jturning wrote:I still think boycotting Novell hurts Linux. We need a strong Novell and Red Hat.
I'm the resident SUSE (the distro itself) fan on this board, and to be honest with you, if Sun goes ahead and GPLs Solaris, I, frankly, almost see Sun as a much bigger player in this game than Novell.
Sun folks have kept hammering on about them open sourcing all of their software technology, and they are thinking about what to do about hardware designs, and with this recent announcement of the GPLing of Java, and potential GPLing of Solaris, I think it's starting to be credible.
jturning wrote:And I think everyone sees through Ballmer's stunt.
Yes, everyone in the free software and open source community that is. All the Windows wankers, Yakee-cracker type of people eat it all up like Apple whores would toss Uncle Steve's salad if they had the chance.
jturning wrote:Microsoft isn't going to sue any customers. And if they had the goods on what patents are there to sue over they'd be making their move on Red Hat without paying Novell $500,000,000.
Microsoft knows that a lot of their customers uses both Windows and Linux, for all kinds of reasons, and by giving SUSE Linux their "blessing " and promising not to sue Novell's customers, users of Red Hat Enterprise or Debian may say "OH CRAP, WE MIGHT GET SUED, LET'S GO PRAY AT THE CHURCH OF NOVELL", and then Microsoft can go to some of Red Hat's big customers and say something like "Look folks, our unlicensed intellectual property is in there, you are violating our patents, pay up or use Novell's Linux, there's a safe one for you!!".
In other words, they have excuses that all kinds of American courts probably would buy.
jturning wrote:And I may be mistaken, but the GPL 3 wouldn't affect what is already under GPL 2 per my understanding.
Correct, but remember that the Free Software Foundation, of which Richard Stallman is president, owns the copyrights for things like GCC, glibc, Grub, and the whole toolchain in general. This software is currently licensed as "GPLv2 or later", in one version change, they can change this to "GPLv3 or later", which I am sure they will do.
To get around this, Novell will have to fork off the entire toolchain and GNU development, and just use the last GPLv2'ed versions of glibc, GCC etc. etc. and to fix bugs and stuff they need to reimplement the fixes, since they can't take upstream fixes, that may be coming from Red Hat or Debian, and integrate them into SUSE. And also, I seriously doubt that Novell has the resources to management millions of lines of code that they didn't write themselves. There is the potential of Novell forking stuff, but it's just so immensely unfeasible that I doubt they're gonna do it. And oh by the way, what was that desktop that Novell decided to make their default about this time last year? What's it's name again? Oh yeah! GNOME!!!
Look at what GNOME originally stood for:
GNU
Network
Object
Model
Environment.
GNOME is part of the GNU project, and even though the FSF doesn't own all the copyrights for everything that's in GNOME, neither Sun or Red Hat has come out and said "We're against the GPLv3!", actually Red Hat is part of the GPLv3 discussion groups! Sun has even expressed interest in MAYBE using the GPLv3 for something like Java or Solaris, when the time is right.
So imagine that both GCC, glibc, GNU coreutils and all the other GNU stuff, including Novell's default desktop all goes to GPLv3. Do you really believe that they are gonna try and maintain all of that themselves? Plus, GNOME comes out with a new version every six months, if Novell could only use one particular version because the newer ones being GPLv3'ed, Red Hat would be WAY ahead of them in no time at all.
jturning wrote:And as a side note, I think we have to be real with spreading Linux and related software. The fanatical free software movement is great, but if only a small fraction of people ever use the software and it never reaches its potential, what good is the movement?
WHAT THE F U C K IS FANATICAL ABOUT MAKING SURE THAT THERE'S AN EVEN PLAYING FIELD FOR EVERYBODY TO BE ON!!!
That is the biggest amount of bullsh!t I have heard since Mr. de Icaza in his ignorance still maintained that Qt is still not free software (Miguel, have you been living under a rock for over six freaking years?).
Sorry for cursing and yelling at you, but if market share and popularity is more important than equality, then I'd actually prefer Linux to stay at about 2 or 3 percent of the market. If Novell ended up having the only Linux that people could use without getting sued by Microsoft, then what would we need the free competition, that the GPL is designed to ensure, for when Novell essentially would have a monopoly of fear?
And even if Microsoft didn't sue people, but just made threats and crap like that, then people would still back away from Red Hat or Debian, because if you're running a small business you probably do not like even the theoretical idea of you being sued by a multi billion dollar corporation! Because remember, what is it that Microsoft has the most of? Oh yeah. CASH!!
If the MPAA can buy US senators, I think Microsoft could buy themselves through a few patent lawsuits or two, unless they're dealing with the European Commission of course!
jturning wrote:I think if we can get the open source software movement to gain a significant percentage of users we could over time transition to the free software model once people understand the benefits and differences.
And to make that transition would take significant numbers.
Alright, you go ahead and do that, in the mean time, I'll make sure to do as much as possible to make sure that the original freedoms that the GPL gives to the users will be ensured in the future of patents, DRM, TPM and all that crap.