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Microsoft Software Linux

Microsoft Sends Linux Survey 1051

GnrlFajita writes "According to Newsforge, Microsoft is sending Linux users a survey asking why they use Linux, and what can be done to make Windows better. The article suggests taking the survey (or surveys, one for business users and one for home users), then sharing your answers with others in the community." Newsforge and Slashdot are both part of OSDN.
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Microsoft Sends Linux Survey

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  • by DeathPenguin ( 449875 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:07PM (#7780371)
    Last four options in the "rank the reasons you like Linux for the home" section:
    The satisfaction of not giving Microsoft more money.
    I don't trust Microsoft.
    I don't want to use proprietary software.
    I don't want to use commercial software.

    I was almost taking the survey seriously until I saw those options.
  • Somehow pathetic (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DuSTman31 ( 578936 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:07PM (#7780373)

    like when the retarded kid at school asks you how to become more popular..

    Still, the biggest advantage I can think of is the open source model - the industry has been working for years on ways to increase reuse, but commercial licensing and patent issues get in the way of that.

  • by cRueLio ( 679516 ) <[moc.nsm] [ta] [oileurc]> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:07PM (#7780375) Homepage Journal
    First they were insulting Linux and saying it has problems bigger than windows, and in the last week they seem to have shown interest in learning from windows. this is like an admission that their software is worse than linux. just my $.02
  • by BlkPanther ( 515751 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:08PM (#7780383) Homepage
    If we were all really non-hypocritical, and truly interested in security, and usability, and not just microsoft bashing, this is a great opportunity to help them out and point out their flaws.... NAH!!

    But seriously, we all complain about MS's problems, now we've actually got a outlet to complain to. If you don't speak up now, you really have no room to speak later!
  • doh! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tuxette ( 731067 ) * <tuxette.gmail@com> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:08PM (#7780385) Homepage Journal
    Microsoft asks Linux users, "How can we get your business?'

    ...

    They apparently don't plan to release the results of their surveys...

    They just don't get it, do they?

    Otherwise, I agree with some of the respondants on NewsForge - don't do the survey. It's just free marketing etc. info for Microsoft. They're not worth it.

  • Re:Splash! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:10PM (#7780401)
    what can be done to make windows better:

    remove all the spyware, follow international standards protocolwise, give the user full control over security, drop that stupid online registration
    and stop the we are at war with the rest of the industry attitude and you will have my cash again.

    To make it short become the microsoft of 82-83 again...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:10PM (#7780403)
    It's the licensing, pricing, and force-fed dependencies that suck. None of these are technical issues.
  • by crushinghellhammer ( 727226 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:11PM (#7780411)
    Could this possibly be a fake? You would think Microsoft would plaster the website with TMs, and legalese.

    Also is it common practice for big corps to use SurveyMonkey. If they are being so open about it, why didn't they have it someplace on Microsoft's site?

    Just a thought..
  • by essdodson ( 466448 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:11PM (#7780416) Homepage
    Why did MS choose to use surveymonkey? This seems like a hoax.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:13PM (#7780428)
    Don't change a thing. Remain closed source and proprietary, release all software under draconian EULA's and other hamstringing legalities, and keep the security model (or lack thereof) exactly as it is, because like Richard Nixon said, you can't know what it's like to stand on the highest mountain (Linux) until you've been in the deepest valley (Windows).
  • by ibbey ( 27873 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:14PM (#7780434) Homepage
    I was almost taking the survey seriously until I saw those options.

    Actually, those are important questions. Any surveys that say that any of those areas are "very important", are immediately assumed to be from zealots, and there answers are given less credence if not ignored completely. I haven't submitted my response yet (still debating on whethter or not I want to help them.) but when I do, the answer to all four of those questions will be #2 out of the 5 point scale.
  • by UpLateDrinkingCoffee ( 605179 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:14PM (#7780441)
    From the survey:
    • Its cheaper
    • There is more free add-on software
    • Better gaming experience
    • Ability to run on old hardware
    • More secure than Windows
    • I want to get more Linux experience to help my career
    • No need to constantly keep installing updates and fixes
    • Integration with consumer electronics devices
    • Better performance than Windows
    • Easier to use than Windows
    • Easier to install than Windows
    • Better install and uninstall of additional software
    • No enforced license registration
    • Better scripting
    • Better command line
    • Better device and peripheral support
    • Access to source code
    • Easier to customize exactly how I want it
    • More intuitive, simpler to understand
    • Linux community support
    • Better reliability
    • The satisfaction of not giving Microsoft more money.
    • I don't trust Microsoft
    • I don't want to use proprietary software
    • I don't want to use commercial software
  • by Helpadingoatemybaby ( 629248 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:16PM (#7780466)
    Here's what I would suggest:

    1) Stop violating the law and pay restitution to each and every company that has been damaged and run out of business by Microsoft's immoral business practices.

    2) Rescind the patent for the "long file name."

    3) Have Bill Gates and the current management team resign from the company.

    4) Drop your prices for your Office suite and OS to zero dollars and zero cents (plus or minus zero) to make it competitive.

    5) Do not release your code until it's done, so security can be improved (like some open source projects are able to do).

    6) Remove the requirements enter authentication codes and product keys. (Many open source products don't require this.)

    7) Use open protocols and stop trying to sabotage everything to make a buck.

    8) Try and improve your dismal reputation for shoddy work.

    9) When making a charitable contribution cease donating "in-kind" the value of software given just so you can fleece the taxpayers of the tax deduction.

    10) God forbid, pay some federal income tax you dirtbags.

    11) In short, there is nothing you can do. Have a nice day.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:16PM (#7780467)
    Am I the only one that noticed that one of their options for "recommended areas of use" was "organizations that want to send a message to the greedy computer industry?"

    Hmm...smacks of a fake to me.
  • pay me (Score:4, Insightful)

    by kardar ( 636122 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:16PM (#7780468)

    I always looked at stuff like this as helping some executive somewhere in the marketing deparment get a huge bonus.

    Give me some!



  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:16PM (#7780469)
    Could this possibly be a fake? You would think Microsoft would plaster the website with TMs, and legalese.

    They *did* start the surveys off with a "Legal Agreement"...
  • by EvilTwinSkippy ( 112490 ) <yoda AT etoyoc DOT com> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:20PM (#7780499) Homepage Journal
    Considering they are simply going to cherry pick the positive comments and dredge the bottom for the stupidist flaming zealot I think we have about as much chance of being heard as a Temperance protestor at the Octoberfest.
  • by Almost-Retired ( 637760 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:21PM (#7780513) Homepage
    I took a look, at the first page. That was enough to make me hit the back button.

    Any questionaire that starts out with a legal header is up to no good. Now, if Bill were to knock on my front door, and was willing to actually talk about it without getting bent cause I said his eula's were a work of the devil (the fact that they are isn't open for discussion IMO), then maybe we could have an informative discussion.

    But you *know* what the chances of that are...

    First, we kill all the lawyers.

    --
    Cheers, Gene
  • Re:My answers (Score:4, Insightful)

    by goon america ( 536413 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:21PM (#7780522) Homepage Journal
    2. I expect software I pay for to work as advertised

    Strictly speaking, Linux cannot and probably will never be able to "advertise" in the same sense that Microsoft can. This, if anything, is a hindrance (not unsurmountable) to the spread of Linux.

    I think what you really mean is "What you see is what you get." Microsoft products are the exact opposite of both parts of that statment.

