's "funny" because people have made jokes about it, which in turn were made because....

      that a balding, fat billionaire throwing a chair and screaming like a toddler because someone left their company for another, more honest and progressive company...well sh*t yeah, that's funny as hell!!

      Well, yeah... happy to agree with that. When the original situation first hit the news *almost three years ago*, it was funny.

      Lazy, unimaginative, kneejerk, predictable jokes that pop up every time Ballmer- or even MS- is mentioned, that are basically just an excuse to mention chairs- humour by proxy- long after the subject was beaten to death.... not funny.

      Hahahahahaha!

      No need to go OTT; it makes you look like you're trying too hard to prove your point, which actually makes a stronger case for mine.

    16. Re:This should be obvious... by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      This shouldn't be mistaken for true group-shared humour. Whether it's funny is irrelevant.
      ...
      Do we actually think it's funny any more?

      No, no , no, that's wrong. That is, I think I disagree.

      What's funny about Ballmer and chairs is four-fold:

      1. Even if Ballmer/chair references were not intrinsically funny, they very often illicit very funny responses, like the parent post, so there is a lot of anticipatory humor about them. People start to laugh when they see Groucho pick up the cream pie; they don't wait until the food fight has actually begun. Similarly, many on slashdot begin to chortle on encountering a Ballmer/chair as they begin to visualize the agonizing facial contortions of the Microsoft apologist who is hunched over his keyboard attempting to peck out an effective response. Well, I admit that this imagery is funny in the same semicrass way that watching a lefty trying to learn calligraphy is funny. It is slashdot slapstick milk-out-the-nose funny, not the highest level of urbane wit.
      2. Second point: For those who've been around for a while, Ballmer/chair triggers a series of recollections that parallel the "I know an old lady who swallowed a fly" song:
        1. He threw the chair because somebody quit
        2. The somebody who quit was a major developer
        3. ??? [since this slot is always "???"]
        4. The monkey dance...

        This kind of compression of communications through evocation of shared memories is the hallmark of a good in-joke. It is funny because you know the guy who wrote it knew that you would bring up memories of this entire series of unfortunate events as you read it, and that's funny.

      3. It brings to mind ancient childhood memories that are themselves funny: "...she's dead, of course."
      4. There was something else, but I forgot it.

      Now I agree that this is humor at the sophomoric Slashdot level. It has none of the elegance of a good Board Room joke. References to monkey dances and guys throwing chairs the way an errant subroutine might throw an exception certainly don't belong in the Corporate Head Office.

      Oh, wait....

    17. Re:This should be obvious... by Jens+Egon · · Score: 1

      Do you have to talk that loud?

      Do you really think it is fair to shout at a poor handicapped geek with no sense of humour?

      "No sense of humour" is a mental disability worth -10 points,that's quite serious for especially for a geek.

    18. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really think it is fair to shout at a poor handicapped geek with no sense of humour?

      *Yawn*... yeah, it's my fault for "not having a sense of humour". Not for the jokes being lazy, unimaginative and turning something that was funny three years ago into an overused and tedious cliche. Sheesh! Even the "Slashdot suxorz" ASCII-goatse trolls exhibit more creativity in the way they tailor the link to the topic under discussion.

      I'm sorry if I inadvertantly insulted one of your hilarious chairs jokes, but maybe you can come up with something more original next time. If you have a sense of humour, that is :-P

    19. Re:This should be obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially the hilarious responses from the M$ fanboys, such as the above

      Not an MS fanboy; just a person who isn't going to cut an unfunny and way overused joke some slack simply because it's aimed at MS.

      Same reason I dislike User Friendly (aside from the fact it looks like it's drawn by a moderately-talented 13-year-old). Simply referencing some geek-friendly topics doesn't make it funny. It's as inane and unfunny as any mass-market cartoon strip (e.g. 99.9% of recent Garfields).

      But you can rest secure "knowing" that I'm an MS fanboy, the damning evidence being that I disliked the endless, monotonously predictable and formulaic rehashes of one joke that happened to be aimed at them. Whatever...

      their feelings so hurt that they can't type straight

      I'd be interested to know *exactly* which part of my post that you were replying to indicates that I can't even "type straight".

      I'll happily admit that one of my other comments suffered from bad editing (one sentence I meant to go back and complete but forget about, and there's a question mark missing from another... oh noes!)

      Also funny is how they go crazy if you say "M$" in a post. "Oh that's so childish! I'm going to tell my mom! You are a little little child! Childish! Childish! Childish! Because I say so you are a little child!" As though saying it enough times will make their dreams come true.

      I'm kind of wary about replying to this, because whatever I say is going to be labelled the ramblings of an MS fanboy and thus damned if I do, damned if I don't. But anyway...

      I personally don't give a flying fuck either way about the zealots on one side and the fanboys on the other. If you get a kick out of calling them M$, that's your choice. I'm not saying I've never done it, but I couldn't be arsed giving someone the excuse to dismiss what I was saying on that basis.

      OTOH, you're more concerned with upsetting the fanboys, so that's your choice. Just be aware that your automatic assumption that I'm an MS fanboy on a pretty flimsy basis says more about you than it does about me.

      And I bet you *love* User Friendly! :-P

    20. Re:This should be obvious... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that it would be *FAR* more effective to say nothing. If the post really is childish, that will be quite clear to everybody reading it. Responding to it indicates that it upset you.

      The M$ stuff does amuse me, though. In this case I think the problem is that it is *not* childish or whatever. Nobody responds if somebody says "microsucks" because the post stands on it's own for belittling the poster. But since M$ really is not that childish, the Microsoft defenders feel the *have* to post to try to convince people it is.

  4. MS cannot be trusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches.

    --Steve Balmer

    1. Re:MS cannot be trusted by zappepcs · · Score: 1

      I bet there are plenty more good quotes to fall back to in the coming months. *IF* MS wanted to be open source friendly, things like OOXML would just vanish, and they would begin to release their own OSS code, but I guess that won't happen. What was that old story about the frog and the scorpion?

      This smells like scorpion shit to me.

    2. Re:MS cannot be trusted by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I bet there are plenty more good quotes to fall back to in the coming months.

      640k should be enough for everybody.

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    3. Re:MS cannot be trusted by drsmall17 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Linux has not been taken off Microsoft's threat list yet, so this is only a strategy to eliminate linux in the end. I personally, do not like the thought of Microsoft helping Apache in any way, shape or form.

      --
      Oday ouyay antway otay ayplay away amegay?
    4. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Shade+of+Pyrrhus · · Score: 3, Funny

      So...Balmer's plan is to give his employees cancer?

    5. Re:MS cannot be trusted by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I personally, do not like the thought of Microsoft helping Apache in any way, shape or form.

      You may want to rephrase that slightly:

      I personally, do not like the thought of Microsoft "helping" Apache's CODE in any way, shape or form.

      Don't forget, they CAN help Apache by making IIS even crappier...

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    6. Re:MS cannot be trusted by ibanezist00 · · Score: 1, Informative

      I'm not trying to defend Microsoft in any way, here, but that quote is often taken out of context. I think what Ballmer was trying to state was that any work that is a derivative of something based on the GNU GPL has to also be released under the GNU GPL. Note that I don't personally think this is a bad thing, I'm just trying to clarify best I can.

      --
      There are mountains to cross for those that are willing.
    7. Re:MS cannot be trusted by carlmenezes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." - Steve Balmer

      eh? no no no...

      "Microsoft is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."

      yep. sounds about right.

      --
      Find a job you like and you will never work a day in your life.
    8. Re:MS cannot be trusted by carlmenezes · · Score: 1

      Here's another one:

      Steve, your organization is now bloated - 640kB of common sense is no longer enough.

      --
      Find a job you like and you will never work a day in your life.
    9. Re:MS cannot be trusted by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      *IF* MS wanted to be open source friendly, things like OOXML would just vanish

      So, to be friendly to open source, they should get rid of the only open document format that can handle billions of legacy documents without losing fidelity???

    10. Re:MS cannot be trusted by alx5000 · · Score: 1

      We call it "canchair" in Redmond.

      --
      My 0.02 cents
    11. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Anders · · Score: 2, Insightful

      *IF* MS wanted to be open source friendly, things like OOXML would just vanish

      So, to be friendly to open source, they should get rid of the only open document format that can handle billions of legacy documents without losing fidelity???

      Sure. Bonus points for opening the legacy format so everybody can write converters.

    12. Re:MS cannot be trusted by dkh2 · · Score: 1

      From a memory management point of view Gates had a valid point there. As memory has become less expensive developers have become less concerned about memory usage.

      Whether the end user notices or not - algorithm optimization is still a good idea.

      --
      My office has been taken over by iPod people.
    13. Re:MS cannot be trusted by alexborges · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nah, they need not go that far. Just OPEN SOURCING a valid reference implementation would be okay.

      Hell, HAVING a reference implementation AT ALL wouldnt hurt either!

      And while we are on our wishlist, they should start transitioning from ooxml to odf, because that would be FRIENDLY to opensource instead of just yapping.

      And then youre also quite ignorant: ooxml looses fidelity and office 2007 cant even open office 2000 files...

      Man... who the hell do you think youre talking about?

      --
      NO SIG
    14. Re:MS cannot be trusted by alexborges · · Score: 1

      No no... ill have to disagree: 100k bucks are a100k bucks. If it has no strings attached (and the ASF is pretty well versed in how to treat its members donations), take it and make it a better webserver.

      --
      NO SIG
    15. Re:MS cannot be trusted by morcego · · Score: 1

      And if we consider there is a lot more to opensource than Linux and GPL, I can't see why Microsoft can't continue attacking Linux while "embracing" opensource.

      I know this is slashdot, and no one RTFA, but the analysis actually makes sense to me.

      I'm sure a lot of people here were using opensource software before ever hearing about Linux (I know I was). A lot of people using opensource software on Windows these days. Which is interesting by itself.

      Consider this, for most people (non-geeks), Windows is free (they get it "free" with their new Dell, whatever). If, after that, they can have all the software they need also for free (Firefox, Openoffice.org etc), why would they want to migrate to Linux ? (yes, I know all the technical arguments).

      As long as Microsoft keep pushing windows through OEM, they can even up its price to recover their loss on the, let say, Office segment.

      There are many possible scenarios here that don't involve MS-Linux.

      --
      morcego
    16. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget, they CAN help Apache by making IIS even crappier...

      I think that's the point: how is that possible?

    17. Re:MS cannot be trusted by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      This probably should have been modded

      -1: 2001 called, it wants its state of affairs back.

      Seriously, you do know IIS works extremely well now, right? Maybe you should crawl out of the "bat cave" (parent's basement) once in a while and keep touch with modern technology.

    18. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Dhalka226 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      *dons flameproof suit*

      I use linux, I like the idea of OSS, and I'm not a big fan of Microsoft, but I do try to give everybody a fair shake. As far as I can tell, this is essentially one word removed from things that other open source advocates say themselves. Swap out "Linux" with "GPL" and you're about a half step away from "the GPL is viral." Right or wrong (and I'm not trying to start a philosophical OSS license debate.)

      Is his quote too simplistic? Yes. Strongly worded to appear to put Microsoft on the "right" side? Yup. Was it intentional, or just a bastardization of the quote above that might happen when somebody tries to speak too intimately about things he doesn't really have much information on? Hard to tell.

      Regardless, that's also his job. He's not a programmer, nor is it likely that he's even particularly involved in the day-to-day stewardship of the company. He's basically a glorified salesman, and his clients are stockholders and potential stockholders. He's giving you one reason that, in his mind, what you can get from Microsoft is better than an open source alternative.

      Distrust them on past actions if you wish, but trotting out this tired quote like it proves anything at all is ridiculous at best.

