WindRiver Will Not Keep Slackware 206
jolan writes: "Patrick Volkerding posted an announcement saying that Wind River is not planning to keep Slackware after the merger." Patrick writes there: "This isn't going to take out Slackware, though. Development continues," and goes on to say "I'm working on setting up a company so we can handle the publishing ourselves. Unfortunately, I'm broke. I can get funding to publish and ship the release to all the subscribers (and anyone else who wants it), but have no money to pay my fellow friends (which sucks) until we make some." Since Slackware has perhaps the most loyal users of any product (just happens to include Linux distributions), and with a new release upcoming, certain reports of its demise have been greatly exaggerated. Maybe we're about to enter a whole new Slackware era.
Re:Post more articles about VB!!! (Score:1)
verified here Re:Slackware PayPal Account (Score:1)
See here on the slack forum: a post by Patrick [slackware.com] in response to some guy posting his un-official paypal donation site. (in all fairness I think the Nanux guy was trying to help, I noticed several posts by him offering to do this, I guess Patrick didn't notice them)
Re:Deconstructing Slackware (Score:1)
Hell yes your on the street guys and I am sorry, but the fact of the matter is that if ANY of us sat around for a goddamn year without producing anything, we would be toast too!
They got Slackware to the big league, only to find out they didn't really like playing the game, just thought that wearing the uniforms would be cool. "We'll have it out in October, somtime around Christmas, first of the year, FEBRUARY!, first week in April, sometime in May... this summer we hope
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
I once read an old
As a new user, I not only want to use Linux, I want to understand how and why it's working. Anyway, so far so good with Slackware, and I didn't have to lean on a Corel-like glossy installation program.
Plus, I like Slackware's background (if that's worth anything).
Anyhow, to answer the question "So who is using Slackware?", put a check mark in the new user column for me.
Re:Distribution Evolution (Score:1)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
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Re:Slackware PayPal Account (Score:1)
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Re:$$$ (Score:2)
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Re:This just shows. (Score:2)
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Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Re:No Such Thing (Score:2)
Not entirely true.
That Doug Miller interview sure did have lots of "Why we're better than you open source hippies" spin to it.
But you wouldn't be the first person to say slashdot was biased, and you'd be right. But so what? :)
Welcome to the unemployed programmer's club (Score:2)
Re:I *think* this is a troll... (Score:1)
Maybe one thing to think about is the possibility that Slackware (and Linux) were successful in the early days because noone threw a limitless amount of money at them.
While a little more money might help, I suspect there are limits to the process.
I'm still trying to figure out if the direction Gnome is going (with a lot of imitation-windows apps) is a good idea.
Re:$$$ (Score:2)
Seriously - I bought a couple of versions of Slackware back in the 3.x days, then went over to RedHat and SuSE for a while, now I'm back on Slackware. Where do I send the money for the 7.x versions I've downloaded, now that it's quicker for me to download than buy? Seriously. I still have a tech job () and I can't think of a Linux/free software/Open Source project which deserves more support. I've got a Slackware penguin sitting on top of my monitor at work, and a t-shirt and snapshot version of Slackware for Sparc - all given to me by various Slackware people. I want to pay for them now that they can't afford to give this stuff away, and I can afford to pay for it.
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:1)
They'll take my CD burner away from me when they pry it from my cold dead hands!!!
-Derek
How much does it cost? (Score:2)
When I first installed slackware I spent about $5 on diskettes and I was up all night downloading the disk images. Ahhhh yes, *those* were the days.
Anyway, kudos to Patrick for his fine work and I hope he finds the money so that he can pay those who work hard along side him. (One more reason for a standard internet micropayment system.)
-Derek
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Clean, raw, basic *nix.
I cannot stand the endless wait for RH to boot. I can't stand how arcane the text file configurations get. Linux conf? PLEASE! No Way.
I compile *everything* from tarballs, with no probs whatsoever; even generic stuff not targeted for linux. My
If slack goes away, I'll have but one honorable alternative: FreeBSD.
Re:Oh one of noble but misguided intentions (Score:1)
The first one, especially.
(sniff!)
if this is true, I am SO there! (Score:1)
Slack means more to me than PBS.
Hey! How about pledge drives?!
Oh! We could have Celtic Kitsch and...