  • by JK Master-Slave ( 727990 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:25PM (#7780550)
    Until the alternative word processors offer the full 'macro' capabilities of Word, i.e. embedded scripting in a .doc file 'just works' the way businesses need it to for their existing documentation base, they're not going to switch.

    I agree, for light writing and word processing purposes (what most of us use a W.P. for) the alternative word processors are quite capable and useful.

    But the kind of 'seamless' compatibility I described above just isn't going to be there, ever. That's like demanding alternative editors with the full capability of Emacs but derived from a completely separate code base.
  • by catbutt ( 469582 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:26PM (#7780554)
    I'm confused as to why those would make you not take the survey seriously. They seem like valid answers, and if that's the way people feel, they should want to know about it, right? I would not be surprised if they designed their survey by first asking people to answer the questions "free form" (i.e. not multiple choice), and then tried to include the most popular answers in their multiple choice.
  • by Hellkitten ( 574820 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:27PM (#7780563)

    • Replace DOS with a decent shell with better scripting support
    • Add parameters to tools so they can be used without a gui (eg. in scripts)
    • Embrace but don't extend
    • Be standard compliant
    • Document own file formats and protocols. Without NDAs or agreements limiting how it can be used
    • Fix security, and be open about outstanding security issues
  • by doug13 ( 25087 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:27PM (#7780564)
    Don't do homework for MS. After they GPL their OS i'll fill out any survey they wish; but until then they bite me. "no silly rabbit, trix are for kids"
  • by edunbar93 ( 141167 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:28PM (#7780572)
    Or more importantly, I want my diary to be readable in 20 years, thank you very much.
  • by jtilak ( 596402 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:29PM (#7780580) Journal
    It's about the opensource philosophy for many people. Unless they decide to make windows truly open source, not shared source, many people will continue to use GNU/Linux. duh. Also, DRM and palladium will just convert more people over to linux. I like to decide what files can open and what programs can run on my computer. It's MY COMPUTER. I should be in control.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:32PM (#7780615)
    So what would happen if someone taking a survey notices that a significant number of their responses come from what they consider to be zealots? Then maybe the survey takers are the zealots?

    Maybe it is just my zealotry. But those four reasons seem like real reasons to me. Not the only ones.

    I find it offensive that some people try to paint Open Source advocates as zealots, but Microsoft zealots are painted as "reasonable". It is reasonable that Microsoft wants to declare war on my profession. They want to take the bread off my table. They want complete and total domination. If there is anywhere left to work it can only be at Microsoft's pleasure as a Microsoft raped solution provider or somehow in collusion with Microsoft. They say in interviews that they believe that their fair share of the market is 100%.

    I am just being defensive. Microsoft is the one declaring war on me.

    Why it is unreasonable to take a customer-centric view of everything rather than a vendor-centric view of everything.

    I regularly have debates with a Windows zealot. He is every bit as biased, passionate and a zealot as I am. But he doesn't believe that he is. I recognize that I am. I try to still make reasonable decisions. But how can a True Believer Zealot (tm) who thinks they are NOT a zealot make reasonable decisions?

    How is it that only Open Source people are zealots?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:33PM (#7780625)
    That doesn't make Windows better. That makes its competitors better.
  • by JK Master-Slave ( 727990 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:34PM (#7780627)
    Perhaps they have little or no interest in soliciting information from the kind of noob who'd run Mozilla but not know how to enable/disable cookies.

    Who would that be in the first place?
  • by zzabur ( 611866 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:34PM (#7780630)
    In 1999 or so, when I started using Linux for most time, Windows WAS a lot better for most purposes -- if you forget stability. For example, there was no decent web browser for Linux, only Netscape 4 which crashed all the time. Basically, it was really hard to get even basic desktop functionality.

    Today, Mozilla Firebird is much better than IE, and in general, Linux has a good or at least useable solution for any need I have. In addition, it's getting better every month. Bad fonts were fixed with BitstreamVera and OpenOffice 1.1 is finally "good enough". Programming tools, etc, were much better for Linux back in 1995. On the other hand, MS products have mainly become slower, more bloated and even clumsier to use.

    I would choose Linux over Windows based on merit and usability alone even in the case both were equally free.
  • by Idou ( 572394 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:34PM (#7780633) Journal
    I am sorry, but I believe this to be the point which they continue to miss . . . and apparently you do too. Without a process being "Open" there is no accountability and no assurance that the process meets the claimed criteria.

    What value is there for me to fill out this closed survey? So that MS can later make false claims about Linux users that I can never check because the survey was closed?

    It is not a matter of MS being able to scrutinize the community through surveys. It is a matter of the community being able to scrutinize the claims MS makes that affect us. The goal is to attain the truth, which is impossible in a closed process.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:39PM (#7780669)
    People always say "Slashdot is not a hive-mind", when people assume that everyone feels exactly the same way. Microsoft is also not a hive-mind. Chris Jones, the guy in charge of the Windows client is particularly level-headed, and would love to fix Windows, rather than bash Linux.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:40PM (#7780672)
    Just don't answer correctly. Answer absurdly.

    If they actually plan on using the answers to the survey when making subsequent decisions, let's lead them to make wrong decisions.

  • by JetScootr ( 319545 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:41PM (#7780676) Journal
    Actually, that may not be far wrong. Think of it: Whoever answers this survey as if it were realistic may also be gullible enough to fall for an RIAA-like lawsuit from SCO.
    All MS has to do is enter into some kind, any kind of "business partnership" with SCO, then they're free to share any data confidentially without the slightest fear of any taint or PR disaster.
    OH WAIT - they're already business partners with SCO to the tune of $6 million for "Linux licenses".
    PS: What kind of ActiveX crap does the survey download? What settings on Windows does it change? I'm afraid to even follow the link. What MS does to Windows machines, IMHO, is just as evil as anything done by virii / blackhats.
  • Wow, what jerks (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dolohov ( 114209 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:53PM (#7780775)
    No, I don't mean Microsoft, I mean all the posts I've read here so far.

    We have nothing to fear from the world's largest software maker paying attention to the needs and wants of the Linux community. Really. Honestly. We've loathed them for years because their software sucks -- why not help them do it better? If your answer is that they *can't* do it better, then fine. But that's not my answer. I can think of a number of things that I'd like them to do. I'll still use Linux, but I'm hopeful that those times I'm obligated to use Windows won't be as painful.

    Or are you too afraid that Microsoft can beat Linux after all?
  • by TheSpoom ( 715771 ) * <{ten.00mrebu} {ta} {todhsals}> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:54PM (#7780779) Homepage Journal
    Oh, come on. They're just saying that they may or may not use your input, and don't have to pay you for it. It's this little thing called COMMON SENSE. It's not even written in legalese!

    What, in that agreement, specifies that you are restricted from doing something?
  • by Dalroth ( 85450 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:54PM (#7780782) Homepage Journal
    Why should I bother? I only want to build software on top of open systems where I have control. Microsoft knows this already. Microsoft is also not willing to give me this control. What purpose would filling out these surveys thus fullfill?

    It's pretty simple... I want the freedom to do things my way. As I see it, this is a very laudible goal and the one our country was found on. Microsoft seeks to control technology such that I am only forced to do it their way. That's the kind of thing dictatorships and Nazi-ism were built upon.

    I choose freedom from enslavement, and Microsoft already knows this.