    19. Re:MS cannot be trusted by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 2, Funny

      2001 called, it wants its state of affairs back.

      by RightSaidFred99

      I really don't think anything more needs to be said...

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    20. Re:MS cannot be trusted by StarkRG · · Score: 1

      OOXML is not a good format. Pretty easy to see that if you really look at the strategy behind it.

      (Really this is just a post to negate my 'funny' mod as I didn't mean to mark this clearly unfunny post as funny)

    21. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm too sexy...

    22. Re:MS cannot be trusted by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Context my ass. He called it a cancer, and that word has distinct connotations. If he had not intended those connotations, he has had plenty of time to apologize or correct the record. That he hasn't done so speaks volumes.

      Stop making excuses for idiots.

    23. Re:MS cannot be trusted by ibanezist00 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know it's Wikipedia, but bear with me:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Ballmer#Free_and_open_source_software

      Next time you want to respond, please do so rationally rather than accusing me of doing something like making excuses for idiots.
      I think Ballmer is an idiot too, but I was just trying to add to discussion.

      --
      There are mountains to cross for those that are willing.
    24. Re:MS cannot be trusted by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      What does that link disprove? He still called Linux a cancer, cancer is still an ugly word regardless of context, and Ballmer was trying to make people think ill of Linux. What did I say that this quote disproves?

    25. Re:MS cannot be trusted by noidentity · · Score: 1

      "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." - Steve Balmer

      eh? no no no...

      "Microsoft is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."

      yep. sounds about right.

      A common typo; the keys are like right next to each other.

    26. Re:MS cannot be trusted by spitzak · · Score: 1

      Um, the "viral" thing is used by people arguing *against* the GPL, not for it!

      "Viral" implies that it will infect you by you simply being in the same room. In reality you have to actually *use* the GPL code, and redistribute the result, for it to have any effect on you, which requires a conscious effort. For this reason GPL proponents certainly don't use "viral".

      Therefore his quote is actually just the same as GPL opponents use, substituting "cancer" for "viral".

    27. Re:MS cannot be trusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easy! Look, I just reverse those two flags and... wait I think I fix something! Damn!

  5. MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by tjstork · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Microsoft's biggest problem isn't Google, it is that everyone is writing for a platform that is vendor neutral. It's extraordinarily difficult to find a business client that wants a client program - they want everything on the web whether it is stupid or not, and that's what has MS really worried. Google has failed in web apps fairly well, besides search, so they aren't the threat. What is the threat is that no one is really writing any sort of new applications for Windows SDK, .NET, etc. Open source people are at least interested in desktop applications development or PC applications development for Linux, and so, this could be part of a larger effort to at least get their stuff on Windows. Ultimately, Microsoft would rather have Windows running Linux applications on it desktop, then to have no desktop at all!

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by QuietLagoon · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Google has failed in web apps fairly well,
      -

      Google needs to release its web office applications as a server that can be installed in a corporate datacenter. That would allow corporations to maintain full and auditable control over their data, while leaving the high cost of MS Office behind.

    2. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by ionix5891 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      that goes against google's core principle of hoarding as much data as possible

    3. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by maxume · · Score: 1

      That's relatively high cost. If you are paying (luke) warm bodies $60,000 a year (and another $30,000 in benefits and shit), $600 software doesn't have to improve their productivity a whole lot to be entirely and completely worth it. Especially if you only pay that $600 every two or three years.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by bravecanadian · · Score: 1

      It would also help if Google even *remotely* competed with MS Office on a feature basis.

      This is a case where you do get what you pay for thus far in the game..

    5. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by jhfry · · Score: 1

      I already commented on the article or I would have giving you a +1 Insightful.

      The one thing that I am very upset with during all of this movement to web apps is the complete lack of quality network appliances.

      To hell with ordering a server, and OS, and the software... then spending days configuring and testing, resolving any issues with scalability etc!

      I say appliances are the future.

      --
      Sometimes the best solution is to stop wasting time looking for an easy solution.
    6. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's biggest problem isn't Google, it is that everyone is writing for a platform that is vendor neutral. It's extraordinarily difficult to find a business client that wants a client program - they want everything on the web whether it is stupid or not, and that's what has MS really worried.

      I have frequently used this fact to argue that Netscape won the browser war after all.

      --
      Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
    7. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Informative

      that goes against google's core principle of hoarding as much data as possible

      Google sells a server you can drop in to index your internal corporate network, dropping in a similar apps server doesn't seem any different from a 'data hoarding' perspective.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    8. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by alexborges · · Score: 1

      I find yours an excelent point in what makes TCO an important figure.

      Too bad that its impossible to find out what that is since all the houses that calculate it are slanted one way or another.

      In any case, you have efficiently depicted why the soho software market exists. Kudos to you.

      --
      NO SIG
    9. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Once I saw the Google search appliance in action, I started to wonder about Google's business. Sure - they're making money with advertising. But I also wonder if all these beta web apps aren't just proving grounds / test beds for enterprise services. What better way to test out your tech than ask the public to throw every conceivable (and even unimagined) kind of data at it and see how it works (as well as watch how they're making their data and your system work for them).

    10. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      leaving the high cost of MS Office behind.

      Does the average business honestly spend that much per employee per day? Even if Office is $100 per seat per year, that's $0.40 per employee per day. Most companies probably spend more on free coffee for employees.

    11. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by tjstork · · Score: 1

      I have frequently used this fact to argue that Netscape won the browser war after all.

      Or, Microsoft won the battle, but lost the war?

      --
      This is my sig.
    12. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Those search boxes have been around for years now, and we've yet to see anything like an "enterprise strategy" from Google. Not saying it won't happen, but it looks like they're entirely unrelated.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    13. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by mythz · · Score: 1

      Yeah thats the main reason, not the fact that they are making billions a year with their current business model to giving most of their services away for free so they can get people hooked on their stuff.

    14. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by Jim+Hall · · Score: 1

      Google needs to release its web office applications as a server that can be installed in a corporate datacenter. That would allow corporations to maintain full and auditable control over their data, while leaving the high cost of MS Office behind.

      We made the same request to Google for their GMail services, about a year ago. We'd love to have all our staff using GMail - email is a commodity, why run your own? But for legal / audit control reasons, we cannot have Google run all our staff email.

      Google responded that GMail just isn't designed / set up that way. They can't sell a Google Mail Appliance, let us plug it into our own SAN. Doesn't work that way. They'd prefer everyone run off gmail.com servers. :-(

    15. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Exactly, the desktop is getting obsolete.

      The German government made a guide how to achieve platform neutrality. Great stuff.

      The whole idea of vendor neutrality requires more mainstreaming.

    16. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Those search boxes have been around for years now, and we've yet to see anything like an "enterprise strategy" from Google. Not saying it won't happen, but it looks like they're entirely unrelated.

      The appliances have been around for awhile. I think I first saw one in 2000 (maybe 2001). You'd think more people would know about them.

      I suspect that goes for Google's enterprise strategy. They seem to have one. There's a while section on google.com touting various offerings. But there's no, for example, gmail-in-a-box (more like "gmail-in-a-box and we'll carry the box for you").

      So - is this all enterprise tech that escapes notice because of Google's advertising success? Is it a fall-back strategy in case advertising bottoms out? Or is it more dabbling that Google seems wont to do on occasion?

    17. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      TCO is still only looking at one side.

      What matters as much if not more than the cost of ownership is the benefit from ownership! Unfortunately that is even harder to calculate than the "TCO"

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    18. Re:MS Open Source is a Web Fallback by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Yeah, in the early days they probably didn't know if they were going to be an advertising company or a software company.

      I suspect their enterprise strategy is mostly "Microsoft is trying to do search, let's fight back by doing office". Something like "Gmail in a box" is probably too cumbersome and expensive for them to really want to support.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  6. enemies close by pak9rabid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just like the saying goes...keep your friends close, and your enemies closer...only in Microsoft's case they have no friends.

    1. Re:enemies close by snoyberg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hardware vendors? If it weren't for Vista, how many average consumers would want 3GB ram?

      --
      Thank God for evolution.
    2. Re:enemies close by ionix5891 · · Score: 1

      they've enough PAYING customers,

      for a corporation thats more important than "friends" and they are still churning out healthy profits http://www.microsoft-watch.com/content/corporate/microsoft_q3_2008_by_the_numbers.html

    3. Re:enemies close by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wow, you're right! But they have a few freaks. And five fans.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    4. Re:enemies close by BrentH · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Considering I just paid 20 for 2GB DDR2 PC5300 brand memory, shipping included, I think pretty much everyone. Vista's memory usage is actually a good thing, because it uses it for precaching much used applications. Empty ram is no ram. I agree with all anti-Vista sentiments (I just can't work with that pos) but memory usage is the only thing I think is good about it. It just doesn't work that well with systems with less memory, and they've failed (surprise) to include some form of graceful fallback.

    5. Re:enemies close by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pre-caching is ok, but should be done when enough memory is available.
      That's different from pre-caching is ok, so let's make loads of memory mandatory.

    6. Re:enemies close by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      Are you claiming, sir, that Microsoft is a Harlot?

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    7. Re:enemies close by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      Vista's memory usage is actually a good thing, because it uses it for precaching much used applications. Empty ram is no ram.

      It's hard to elucidate on how many levels that this statement is wrong. Guess you bought the FUD along with your mega-quantities of "no-RAM". I bet you think the bogus "UAC" and the constant access to HDD are good things as well.

      Lets hope that this will be the year of the Vista desktop as their first release wasn't ready for Grandma Mabel. That Linux cancer is taking over....

      Other than that Steve Ballmer and Microsoft can go fuck themselves sideways with their shit software. I'm glad I've never given them a cent and never will

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
    8. Re:enemies close by sqldr · · Score: 1

      only in Microsoft's case they have no friends.

      Apart from Baal, Dr Evil, Satan, Cthulu, Shub-Niggurath, Dr Evil, Darth Vader, Celine Dion, Pinhead, the ebola virus, Cowboy Neil, er..

      --
      I wrote my first program at the age of six, and I still can't work out how this website works.
    9. Re:enemies close by philipgar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What about all the OSX users?

      This is spoken from someone working on a macbook, so don't mark me down as an anti-apple zealot. OSX eats up memory. 2GB is the minimum I'd want on a leopard machine. If you plan on using parallels at all, 3GB is likely not enough. Of course, I tend to always have tons of tabs open in safari, I run mail, a terminal, xchat, adium, textedit, itunes,and other stuff at the same time.

      At the end of the day, RAM is dirt cheap. I can buy a 2GB stick for about $40. If my OS eats memory it really isn't a big deal. The real problem is that my machine can only accept so much RAM.

      Phil

    10. Re:enemies close by alexborges · · Score: 1

      And Dr. Evil as well for good meassure....

      Er....

      --
      NO SIG
    11. Re:enemies close by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? Does mummy by all your MS software? Linux on the desktop? Apple destroyed that pipe dream with OSX. Now off to bed with you little freeturd.

    12. Re:enemies close by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's so terrible about UAC?

    13. Re:enemies close by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Using big words like "elucidate" doesn't make you right. It just makes you verbose.

      Empty RAM is as useful as not having the memory, because you still have to load off the drive to get data into it. If the data's already there, then it's much more useful. There's no reason to leave available RAM empty, to cache data until there's something else that needs to be there. Anything else is a misuse of memory.

      The problem with Vista is that it REQUIRES all that memory. Using it as it does isn't the problem.

    14. Re:enemies close by BrentH · · Score: 1

      I bet you think the bogus "UAC" and the constant access to HDD are good things as well.

      No, I do not. Read my comment again, please. I think Vista is a pile of shit (and I tried). Period. But using ram (if available) is a sensible thing, as it's pretty much free these days. Empty ram is useless, and with new systems having at least 2GB sitting around, that would just make no sense. Having a empty cache setting in your processor makes no sense either, right? But, it appears you were only interested in placing the zilltionth general rant against against Vista, for which in principle you can have my support, but you've picked the wrong thread to place it in. Please notice how you've said that the idea that using empty memory for caching is wrong on many levels, without even naming one (of course, there are none).