(slaps self) OW!
Never mind.
I will, however, give gladly to the cause.
Shit, man.. I've never really HAD a cause before!
Guess I do now..
Wow.
Re:slack is a good stepping stone to solaris (Score:2)
Slack is *THE ONLY* linux distro that actually looks and acts like a commercial distribution.
Commercial distros are user hostile for an excellent reason: USERS SHOULDN'T BE USING THEM!
LUSERS FSCK THINGS UP!
Slack is the *ONLY* linux distro that actually trains you for the larger *nix world.
And it does so well!
Learn slack, and you can easily hop over to any commercial *nix distro whatsoever.
Slack=Clue, my friends.
Never forget that.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
If you've been using slackware since the 1.2.13 kernel, I wouldn't say you're new to linux. That's longer than probably 90+% of current linux users. I've only been using GNU/Linux since the 2.0.(28?)kernel and even then it still seemed more like a hacker/hobbiest thing, at least compared to today.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Tried Debian, didn't like it. Not sure why. A friend prefers it though, but everyone is free to choose their distro.
Distribution Evolution (Score:3)
- SLS 1.0 (kernel 0.99.x days)
- Yggdrassil (first usable distro IMHO)
- Slackware 3.0 (ELF!!)
- Slackware 3.1
- Redhat 4.2
- Redhat 5.1
- Redhat 6.0 (They finally convinced me to look for something better)
- Debian 2.2
- Debian Unstable...The Holy Grail
-adnans
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
vi
-- comment out undesired services --
$killall -hup inetd
Sheesh! It's not rocket science...
--
"In the land of the brave and the free, we defend our freedom with the GNU GPL."
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
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"In the land of the brave and the free, we defend our freedom with the GNU GPL."
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
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"In the land of the brave and the free, we defend our freedom with the GNU GPL."
Re:And amen. (Score:1)
Most distributions compile for the lowest common denomenator PC architecture (386,486,Pentium - depends on distro). Most of us run P2, P3 - a big difference in processor architecture. The compiler 'knows' which type of processor you have, so when you recompile software, the compiler can take advantage of the new technology in the new processors. Hence, your program is compiled with the new technology and the net result (generally) is that you get faster programs.
--
"In the land of the brave and the free, we defend our freedom with the GNU GPL."
Amen, brother! (Score:1)
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:1)
> any laptops that don't have
> at least a PCMCIA-II slot
But it does. Very well. And, of course, Slackware from floppy disks is the way to go in such cases.
Re:It *is* a troll (Score:1)
Nice trademark... (Score:1)
I hope Slackware goes out on its own and makes a TON of money. It was the first distribution I ever installed (from floppy!) and I still use it today.
Cut those ties that bind and see which way the wind blows.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Slackware is also a handy base to start a new ditribution from. At my employers, I simply make new tag files, burn CDs, and I have automatic slack installers. At home, I have created an LDAP-authenticated distribution off Slackware. Again, no headaches, no unstable libraries, no balky compilers.
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:2)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:2)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Re:Shocker! (Score:1)
P. Volkerding:
Colour me a Slack user... (Score:1)
It was a bit more work, but I knew everything going on with it. Now I am learning about RH and when things don't go smoothly it is very frustrating because I don't feel as in controll over whats installed.
Might just be that your more comfortable with what you know.
Filter
.
Historical Value (Score:1)
Re:Distribution Evolution (Score:2)
That's funny I went the opposite direction.
Patrick, if you're reading this, I hereby promise to buy a CD of every future release. And you can crash here at my house if you need to. ;-)
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
Stop it now.
Damn, PAY for it! (Score:2)
It's lack of care that is killing the soft. You don't care for the future. You don't plan. You don't see. You are a selfish boom waiting for the next piece of soft. If any one is killing the soft then it is 90% of you people for being too lame to help.
Linux was a movement. It was born of hundreds of thousands helping each other. So it progressed with no big needs for cash exchanges. It was a pure barter market. Today this movement was caught by corporations and millions of users. Corporations expect to make money, users expect that someone offers them the next "hot" product. That is how the movement was transvestited. Today Linux is an hybrid between its originality and the "classical" market. So it is dying due to its internal contradictions. And no one is caring to help. No one cares to suit the old and new conditions. No one is beating his head to find general mechanisms to save the system.
