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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] GPL vs. paid version and ethics
- Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2012 11:36:29 +0200
- From: Attila Kinali <attila@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] GPL vs. paid version and ethics
- References: <501DE355.4090603@dcook.org> <EE43C9C5-E262-46CE-A89E-007470C30252@boxlightmedia.com> <20120805182902.1e653b178c042c230f331c01@kinali.ch> <878vdt8a03.fsf@uwakimon.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <20120806140016.14b2b33a6a3e2d389fc2c089@kinali.ch> <87lihrvq3m.fsf@uwakimon.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp>
- Organization: GEHIRN
On Tue, 07 Aug 2012 03:21:17 +0900 "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com> wrote: > Attila Kinali writes: > > > Any references to those papers? > > Eric Raymond's papers "The Cathedral and the Bazaar", "Homesteading > the Noosphere", and "The Magic Cauldron" are available from his home > page (or one of them, anyway): > > http://www.catb.org/esr/writings/homesteading/ These i know already. > The Gang of Four response was Bollinger, Terry, Russell Nelson, > Karsten Self, and Stephen J. Turnbull, ``Response: Open-Source > Methods: Peering Through the Clutter,'' IEEE Software, July/August > 1999, pp. 8--11. Steve McConnell's leader is in the same issue. Thanks, i'll have a look at them. > > Uhmm.. a prominent counter example would be libav/ffmpeg. > > It has been started by hobbists, and 10 years later it ist still > > run by hobbists. > > You don't get to use counterexamples. You're the one who made the > sweeping claim that you'd expect a team of hobbyists to produce better > software than a paid team. Ok > > > The thing is, there never would have been a Mozilla without Netscape, > > > and no OpenOffice without Sun Microsystems. > > > > s/Sun Microsystems/Star Division/ ;-) > > I stand by my spelling. There was a piece of crap called Abiword, > too. It had some financial backing but it wasn't something that you > could really substitute for MS Office. These programs need a *lot* of > muscle behind them. Hmm.. It might be just me, but IMHO most of the things that Sun fixed were UI stuff, and i dont think they made everything better. The functionallity was already there when Star Division was bought out. I cannot comment on the MS Office compatibility though, as i wasn't exposed to many word/excel documents back then. > > But those that survive the first couple of years are of a lot > > better breed than their comercial counterparts. IMHO > > Perhaps if you're a hacker. I doubt that very many non-programmers > would agree with you. Given that quite a bit of my environment consists of psychology students... And those who do not use a Mac use Ubuntu (the number of Windows machines is quite small). So i guess, that for those students, who are admitably everything but hackers, ubuntu and OSS seems to be good enough. > > Then you have a much better experience than i. > > Learn Python so you can hang out with a better class of people and > employers, and get a better job is all I can say. :-) *g* I tried Python, but it somehow never stuck to me. I always switched back to C and perl ^^; And i think that learning Haskell is enough for the moment ;-) But then again, i don't know any company that uses Haskell or even Python in a larger scale around here. The only one might be big G... but they thought about hiring me as a mere sysadmin... > > I've done that for MPlayer for a couple of years. Filter all incoming > > bug reports for stuff that would be real bugs (most of them were user > > errors) and pass them on to the developers. Unfortunately, nobody paid > > me anything for it... > > And someday you'll quit and maybe somebody will pick up the slack and > maybe they won't. MPlayer is only used by a few freaks these days, who don't like VLC for some reason or other. So the amount of user questions went down quite considerably (and development speed too). And yes, i quit.. years ago... Attila Kinali -- The trouble with you, Shev, is you don't say anything until you've saved up a whole truckload of damned heavy brick arguments and then you dump them all out and never look at the bleeding body mangled beneath the heap -- Tirin, The Dispossessed, U. Le Guin
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