    15. Re:enemies close by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that my machine can only accept so much RAM.
      And that fact that I don't think i've seen any laptops recently with more than two slots and 4GB sodimms are f*cking expensive (at least they seem to be here in the uk, US prices seem to have gone down recently so maybe there is hope that they will become reasonablly priced here too in the not too distant future) and difficult to obtain.

      And the fact that 32 bit desktop editions of current versions of windows simply do not support more than 3.something (the something varying depending on the other hardware in the machine) gigabytes of ram.

      and many hardware and software vendors either do not support 64 bit windows or do so only partially (for example you can't use altera paralell port dongles under 64 bit windows, nor can you swap them for USB dongles anymore. So your only option is to move to mac locked or licenseserver which can be a PITA). and afaict you can't run the netware client on 64 bit windows either.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    16. Re:enemies close by omnipresentbob · · Score: 1

      Nor any foes... I'm surprised Linus isn't on there...

    17. Re:enemies close by Leonard+Fedorov · · Score: 1

      Lets put activation switches in all Vista machines, turn them all off, and hold the world's data for ransome of one hundred billion dollars!!!11

      Wait a minute...

    18. Re:enemies close by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      I have a vintage iMac with 256MB of RAM running OSX 10.3. It works well (although I did install 10.4 on a nearly identical machine and that ran poorly).

    19. Re:enemies close by jt2377 · · Score: 0

      "And the fact that 32 bit desktop editions of current versions of windows simply do not support more than 3.something (the something varying depending on the other hardware in the machine) gigabytes of ram."

      PAE - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension

    20. Re:enemies close by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Any developer who happens to run a couple of VMs on his box for debugging/testing?

    21. Re:enemies close by Philip+Shaw · · Score: 1

      \tinfoilHat=on

      I'm not entirely sure that this is the real Linus, since he only has 3 posts, and 2 of them are moderated to -1 and the third is on 0, although I cannot see the moderation history (presumably because the posts are so old, the moderation system may have changed incompatibly or something).

      Furthermore, one of the posts refers to his attempts to remove Media Player from XP by deleting the folder, which seems strange for two reasons:

      • That Linius would be using XP on what we can presume was his own machine, and using XP enough to care that Media Player was on there (in 2002, so before s much DRM was involved)
      • that he would expect this to have no side effects with respect to broken registry entries and the like.

      Finally, Linus has not actually commented on any Linux-related stories.

      \tinfoilHat=off

      On the other hand, if he is an impostor, he did remember what company the real Linus is working for. I suppose he could just not care too much about reading (or at least commenting on) /.

      --
      "A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject."- Winston Churchill
    22. Re:enemies close by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is true,
      Microsoft has helped the hardware industry. If it was a linux world, We would all still be running Quake4 and HL2 on a 80386 ;) The only thing that would change would be bigger hardrives to hold the high resolution pics of all those sexy linux desktops (and pr0n)

    23. Re:enemies close by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      It's not Linus Torvalds, but Linus from the Peanuts cartoon! He probably lives here in Springdield with all the other cartoons.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    24. Re:enemies close by snoyberg · · Score: 1

      What part of "average consumer" did you not understand?

      --
      Thank God for evolution.
    25. Re:enemies close by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately in currently supported 32 bit versions of desktop editions of windows (XP SP2, XP SP3 and vista) MS has limited the address space to 4GB (which gives 3.somethingGB of ram since ram is not the only consumer of address space) even when PAE is enabled.

      They claim they did this due to driver compatibility issues, whether that is the truth or whether it was deliberate crippling to push people to server editions we will probablly never know.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    26. Re:enemies close by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Vista's memory usage is actually a good thing, because it uses it for precaching much used applications.

      Oh that's why Vista is so fast --- oh wait, it's not.

  7. Embrace, extend, extinguish. by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

    What part don't you understand?

    1. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why only MS can do it.

      Let's fuck up all their de-facto standards with GPL-only extensions and see how they like it.

    2. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by Erikderzweite · · Score: 1

      Because they are a monopoly? As long as GPL software doesn't dominate desktop market you cannot fight Microsoft with their own EEE tactics.

    3. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by notamisfit · · Score: 1

      So, uh, which one is it? Does Microsoft maintain monopoly power because they EEE their competitors, or can they EEE their competitors because they're a monopoly?

      --
      Jesus is coming -- look busy!
    4. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both, of course.

    5. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      Dunno about you, but my eee _is_ dominated by GPL software. :)

    6. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by spitzak · · Score: 1

      Let's fuck up all their de-facto standards with GPL-only extensions and see how they like it.

      First they could use the GPL code to implement the standards if they wanted to, and release the relevant tools GPL. I'm sure they are clever enough to wall it off into an application so that they don't have to release stuff they don't want to.

      Second it is highly unlikely for any standard to be accepted even on Linux unless the reference is at least LGPL, or GPL with the linking exception, or BSD. Even the FSF realizes this and releases anything they want to establish as a standard as BSD.

      Most importantly the GPL covers an implementation and not the standard. They can just write their own code to implement it. Even if they can't figure it out from the docs, the GPL explicitly allows reverse engineering. This is on purpose and part of the GPL design.

    7. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Yes, you can, it is called the domino effect.

      Have a look what elements of the Vista desktop and standard applications are not yet available for other platforms as well.

      Office is e.g. a lock-in as OpenOffice is not the best competing product yet. The adobe suite is at least available for Macs. iTunes. Games. Hardware support. The remaining advantages are melting fast. All essential open source tools are also available for other platforms, web applications anyway.

      http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/789019/000119312508162768/d10k.htm

    8. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish. by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      still there is a hell of a lot of specialist and internal software that is windows only. It only takes one windows only app to keep someone on windows.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  8. The writing on the wall: "Mene mene tekel uparsin" by LaminatorX · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's measure has been taken more than once, and when weighed found wanting. Their kingdom shal not remain intact.

  9. Luring developers back by Iphtashu+Fitz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The argument that Willis makes about MS wanting to lure F/OSS developers back is quite accurate. I just wonder how much MS's past behaviors will hurt them in this endeavor. Many people, especially those closely aligned with projects like Apache, Open Office, etc. are well aware of MS's historic practice of "embrase, extend, extinguish" so they're likely to be very cautious about any olive branches that they offer. I wonder if this well documented behavior of MS's is likely to doom such tactics to failure in the long run. As the next generation of programmers gets their feet wet they'll likely read & hear about all the trouble MS has caused, and see growing number of F/OSS projects. My guess is that many of them will likely deduce for themselves that sticking with F/OSS as much as possible is the preferred track to go and that they shouldn't trust MS themselves like those before them. Perhaps some folks within MS have also realized this and that's why they're starting to "cozy up" to F/OSS. They likely realize they've got a LONG way to go to start winning the real hard-core F/OSS folks back to supporting Windows.

    1. Re:Luring developers back by sheldon · · Score: 0

      The impact of that would be negligible.

      Most developers view open source as a means to an end, not a religion.

    2. Re:Luring developers back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until they realize that they can't get a pay check from F/OSS.

    3. Re:Luring developers back by Mynorrrr · · Score: 1
      When will this FUD die....

      I have and still do manage a good income from FOSS but the increasing competition is starting to worry me.

      Oh wait that means there is more than one of us!

    4. Re:Luring developers back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really. Nobody gets a paycheck developing F/OSS? Nobody?

    5. Re:Luring developers back by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      Most developers view open source as a means to an end, not a religion

      you really are new here! :-)

    6. Re:Luring developers back by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      Programmers are a fickle bunch, the next cool toy comes along, they'll all want to develop using it. Just look at C#/.NET and how everyone's cooing "ooo shiny".

      Hence MS making more of this stuff - and pushing to have it "interoperate" with various F/OSS projects like Apache.

      However, I do see an interesting item in there - Mono. See, I always thought Mono would be a teaser that persuaded developers that they should learn C#, then they could create apps on Linux just as easily as on Windows... only for them to find half the shiny bits were missing when they came to implement them, and so would end up by default as Windows developers. I'm sure MS thinks this too.

      Now, what happens if Mono does deliver? Why would anyone want to write for Windows then (if they had to pay a large fee to licence the OS in the first place, and then charge a large licence fee from their customers) when they could ship app and everything running on a free OS?

      I wonder what would MS do if Mono gets good. It could be the end of MS, assuming the top management didn't do something about it and I can't see them sitting back saying "its OK, our online advertising revenue will keep us afloat" :)

    7. Re:Luring developers back by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute. Does that mean I have to give this money back?

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    8. Re:Luring developers back by sheldon · · Score: 1

      HA! Take a look at my uid. :-)

      I'm not saying /. people view it as a religion... just most developers.

    9. Re:Luring developers back by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      I know - I'm glad at least 1 person got that uid joke :-)

  10. yeah right... by sm62704 · · Score: 4, Informative

    working desperately to change public opinion of Microsoft's involvement in the open source community

    After years of calling it "open sores" and saying open source is a "cancer", I'd say they have their work cut out for them.

    Do they really wonder why open source people don't trust them?

    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    1. Re:yeah right... by dedazo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      After years of calling it "open sores" and saying open source is a "cancer"

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista, do you really wonder why they'd trust you at all?

      You're not going to get rid of Microsoft, much as twitter & co. would want you to believe. So I'd recommend you eye them suspiciously and try to figure out if they're being open and straightforward about what they're doing. A sort of "keep your friends close and your enemies closer" deal.

      My personal perception - admittedly a limited view of a slice of the company as viewed from the outside - is that the rank and file are more and more aware of the need to play fair in order to compete effectively. They know that they have some really good software, but they have to justify the costs that go with it. Interoperability is one way to do that, as long as it's in everybody's interest and not just theirs.

      I think Microsoft is changing, but it's not going to happen overnight. You can either give it a chance, or continue down the same path. They still own 90% of the desktop, their server market share is growing and either way they're still shoveling money every quarter. They're still the 300lb gorilla, and charging them head on while screaming is not going to work very well.

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    2. Re:yeah right... by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista, do you really wonder why they'd trust you at all?

      I think the key difference you've failed to recognize is that the people who have done the things you point to aren't trying to get in good with Microsoft, while Microsoft, which has likened Open Source to cancer, is trying to get on the good side of the open source community.

      They're still the 300lb gorilla, and charging them head on while screaming is not going to work very well.

      A 300lb gorilla is either abnormally small, juvenile, or perhaps a large female. The common term for an a juggernaut that dwarfs all competitors in an area of business is "800lb gorilla".

    3. Re:yeah right... by dedazo · · Score: 1

      I think the key difference you've failed to recognize is that the people who have done the things you point to aren't trying to get in good with Microsoft

      Perhaps you'd like to read my post again. Attention to the part where I suggest trying to meet them halfway would be appreciated.

      A 300lb gorilla is either abnormally small, juvenile, or perhaps a large female.

      It's also faster and more nimble than the 800lb one. And it's still 300lb.

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    4. Re:yeah right... by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      You're not going to get rid of Microsoft, much as twitter & co. would want you to believe.

      True, they're doing that well enough on their own. Vista has bad press because it is bloated and doesn't do *anything* better than XP or Linux and in fact does many things *worse*.

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
    5. Re:yeah right... by dvice_null · · Score: 1

      > They still own 90% of the desktop

      They also owned over 90% of the web browsers in 2003. Now it is less than 80%. http://www.thecounter.com/stats/2008/August/browser.php

      > their server market share is growing

      By what study?