  • by cuban321 ( 644777 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:56PM (#7780792) Homepage
    Yes, but when you are providing information to managment it goes over alot easier when saying 'Here are the results of our public survey' as opposed to 'Here is the random information we gathered from reading various articles on a website, which may or may not be from all points of view'.

    Daniel
  • However (Score:4, Insightful)

    by msgmonkey ( 599753 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:56PM (#7780793)
    There is no option for "I prefer Linux over Windows", or "Linux suites my needs nicely and it's free". I don't know if its done on purpose or it's just arrogance but the question seems to assume that Linux is not very good and there must be some other reason for you using it home.
  • by kingkade ( 584184 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:57PM (#7780797)
    The question was posed as "What's wrong with commercial software?", not "What's wrong with MS?". Try to keep the non-sequiturs out of the discussion.
  • by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @03:59PM (#7780811)
    Because that's a feature of all large businesses - there's nothing special about MS in that.
  • by shaitand ( 626655 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:02PM (#7780841) Journal
    How about the win32 api, which is neither fully documented nor correctly documented.
  • by cornjones ( 33009 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:03PM (#7780847) Homepage
    They flat out asked us "Ok, tell us, what do you think, we value your opinions and we want to know." MS has never done this before.


    Do you think that is what they are really doing though? My first thought was along the lines of yours. If they are asking maybe they will actually listen. But I don't really see them listening to most of items that I see being brought up (here at least)
    1. Security. Everybody wants tehm to be more secure but it isn't like they are putting the bugs in on purpose. They may be sending the products out the door before they are ready but that isn't going to change, market pressures being what they are. They have made some strides but it is the most popular and hammered on OS. Add that to their old mantra of making everything work together (as long as it is MS branded) and they are always going to have some security issues.

    2. Open standards. We all want to see NTFS and the office formats documented and released. Never gonna happen. MS Office Rul3z the business world. They have considerable disincentive to make everybody else be able to use their doc formats. They have gotten where they are through "embrace and extend" and I don't see that changing.

    Those are the main two I am seeing and have heard people talking about. Maybe we will get some small things in there, people making suggestions for their favorite eye candy piece but the nuts and bolts aren't going to change.

    Do i think we should do the survey? Ehh, i am up in the air about that. It does seem like we would be giving them free market research but at least maybe we could get tab browsing or something built in.
  • by randall_burns ( 108052 ) <randall_burns@@@hotmail...com> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:04PM (#7780860)
    It might be helpful if Microsoft would act like a real business instead of a government subsidized utility and do some real risk analysis of the security risks associated with Windows. Is there any reason to assume that ever major gang tjat conducts financial fraud hasn't infiltrated Micro$oft at this point? What audits of the security of Windows have been conducted that would mitigate this?
  • Re:Free as in Beer (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cornjones ( 33009 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:06PM (#7780869) Homepage
    a good portion of the rest of their products are sold at a loss.

    Correct me if I am wrong but didn't you just describe the classically illegal part of a monopoly?

  • My response... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SealBeater ( 143912 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:08PM (#7780884) Homepage
    15. List the top one or two possible improvements that you would like to see made to Windows.

    Nothing. You don't understand, your whole design philosiphy is flawed. You are presenting to the user little boxes that say "this far and no further" Such boxes do not exist with Linux. For instance, I can network every computer in my home, multiple firewire, multiple ethernet, SCSI if I want to, bond them all into one virtual interface, install openmosix, have a cluster, have it serve a webpage or my mp3s and I can do it from the internet cafe. From the command line. For free.
    I don't have to worry about viruses. I don't have to worry about a document I write containing identifying information about me. I don't have to worry about what's the next thing that is going to attack my box, due to your screw ups. I don't have to worry about my computer doing things that you want it to do rather that what I want it to do. Free upgrades, for life. Don't like something? Change it. Would you like to have no bloat? Rip out X Would you like your apps to be optimized to your CPU? OK, change your $CFLAGS. Got old hardware? No problem, what do you want to do? Mail? Web? Game server? GUI overhead? What's that? You don't understand. Windows is a fisher price toy.

    16. List the top one or two improvements that you would like to see made to Linux.

    Gnome, stop trying to be another microsoft. Don't walk down the same road. Some of us don't want binary format registry file configuration files that can't be edited by hand.

    GTK, some of us like to run ./configure --disable-nls and not have the script ignore us. We don't want all the translations and some of us do notice and don't like it when we tell software to do something basic like this and it ignores us.

    Glibc, modualize the security options. Let the user choose the level of encryption. There is a project that replaced the stock md5 with blowfish. This is a good idea.

    SealBeater
  • by mindriot ( 96208 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:10PM (#7780896)
    ...to answer this survey would be, "we use Linux because it is Free as in Speech." Any other answer is just a cheap way of giving MS helpful tips on how to make more money. Too bad the survey does not really allow this kind of answer. But, I think, if everybody participating said that (GNU/)Linux is the single choice because it is Free, we could leave a good impression... at least I suppose RMS would agree.

    So, if it is possible in any way, fill out the survey saying, "none of the given reasons are why I /really/ use GNU/Linux (although, of course, I get all these reasons as a side effect). I use it because it is Free." I wonder what MS would do if everybody answered the survey like that?
  • by Pharmboy ( 216950 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:10PM (#7780898) Journal
    True, but it also costs money, and Slashdotters are a bunch of commies who don't want to pay for anything.

    Yes, you are a troll, but you accidently made an important, but incorrect comment.

    I pay for linux. Every production machines I have that uses linux, has paid support. I have purchased every version of RedHat in the box, since 4.2 (except 9, which had no box set).

    I use both windows and linux, in about equal quantities. I use windows where I have to use proprietary software on the desktop. I use linux where I need machines to be bullet proof reliable and dedicated to do one or two tasks at very high performance levels.

    I AM trying to migrate to Linux fully, but not because of money. Its because of choices. I have an old dual cpu pentium pro 200 box that I run as a dedicated DNS server. Old, but still very good performance and incredible uptime. It is stripped down to a kernel, bind, sshd and a few utilities. This means very little CAN go wrong. I could do the same thing on a new box, or an old box, with the load being the deciding factor.

    MS does not give me the option to do this, as you MUST install the gui, not practical to use BIND on, has 10x the amount of software to do the same task. Also, it is impossible to backup the entire OS with Windows (on purpose). MS does not give me the option of taking an old machine that is out of production, and installing the same OS and BIND, to act as a backup (unless I want to pay for a license I am not likely to use). Linux does.

    I use Linux, not because its cheaper (its not for me), but because I am too lazy to keep up with the other 95% of the OS that is not necessary for any given task, AND I am too professional to NOT keep up with it if its installed. At the server, Linux is is just faster, easier to install, more reliable, more stable, faster, better supported, easier to customize, easier to maintain, easier to learn, easier to backup and restore, smaller, more flexible, and requires less manhours than Windows.

    After previewing this comment, I realized I was wrong. When you consider all the costs, I guess it is cheaper then. Hmm.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:13PM (#7780919)
    Microsoft is deliberately seeking information they can use against Linux. They will make use of any unfavorable comments about Linux in their own propaganda.

    The bottom line for me is exactly what you stated. They have a legal statement at the beginning that says they can make use of your answers however they want. Frankly, my comments about both Windows and Linux are professional opinions. People pay me for those. Microsoft explicitly stated that they weren't paying.

