Mailing List ArchiveSupport open source code!
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]tlug: Linux for the masses: a civil reply, I hope.
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: tlug: Linux for the masses: a civil reply, I hope.
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
- Date: Thu, 1 Oct 1998 14:13:39 +0900 (JST)
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- In-Reply-To: <3.0.1.32.19980930213827.006ab748@example.com>
- References: <3.0.1.32.19980930213827.006ab748@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
>>>>> "tjh" == tjhaslam <tjhaslam@example.com> writes: tjh> Right (or Left. Or whatever). And I greatly appreciate tjh> Chris`s sense of a Linux dev community Hmm. I'm going to have to rethink my idea of the Linux community. Even today it's not unreasonable to identify "dev community == user community == `the' community". (As evidence, you and JDH apologized for coming in empty-handed.) A few days or weeks from now, that may no longer be the case. Certainly I need to start preparing for that day now. And of course I have to think about where the commercial entities belong in the scheme of things. (For personal philosophical use, and that of those who care to read/listen to me.) tjh> GNU has no problem with GNU for the masses. Or for that tjh> matter, with what they deem GNU/Linux. Or further still, tjh> `ease of use` via a GUI. (The perhaps never to appear GNU tjh> desktop __TEAK__, for example). Much of what GNU wants is to tjh> take the mystery and elitism out of computing and information tjh> technologies--as well as the expense. "Computing and information technologies" is too broad a class. GNU wants to provide a common, solid, well-understood _foundation_. UI design, for one, is going to remain an art for a while at least, and thus by definition (mine, anyway) mysterious and elitist. The superstructure of new apps and so on, definitely mysterious. And RMS does not care one bit what anybody else wants, and especially not non-programmer users. His community _is_ the developers, and he does not hesitate to inflict pain on people who do not rebuild their tools and OS on arrival of a missive from gnu-announce. The masses are of course welcome to use GNU products, but he does not care if the software is user-friendly or inexpensive (to non-developers). That is somebody else's problem. Believe it or not, *I* am a _lot_ friendlier in principle to non- developer users than GNU is, or at least than RMS is. tjh> a. CS and ST: not personally asking that YOU develop the tjh> tools I and others want. Sorry if it sounded that way tjh> (though I do think Emacs development is the great blackhole tjh> of programming talent: <grin> [1] tjh> back to my sorid reality: if by chance you and some friends tjh> did, however: 10000`s of people would use these tools. Sure. But you _are_ asking that _somebody else_ do the work. Necessarily so: if all 170 of us on this list quit our jobs today and started working full-time on the list of apps just you, Jonathan Byrne, and John De Hoog have mentioned in the last few days, it would still be years before we were done (it'd be a year just getting us organized). I didn't take it personally. tjh> d. CS: get ready--but not quite yet--to rouse the old guard tjh> and guard the kernel & libraries. Even and _most hopefully_ tjh> if the Linux dev com does not fragment/become balkanized from tjh> the `outsiders` picking alleged winners and losers and tjh> financing accordingly, some of the new code boyz and grrls tjh> coming in will not entirely share your values or sense of tjh> community: but will at least have some skills. And GNU GPL tjh> might not quite offer the protection you think. (To revive tjh> an earlier half-serious jest: MS Linux, anyone?) The Linux development community has already balkanized, although not to the point of civil war, not by a long shot. Not to worry, it will work itself out. I would think MS Linux would be a good thing, from the populist view. What is the scenario you are thinking about? Here's mine: Linux is dead! Long live Linux! Development would fork, there would be a period of confusion, a lot of good people would flock to the money, and the open source Linux would rise from the ashes and mutate into something totally unusable to the average user again because only the hackers would use it, and they will worry more about features and standards than about stability of this or that patchlevel. (Maybe it would be overtaken by the *BSD groups, although I don't think so; that would require losing Linus and a civil war among the remaining leaders at the same time; the development process used by Linux is more effective.) But the unusability of open source Linux[tm] wouldn't matter, because you'd have MS Linux, with Word and Excel and fairly shortly NetObjects Fusion. And you'd still have Apache and Emacs and Perl and all (if you wanted them, but despite their availability for Windows few Windows users I know have them), although possibly not Aladdin Ghostscript and I'm pretty sure not qmail and xv. It would be expensive, at least more so than TurboLinux. Not unreachably so. But that's what you really want, isn't it? It would give a hundred million users, maybe more, permanent freedom from the Blue Screen of Death. Sure, MS Linux users would likely lose the benefit of future development of open source Linux, because it would be more profitable for MS to develop inhouse (integrating new kernel features would be costly, because they would have to avoid conflicts with whatever device MS used to keep their proprietary parts of the kernel proprietary). Theoretically it's possible that MS would use MS Linux as a springboard, and never look back, and Linux and the other free OSes would all die. I think that's unlikely; MS will find some nice internal contradictions and the MS process will choke itself, just like NT has. But Linux itself is already Good Enough[tm], you don't need it to get better. You need apps, or that's what you said. And of course MS would track the kernel, and the next time it stabilizes they would do the whole process again. _This is exactly what RMS wants to see_: an MS that stops wasting resources on junky proprietary OSes, and does what they're good at: monopolizing the app market, to the benefit[sic] of the hundreds of millions to whom computers are just a tool. Well, maybe he'd ask that they abandon Word in favor of WYSIWYG extensions to GNU Emacs, too ;-) The only protection I want from the GNU GPL is the freedom to use the published sources without worrying about getting sued (GIF is the classic example of the worry); I'd be unhappy and frustrated if MS developed something _really good_ for the kernel and found a legal way to keep it proprietary, but forcing MS to publish is not really what the GPL is for. You see, I want to keep Linux, and open source in general, _for_ myself, not _to_ myself. I also object to the non-compliant garbage that a more powerful MS OS would likely spew all over cyberspace, but that's going to happen anyway. But I refuse to support, and will argue against, processes that lead to open source products spewing garbage. I don't expect MS to listen. I expect _you_ (tjh, that is) _will_ listen, and probably decide I'm a paranoid maniac, and be on the other side of the argument. That's OK with me. I don't _need_ to win. (Or even be right: you may even convert me.) I have the GPL to guarantee there will always be a Linux; I may not have the most advanced version of a Linux-derived OS, but I'll have source. Footnotes: [1] Emacs is the closest thing to a GUI (Grand Unified Interface) Linux has. I know at least one person (not me) whose /etc/passwd contains juser:*encrypted*:1000:1000:J. User,Earth:/home/juser:/usr/bin/xemacs I'm not about to recommend that as the default shell to TurboLinux, though ;-) -- University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences Tel/fax: +1 (298) 53-5091 --------------------------------------------------------------- Next Meeting: 10 October, 12:30 Tokyo Station Yaesu central gate Featuring the IMASY Eng. Team on "IPv6 - The Next Generation IP" Next Nomikai: 20 November, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 --------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsor: PHT, makers of TurboLinux http://www.pht.co.jp
- Follow-Ups:
- tlug: Linux for the masses: a civil reply, I hope.
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: tlug: Nikkei Shimbun
- Next by Date: Re: tlug: Nikkei Shimbun
- Prev by thread: tlug: unsubscribe
- Next by thread: tlug: Linux for the masses: a civil reply, I hope.
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links