      > charging them head on while screaming is not going to work very well

      I think we are doing just fine. It is the Microsoft who is losing here. Why do you think they first ignored us, then tried their FUD campaign and now they want to be our friends? To me it seems that we are doing better and better.

    6. Re:yeah right... by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista, do you really wonder why they'd trust you at all?

      Please show us direct and credible quotes from Linus Torvalds, or ANY CEO of ANY Linux-centric corporation who has made ANY such statements. Meanwhile, we have the CEO of the Microsoft Corporation making blatantly false/misleading statements, often doing so in a childish manner.

      This is why your argument fails before it even gets out of the gate.

      /P

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    7. Re:yeah right... by alexborges · · Score: 1

      Man... who on earth would want MICROSOFT to trust them?

      Get a grip: they were once a good thing for computerdom, they freed a many developer from really mean overlords, but they became one themselves and do not want to cave in and cooperate so that we can transition to a competitive market where everyone can make a buck without them necessarily making ten.

      Its time for them to be smitten. And smite them the lord will.

      (sorry for the bad spelling, it wouldve read quite nicely if i knew how to write better english)

      --
      NO SIG
    8. Re:yeah right... by alexborges · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah... and by the way: charging them head on IS WORKING very well. Thank you very much.

      --
      NO SIG
    9. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft is not small, fast, or nimble. It is gigantic, established, and powerful.

    10. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I thought it should not be hard to find a quote of Richard Stallman that condemns everyone writing proprietary software. And it was quite easy:

      Writing non-free software is not an ethically legitimate activity, so if people who do this run into trouble, that's good! All businesses based on non-free software ought to fail, and the sooner the better.

      Doesn't sound that friendly either. It was in the "Attributed" section of Wikiquote, but I think it resembles the truth more than this 640k memory joke.

      As a bonus question: has Richard Stallman ever denoted software as free that was not licensed with GPL?

    11. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're still the 300lb gorilla, and charging them head on while screaming is not going to work very well.

      And yet, here they are, trying to figure out how to at least APPEAR to be playing nice. Huh.

    12. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you'd like to read my post again. Attention to the part where I suggest trying to meet them halfway would be appreciated.

      Why? We don't need them.

      It's also faster and more nimble than the 800lb one. And it's still 300lb.

      Oh, well, in that case MS would be the two ton gorilla, AKA Bloaty McBloatinchubbs.
      Thank yew, thankya verahmuch.

    13. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy...

      You must be kidding, right? The thing you failed to realize is that Clippy is still there along with that stupid dog from Microsoft Bob days. Those creatures are there when you start Word/Excel/etc., when you close and reopen they sometimes come back even when you think you've finally banished them and they're there EVEN WHEN YOU SEARCH for files.

    14. Re:yeah right... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference is that I don't owe Microsoft anything. They are trying to win back _my_ favor and _my_ custom. I don't care what they think of me. They should care, however, about what I think of them, because I'm one of their customers that they have lost.

      Microsoft has everything to win and I have nothing to lose in this relationship. I'm very happy using open software and frankly I can't imagine a scenario where Microsoft could win back my trust, even one involving a public firing and condemnation of Ballmer and everything he stands for (although that would be a good start). I also can't imagine Microsoft making a product I would want or prefer to what I have now. They haven't done anything in many years that isn't completely unsuitable to my needs. I liked XP. Heck I _still_ like XP. But they killed XP and replaced it with something that I do not like and refuse to use. I don't owe them anything, but if they want my future business, they owe me a lot.

      You don't seem to understand how the vendor/customer thing works.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    15. Re:yeah right... by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      As a bonus question: has Richard Stallman ever denoted software as free that was not licensed with GPL?

      Public Domain?

    16. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're really grasping at straws here to find something wrong with open source. Stallman is not the CEO of a global monopoly which is ruled from the top down like Ballmer or Gates. Pointing out one person in the bunch that you don't like doesn't represent the whole, whereas with a CEO and with a monopoly, you're stuck with their decisions whether you like them or not.

    17. Re:yeah right... by rmdashrf · · Score: 1

      I dislike Steve as much as the next guy, but I think calling him a 300lb gorilla is taking it a bit far. If we don't stop this behaviour here and now, people will start calling him a knuckle dragging, chair throwing submonkey next.

      --
      Nihil in publicum sputa.
    18. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's that desktop market share working out for you so far?

    19. Re:yeah right... by archeopterix · · Score: 1

      A 300lb gorilla is either abnormally small, juvenile, or perhaps a large female.

      What do you mean? An African or European gorilla?

    20. Re:yeah right... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      I fail to see "Winblows" or "microsucks" or any of your other words in the above quote.

      Meanwhile it is trivial to find the word "cancer" in a Microsoft quote.

      BZZT. Please try again.

    21. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Growing, thank you very much.

    22. Re:yeah right... by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Right. But read their nightmare scenario to chose your favourite way to break their neck:

      http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/789019/000119312508162768/d10k.htm

      It is a domino effect, adapt or die. that sounds unrealistic given the market value and success but in fact the turning point is close. I am not sure Microsoft can learn quickly enough and catch up.

    23. Re:yeah right... by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista, do you really wonder why they'd trust you at all?

      We don't give a rat's ass if Microsoft trusts us. They're trying to infiltrate open source, not the other way around. Your argument is pointless and completely irrational.

      So I'd recommend you eye them suspiciously and try to figure out if they're being open and straightforward about what they're doing

      WE DON'T TRUST THEM. Is that so hard to understand? We don't believe they're being open and straightforward, why should we? They've never been open and straightforward with anyone ever.

      Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me over and over for twenty years, shame on me. If Microsoft wants our trust they're going to have to earn it.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    24. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      False equivalence. In reality, the language used between parties of massively differing social power should be different. In other words, when a bully insults the underdog it's not OK, but when the underdog insults a bully it is OK.

    25. Re:yeah right... by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista, do you really wonder why they'd trust you at all?

      I don't see how that's relevant here.

      You're not going to get rid of Microsoft...

      Oh, no shit you say? For our next trick, we will show you how 20,000 toothpicks can kill a cow. Stay tuned.

      My personal perception - admittedly a limited view of a slice of the company as viewed from the outside - is that the rank and file are more and more aware of the need to play fair in order to compete effectively. They know that they have some really good software, but they have to justify the costs that go with it. Interoperability is one way to do that, as long as it's in everybody's interest and not just theirs.

      I think you may be correct here. Corporate culture change is a slow thing. But even if you're right, we are under no compulsion to give a shit.

      You can either give it a chance, or continue down the same path.

      Okay, then. I'll go with "same path." I'm glad we're on the same page here.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    26. Re:yeah right... by dedazo · · Score: 1

      I recognize that intoxicating smell of underdog heroics is diminished when considering this problem in a logical way, so I completely understand that you so desperately want to keep the "us vs. them" status quo and "don't give a shit". It's been 14 years since I first heard about open source and how it was going to like totally kill Microsoft, so hopefully you have just 14 more to go.

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    27. Re:yeah right... by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      I recognize that intoxicating smell of underdog heroics is diminished when considering this problem in a logical way, so I completely understand that you so desperately want to keep the "us vs. them" status quo and "don't give a shit".

      Go ahead an imply my immaturity. I've had way worse ad hominem attacks, it doesn't bother me.

      It's been 14 years since I first heard about open source and how it was going to like totally kill Microsoft...

      And it is working, very much so. You may have missed it, but that's the discussion topic here. Yesterday it was the shareholders' report, today it's this new tactic of "but we LURV open source, please be our friend!" They're scared shitless over there right now, of little old us, and they have no idea how to deal with it, so they're trying every ham-fisted schtick they can think of. Kinda flattering, in a way.

      Bottom line: We're kicking their asses. Quality, ease-of-use, aesthetic appeal, price, interoperability, portability, you name it, we're whipping them in it. What do they have that we don't? Market share. That's it, and that's starting to slip too. Slowly slowly slowly, but it's happening right now. Yeah, it may very well take 14 more years, it takes a long time to bleed out a cow. What of it? Time's our friend and their enemy.

      If you're still waiting on "The Year of Linux on the Desktop," I've news for you, it was 2006.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    28. Re:yeah right... by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      I hate to barge in on the fun here, but after years of calling them "Micro$haft" and "Windoze" and lame outdated jokes about Bob and Clippy, not to mention the massive FUD campaign against Vista

      You had me up until this point --- but come on, Vista is its own FUD!

    29. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft is 'too big to fail'
      They are the Bear-Sterns of the computer industry.

    30. Re:yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The common term for an a juggernaut that dwarfs all competitors in an area of business is "800lb gorilla".

      Obviously, we need a 1200 lb gorilla.

    31. Re:yeah right... by geber22 · · Score: 1

      A 300lb gorilla is either abnormally small, juvenile, or perhaps a large female. The common term for an a juggernaut that dwarfs all competitors in an area of business is "800lb gorilla".

      Don't underestimate the power of a 300lb gorilla, it would tear the average man apart limb by limb.

  11. Poor schmucks by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    While these MS employees might generally want to work with open source, I would guess most people in open source distrust the company. These employees might actually be working on things like interoperability in earnest; we are highly suspicious of how the executives are planning to use those projects for more nefarious deeds. It wasn't that long ago (Nov 2006) that Ballmer rattled his sword about Linux IP infringments without specifically naming them. All MS wanted to do is plant FUD. In today's IP world, companies stockpile patents mainly for defensive purposes. If MS ever actually went after Linux, it would have to deal with companies that would need to defend their IP whether they had a stake in Linux or not. But those who have huge investments in Linux: IBM, Oracle, Redhat, Novell, aren't pushovers either.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    1. Re:Poor schmucks by omnipresentbob · · Score: 1

      But those who have huge investments in Linux: IBM, Oracle, Redhat, aren't pushovers either.

      Fixed that for ya ;)

  12. Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure what google has to do with OpenSource. I know that they use a lot of it, but they certainly are not releasing their applications such as search, mail, documents, etc.

    1. Re:Google? by Shikaku · · Score: 3, Informative
    2. Re:Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure what google has to do with OpenSource.

      I'm not sure you've been paying attention or that you belong here. Google has contributed developer time and resources to many open source projects ranging everything from the Linux kernel to Wine.

      Yes they keep some of the stuff they develop to themselves. Yes they use a lot of open source stuff too. What you are missing is that they also contribute back to many of the open source projects they benefit from.

      Google Summer of Code and Google Code would seem to have everything to do with open source.

      Get out from under your rock, stop trolling, or both.

    3. Re:Google? by dvice_null · · Score: 1

      And the way I see it. Using is also contributing. If you use open source, you don't pay money to the competitors. Money which they would use to market their product.

      Also if you ever tell, mention or if someone can see you using an open source application, you have marketed it. Google has done this also as we know that they are using open source software.

      So while Google is doing a lot more than just using. Don't underestimate the power of "just using".

    4. Re:Google? by Paradigm_Complex · · Score: 1

      It's more than just not paying the competition (I could use neither the F/OSS option or the competition and accomplish the same thing) or marketing. Using F/OSS and increasing F/OSS market share encourages open standards and interoperability, which in turn make life for the developers of the given F/OSS project much easier. Consider: thanks to Firefox's marketshare much of internet moved away from IE-specific websites. Got a big idea for some software Google should put on all their servers? It better run on Linux.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
  13. Survival..... by UseCase · · Score: 1

    Embrace, extend and extinguish if possible.... If not mimic, befriend and strangle until you can extinguish.

    M$ is kinda like kudzu or pigweed in that respect.

  14. Cashing the GNU by Lucas.Langa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What about this crazy idea:

    1. take an interesting open-source project Foobar
    2. if there's a need of new feature, write them
    3. hell, even release the changes as open source as well
    4. package it as Microsoft Foobar
    5. sell the product like mad in ways no other company is capable of (think OEMs, institutions, government, lawyers, etc.)
    6. PROFIT

    Yeah, there even doesn't have to be a "???" step.