    Also, when it comes to a decision about what OS to put on my own hardware, they must discuss it on my terms, not theirs. Here's what Windows would have to have to compete with Linux:

    • Full source code for all Microsoft products released under the GPL.
    • All protocols, APIs and data formats fully documented.
    • All security holes disguised as features closed, permanently, and no new ones added, ever.
    • Dump Trusted Computing. It is about restricting the rights of the end user.
    • A tool set comparable to Linux, free. That is, compilers and interpreters for C, C++, Fortran, Ada, Pascal, Objective C, Prolog, Haskell, Lisp, Perl, Python, Awk, lex, yacc, Basic, etc., etc. Debuggers, libraries, editors, profilers. Libraries for test scaffolding like CppUnit and JUnit.
    • A promise that existing formats will be readable and losslessly convertable to future formats, forever.
    • A repudiation of their old EULAs and conversion of all of them to the GPL.
    • No forced upgrades.
    • No coerced upgrades, where existing users have to plead with people who have already upgraded to jump through hoops to avoid sending unreadable new formats.
    • Choices. Under Linux, I can choose Gnome, KDE, plain X with a variety of window managers etc. I can also choose AbiWord or OpenOffice or many others. I don't want a world where one company maintains a de facto standard and actively hinders anyone else's attempts to interact with it.


    There is nothing to trust about Microsoft.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:17PM (#7780973)
    I'm confused as to why those would make you not take the survey seriously. They seem like valid answers, and if that's the way people feel, they should want to know about it, right? I would not be surprised if they designed their survey by first asking people to answer the questions "free form" (i.e. not multiple choice), and then tried to include the most popular answers in their multiple choice.
  • by gad_zuki! ( 70830 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:19PM (#7780980)
    How about allowing OEMs to sell dual-booting machines and let the people/market decide? I think we're way past the point of "fixing" windows and are in the area where people should be able to test the "competition" from Dell, Compaq, or whoever without the OEM's fearing losing their contracts with MS.

    We should just be able to say "Yes, I want windows 2000 on there and Mandrake 9." And the OEM should make sure it has drivers for both systems.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:19PM (#7780984)
    First they were insulting Linux and saying it has problems bigger than windows, and in the last week they seem to have shown interest in learning from windows. this is like an admission that their software is worse than linux. just my $.02
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:21PM (#7781004)
    If we were all really non-hypocritical, and truly interested in security, and usability, and not just microsoft bashing, this is a great opportunity to help them out and point out their flaws.... NAH!!

    But seriously, we all complain about MS's problems, now we've actually got a outlet to complain to. If you don't speak up now, you really have no room to speak later!
  • My answers (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:23PM (#7781023)
    Dear Mr MS Marketing,

    I use linux because

    1. I expect to own software I pay for
    2. I expect software I pay for to work as advertised
    3. I expect not to be foreced into downloading other components I don't want of said software to keep my machine secure. (IE media player has to be downloaded to make explorer secure)
    4. I expect to not be forced to give up all and any reasonable legal rights when I open the package.
    5. I do not want to deal with software that guarantees via the liscence agreeement that the publisher can remotely look at my computer at will.

    As soon as the law makers get their opposable digit out of their anal orpheus, and restore a modicum of protection to consumers I don't have any faith that any of the points that I have outlined above will be addressed. Lets face it, you pay for the software, break open the box, and you have no legal expectation that the software will work, in any way shape or form.
  • by cantabrigian ( 689418 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:24PM (#7781028)
    Based upon these options, there is a reason not to take the survey seriously: there is no option to claim that you use Linux simply because it is better software. I can see Microsoft's spin already: "100% of respondants say that they use Linux for political reasons rather than technical ones".

    It seems that Microsoft has composed its survey choices very carefully: none of the choices in the multiple-choice questions allow participants to express their true feelings about Linux. Most likely, these survey results will be used to convince investors and IT departments that the primary reasons for choosing Linux are political, and thus there is no reason for them to convince their management that it is worth the effort to migrate.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:27PM (#7781050)
    Full source code for all Microsoft products released under the GPL.

    You could have ended your list here. The GPL addresses all of the remaining items.
  • by W2k ( 540424 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:27PM (#7781056) Journal
    The survey sites themselves are slashdotted but from people's comments here and on NF, I can tell Microsoft have tailored these surveys very specifically to make it easy for them to simply filter out all the zealots. For example, anyone who suggests Linux provides a superior gaming experience, better hardware support, or other things which are known Linux weak points is an obvious zealot and can be safely ignored.

    There was apparently a section at the end of one survey asking users why they didn't want to use Microsoft - and the options included "don't want to use commercial software", "I feel satisfaction in not giving Microsoft any money", something like that. Another obvious zealot filter. And from the comments, people seem to be falling for it big time. Seriously, zealots do nothing but hurt the free software movement in taking every chance to ridicule Microsoft, no matter what they do. Eventually, someone will go too far, Microsoft will slam him/her with a lawsuit and it will be another HUGE PR fiasco for free software - even if the person was just a random zealot and not in any way involved with any free software projects.

    What zealots don't realize is that by posting bogus and/or hateful answers to the survey, they will in fact be helping Microsoft - moreso than if they were to answer it seriously and professionally. When trying to persuade a company to use MS products rather than free-software ones, MS will be able to simply show them some survey results and say "look, these are the people you will be trusting your business with". And noone will be there to contradict them, obviously.

    But if that's the way you want it, fine. Not my problem. I've always chosen software depending on what gets the work done, I don't care much about whose license says what or whose software is free as in speech or in beer. Being zealoty about software is useless. But being zealoty and accomplishing the exact opposite of what you're trying to do is ridicilious, and I laugh at those people.
  • by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:30PM (#7781078)
    They have a legal statement at the beginning that says they can make use of your answers however they want.

    Yup. That's been in the small print of every survey I've ever taken, and on the "comment on our product/service/whatever" form I've seen.

    What's your point?
  • by Devil ( 16134 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:30PM (#7781080) Homepage
    "Microsoft is deliberately seeking information they can use against Linux. They will make use of any unfavorable comments about Linux in their own propaganda."

    Of course they will, but Linux users can always say, "Hey, Microsoft knows they have an inferior product, so they came to us for help." As much as /. people hate Windows, this is, I think, a good thing.

    First, by asking Linux users what they can do to improve Windows, it is a de facto admission that Windows is an inferior product. Second, maybe we could get some good things out of it, like fully-documented APIs and more-open protocols from Microsoft.

    However, don't expect Microsoft to release jack under the GPL. Put it out of your mind, because it'll never happen. And don't expect that Linux users are going to go easy on Microsoft. We have put them in our sights and will take them down, not through legal wrangling, but because the open-source community will out-build them.

  • One word: POSIX (Score:2, Insightful)

    by The Lord of Chaos ( 231000 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:36PM (#7781110)
    And have it standard equipment, not some overpriced add-on package.

    Let us write software that is cross-platform.
  • by hacker ( 14635 ) <hacker@gnu-designs.com> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:37PM (#7781118)
    We didn't pass on the copy of this sent to our LUG mailing list (nor did several other LUGs that I've heard of getting this same email). Luckily we run a moderated mailing list, and the person couldn't be bothered to subscribe, or download the list archives, or actually research the material that he wants answers on.