Is there anyone that will make the next chapter of the "Cathedral & The Bazaar"? Better to write it soon or the computer market will turn into eXPired cans...
Re:So who is using Slackware? ME TOO (Score:1)
I've got it running on my Vaio SuperSlim at home.
Where can I send a check to Patrick?
domc
Re:This just shows. (Score:1)
Linux does not exist for corporations to make money off of. If corporations do make money off Linux, then all the better, but Linux's primary focus has never been and never will be (I hope not, anyway) making money for corporations. The aim of Linux is to be a free-as-in-speech kernel. If a Linux company wants to do the things you describe, but says to itself "Damn GPL, how am I supposed to make money?" then maybe they are in the wrong business. And even if all the Linux companies fail and the only people left using Linux are your so-called "hobbyists," and the only way to get device drivers for new devices into the kernel is to either sign non-disclosure agreements which would violate the GPL or to bust out the logic probe and reverse engineer the driver, then someone who likes that hardware stuff and believes in freedom of information will write that driver and Linux will live on.
I hate to tell you this, but there's more to life than money. Sorry.
Dysprosium
P.S. Sorry for the run-on sentences, but I'm trying to make a point.
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:1)
Well, I don't think that's a valid assessment at all. Looking through the -current tree (last updated on Sunday evening), we've got X-4.0.3, gcc-2.95.3, the 2.2.19 kernel, Apache-1.3.19, Perl-5.6.1, Bash-2.05, and glibc-2.2.2... not to mention the piles of other programs that have recieved updates. Slackware 7.2 will probably be the most current distribution around when it is released.
Just because you don't hear about the updates everywhere doesn't mean they aren't getting done. The ChangeLog is your friend for things like this.
Re:Slackware PayPal Account (Score:2)
So basically, I cannot really do anything on Slashdot to prove that the account really goes to the distribution. I can tell you that Patrick himself set it up, after quite a lengthy email exchange with the rest of us. All I can do is give you my word that it's legit. If you'd like to email me privately to discuss this, feel free.
Slackware PayPal Account (Score:5)
So if you're looking for a way to help us out, this is a good opportunity. Of course, buying the next release would also be helpful. But for those of you that download it or are just feeling generous, here's your chance. Thanks.
afraid for FreeBSD (Score:1)
They will use and take advantage of FreeBSD because of it's license. It bothers me that all the hard work that went into FreeBSD is going to be gobbled up by some M$-like company. If freeBSD goes into that trap I won't be able to handle the loss of Slackware as well. That's way to many blows.
I believe Slackware is better off without them. I always felt they were held back. It's like what another poster said we may have just witnessed the demise of one of linux's most classic and bloatfree distro or a whole new era of slackware.
This is an excellent opportunity right now for a company to take it over. They'll immediately get their hands on one of the most popular linux distros.
Simplicity is divine. Goodluck Slackware!
Re:News for Nerds: Slashdot staff to seek new jobs (Score:1)
Before I get flamed for the preceding sentiment, I have to say that was one of the funniest jokes I've seen this month.
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Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Actually, I started with Slackware in 1997 or thereabouts, because the Linux-Installation HOWTO, or whatever document I found at the time, had step-by-step instructions that were Slackware specific.
I've tried all the others, but nothing beats Slackware's DIY mentality.
Slackware is the Ramones of Linux distros -- it ain't complex, and it ain't pretty, but it works for me.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
I would just like to say that anybody who claims Slackware Linux is "irrelavant", only used by 7 people in the world, or that it "sucks" is blind to the awesome power and beauty that is Slack.
The Red Hat users will never understand that editing a easy to find config file to turn on the BIND is better than having some 31337 h@X0r script kiddie root your box because you didn't even know you were running BIND and don't have patchlevel 8.1-pre1-alpha4-test7-ac3 or something. They will also never comprehend why anyone would want to run Linux without X windows, because anything useful must have a GUI, right?