    --
    Build a tool even an idiot can use and only an idiot will want to use it. -S.O.B.
    1. Re:Cashing the GNU by steelfood · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm sorry, but Foobar is not open source.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    2. Re:Cashing the GNU by smooth123 · · Score: 1

      Isnt that what Billo did the first time around to make his M$ fortune. Sell a crappy version of an existing product. This is not new, anybody who has followed M$ knows exactly what Ball mer is trying to do.

    3. Re:Cashing the GNU by drodal · · Score: 1

      They could start with firefox!

    4. Re:Cashing the GNU by alexborges · · Score: 1

      The day this happens without them later breaking "Foobar" later or making proprietary forks of it, hell will freeze.

      Its getting mighty cold down there, but not THAT much.

      --
      NO SIG
    5. Re:Cashing the GNU by Toffins · · Score: 2, Insightful
      3.hell, even release the changes as open source as well

      Since your subject line was "Cashing the GNU", if they didn't release the changes as open source, they'd be breaking the terms of the GNU project's General Public License, which requires source code for changes to be released whenever the modified original code is redistributed.

    6. Re:Cashing the GNU by TheDreadedGMan · · Score: 1

      What about this crazy idea:

      1. take an interesting open-source project Foobar
      2. ...

      My open source project is called Foobar you insensitive clod!

    7. Re:Cashing the GNU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, it isn't, and that's why I don't use it anymore. Best audio player out there, but limited by the whims of it's sole developer. He's a dictator, and not so benevolent. It's got a terrible randomizing algorithm and there's no way to fix it with no source. There's an SDK, but all that does is expose what the dictator wants to expose. Really a great case study in how closed source hurts a projects' potential.

    8. Re:Cashing the GNU by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      The problem with that model is Microsoft would have to be willing to take a big hit on their margins.

      Foobar is not going to sell for $500 when you can download it for free. Maybe $5 per seat - one time cost - if that, and that mainly if support is provided above the RTFM and chat/newsgroup support provided by most FOSS projects.

      This is the argument that I've presented over the years: shrink wrapped software is all but dead. What will follow will have limited profit margins for big corporations that are trying to continue that old model, or try to modify the FOSS concept to somehow gain an advantage...it won't happen. There are only a few compelling applications of the subscription service model, and most of the profitable ones involve RPGs and communication/information services. A subscription based office suite won't sell when there are so many free alternatives that are just as good, if not better.

      In the interim opportunities for individual developers who can quickly modify and deploy specific customizations on contract will rise. These kind of jobs will allow select individuals to prosper, but will not provide the volume necessary to generate a Microsoft sized revenue stream. Companies will come to find off-shoring to other monolithic companies not cost effective, and they will embrace open source and hire FOSS professionals who will more and more hang up their shingles in the virtual spaces. Cost will be negligible compared to previous models (lower overhead), quality will be on par with current results - with the added bonus of having more customized applications for specific business purposes, and deployment times will be faster (less time to modify existing FOSS than to build proprietary system from the ground up).

      It is just a matter of time before the other shoe drops. The thrashing around of Microsoft is probably a good indicator that things are moving in that direction.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    9. Re:Cashing the GNU by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      The problem with that model is Microsoft would have to be willing to take a big hit on their margins.

      Foobar is not going to sell for $500 when you can download it for free. Maybe $5 per seat - one time cost - if that, and that mainly if support is provided above the RTFM and chat/newsgroup support provided by most FOSS projects.

      Not necessarily. In the consumer market, yes. But in the corporate market - ah, there's the gold. Even today, many companies are going to buy products from Microsoft instead of using equivalent open source solutions.

      I would bet that they could take a high quality open source solution and re-market it with great profit margins. And do so with multiple projects. Not only do they not have to pay for the original development, they could subcontract support out to the original (or other) developer(s) quite easily. They could even set up a special channel for MS partners who work OSS for site-specific customization.

      It might not even be their undoing - they could become just as big an OSS behemoth as a proprietary one. With the quarter to quarter profits and war chest it's not even that unlikely given enough time.

  15. Anybody else think this might backfire for MS? by jhfry · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The one thing that MS has going for it is a complete lack of understanding of "open source" by upper management of many companies. I know that at previous jobs I couldn't even use those two words together without fear of a slap on the hand.

    I realize that things are shifting and many companies are already investigating "open source" solutions, however they still weigh the pros and cons of both and still usually go for the business model that they understand the most.

    Now that Microsoft is trying to be Open Source friendly, their name is appearing in all kinds of articles with those dreaded words "open source" and therefore all those managers who disreguarded that entire sector of the software industry are now that much more willing to let their IT departments experiment with "open source" solutions. And us IT people who have been waiting to jump the MS ship for years actually have an audience for that great MS replacement solution we have had in our heads.

    I predict that this pandering to the Open Source community might signal the downfall for MS. Unless they embrace it completely and bleed "open source", they will never be as good as their "truely open" competitors.

    It would be like Coke advertising that it now tastes more like (insert cheap cola maker here)... all of those people who have been drinking Coke because they thought it was better because they knew the name will now try the alternative. If the alternative is truely better, who's gonna drink Coke anymore?

    --
    Sometimes the best solution is to stop wasting time looking for an easy solution.
    1. Re:Anybody else think this might backfire for MS? by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      The one thing that MS has going for it is a complete lack of understanding of "open source" by upper management of many companies.

      I think it will backfire because of the assumption that everybody will buy the FUD.

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
    2. Re:Anybody else think this might backfire for MS? by kipman725 · · Score: 1

      because cokes cool? it already tastes like shit.

    3. Re:Anybody else think this might backfire for MS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you dont drink it, you add baking soda to it and smoke it.
      silly kids.

  16. MS can be trusted by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2, Funny

    MS can be trusted to do whatever they need to do to make a buck.
    So I'm expecting Office .Net binaries that happen to run OK on Mono any time soon.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  17. MSFT adding staff to compete against open source by twasserman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've recently heard that Microsoft is looking for a Senior Director in the Product Marketing area around their web application development strategy and tools. One of the requirements for this position is a solid understanding of the LAMP stack and development approaches for web applications built on open source software. Presumably the successful candidate will have the task of marketing Microsoft's .Net story against the open source LAMP stack. Microsoft's participation at OSCON and similar events gives them both the opportunity to become part of the open source community, and a better understanding of how they can compete against it.

  18. Big Deal? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

    I've been writing software of some sort for about 10 years; naturally I've been involved in computers even longer than that... and I'm curious - what exactly is there to be optimistic about as far as Microsoft's attitude toward OSS? How would Microsoft opening the source to any of its stuff really change anything?

    I keep seeing people get all excited about this. Just because something goes open source doesn't mean it's going to be free. Even if Microsoft opens everything tomorrow they will still be a huge monopoly capable of charging whatever they want to charge.

    So, FOSS / OSS fanboys - why all the excitement?

    --
    You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    1. Re:Big Deal? by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Not sure if the word "excitement" applies here.

      I'd suggest the more descriptive terms of "trepidation", "abashment", "surprise", "caution", and other factors that can serve as descriptions for the entire FOSS community looking in Microsoft's direction and thinking "WTF!?"

      /P

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    2. Re:Big Deal? by alexborges · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Depends on what you mean by "Open Source". If everything microsoft does goes Free Software (a real FOSS license that protects the six freedoms), its free, forever.

      Yes, they will still make a buck: GOOD! If we only managed to convince them of that.....

      Sigh

      --
      NO SIG
    3. Re:Big Deal? by aztracker1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that like any large corporation there are some divides in principles from one department/division to another... Take ASP.Net MVC, and the DLR teams for example... these teams have been very F/OSS friendly for several years now... I think it just depends. Many large companies will have teams that use one platform/environment over another.. I don't think it necessarily speaks for anything in particular to see MS employees take an interest in OpenSource. It's just a big company, and like any big company there is some diversity in what people have interests in...

      I don't think it's part of some master plan, so much as part of being a large technology company in this day and age.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    4. Re:Big Deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if Microsoft opens everything tomorrow they will still be a huge monopoly capable of charging whatever they want to charge.

      Wait, you're saying your biggest problem with Microsoft is that their software is expensive?

      I think most people here dislike Microsoft for the illegal business practices they use to shovel their mediocre products down people's throats or they dislike all non-free software on principle but... price?

      You could always pirate Microsoft products if you'd prefer to use them, or, you know, get a job.

    5. Re:Big Deal? by lazy_nihilist · · Score: 1

      If everything microsoft does goes Free Software (a real FOSS license that protects the six freedoms), its free, forever.

      I thought that there were only 4 essential freedoms required by a FOSS license.

    6. Re:Big Deal? by alexborges · · Score: 1

      Well... erm... those four then.

      --
      NO SIG
    7. Re:Big Deal? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      Haha, I pointed that out to contrast FOSS with what Microsoft does. I, personally, don't care too much about their pricing outside of the crazy overpricing of Vista.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
  19. Here's the deal. by TheDarkener · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here are the plain, simple facts regarding this sudden "change of heart":

    1) Microsoft has, up until this point, violently opposed the open-source model, community and underlying morals & ethics that sustain our "ecosystem" as they put it. They have used Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt, slander (and lots of PR/marketing money) to make open-source look inferior to their products. Remember, open-source is a "cancer".

    2) Microsoft, since the beginning, has outright sabotaged other software companies' software, pushed (against their own customers no less) software onto their customers that only benefits them (WGA, Terminal server licensing server) and causes unjust amounts of headache for the people who purchase said software.

    3) Speaking of Terminal Server, just a quick personal note from my recent experience: Microsoft intentionally limited Windows 2000 Server color depth to 256 colors for connecting devices (NT4 did NOT have this limitation). Windows 2003 Server touted features include 'Increased color depth in connecting devices'. This seems an awful lot to me as a conscious effort to cripple one version of their product, to be able to sell more of their next.

    4) Microsoft is headed by a guy who got so butt hurt at an honest competitor that he threw a chair and started cursing.

    ---

    The open source community must stand tall against Microsoft. Don't let the easily forgotten past dilute in your current glass of water - Microsoft has absolutely no intention of making an about face. They exist because they want to make MONEY. LOTS of money. And that's not bad, we all need money to survive - but Microsoft doesn't play by the rules. Never has, never will. I say we give them 10 years to prove their intentions (since it took them at least that long to put them in the position with the community in the first place) with the community. After that, maybe we'll feel more comfortable with letting the wolf into the sheep's domain.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Here's the deal. by WankersRevenge · · Score: 1

      If you write open source software to make a stand against Microsoft, all the power to you. But what happens, when the giant falls? Does your ambition fall with it? Does your software become neglected? I say let Microsoft worry about Microsoft, and you should write the best software that you can.

    2. Re:Here's the deal. by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

      If you write open source software to make a stand against Microsoft, all the power to you. But what happens, when the giant falls? Does your ambition fall with it? Does your software become neglected?

      Oh no, Microsoft is gone - I have no reason to write quality code now! /me wonders if that was the case before 1979...

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    3. Re:Here's the deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about though?

      Free Software stands tall on its own and its ability remain free through the GNU GPL.

      There is no fear about any commercial entity that is interested in free software; any person or company with an interest in free software is welcome as long as they keep the principles of the GNU GPL in minds while they play.

      Any weaknesses in the GNU GPL are also welcomed to be challenged as that will help it to evolve...

    4. Re:Here's the deal. by jdstroy · · Score: 1

      IIRC, NT TS 4.0 was acquired from Citrix Metaframe. This "intentionally" limiting of Windows 2000 Server to 256 colors was due to restrictions from Citrix. And let's think about this... 1) Windows 2000 => Windows 2003 : An "improvement" in colors = intentional sabotaging of the older product, even before the release of Windows 2003, to motivate an upgrade. 2) Windows NT 4.0 Terminal Services => Windows 2000 : A (supposed) degradation in colors = intentionally discouraging upgrades? Something doesn't make sense. Flame this post if you want, mod it down if you want, but really, the parent argument makes no sense in the big view of things.