    The best reply I've seen so far, from any LUG member is the following:

    "I turned him down. There are a number of reasons why, but they mostly boil down to this: There is no incentive for us to give Microsoft our time and advice. They could never reciprocate. They're not interested in making the computing world better, they're only interested in making their next quarter revenues. That's fine, I'm not anti-business. But business is business and Freedom is Freedom; they want free beer and I want free speech. I have definite goals in using Linux and helping someone who's bosses (for example) fund SCO contradicts that."
  • Two birds... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by stubear ( 130454 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:44PM (#7781166)
    ...with one stone. If people answewred this this survey with the answers they gave here then Microsoft got you guys hook, line, and sinker. Now they can demonstrate to the business community that you guys are irrational morons with the intellect of a three year old. Congratulations.

    If on the other hand you truly answered as responsible adults, which many of you don't seem to be, then they got some excellent advice on ways they can make Windows better and stem the adoption of Linux at home and businesses.

    This has to be one of Microsoft's more ingenious marketing efforts to date.
  • by ImpTech ( 549794 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:49PM (#7781188)
    See, I would argue that their VM scheduler (loves to swap to disk), their file system (manual defragging required), the registry (come on!), are only a few among several technical failings in current Windows operating systems. For that matter, I can't prove it, but I'm convinced their disk I/O system sucks as well. I bog it down all the time.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @04:50PM (#7781195)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:02PM (#7781277)
    I don't think they can do that - last I heard they don't have any documentation themselves, the closest is a reference implementation of the loader.

    At the bytestream level it'd be pretty hard anyway, as the formats are based on several different technologies (for instance, OLE Structured Storage). The format also contains wierd stuff like gaps of garbage to stay compatible with bugs in earlier versions.

  • Actually... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by zandermander ( 563602 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:03PM (#7781283)
    I don't usually respond to *any* surveys simply b/c my time is more valuable than offering it for free to some company.

    With that said, this is yet more evidence - along with the price drops in Thailand, Ballmer's world travels and all their other efforts to quell the tide - that Linux is slowly restoring competition to the marketplace.

    Linux may one day supplant MS, it may not. It might garner a significant market share and co-exist with MS. As long as there is competition in the market, MS can't abuse their power and THAT is what is important to me.
  • by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:06PM (#7781308) Homepage Journal
    Ever heard of DLL hell?
    When was the last time you used Windows? These days dependency hell in Linux is 10 times bigger of a problem than DLL hell is in Windows. The only time I ever encountered a missing DLL on my Windows box within the last few years was when I wanted to run a program which needed the .net runtimes. Do a Windows Update for the .net runtimes, problem solved.
  • Paranoia (Score:0, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:22PM (#7781417)
    Microsoft is full of smart people and can determine the technical weaknesses of Linux without Linux Zealot Fred Jones's help. Or, MS can go right to the source in the public developer mailing lists.

    What you guys seem to be suggesting is some sort of GNU/Stalinist censorship: No one may say anything bad about Linux because it could be used against us.

    Sorry, it's Open software and an Open community. Circling the wagons is impossible.
  • by kuzb ( 724081 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:22PM (#7781419)
    - Full source code for all Microsoft products released under the GPL.

    GPL is a bad licence to begin with. the BSD licence would be a lot better, if they were to adopt anything at all.

    - All protocols, APIs and data formats fully documented.

    They are documented, that documentation is not always free though.

    - All security holes disguised as features closed, permanently, and no new ones added, ever.

    Exactly which security holes did MS disguise as features?

    - Dump Trusted Computing. It is about restricting the rights of the end user.

    Ok, at least we can agree on something. I concur, trusted computing is a bad idea.

    - A tool set comparable to Linux, free. That is, compilers and interpreters for C, C++, Fortran, Ada, Pascal, Objective C, Prolog, Haskell, Lisp, Perl, Python, Awk, lex, yacc, Basic, etc., etc. Debuggers, libraries, editors, profilers. Libraries for test scaffolding like CppUnit and JUnit.

    Point is, the compilers ARE free. You can download C#, visual basic and others WITHOUT paying for them. It's the IDEs that typicly cost the money. You also don't need to use a MS language, there are other langauges available for windows for a variety of purposes that MS had nothing to do with, which work fine under windows. Java comes to mind, as does Delphi, PHP, Python, Perl and many others which are too numerous to list. In fact, there probably isn't a language that you listed which is not also available for windows. Many of these GNU tools you want have windows ports as well.

    - A promise that existing formats will be readable and losslessly convertable to future formats, forever.

    You're not very clear here. Formats for what?

    - A repudiation of their old EULAs and conversion of all of them to the GPL.

    The GPL isn't the answer to everything. I don't blame MS for not using the GPL, I wouldn't either.

    - No forced upgrades.

    Upgrading is inevitable. MS does not force you to upgrade. If no one ever had to upgrade in the Linux world, we'd all be using kernels from 1990. MS doesn't force anyone to upgrade, people upgrade because they want the new offerings included in those upgrades. Hell, if you still want to use windows 98 these days, most software will still run under it.

    - # No coerced upgrades, where existing users have to plead with people who have already upgraded to jump through hoops to avoid sending unreadable new formats.

    This isn't MS's problem, it's yours. If you want to cling to old formats, outdated software and outmoded formats, that's your problem.

    - Choices. Under Linux, I can choose Gnome, KDE, plain X with a variety of window managers etc. I can also choose AbiWord or OpenOffice or many others. I don't want a world where one company maintains a de facto standard and actively hinders anyone else's attempts to interact with it.

    You really don't know a lot about windows, do you? You DO have choices under windows. How about blackbox for windows? How about Litestep? how about geoshell? There is a MASSIVE list of shell replacements (which could be likened to window managers) for windows. I don't NEED to use MS office either. I can get openoffice and/or abiword for windows. I can use any one of a dozen other office suites as well. The fact that MS office just happens to be superior to most of them is the reason most people will buy office instead of using something opensource.

    Quit trying to blame Microsoft for coming up with a STANDARDIZED model for which to do things. It's proven that it works. KDE and GNOME are still trying to agree on standards for interoperability between them, and it has only worked with limited success.

    I suggest you learn something about the operating system you intend to bash, it might help to make your arguments a little better.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:28PM (#7781478)
    Enough people to matter.

    Besides, if only 1 person in your organization is making use of macros and other advanced features, it's very useful that everyone else can open that person's documents without additional software.
  • by JamesOfTheDesert ( 188356 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:37PM (#7781549) Journal
    And how many of those come with Windows? You can't even rip music to MP3s without loading extra software.

    So, Microsoft should bundle *more* software?

    I'm all for it, but you that for every item added, there's gonna be somebody unhappy because MSFT has (somehow or other) reduced the user's choice. And they'll be right in line behind those bemoaning the disk space reuqired to install Windows.

    Before: Windows doesn't include MP3 ripping software!

    After: Call the laywers! Microsoft is freezing out competitors by including MP3 ripping software!

  • by RabidStoat ( 689404 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @05:51PM (#7781624)

    All protocols, APIs and data formats fully documented.

    All security holes disguised as features closed, permanently, and no new ones added, ever.

    Dump Trusted Computing. It is about restricting the rights of the end user.

    I agree with most of the above although I wish Linux would strive to meet the ones I've quoted as well ! Not everything is rosy on the other side of the fence.

