The Open Source Design Conundrum
Matt Asay writes "Walk the halls of any open-source conference and you'll see a large percentage of attendees with ironically non-open-source Apple laptops and iPhones. One reason for this seeming contradiction can be found in reading Matthew Thomas' classic 'Why free software usability tends to suck.' Open-source advocates like good design as much as anyone, but the open-source development process is often not the best way to achieve it. Open-source projects have tended to be great commoditizers, but not necessarily the best innovators. Hence, Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst recently stated that Red Hat is "focused on commoditizing important layers in the stack." This is fine, but for those that want open source to push the envelope on innovation, it may be unavoidable to introduce a bit more cathedral into the bazaar. Without an IBM, Red Hat, or Mozilla bringing cash and discipline to an open-source project, including paying people to do the 'dirt work' that no one would otherwise do, can open source hope to thrive?"
Oh, quit your bitching. Nobody's forcing you to use Linux, last time I checked.
Define "most people". Does that apply to ME ? If not, why should I care ? (or even more relevant, why should I pay more ?)
Apple have designed a system for the masses, ok so they aimed for the elite of those masses (through the mechanism of elitist price), but they are still the masses not the real computer users. If they were so ferkin good why did they adopt BSD as a base ? Go on , why ???