The Debian users will never understand that computers with 8 megs of RAM *are* useful. They will also be stuck with shitty installer that craps out early in the install where only later do you realize that the messup was fatal (my experience). It will also be nigh impossible to download ISOs or make a pseudo-image, because the listfiles, MD5 sums, and packages will always be in separate FTP/HTTP sites. Only two of the sites will have the files you need, the third will carry the last part only when Debian has issued 2 more releases past the one you want, because they rushed and botched the job (See Debian 2.2R2). The ISOs are never to be found because rabid Debian followers would download them like crazy.
(ok, I'm just poking fun here on these last two...)
The Mandrake users will belive that computers that don't support a 256 color framebuffer aren't worth installing Linux on.
The SuSe users will trash hard drives under 4 gig, because there's no way you can install 6 disks of every Linux app on the planet on something like that.
Slackware is the ultimate Linux distro from which all others merely add crap on to. It is the height of configurabilty. What other distro will let you NOT INSTALL binutils (things like 'ls' and 'cat') so you can cram a complete DNS server or router into a RAM disk. I will probably never run another distro (save maybe Debian if they clean up their act). Slackware lets me count the buttons on the shirts of all my software just like I used to do in DOS. I can cut out whatever crap that I don't need and reclaim my disk space or speed. Trying that in Red Hat will probably end up breaking some obscure tool that you need 2 months later.
The percentage of people using Slackware may be low, but this does not diminish its usefulness. If you ever find yourself bitching and moaning about Your Favorite Distro, it's almost a guarantee that somebody can come up and say:
"Oh, well, Slackware does that just fine..."
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
I'm thinking the Slackware, FreeBSD and freesoftware guys should all band together and take their stuff with them. You know, bring Walnut Creek back...
Re:This just shows. (Score:2)
RedHat has contracts totalling billions of dollars. Does that sound like a poor revenue source? If Linux companies fail, it's either because they were depending too much on the stock bubble, or their business simply failed.
Remember - these are ALL startups, and four out of five startups fail. Shall we recite the past of failed (died or merged) computer companies that had their moment of glory? Digital, Tandy, Cray, and many many more.
every linux company (even media-based ones, like VA Linux and OSDN) is facing bankrupcy in the near future.
I don't see VA Linux doing *anything* media-based (yes, many of their subsideraries and side-projects are)... they sell hardware and clustering solutions. Period. And other than their stock tanking, I don't see anything that says that they are going to go bankrupt. If their business plan is *based* on the income from their stock, they are going to have to rewrite (okay, they will have had to rewrite it awhile back), or their going bankrupt is a function of poor business practices.
-blink- -blink- And what the hell does this have to do with Slackware?
I'm just pissed because they stopped printing Dobbsheads on the CD-ROMs. Bastards. They turn their back on the great salesman, and they lose karma (the mystic kind, not the CowboyNeal kind). Gee... I wonder why?
Praise Bob! [subgenius.com]
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Evan
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:1)
I suppose that my problem is that all I want from packages is an install and uninstall button, which is just what you get with slack paks! I'll keep up with the dependencies by reading the instructions, just like I should!
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Re:That 2.4 kernel (Score:1)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Me Too!
</slashdot>
Seriously, it's my favorite distro. Hands down.
What do I do, when it seems I relate to Judas more than You?
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
running Oracle) and 2 workstations (one a laptop).
Rock-solid stable, and elegant in its simplicity.
It doesn't try to do everything for you, and
that's a definite plus if you want/need to know
what's going on in your system and want to make
your own choices.
Re:uptime is a fallacy (Score:2)
Bunk is Bunk (Score:2)
Industries can and do make money on services alone. What do you think Health Care is?
The information about how your body works and how to fix it are publicly available. Physicians make their money because they offer a service - they keep up with modern medicine and recommend healthy courses of action for you - based upon a price. If you have the time to do your own research (which most people don't), then you can figure out what is wrong with you and what you need to do about it. Health Care is a service industry, and it does quite fine.
Don't argue that the little bit of hardware used by most physicians eliminates them from the service industry. Overall, it is a minor portion of their duties.
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:2)
Zetetic
Seeking; proceeding by inquiry.
Elench
A specious but fallacious argument; a sophism.
Re:This just shows. (Score:2)
Re:This just shows your ignorance. (Score:2)
Screw MS they are just another corporation. They hire PR firms and advertising agencies to tell the entire world what a bunch of swell people they are and how their servers never crash and how their products play nice with others (all lies of course). But if I tell the truth then I am "bashing" them. Well they are lucky I am not a billionaire and I can't afford PR firms because then the truth would be broadcast on the airwaves.