  • by antek9 ( 305362 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @06:00PM (#7781674)
    For starters: how about issueing online surveys that don't demand cookies to be accepted?
  • My answers (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ajs318 ( 655362 ) <sd_resp2@earthsh ... .co.uk minus bsd> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @06:00PM (#7781677)
    1: Advanced.
    2: > 2 years.
    3: yes
    10: everyone
    15: Availability of the entire source code to all current and obsolete Microsoft products; either under a Copyleft licence {such as the GNU GPL or the Creative Commons Attribution / ShareAlike licence} or by placing it in the Public Domain.
    16: Hardware vendors need to adhere more closely to published standards, or else provide full disclosure to enable the creation of open-source drivers; and to label products as compatible with Linux {and for that matter, the BSD family}.

    I'm not sure the survey isn't a fake, but on the other hand I'm not ashamed of what I think. I honestly believe that the closed-source model, by the way it keeps victims beholden to a single entity, is tantamount to slavery. And I don't think Linux needs to change so much as other people's attitudes need to change. I'm -- to put it extremely mildly -- annoyed at the fact that almost every piece of hardware I pick up trumpets its compatibility with the latest Windows and MacOS, yet fails to mention Linux and the BSDs. Even things like keyboards, mice, network switches and USB hubs -- which are to all intents and purposes OS-independent. That sort of thing is exactly why Linux et al are considered to be "alternative" OSes.

    In the meantime, what we -- as a community which values honesty and mutual assistance -- can and should do is twofold. Firstly, if we are ever forced to purchase an unwanted Microsoft product, we should exercise our right to explicitly decline the EULA, and make sure Microsoft knows; that way, we will not be counted as Windows users to inflate Microsoft's statistics. Secondly, we should let hardware manufacturers know that Linux/BSD users use their products, and post reviews of hardware we have used so that other Linux/BSD users -- and would-be converts -- can see that hardware they might like to buy is compatible with such systems. We must lead by example a little -- we can't expect anyone to help us if we aren't willing to help ourselves.

    Once more hardware is seen to be compatible with Linux and the BSD family -- thereby answering a common, if not entirely undeserved, critisism often levelled at such operating systems -- then it will be feasible for non-specialist retailers to offer family-friendly, matched packages of PC, video-in, printer, camera and scanner, with a GNU/Linux or BSD operating system and appropriate drivers already installed. Bye-bye to the criticism of difficult initial installations. Supply a recovery CD which allows you to boot up, login as root and set up user accounts {in case someone forgets their root password}.

    To answer the criticism of software dependencies, I propose for someone to distribute a series of CDs which contain the source code for an application and, crucially, all the libraries it requires, so dependencies can be met from a single place. {IMLE .tar.gz is still the most reliable package format, as it works equally well - when it works, which is whenever you can satisfy the dependencies - on all distributions and well-made installs from scratch}.
  • by Dominic_Mazzoni ( 125164 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @06:07PM (#7781709) Homepage
    Just reading their questions makes it abundantly clear to me that they don't understand the potential of Linux:

    2.What best describes your involvment with Linux?

    Hobbyist
    End user
    Informal team computer expert
    Front lines IT support
    IT administrator
    Developer of internally used applications
    Developer of applications for sale
    IT manager
    Consultant

    I'm focusing in particular on "Developer of internally used applications" vs "Developer of applications for sale". In Microsoft's world, those are the only two alternatives. In the world of open-source, there's a wonderfully happy medium in-between. What about the growing group of developers whose job is to take existing open-source software, improve it for internal use, then release it back to the community (like RedHat, Apple, AOL, RealNetworks, NASA, etc.)? What about developers who write free, open-source software to work with the hardware that their company produces (like Myricom)?

    In Microsoft's world, the only reasons to develop software are for your own personal needs, or to sell to make a profit.
  • by derF024 ( 36585 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2003 @06:07PM (#7781715) Homepage Journal
    Windows disk partitioning is automatic, built into the installation.

    No, you have to use fdisk to add and remove partitions. Most (if not all) linux distributions set up your partitions automatically.

    Most newer versions of Windows detect ALL your hardware. WinXP even detected my Cisco Wireless card.

    WinXP wouldn't detect my Prism WiFi card, or my intel etherexpress pro 100. It wouldn't detect my ATI radeon, or the Nvidia geforce 2 in my desktop computer. It wouldn't detect either of my xircom ethernet cards, and I don't believe it detected my Soundblaster Live, either. I had to go hunt around the internet for all those drivers, and it's only because I know what's in my computers that I knew where to look. Debian detected all of those devices and set them all up without a single question.

    And as for software upgrades, that's not part of the installation.

    It isn't, but it should be. You can't plug a freshly installed windows machine into the internet these days for more than a few minutes without it catching some form of worm. That gives you barely enough time to head over to windowsupdate and grab the latest patches, or (if you know what you're doing) set up the software firewall.

    And as far as your INDIVIDUAL software, upgrading Mozilla or Winamp is as simple as going mozilla.org or winamp.com and downloading the latest version. All easy.

    Ah, so having a program tell me when I need to update all the software on my system is harder than visiting 100 websites a day to check for new updates. Yea, that makes sense.

    Functionality, yes. The option to change the screen resolution, no.

    That doesn't make sense; The functionality is the ablility to change the resolution, and both KDE and gnome give you that functionality in their control centers. Beyond that, you can use non-kde and non-gnome software to do the same thing.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @06:08PM (#7781721)
    Yes, I've seen web benchmarks, and it's true that Quake 3-based games are about 1% faster on Linux.

    However, do you dopes actually think that's going to be "switcher" argument? The only people who would care are uber-gamers who will stick with Windows because that's where the games are.

    To everyone else, you either sound like bullshitters with zero credibility because you are exaggerating such a meaningless statistic.
  • Correct...and.... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by djupedal ( 584558 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @07:17PM (#7782134)
    Participating in this 'survey' will assure your perpetual receipt of a flood of pro-MS propoganda.

    And...investing in Microsoft is risking having your own money used against you in the marketplace.

    Best advice...steer clear, there's no good news about dealing with the beast.
  • Why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by nthcolumnist ( 734273 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @07:40PM (#7782267)
    Is there a particular reason you feel obligated to assist this very large corporation?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @07:55PM (#7782337)
    to me the problem has always been compatability, protocol/API documentation (full, free, and current), and ability to swap out components for whatever reason I want that are not part of the core OS. (by that I mean what anyone would academically define as core OS, not browsers, GUI (or any UI), filesystem, etc) There was a time when I actually prefered IE on Windows, however there was never a time I wanted security holes extending to basic and everyday operations like viewing files, searching, etc. (Some of these things were "neat" but not worth the risk)

    I actually do not want MS to bundle anymore software. I especially do not like the restriction of choice, meaning that regardless of any conspiracy theory or fact... I should not have apps break after patches due to API changes or re-routed calls not done in a proper abstracted method. The Hidden API that was apparently supposed to be disclosed way back when (but due to political changes was pulled back) would be nice as well. I don't believe MS should be legally forced to disclose this unless there is an actual contractual breech to customers and vendors surrounding it. Simply put, I CHOOSE not to use MS whenever possible for these reasons. That is as a user and a developer.

  • by paranerd ( 672669 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @07:56PM (#7782344)
    Don't try to force me to compute the way you, and Hollywood, and the Government want me to compute. NO DRM. None. Nada. At all.No proprietary formats; I've already lost enough productivity, and personal data thinking to rely on Microsoft proprietary formats.