    5. Re:Here's the deal. by jdstroy · · Score: 1

      IIRC, NT TS 4.0 was acquired from Citrix Metaframe.

      Meant to say Citrix. Metaframe was the product.

  20. lolcrosoft by sohp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Im in ur OSCONs, stealin ur develpurs! DEVELPURS! DEVELPURS!

  21. Microsofts biggest threat is the GPL, not OSS. by miffo.swe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The biggest hurdle between Microsoft and open source is the GPL. Because of how the license is written its very hard for Microsoft to embrace and extend any project written in GPL, especially GPLv3. Even if Microsoft somehow should manage to get the lead developers of some high profile projects away enough people exists that would just fork and ignore them completely.

    I expect Microsoft to put much effort into trying to get more projects to use for example the BSD or Apache license instead of the GPL. Some people might but i suspect most peope are smart enough to realize all they are after is another chance at doing a Kerberos on other peoples hard work.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  22. I think you mean PDF by tepples · · Score: 4, Informative

    *IF* MS wanted to be open source friendly, things like OOXML would just vanish

    So, to be friendly to open source, they should get rid of the only open document format that can handle billions of legacy documents without losing fidelity???

    Grandparent said OOXML not PDF.

  23. If Microsoft -HAS- seen the light.... by GeneralEmergency · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...then where the HELL is the "Mia Culpa, Let's be friends." interview with Stevie "King of the Flying Chair" Ballmer here on /.?

    Wake me when this happens.

    [Snoring Begins]

    --
    "A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
    GeneralEmergency
  24. Star Trek quote... by timjones · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From IMDB:

    [on whether to help the Klingons]
    Captain James T. Kirk: They're animals.
    Captain Spock: Jim, there is an historic opportunity here.
    Captain James T. Kirk: Don't believe them. Don't trust them.
    Captain Spock: They're dying.
    Captain James T. Kirk: Let them die!
    [pauses... Spock cocks his head in surprise.

    Honestly, folks, what makes you think any Klingons, err, microsofties can be trusted in this day and age?

    or maybe this is closer to home:
    Steve Jobs (from Pirates of Silly Valley): "Dead culture in a crumbling castle"...

    They're just saying "nice doggy" until they can find a rock. Maybe this is what the teachers meant when they said: "Those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it".

    Or how many times do you insist on touching that hot stove? Really. They need us more than we need them. Ignore them, move along, nothing to see...

  25. Devel purrs by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

    I can has BSD?

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  26. I hear the talking, I don't see the walking by stox · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Microsoft has been making some big noises. When they start releasing some real open source software, that runs on something other than windows, maybe I will stop laughing hysterically. Until then, it is all noise. In addition, due to their prior behavior, they are going to have a much higher barrier to go over than their competition.

    Sorry kids, you made your bed, you get to sleep in it.

    --
    "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
  27. Google open source ? by djelovic · · Score: 3, Interesting

    > Of course, the powers that be at Microsoft may have finally
    > seen the writing on the wall and felt the pressure from Google
    > enough to alter their strategy a bit.

    So Google has open sourced its search engine? Cause all I've seen them open source is some fluff plus some contributions to projects that they use in order to provide their services (where the ratio between them receiving and giving is about zillion to one). No open sourcing of their golden eggs.

    So please Slashdotters, stop being such bitches for Google and Apple. Try to understand that for-profit companies have only two relationships with the GPL license: If they provide services or sell hardware, they love it. They can piggy back on the stuff others have built and make a buck. If they sell software, then they hate GPL because selling GPL'ed software is damn hard. (Not impossible, but hard.)

    Microsoft is playing nice with open source for three reasons:

    1. Microsoft is working very hard to improve its image. Look at the number of lawsuits they have settled in the last few years vs. the 90's and you'll see a company that's trying very hard not to get any bad press.

    2. Regulators have squeezed Microsoft's balls to publish their protocols and file formats and play nice with others.

    3. Corporations that they sell a lot of licenses to demand they interop well with other operating systems and applications that they use.

    Dejan

    1. Re:Google open source ? by Paradigm_Complex · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So Google has open sourced its search engine? Cause all I've seen them open source is some fluff plus some contributions to projects that they use in order to provide their services (where the ratio between them receiving and giving is about zillion to one). No open sourcing of their golden eggs.

      Open source is not about being anti-competitive-business. If I had to simplify it down to that level it'd be closer to anti-customer/end_user-abuse. It's perfectly reasonable for a company to be very pro-open source without giving away everything. In many cases, like Adobe's flash player, it seems obvious that if it were open sourced a better implementation would come about (either from a fork or just community assistance). This doesn't exactly correlate to Google's search engine.

      If Google can make a zillion-to-one ratio by their contributions to things like Firefox it's win-win for both them and their customers. Such things are most certainly successful business tactics the open source community can fawn over which Microsoft definitely feels pressure from. For many not-so-savvy computer users, Firefox is the face of open source. It's something they can use with relative ease (not much to learn after jumping from something like IE) and is - even to them - obviously better than the best-known proprietary equivalent (IE). Funding Firefox is absolutely a huge boon for open source.

      Honestly, I always saw Google's golden egg to be their reputation. Even if MS or Yahoo! suddenly had a better search engine Google could ride their reputation pretty far. This reputation goes beyond simply their excellent search engine to - you guessed it - their open source support.

      So please Slashdotters, stop being such bitches for Google and Apple. Try to understand that for-profit companies have only two relationships with the GPL license: If they provide services or sell hardware, they love it. They can piggy back on the stuff others have built and make a buck. If they sell software, then they hate GPL because selling GPL'ed software is damn hard. (Not impossible, but hard.)

      There's technical problems about being a bitch to a company as a F/OSS advocate. The beauty of F/OSS is how it keeps companies from being able to be abusive to their customers. Now, if someone supports a company which bases their business on things such as vendor lock in... "bitches" may be an appropriate term for their fans.

      If a company like Google (which provides services) can have a successful mutually beneficial existence with the open source community why should we, the open source community, not feel grateful? If we can indirectly fund Firefox by backing Google, we get an awesome F/OSS web browser. We get improvements in WINE for Photoshop and further limit the reasons against moving to Linux or BSD. Etc, etc.

      1. Microsoft is working very hard to improve its image.

      An image like Google's?

      Regulators have squeezed Microsoft's balls to publish their protocols and file formats and play nice with others.

      Right, because those are icky closed source proprietary things. Pretty much everything Google does is sufficiently open to work with everyone else's everything, so they don't get pressured as Microsoft is. Again, Microsoft wants to be like Google here. (Even if it had to be beaten into their skulls)

      3. Corporations that they sell a lot of licenses to demand they interop well with other operating systems and applications that they use.

      Right, pleasing their customers by supporting their costumer's needs like interoperability with other platforms. Like Google.

      Beyond Trolling, do you have a point? You've said nothing to show how the GP was incorrect: Some people high up in Microsoft have finally realized that it would be financially advisable at this point to start being nice to their customers, who have come to expect such treatment thanks to companies like Google.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
    2. Re:Google open source ? by djelovic · · Score: 1

      > Open source is not about being anti-competitive-business.
      > If I had to simplify it down to that
      > level it'd be closer to anti-customer/end_user-abuse.

      Not to nitpick, but isn't open source about sharing your source with others so that they can learn and contribute?

      > It's perfectly reasonable for a company to be very pro-open
      > source without giving away everything.

      Depends on the license. GPL, which is what all the cool kids are using these days, is corrosive: You publish your library as GPL, oops, now you have to publish all your programs that use that library as GPL.

      As for other licenses, they are more business friendly, but still problematic from a standpoint of a software company. If you plan to make a buck from selling software, then why give other people your source code so that they can compile it and make it available to others for free?

      So if you are a software company, then if you publish anything it's the stuff that tangential to your core business. And if you are a public company you pray the god that whatever you are giving away doesn't become next year's big thing because then the shareholders may crucify you because you gave away something that would make them a lot of money off for free.

      > If Google can make a zillion-to-one ratio by their contributions
      > to things like Firefox it's win-win for both them and their customers.

      Google has a three-fold business interest in doing that:

      1. They don't want Microsoft to control the users browsing experience so they are sponsoring the alternatives.

      2. They pay Mozilla to make Google their default search engine from the default home page.

      3. They play nice with Mozilla because they don't want to find themselves in a world where an ad-blocker is shipped with FireFox by default. They said in their IPO documents that something like that would be the kiss of death for them.

      None of these is about their customers (people paying for ad clicks), it's a about their business interests.

      > Beyond Trolling, do you have a point? You've said nothing to show
      > how the GP was incorrect: Some people high up in Microsoft have
      > finally realized that it would be financially advisable at this
      > point to start being nice to their customers, who have come to
      > expect such treatment thanks to companies like Google.

      I disagree. Being a customer of both Microsoft and Google, I've never felt shafted by either company. Both are there to make money off me and I'm there to use their products and services when I chose to. If they can make a buck off me, they try to. Neither particularly cares about me or treats me "nice".

      There are people that did get shafted by both companies. Which with these two companies being large and doing lots of things is normal.

      But this is not about customers, the posting was about open source. 99.9 percent of both companies customers don't give a fuck about their relationship with the open source world.

      Both companies participate the open source scene to a very small degree. Google does it mostly because as a service company it makes direct business sense, Microsoft does it to clean up their image and lessen the number of people that will bad mouth it to paying customers purely because it's Microsoft.

      Microsoft is doing this as a PR move. It will never be anything more than that because it doesn't make business sense as long as they are in the business of selling software.

  28. placing my mark on contempt by Narcocide · · Score: 1

    When they really mean it video games will work well with wine.

  29. I hate to say this.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but, Microsoft really isn't against F/OSS. It just sees some programs as competition. Open Office vs. Microsoft Office. Linux vs. Windows. I mean look. They seem to have a good working relationship with Mozilla. And that's most likely because they don't stand to lose any money by someone choosing to use Firefox. As geeks we tend to see Microsoft as this evil monolithic corporation that is bent on world domination. (An exaggeration I know.) But, they, like thousands of other organizations, are a business. They try to make as much money as they can. Some of these methods can and have been unfair. But, who doesn't tend to cheat a little?

  30. Developers, really ? by zartacla · · Score: 1

    What kind of developers will actually want to believe Microsoft ? The good ones are sure to know the embrace-extend-extinguish policy, so they won't. The only-money-oriented developers are probably not to be found in the open-source world anyway. Then there are beginners or amateurs who *might* actually get lured by it. However, the recent talks of Microsoft with Apache does create a feeling of doubt whether even good developers and practitioners are vulnerable to Microsoft's actions and plans.

  31. Re:MSFT adding staff to compete against open sourc by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

    You can't compete against something you don't understand. I'm fortunate enough to be working in a company that has Java, PHP, Ruby and .Net development in house, and that's just for web based development. Personally, I'm not a big fan of PHP or MySQL... But I'll take PostgreSQL and ASP.Net MVC though... Unfortunately we're mainly on Oracle + Java (Spring) for internal apps, and Oracle + ASP.Net for externally facing apps... but some changes are gaining traction. MySQL is probably going to be used for a few things coming up.. I'd rather use that than Oracle myself, despite the DBAs desires for otherwise.

    --
    Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
  32. and then there's that "200+ patents" business by nobodyman · · Score: 1

    And with them raising the specter of these nebulous, unspecified patent violations, OSS/Linux proponents would be wise not to trust them.