Nike does not need my help making sneakers (they have 14 year old girls for that), Miller does not need my help to make their crappy beer, and MS does not need my help to write their crappy software.
What kind of moron advocates that we help corporations make their products for free? Why don't you go to Ford and mop their floors or paint their body panels for free? I am sure they would love to fire their janitors and have you do their work.
Re:probably, but still the kernel of the idea is g (Score:1)
And yes, Gobe [gobe.com] Productive is a great "office" appl. The developers were involved with Apple's ClarisWorks and have come up with the ideal, lighter weight "works" package. It's all 90% of "office" users will ever need in an efficient, easy to use package.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
That 2.4 kernel (Score:1)
Unfortunately, my laptop doesn't. I think the video card only has 512K of RAM; I don't know, because I wasn't (and still am not) suicidal enough to throw X on there. However, I did manage to fit glibc, egcs, mysql, and apache on there... a full server in less than 200 MB of space, all running from a laptop! it's insane. I'm a walking UNIX server! : )
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Have you ever tried to run a Debian installer on a 486 laptop with 8MB of RAM? How about RedHat, or Mandrake? The greatest thing about slack is that it *works*. There's definitely still places left for Slackware - low-end machines that can't handle the latest stuff, and any machine for a user who wants to actually understand Linux, not just use it. Slack taught me a lot about UNIX in general, and I'm going to definitely support whatever Pat does with it.
Re:Or not. (Score:5)
Did you mention a real upgrade system [slackware.com] with dependency checking [slackware.com]?
Open mouth, insert foot?
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
As mentioned in one of the replies, Slackware is indeed the least "fix after all" prone, and one always knows what and where the configuration files are... And yes, my experience with other distros been quite the opposite, which is that trying to tweak/secure distros like RedHat, SuSe and Debian can cause major frustration....
Re:This just shows. (Score:1)
drop like flies.
However, you're right about the fact that Linux developers need to start thinking heavily about the GPL. I'm as much in favor of free information as the next guy, but licenses like BSD allow for much more flexibility when dealing with those who want to make money. Encumbering code with the GPL makes corporations run away from it, which no doubt is why BSD is Wind River's license of choice.
Let the religious war commence.
-t
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:1)
So you rather not have the help of non-American, like myself?
Internet and nationalism doesn't mix well I guess. Sorry for the rant, but this is just the kind of "we are the world"-ies that make me want to throw up.
Don't try to bend this sig. That's impossible...
Re:afraid for FreeBSD (Score:2)
Secondly, the work hasn't been gobbled up. As one of the many people who have actually put time and work into FreeBSD, I can tell you that it won't bother me in the slightest to have Wind River use my work. And FreeBSD was not sold, it will still be available, and it really isn't major news to the FreeBSD world- a few FreeBSD developers (including some major developers) have new employers, but that's about it.
I *think* this is a troll... (Score:1)
This isn't a completely obvious troll because many people still believe that FDR saved America from the great depression through The New Deal (though it's now generally agreed that only World War II really turned things around-- look it up [loc.gov] if you don't believe me).
That said, the overall feels seems to appeal to emotions (Do the right thing, Be American, etc.) so I'll label it a troll. Respond accordingly...
-Ted
So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Perhaps its time for another "What's your favorite Linux Distro?" poll. Will CowboyNeal have his own distro as well?
-Ted
But where does the money stop? (Score:2)
Yes, there's a lot of inefficiency in the beaurocracy. But it's become a difficult task to even determine which money is wasted money, and without cutting meaningless projects, well meaning studies can't get their funded.
That said, I still believe that the government funding for slackware development idea is a troll.
-Ted
Re:YABT? (Score:1)
Re:Or not. (Score:2)
One really nice thing about Slack - when I learn how to do something (say, setup sound), I can do it on any other linux box. Sure, the packaging system won't like it, but it'll work. That means more to me than "click here a presto! you have sound!" what about when it stops working in 10 days? Is there a "click here and presto! your sound is fixed!"
(taken from real expereince. shit does up and break in linux on pc's. cheap ass shit hardware, ya know.)