    Don't sneak information off of my computers like I have caught you doing in the past. I'm as Microsoft free as I can possibly be after I installed a firewall and found out my Microsoft Works software, which I NEVER used, was ET-phoning-home every single week for supposed updates (which updates I was never offered in over two years of ET-phoning home. This is what began my rabid antiMicrosoft proselytizing.

    It's MY computer. I don't lease it. I don't run it at your good pleasure, or under your benevolent supervision, or to your tune, or at your permission. It's MINE.
  • by mingot ( 665080 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @08:29PM (#7782562)
    All protocols, APIs and data formats fully documented.

    Get back to me when the open source camp achieves this. Oh, I can look at the source? You can look at a disassembly. Trudging through x86 asm is a bit more taxing than looking at poorly commented C code. But just a bit.

    A tool set comparable to Linux, free. That is, compilers and interpreters for C, C++, Fortran, Ada, Pascal, Objective C, Prolog, Haskell, Lisp, Perl, Python, Awk, lex, yacc, Basic, etc., etc. Debuggers, libraries, editors, profilers. Libraries for test scaffolding like CppUnit and JUnit.

    All already available. Do you mean MS should foot the bill for recoding all of these and then release them under the GPL? Why? Does it bother you that it's the gcc team and not Linus writing the C++ compiler for Linux? Oh, and with regards to some of the newer stuff (like C# and VB.NET) the compilers are free for the downloading. In addition there are open source compilers that are coming along nicely.

    A promise that existing formats will be readable and losslessly convertable to future formats, forever.

    I'm going to assume that you're talking about the Office formats. Guess what? Done. I can save any Office file in 2003 and it's readable on both 2000 and XP with no conversions or hassle. I think Microsoft recognized that people were simply not upgrading because having to deal with clients on older versions was such a hassle.

    No coerced upgrades, where existing users have to plead with people who have already upgraded to jump through hoops to avoid sending unreadable new formats.

    Taken care of, really. See previous item.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @08:55PM (#7782708)

    > what can be done to make Windows better

    Microsoft is not gonna like what they hear. Many IT managers are very nervous about the single-supplier issue. They HATE to be locked into a single supplier, they NEED a way out of that trap. That's gotta be issue #1, hands down. The only way out of that trap is to open up the Windows source.

    Microsoft funds an idiotic site called "softwarechoice.org". The point of that site is to try to tell customers that the single-supplier issue (and other licensing issues) are "illegitimate" reason to choose their software solution. Given Microsoft's attitude about this, there's just no way that they intend to listen to what customers REALLY want.

  • by pHDNgell ( 410691 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @09:10PM (#7782786)
    Look at big companies like IBM and SGI, or small ones like Red Hat. Why do they spend their own R&D dollars improving Linux, and then releasing the source code publicly? Why didn't they do the same thing with a BSD Unix?

    Big companies were using BSD unix in their products for a while (and continue to do so). They were not obligated to release the code, which is why you didn't see quite as much.

    Linux is about mind share, though. SGI didn't release XFS to Linux because, as a company, they thought Linux needed a better filesystem. They wanted a significant contribution to something that's on a lot of people's minds. Linux is big business now, and everyone wants to have a piece of it. It's not because it's GPL, it's because it's Linux.

    But the GPL license gives them dual motivators: an obligation to release new code as payment for using old, and an assurance that code they do give out won't be turned against them by a competitor.

    I don't think that describes ``dual motivators.'' It sounds like they have a restriction on their freedom vs. the BSD license (freedom to produce a product from the thing without giving away their work product), but a consolation that says that at least anyone looking at the code will also have to release their changes.

    That does *not* keep their code from being used against them. One company may be great at producing code while another is great at getting money from it. The code the first company releases is available to anyone, so they don't really have anything special to offer after it's written. If this company were the only source of this implementation (i.e. closed-source), they would then have an advantage.

    There's lots of GPL code, but I don't see lots of companies going out of their way to produce GPL code.

    But yeah, Linux is big business right now because people can use it at home, and it solves many enterprise problems. I imagine we'll see postgres doing the same thing at some point for the same reasons. The thing is, postgres can do it more quietly since there's no requirement to ship tweaks and stuff.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2003 @10:14PM (#7783069)
    Only two points:

    1. Do not be surprised if the results of this survey end up in MS anti-Linux propaganda, or are otherwise used in a manner (hoped by MS, at least, to be) detrimental to Linux, or to OS in general.

    Their PR goons and lawyers probably already know what response they are looking for, and it is virtually certain that the statstics of the answers they do receive will be able to be manipulated to give it to them. In addition, the answers in general may provide new insights and ideas for, say , undermining the motivation of programmers to work on OS, or other forms of psychological warfare. After all, they have already gone after the end users, where they are discovering that bludgeoning doesn't work. Who remains to attack?

    Make no mistake: MS is fighting desperately on every front to undermine Linux, and one would be badly mistaken, IMHO, to assume that this survey represents any change of heart. This is just one more strategy to get inside the enemy's head in order to destroy him. There are bombs, and there was Mata Hari... and being asked deferentially for your opinion can be flattering, can it not?

    2. Re the sruvey itself: As Louis Armstrong famously said, "If you got to ask, you ain't never gonna know!"

    -- A.C.
  • by lpq ( 583377 ) on Sunday December 21, 2003 @10:46PM (#7783187) Homepage Journal
    It's the one thing they don't "get". We don't want a feature, or a frill, or any particular thrill -- just the source, the full source, unrestricted for all to use or see.

    So in any future era, like the present one now at hand, when MS says goodbye to Windows [X] (current, 98), anyone can make the decision to transition based not on fear of no more security fixes or fear of being unable to keep up with new hardware -- but based on need or want for the new things in whatever
    new Win OS delights!

    That's the enduring process of open-source. The maker goes out of business and you aren't left stranded -- you have all the source code for your product. How many pieces of junk CD's have I tossed because the no longer ran on newer OS's and the companies no longer support them (assuming the company is still around). You get to a point when you want to say "STOP".

    Even linux, I watch...was true with 2.4 and 2.6....the benchmarks showed
    how nicely linux scaled under load with multiple processors...but the bottom end response time seemed to increase in both (just looking at
    graphs). Yeah, 2.4 handles itself better under high load and might not lock up like 2.2, but under low load that my system is at 99.9% of the time...?

    Does anyone still run linux on an i386? or even i586? aren't most at the Pentium-Pro/PII/PIII or better level? Does linux still run on a 386 or 486?

    Anyway...seems like so much "growth" is by forced change...is that really growth -- the music industry thought the upspurt in CD sales in the 90's was. When it was just the public playing "catchup". Now they have to go and invent a new format (duh...it's not about piracy...)

    -l
  • by laird ( 2705 ) <lairdp@@@gmail...com> on Sunday December 21, 2003 @11:35PM (#7783420) Journal
    "10.Rank the importance of server operating attributes to your organization.
    (1 indicates a preference for low product cost and more administive and end-user time. 5 indicates a high up-front product cost but less user effort)"

    Note that this assumes that your two choices are "low cost/more administration" and "high code/less administration". In practice, Linus is both lower cost and lower administrative overhead, while Windows is higher cost and higher administrative overhead.

    "11.Rank the importance of easy initial configuration and setup of a server operating system against easier administration.
    (1 is easy initial setup and lousy administration and 5 is difficult initial setup and great administration)"

    Similarly, this question assumes that you have to choose between "hard setup/easy administration" and "easy setup/hard administration". Linux is both easier to install and easier to administer than Windows.