  33. MS cannot afford to be the "outlier" by davide+marney · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think the GP is pretty much on the mark. If MS loses the mind-share of the next generation of developers, their software stack will become the outlier, the exception to the rule. This, MS literally cannot afford.

    IE is a good case in point. Anyone doing web development follows the pattern of developing first for the standards-compliant browsers then tweaking (and tweaking) for IE. This strategy works even though the "compliant" browsers really aren't that compliant. They're just a whole lot closer to each other than they are to IE, and that's enough. (Maybe IE8 will fix all that. Maybe not. We'll see.)

    Nevertheless, one thing to remember is that MS has an exceptional track record of delivering wonderful developer tools. Visual Studio is very impressive. Blend is terrific, and integrates very nicely with Silverlight. The design of .NET is nothing short of inspired. The architecture of the Simplicity OS is very innovative. If MS can get lift-off on their cloud computing tools, I'm sure they will create quite a stir.

    In a word, MS really does have the chops to compete.

    But if they lose the mind-share of the next generation, if they are perceived as the outlier technology, they're toast. This means their tools are going to have to play nice with data protocols, file formats, and other industry standards. It's reached the level of a business necessity.

    MS must interoperate, or die.

    Happily, I very much doubt MS will die. I look forward to some true engineering competition from MS. I think they'll push hard on the F/OSS community, and everyone will be better for it.

    Game on, MS!

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
    1. Re:MS cannot afford to be the "outlier" by Eighty7 · · Score: 1

      (Maybe IE8 will fix all that. Maybe not. We'll see)

      It can't. All the people who were going to upgrade have already done so. IE8 isn't gonna change that any more than IE7 did. A more popular vista might have helped.

  34. I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The idea that there is this one, monolithic Microsoft that's single-mindedly driven to crush all competition (beginning with open source) is actually pretty much a myth. Within Microsoft there are a lot of different departments, teams, and initiatives. And believe it or not, nobody at the top is in charge of issuing brown shirts and armbands.

    A couple of years ago I attended a presentation by some Microsoft folks at LinuxWorld Expo. It was actually by the Windows Embedded team, who wanted to talk about Windows CE, Windows Mobile, and Windows XP Embedded. I guess the perception at the time was that there were a lot of interesting new devices coming to market, and that many of them were considering Linux for their OS. The Microsoft team wanted to get in the word about the Windows option.

    Nothing strange there. That's just basic Microsoft competitive (or call it anti-Linux if you want) tactics. What was interesting, though, was that the talk was not held at the LinuxWorld convention center. I was tipped off about it by a girl who was wandering the show floor, handing out flyers. The actual talk was taking place at a pizza parlor across the street. So I went over, told them who I was, had a slice of pizza, and listed to how their new build tools for XP Embedded worked. Everybody was quite nice and cordial, and nobody even bothered to slam Linux.

    My point is that, all in all, this was a pretty low-rent, low-impact move on Microsoft's part. If it was part of some evil Gates/Ballmer master plan then it was pretty ham-fisted. Rather, my guess is that the embedded team just felt strongly enough about marketing their product to the LinuxWorld audience that they got together some marketing budget from their own department, bought a few plane tickets for their guys, hired a local babe to distribute the flyers, and did what developers do almost every Friday -- bought pizza.

    The iron fist of Ballmer crushing down? The face of evil? Hardly. The Microsoft reps were completely non-confrontational, and I, for one, was happy to hear what they had to say. I suppose I could have sat there and plugged my ear with one finger while singing "la la la la la" between bites of pizza, but then I'd kind of look like the closed-minded one, don't you think?

    So if a few guys from the open source department at Microsoft come and give a talk at an open source conference, I hardly see where it's cause for all this alarm. If anything, it should be encouraging. Does it mean Microsoft has "turned over a new leaf," and is going to completely change its business practices to suit what the /. crowd thinks? Obviously not. But I am at least willing to assume that the guy is being honest about what he says. Or do you really believe that he didn't spend any time crafting the speech -- maybe he just sketched it out on a napkin the night before, while drinking absinthe from a harp seal skull with Steve Ballmer?

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by notamisfit · · Score: 1

      Seems to make sense. I've heard that a lot of the cluster-fuckery around Vista is the result of MS trying to keep two or more development camps happy.

      --
      Jesus is coming -- look busy!
    2. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by garett_spencley · · Score: 1

      The iron fist of Ballmer crushing down? The face of evil? Hardly. The Microsoft reps were completely non-confrontational, and I, for one, was happy to hear what they had to say. I suppose I could have sat there and plugged my ear with one finger while singing "la la la la la" between bites of pizza, but then I'd kind of look like the closed-minded one, don't you think?

      Do you honestly expect Satan will appear before you completely red with horns and a pitch-fork ?

      Have we not learned ANYTHING from ultra-orthodox religious zealots ?

      I'm going to have to give RMS a call. I've got my work cut out for me and need all the help I can get.

    3. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by TheDarkener · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The idea that there is this one, monolithic Microsoft that's single-mindedly driven to crush all competition (beginning with open source)...

      BEGINNING with?

      Look - Nobody said anything about M$ being some huge evil monolithic consciousness. I was plainly talking about their (very) public track-record regarding their stance against open-source software. You're trying to show M$ has small-time departments with insightful, honest programmers - I agree 100%. There is no doubt in my mind that Microsoft employs some of the brightest, most motivated and insightful programmers out there.

      That doesn't mean that the ones at the top are those kinds of people.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    4. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me guess, you weren't wearing your tin-foil hat that day?

    5. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by Elektroschock · · Score: 1
    6. Re:I wouldn't go totally crazy about this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS

      Our operations and financial results are subject to various risks and uncertainties, including those described below, that could adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations, cash flows, and the trading price of our common stock.

      Challenges to our business model may reduce our revenues and operating margins. Our business model has been based upon customers paying a fee to license software that we develop and distribute. Under this license-based software model, software developers bear the costs of converting original ideas into software products through investments in research and development, offsetting these costs with the revenue received from the distribution of their products. Certain âoeopen sourceâ software business models challenge our license-based software model. Open source commonly refers to software whose source code is subject to a license allowing it to be modified, combined with other software and redistributed, subject to restrictions set forth in the license. A number of commercial firms compete with us using an open source business model by modifying and then distributing open source software to end users at nominal cost and earning revenue on complementary services and products. These firms do not bear the full costs of research and development for the software. Some of these firms may build upon Microsoft ideas that we provide to them free or at low royalties in connection with our interoperability initiatives. To the extent open source software gains increasing market acceptance, our sales, revenue and operating margins may decline.

      http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/789019/000119312508162768/d10k.htm

  35. Im just 33 but im no fool by unity100 · · Score: 1

    im young compared to many of you old coots here, i know. despite im older than many younguns.

    yet even do i know that you should think twice, trusting someone that wronged you or others before.

    1. Re:Im just 33 but im no fool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quick!

      Somebody give this guy a lightsaber!

  36. Bill has left the house by PPH · · Score: 1

    While Gates ran the show, OSS was evil. The corporate faithful weere required to live by this dogma. Those who voiced other opinions (like porting Office to Linux) were banished. There was a feeling that this thinking originated with Bill.

    Lets see if this is an honest change in philospohy. I'd expect to see the anti-OSS people moved aside and some more pragmatic thinkers given power.

    I've seen it numerous times at other companies. Its too difficult to teach an old dog new tricks, so when a corporation really wants to change its culture, heads roll.

    Pics, or it didn't happen.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  37. Take Three by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1
  38. Microsoft could easily demonstrate support by djmurdoch · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If MS wanted to support open source projects, they could devote some resources to help them. In particular:

      - MinGW could use help porting to Win64
      - Anyone using gcc compilers on Windows would benefit if Microsoft's debuggers supported debugging one of the gcc debug info formats, or if they helped gcc to produce their format.

    I suggested these ideas to a Microsoft rep at the Flourish conference in April, but was brushed off.

  39. Laugable contempt, please. by Hasai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "....or laughable contempt, depending on how old/jaded you are...."

    Yup; very old, very jaded. I was bossing mainframes when little Billy Gates was still sleeping on computer room floors, and I have yet to see anyone who didn't eventually get stabbed in the back by little Billy and his pack of thugs.

    Just wait for it. They've always gotten away with it, so there's no reason for that pack of rats to change their ways now.

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

  40. What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Erris · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Any attack that M$ can make, they will make. There's never been a weapon M$ has that they have not used and they have always done it with the most charming face they can make. Historical examples include knowingly selling inferior tools to Lotus developers and the ongoing software patent attack and continued. M$ is an evil company and they will attempt all three attacks the article mentioned and one more:

    1. Internal poison - both code and social. They do not fear "open source" they are afraid of software freedom and continue to smear advocates of freedom. If they can't make people think free software is not as good as theirs, they will seek to sabotage it with moles. Neither will work.
    2. Co-option - see Novel and Mono for examples of how M$ would like to make everything dependent on their patented software. This is another form of poison.
    3. Distraction of developers - this is part of #1 really. Mindshare is everything to them, when developers discover the benefits of freedom they don't come back. The effort to retain them is too little too late, that's M$ is prowling Open Source instead of their own conferences.
    4. Create fights between free software projects. Developers who are busy fighting instead of cooperating can't compete. All of this reflects M$'s inability to compete with free software.

    At the end of the day, M$ wants you to pay them when you use your computer. Vista, IIS, and Visual Studio all show that they don't have much that merits that pay, so they need to steal a new set of software.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  41. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    seriously mate, you need professional help

  42. Develpers developers developers! by sproketboy · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has lost a lot of developer mind share in the last 10 years to Java, PHP, Python, Ruby and others. NONE of these languages came from Redmond and .NET has not been as successful as they would have hoped. Java is hugely entrenched now and PHP has been the new VB for at least 6 years now.

  43. answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    seppeku

  44. Oh twitter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought you were tired from shilling your own posts all day yesterday. Guess not?

  45. #insert by Grail · · Score: 1

    Chakotay's story about the scorpion and the fox crossing the river springs to mind. Though it's probably based on the Turtle and the Scorpion.

  46. Ironic MS-Icon: Opensource is the one assimilating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft will be assimilated. Their technological distinctiveness will be added to our own. Resistance is futile.

  47. Those who really have to worry by sentientbrendan · · Score: 2, Funny

    are those who work at slashdot.

    Where would slashdot be without Microsoft to bash? They might have to do some actual journalism.

  48. Re: All together now by ftide · · Score: 1

    Yeah really -- Redmond now has a "clear, build, hold" counter-insurgency strategy 2-3 years too late where the "terrorists" are Open Source proponents and the military at large as Microsoft is clueless.

    I really like wine, though. It runs slow on my x86 system but runs Win98 apps good w/o the silly windows registry foolishness.

  49. Yeah right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like a rapist coming back to ask his victim for a date.

  50. Re: Extinguish Them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I messed up my mod, so I'm replying to say "mod parent up!" & reverse it.

  51. Open Source, Licenses & MSFT by friarminor · · Score: 1

    Need to find another revenue stream for open source because it is becoming apparent that license semantics are creating more loopholes and it is a never ending struggle to plug them and by then the things they were supposed to keep out are already inside and seated as an advocate - devil's advocate that is. Best. alain www.mor.ph

  52. What they need to do by spitzak · · Score: 1

    Too many people here say that Microsoft needs to release Windows or something under the GPL to get their trust. That won't happen, and is not necessary.

    Conversely, what Microsoft wants is to add Windows-specific extensions to existing GPL projects. That is probably the extent of their evil plans.

    What I want to see Microsoft do:

    Rather than just say "here is some extra code and ifdefs so it runs on Windows" is make changes to Windows so "your Linux code compiles without changes". Now let's ignore X, which is a mess, and I can't blame them for not emulating that. But they need to provide a working, default, POSIX-like environment. This means that all files can be clearly named with as string starting with "/", and that if you truncate after a slash and do readdir, you get a list of the files there. It means that any api that returns a filename returns forward slashes. It means that there is no difference between text and binary files (interesting that they still have relics of 1950's mechanical teletype designs in their system, yet claim they are the "modern" one).