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Try with other distributions before (RedHat, SuSe,
Caldera, Mandrake...). I only find Slackware is the _BEST_!
Why?
Becoz' I find it:
1) Most customise-able distribution.
2) Most stable. (have one Slackware, running > 180 days non-stop) All my installation, reboot only for kernel update and some hardware issues...
3) Most easy to use! Becoz' it actually teach to me _HOW_ to manage it (just use 'vi').
4) No fancy (broken) UI for system maintainance. (just use 'vi')
5) It is a wonderful distribution to actually LEARN Linux (Unix)
There are of more... But these are what I like most.
GhostDancer
Re:How much does it cost? (Score:1)
Well, okay, boot and root ones maybe, but still.
*whew* (Score:2)
Of course, there are bound to be tons of "why use slackware?" posts. Well, I'll tell you why. At first, I hated it too; the first place I set it up was in my dorm room, connected to the bare internet, before they even set up the university firewall. I didn't know how to do ANYTHING. I had to scour the net just to get my vid card up so I could get out of text mode (twm! whoo hoo!).
The point is, on slackware 7.1, I can still use all those techniques to get the distro up and running 5 years later! I learned slackware well and my knowledge still applies. Of course there are new packages now, like KDE and GNOME, and I don't mind learning new stuff. But i DO really like that all the stuff I learned then, still applies on newer and more powerful systems.
I prefer this to redhat because, although it came closer to running out of the box, it didn't quite, and I never did get my soundcard working with redhat 6. Not to mention slackware is one of the better systems on which to compile and install your own kernel; I tried it with redhat and it just broke EVERYTHING. I got frustrated and switched back.
This is starting to sound like a guy whining about liking it the way things were "back in the day," and I guess to an extent it is. I don't know that i'd recommend slackware to a new user. But it's my personal favorite, and it's still really powerful and stable as hell.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Re:Tax rural US to build toys for urban US (Score:1)
Your argument has a point. But its a democracy, which by nature, can't make everyone happy. My solution would be a dissolution of the nation into small representative democracies. Bumpkin Idaho doesn't want New York, and clearly, New York doesn't want Bumpkin Idaho. Just call it quits and have everyone agree to secede peacefully from one-another. Its grossly unmanageble as it stands.
Bush, War on Drugs, "you know... for kids!", Tax free Religious organizations my ass.
-Daniel
Re:Tax rural US to build toys for urban US (Score:1)
I'm not talking about the nuclear anihilation of Bumpkin Idaho... (is there such a place?) I'm talking about the right to self-determination. Their own laws fit for their own customs and ideal, NYC for NYC and Bumpkin for Bumpkin. Clearly, if now Bumpkin is selling food, and NYC is buying food there's no reason being seperate nations would upset the ballance. Is your pen made in China, your clothes in Mexico or Italy, and your hard-drive fabbed in Japan?
On the other hand I'm sure NYC is not Bumpkin's most important consumer, nor is Bumpkin NYC's (a sea port) only food source.
-Daniel
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
Regardless, $500 million is nothing in respects to the cost of one new plane, fueling/arming an existing miliary training excercise or test, or the cost of a single use offensive weapon. Personally I'm surprised with the limitless military budget that more /research/ hasn't been done in energy/cost efficiency that might have trickled down by now to better electric vehicles or the like for the people.
BTW, Patriotism and nationalism are entirely misplaced sentiments. We should be concentrating on what can be done for the greater humanity rather than attempting to appease conservatives with boldly colored fabrics.
-Daniel
Or not. (Score:5)
And maybe Slackware will slowly slide further into irrelevancy because it turns out that sophisticated packaging systems, installers, and the ability to upgrade from one release to the next are all things that people actually want.
Goodbye, karma... (flinches)
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Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:1)
Source RPMs are nice because you can configure them different options and then build an RPM.
Then RPM keeps track of the files so you can un-install them later.
I would be interested if someone could explain how the other (non-RPM) packagers keep track of
files installed by "make install".
Re:Slackware PayPal Account (Score:2)
kickin' science like no one else can,
my dick is twice as long as my attention span.
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
Isn't it our government that would already like to peek into our computers using systems like Carnivore?