    Ah well, perhaps even by setting up false options, they'll learn something about what people consider important.
  • by AstroDrabb ( 534369 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @12:45AM (#7783717)
    All protocols, APIs and data formats fully
    documented.
    Where are there any undocumented protocols or protocols that you cannot get the documentation for, used in Linux?
    All security holes disguised as features closed, permanently, and no new ones added, ever.
    While there will always be the possibility for security holes in ANY OS, when has there ever been ONE in Linux that has been hidden?
    Dump Trusted Computing. It is about restricting the rights of the end user.
    Where is Trused Computing in Linux? Even if there ever was some framework for TC, in Linux it would be something that could EASILY be turned off or taken out. Under MS Windows, it WILL be an "integral" part of the OS and used against the end-user by software companies and the media companies to enforce their "IP".
  • by Malcontent ( 40834 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @01:08AM (#7783809)
    Ask a friend. Go to the local linux users group and ask a stranger.

    One of the reasons Linux is so much fun to use is the community. Your local linux user group will not only provide you a CD they will install and configure it for you too.

    Not only will you get a "free" operating system you'll make some friends too.
  • Entering Phase 3 (Score:5, Insightful)

    by benna ( 614220 ) * <mimenarrator@g m a i l .com> on Monday December 22, 2003 @01:20AM (#7783861) Journal
    Let us have a short retrospect of a quotation of Mr. Mahatma Gandhi:

    "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they attack you, then you win."
  • Re:What. I. Wrote. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by burns210 ( 572621 ) <maburns@gmail.com> on Monday December 22, 2003 @03:07AM (#7784306) Homepage Journal
    Apple and osX use openGL for their graphics, and are quite happy doing so. Why shouldn't Linux? (it does already).

    We should put more effort into improving openGL, speed, usability, and whatnot to make it competitive with directx
  • by binarytoaster ( 174681 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @04:25AM (#7784520)
    Even Entourage will not connect to 5.x, and that IS made by Microsoft... ;)

    2000 or later only. Go fig. Maybe MS doesn't want to deal with 5.x's kludgy implementation again, so they don't open it (maybe they don't have documentation of it?) ...still doesn't quite explain 2000+...
  • by RabidStoat ( 689404 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @09:17AM (#7785334)
    All protocols, APIs and data formats fully documented.

    Where are there any undocumented protocols or protocols that you cannot get the documentation for, used in Linux?

    I didn't say anything was undocumented, the emphasis on my comment was intended to be "fully". Some of the documentation for various security packages I've been working with is badly written and incomplete with badly worked through examples. I'm a fully paid up member of the open software paradigm but I wish that when people contribute they'd realise there contributions are more valuable if they fully document their software. Not that they have to, their contribution is valuable nevertheless, but it'd be even better if they did.

    All security holes disguised as features closed, permanently, and no new ones added, ever.

    While there will always be the possibility for security holes in ANY OS, when has there ever been ONE in Linux that has been hidden?

    I think we read the second part of this one differently, I read it as "no new security holes added ever", I think you might have read it as "no more holes disguised as features added ever". To be honest, I doubt if even Microsoft deliberately add a true security hole disguised as a feature. Certainly they claim many security holes are features after the event, certainly some features they add contain inherent security problems but they, you'd have to assume, fit into the architectural model that they are/were trying to maintain however flawed that may be.

    As to the last comment, I'm not sure why you've emphasised the "against" in the last sentence, if it's a tool that could be used to protect intellectual property is that a bad thing ? Maybe it is if you believe that companies shouldn't own it in the first place. Personally I see too many people "stealing" software and justifying it by saying it should have been free in the first place.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 22, 2003 @09:29AM (#7785412)
    well, even though I agree that /. is fairly anti-MS I don't agree with all of your comments.

    "See, the thing most people dont understand (since they dont actaully work in IT or especially MIS) is that, for the most part, the MARKET is what has given MS its dominance."

    Partially true yes but you have to look at other aspects here. MS has a lot of money and they can buy-out smaller competition. This would give them more dominance since they have bought what they would have had to compete with. This would also help them out with their market share wouldn't it.

    "They make a pretty stable product"

    Which product are you referring to here? Not all of them are equal in the stability stakes.

    "How the hell can somebody say Windows doesnt give them a choice in software? Try walking into a software store some time!"

    Almost all software I've ever bought has to be run on windows. This restricts my options (although that wasn't the point you were trying to argue i know).
    There's a huge choice of software for windows but I would appreciate it if I was given a clear option to NOT install some windows software. I like to know exactly what I'm installing, not end up finding out that someone has decided I might like this or that installed by default.

    "So, here is what will happen to this thread. It might get modded up by people who see the intelligence of what i am saying"

    This is not a smart thing to say. It shuts out other peoples opinions. Even though I can acknowlege that MS's products arn't sent from satan or completely useless (they wouldn't be where the are now if they were) I dislike people presenting an opinion as fact and saying anyone who disagrees is stupid and ignorant.
    If you get modded up or down so what? it's a number. get over it.
  • Simple! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Quixadhal ( 45024 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @11:29AM (#7786214) Homepage Journal
    Follow Apple's lead (again!) and dump the 20-year-old DOS core of your OS, replacing it with one of the unix variants out there. Now, go rewrite your GUI and desktop API to work on top of it.

    Make a legacy layer (MS-WineX?) to run "old" apps, and have a well-documented standard API -- just ONE -- no "magical hidden" parts for people with deeper pockets -- which all developers can use to write applications. If you need help with this, find an old AmigaOS kernel/intuition reference set and read it.

    Force the hardware industry (and MS is the only one really able to do that) to get rid of the antique BIOS garbage, and adopt something more flexible like what recent Suns use. While you're at it, ditch ISA and let it rust in peace. Send the keyboard/ps2 moue controllers off with it and standardize on USB.

    At that point, you'd have a solid stable environment which CAN emulate all the bugs of yesteryear, but doesn't have to. You'd also have nicely put yourself in place as the desktop linux solution.

    One other tip.... listen to your customers. When they've been telling you your system is bug-ridden, unstable, and insecure for YEARS on end, and are CONSISTANT about these reports... maybe you should do something more than have Steve Ballmer run around on stage yelling about how great your company is?
  • by schon ( 31600 ) on Monday December 22, 2003 @12:53PM (#7786847)
    They seem like valid answers,

    Seem like, but aren't.

    For starters, the take the assumption that Windows is better than Linux, and that the only reason someone would use Linux over Windows is because of some political/moral stance.

    Where is "because Linux is technically superior"?

    Or "because Linux is more secure"?

    or "because I prefer the way Linux acts"?

    All of these are just as valid as the ones given, but don't show some sort of political bias.
  • by k12linux ( 627320 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @02:53PM (#7796409)
    Besides, if only 1 person in your organization is making use of macros and other advanced features, it's very useful that everyone else can open that person's documents without additional software.

    Which is EXACTLY why document specs should be open. I support around 6000 users. Of those, only about 50 know how to do anything useful with macros and of those only 1-2 actually require any type of macros. I doubt either would *need* VBA macros as long as they could just automate some other app.

    Why should our organization have to pay over a quarter million $ just because 0.03% of my users might need MS Word macro capabilities? But instead, as long as we want 100% file compatibility we are locked into buying MS-Office for every PC.

    If the file formats were open, alternative apps could be 100% compatible and the choice of which app to run could be made based on needs and not lock-in.

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