    Somebody above mentioned how "nice" they were about trying to get people to develop for Windows CE. Yet the whole point about developing for CE is that the code does not port to other machines. What I would like to see is them saying "hey you can run the same programs on CE as on those Linux phones, without any changes, because we will help you".

    OSS has done enough crap trying to be compatible with them it is time for them to show that they really mean it by doing some work on their own.

    Other things: drop OOXML and actually list those "200 patents".

  53. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Macthorpe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm probably going to regret this, but here goes:

    - The only link I can find for 'selling inferior tools to Lotus' is to a Roughly Drafted article that, as usual, fails to cite sources. Can you provide any? I'd be interested to read them.

    - You say that Microsoft actively smear advocates of freedom - can you show me one example?

    - What you call co-option others call co-operation. Can you explain why you feel that Microsoft helping Novell to create an OSS version of .NET is 'poison'?

    - Can you give me an example of Microsoft creating fights between OSS developers? All the ones I have seen publicised on Slashdot have been the inevitable result of the politicisation of OSS and FOSS by people such as yourself.

    - We all know you hate Vista, but what in your view is wrong with IIS and Visual Studio? I'm assuming you're going to cite security issues with IIS, but IIS 6 has had only one known remote code execution hole, and even that cannot run code with more privileges than IIS itself is given. Furthermore, Visual Studio is highly rated by most who have used it.

    I write this in the interest of furthering discourse, but I have to admit I'm not holding my breath. I hope you surprise me.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  54. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by rtb61 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I would have thought the whole Novell agreement and press release was a really good example of M$ going out it's way to create as much disharmony as possible. The way M$ handled the press release certainly did a lot of harm to Novell's relationship with open source community.

    Mostly all of this stuff, M$ cosying up to open source, is just a cynical exercise in marketing. As a lot of developers are finding open source tools cheaper for the medium and long term M$ is finding it much harder to attract them, for example silverfish is really just going nowhere. I certainly hope you wont ask me to cite developers, developers, developers, developers and the associated billy goat wild gesticulations ;).

    How long ago was it that M$ was doing exactly this same sort of thing, only to be followed up a month later with a 'all your patents belong to us claim' by ballmer. Of course M$ can change, just as soon as it tosses out the old management team and replaces it with a new team, one that is capable of successfully diversifying a company with billions of dollars of capital (you would have though that was a no brainer) and converting money losing divisions (after years and years of losses) into money making divisions, ballmer's boast of being able to lose a much money as necessary to gain market share eventually has to wear a bit thin, dare we say, threadbare.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  55. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    If the agreement was harmful to Open Source, Novell as a company should not have signed it. I would wager that it wasn't, because since then absolutely nothing negative has come of it save the FSF blustering and posturing and Microsoft doing the same. Nobody has yet shown what harm has been done to Linux as a whole as a result of the deal, save complaints over the restructured GPL. On the contrary, there's a story right here on Slashdot about the increase in Linux installations across the UK.

    Save that, I don't think you answered a single question I raised.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  56. Windows 2.6.27 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Introducing,
    Windows 2.6! Has all the latest Programs like Firefox, and can run windows programs natively! Ships with the latest 2.6 linux kernel, and even comes with IE8 and Outlook! (Xlook). You can purchase this software for $200 which includes one year of microsoft Tech support. Upgrade now to linux ultimate and get free photo editing software (gimp), virus protection, firewall (iptables) and much, much more.
    So order now!

  57. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by dwiget001 · · Score: 1

    Seriously, what he said is spot on!

  58. And so the fable ends... by Jekler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "I'm a scorpion; it's my nature."

    Microsoft doesn't share, ever. They exchange, acquire, barter, steal, strategically release, but under no circumstances do they share. Nothing goes out of the company without a bean counter being able to draw a direct map of how the outflow will lead to a corresponding influx. If you have something of value to Microsoft, they will examine scenarios in which they get what you have in exchange for something they have. If you have nothing of value to Microsoft, you get nothing. It's not sharing if there's always an angle, that's bargaining.

    Sharing is a human behavior. Microsoft is not human. It's a corporate entity whose mentality is closer to a reptile or shark. It is to our great detriment that we anthropomorphize them. Sometimes they exhibit behaviors which seem to mimic the emotions we are accustomed to: fear, sadness, joy, remorse... but when it comes down to it, they feel nothing, it's just another feeding strategy. Reptiles don't smile, their mouths are just curved sometimes.

    We must always remember, corporations are more vicious than a shark. Unlike a mindless predator, they actually know we anthropomorphize them and they use that too as a weapon against us. The problem we have when dealing with corporations is that, as people, we have a tendency to believe other people have the same altruistic intentions we have. And the worst part is, the corporate agents you meet at these gatherings DO have altruistic intentions. They're not in on the plan, they're just corporate agents who are fulfilling their duty and their only duty is to earn your trust. It's the corporate agents you don't meet who are assigned to violate your trust, and they have no problem doing it because they've never even met you, they didn't shake your hand, they didn't have a beer with you. But the corporation operates as a single entity. The hands which embrace you don't know they're holding you in place for the mouth to bite, so the hands may even genuinely like you.

    The corporation is counting on the fact that you think the agents walking around OSCON are normal people just like everyone else. Don't be fooled.

  59. I think I cracked the code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think I know why MS is doing this: Yahoo.

    They desperately need to counter Google, who passed them in profitability this year. Assimilating Yahoo would be a big boost for Microsoft online. But the Yahooligans are big OSS users and their brain trust are unlikely to be happy working for the "old Microsoft" (Yahoo was actually using Linux for their surfer's desktop OS in 1997!). So the "new Microsoft" is trying very hard to appear OSS friendly to trick the OSS loving engineers at their targets for acquisition.

  60. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's because you're a jackass and a troll.

  61. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    And you are...?

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  62. Linux i by Jamie+Lokier · · Score: 1

    I just installed 2.5GB on my Ubuntu Linux laptop - because 1GB wasn't enough to run Firefox for long.

    (Firefox 3 is using 988MB as I write this...)

    Everything has felt *much* nicer on my Linux desktop since going up to 2.5GB.

  63. Not them by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

    It would be very foolish from a hardware vendor to not backstab MS once they have the chance of not paying MS's tax.

  64. ROFL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for all the laughs, twitter.

  65. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your assault on twitter is the same kind of thing and shows just how petty you bastards are.

    Your mental illness is getting worse by the day twitter. Not only are you now referring to yourself in the third person, you are actually comparing yourself with people like Perens and Raymond.

    Your posts are sometimes amusing and sometimes even informative. But I wonder what kind of paranoia and psychotic fixation would drive someone to do what you do on Slashdot. Maybe you should consider thinking about the things you could be doing when you're writing up useless crap like this.

    Best of luck to you, in all honesty. And to your family, most importantly. People like you (not much different from drug addicts) tend to harm those around them while they destroy themselves.

  66. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    I find it a pity that you took my post as a personal attack rather than what it was, which was an attempt to build a bridge and actually engage you in dialogue. Not only that, but you had to break out another sockpuppet to do it.

    When people ask me why I don't try this with you, I'm going to give them this link.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  67. Anonymous Coward outed as MS shill?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd say the joke served its purpose here. Got an MS fanboy to blow his cover

    You've got a four-figure account, and a username like that and you *still* think this "Anonymous Coward" fellow has "outed" himself as a fanboy?! There's something I have to break to you about Mr. AC...

  68. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by dedazo · · Score: 1

    Completely offtopic, but just in case someone actually doubts who "ibane" is after reading "his" post, take a look at this journal entry.

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  69. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    I didn't answer anything because you didn't say anything of any worth.

    Email from the guy who did it has been presented in court twice. He's the one who called developers "pawns and one night stands".

    No sources as requested.

    Peter Quinn [slashdot.org], RMS, Bruce Perens, Eric Raymond and so on and so forth.

    One link which says nothing of the sort, one full of speculation, and no actual proof provided.

    Mono is a good example of both poison and fight feeding.

    Co-operation is not co-option. I'm not seeing anything in your link other than further speculation and no facts.

    I would describe such fights as driven by M$ misinformation.

    No proof, or even a reasonable attempt to provide evidence from a different point of view. I can show you instances where what you say has driven other Open Source users to denounce your position, and more high-profile splits because of other more radical activists such as Stallman - unless you would describe the relationship between Stallman and someone like Theo de Raadt as friendly, in which case I don't think I can help you.

    Both are only useful for Windows users and both are inferior to free software offerings.

    Feature comparison? Even the name of another competing product in either market? No.

    Please stop trying to fool people on the sockpuppet issue, Twitter. You've basically admitted it already, I don't know why you bother, other than to further insult people's intelligence.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  70. slow learner by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    WE DON'T TRUST THEM. Is that so hard to understand? We don't believe they're being open and straightforward, why should we? They've never been open and straightforward with anyone ever.

    Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me over and over for twenty years, shame on me.

    Some people are slow learners.

    If Microsoft wants our trust they're going to have to earn it.

    Chump. Assuming the improbable, that MS minions are really sincere about interoperability etc, just how do you propose to let them demonstrate that without either putting yourself into a vulnerable position or allowing them to waste your time or resources evaluating vaporware?

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    1. Re:slow learner by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Chump. Assuming the improbable, that MS minions are really sincere about interoperability etc, just how do you propose to let them demonstrate that without either putting yourself into a vulnerable position or allowing them to waste your time or resources evaluating vaporware?

      They're going to have to come up with something that doesn't suck and give it to me for free to make up for all the money I've wasted on their crap. And they're going to have to kiss my ass, too.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  71. Yeah, right. Who wrote that stuff, then ? by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    ...employs some of the brightest, most motivated and insightful programmers out there.

    Yeah, right. Then who wrote that stuff that's infamous for security, performance and interoperability failue? The <sarcasm> tags seem to be missing. Or was it a reference to cases like buying out Borland's developers and sending them to the beach indefinitely?

    If MS is employing "some of the brightest, most motivated and insightful programmers out there", how come all they can do is copy existing products or buy out bottom of the barrel competitors' products? Most of MS product line seems based on purchases of small, floundering companies. Most of subsequent develpment

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  72. Re:you forgot to change accounts. by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

    If I ever wanted to play the 'dreadfully easy' sockpuppet game Twitter (and I don't), I wouldn't be so stupid as to establish a conversation where I take on multiple identities in the same thread.

    I'm surprised that you haven't got that yet.

    --
    "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  73. Re:you forgot to change accounts. by dedazo · · Score: 1

    You are so entertaining when you're angry, trollboy. Angry, angry, angry. Always angry.

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  74. Re:you forgot to change accounts. by dedazo · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's the same singsong voice on all your accounts, including the new one.

    Who pays you for all this shit, twitter? Surely no one can spend so much time and effort to post on a website unless they are being compensated somehow?

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  75. Re:What it really looks like. All Guns Blazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > both are inferior to free software offerings.

    HAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!

    that's why i come to slashdot, to be amused by the retarded
    zealots and delusional fanboys, yessir.

  76. It's called Interix. by argent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Rather than just say "here is some extra code and ifdefs so it runs on Windows" is make changes to Windows so "your Linux code compiles without changes". Now let's ignore X, which is a mess, and I can't blame them for not emulating that. But they need to provide a working, default, POSIX-like environment.

    You mean "they should ship Interix with Windows by default"?

    Absolutely. That's the biggest thing they could do to turn around the view of Microsoft. The fact that they won't do it is continuing proof that no matter what they say it's all vapor.

  77. Re:you forgot to change accounts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot to change accounts... fucktard.