Hey Uncle Sam! We know that you have lied, cheated, stolen and murdered in order to advance the corrupt ideals of a small percentage of high-profiled people! Since you know exactly nothing about creating operating systems, and since we trust you implicitly with our computers and private information, would you be responsible for helping us create an operating system, using our tax dollars, so we don't have to run Windows? Please? We trust that you won't be as mindless as the Marketing and Sales droids that we're always complaining about, because Heaven knows that you are responsible enough to only create good, wholesome programs for people that don't help line anyone's pocket.
No thanks. I'll take what I've got over that kind of control any day.
--SC
probably, but still the kernel of the idea is good (Score:2)
yes, or somebody trying to be funny
Still, the basic idea striped of trollness and hyperbole does have merit. Linux is something a lot of agencies and schools and whatnot feeling a budget pinch could use (not with the students or teachers directly perhaps but certainly to replace expensive NT or Novell servers, expensive both as software cost and because you aren't going to get the dusty 486 in the corner to run NT). Furthering the development of linux (say Slack for the sake of the arguement, Mr. Volkerding is an American and Slack is a good baseline "serverish" linux distro that any Unix oldschooler that a school district or agency had would feel comfy with) would be extremely cheap compared to most of the things our government does. Arbitrarily setting the "Slack Development" budget at $1,000,000 a year, that's 1/16th what we pay for the helium fund (I think the helium fund was 16million/year. May be 30 mil.)
Heck, triple that and pay folks to develop software on linux to meet agency needs, like educational software perhaps, or tools for a farm agency, or a slick admin interface that's really foolproof so even an elementary school teacher could admin a Slack box powering the classroom network most of the time without having to call the school admin. And since the OS and the developed apps are open source, every agency could benefit (unlike buying commercial ware for one agency in need at time X). 3million equates to less than a penny per person in the US per year.
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News for geeks in Austin: www.geekaustin.org [geekaustin.org]
Re:Slackware PayPal Account (Score:2)
Dude, call or email CmdrTaco or somebody at slashdot and have them make this a front page story. Definitely news for nerds and stuff that matters. Plus you'll probably get about 90 bajillion donations that way. :-) (I'd donate right now but I'm a poor college student (really, I have $3.41 in my bank account right now). When I get a job in a few weeks I will though.)
I'd hate to see Slackware take it on the chin. It was the first linux distro I tried (Slack96! w00w00!), and the one I keep coming back to (every now and again I've dallied with debian and redhat, but I miss the simplicity and purity of design that seems to be the characteristic of Slack).
If Slackware doesn't have it's own category/icon, a picture of Bob would be cool... ;-)
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News for geeks in Austin: www.geekaustin.org [geekaustin.org]
This just shows. (Score:4)
Okay, I'm going to throw this out there, and I know that there will be some pretty strong opposition to it, but I ask you, just hear me out...
I believe that if any of these young, innovative, linux-based companies are to survive, one very important thing has to happen:
Linux has to go Closed-Source.
Now don't get angry, this is just the truth. We need Linus and the kernel developers to seriously take into consideration a major license shift. Of course it couldn't possibly happen overnight, but if there isn't some type of intellectual property control for Linux by the 2.6 kernel, than you can pretty much kiss it goodbye.
Now, I know there will be those of you who argue "But Linux will never go away, since it's Open Source, hobbiest can keep it alive." Well, that's true in a sense, but in the event that all the major Linux distros go under, how quickly do you think all other device manufacturers and software companies would quickly forgot that Linux even existed? Sure, Linux would probably live on, and it could live on forever, provided that the hardware these "hobbyists" have it installed on now lasts forever.
Closed-source allows us to use the world's various copyright laws to our advantage. Siddenly, instead of having to charge a fee for updates and services, Redhat and the like can just charge for Linux itself. Heck, since so many of the developers are volenteers, you're looking at a wide enough profit margin to charge much less than M$.
That's another thing, with a closed-source license, and better control of the kernel, Linux could finally defeat those arguments M$ brings about it "possibly mutating" and "not having reliable corporations behind it". Linus, being the copyright holder, could maintain a much stricter control over the kernel, and with the distro providers making money, it's a win-win situation.
I know the idea of this isn't something people want to think of. Still, the bubble has burst, and every linux company (even media-based ones, like VA Linux and OSDN) is facing bankrupcy in the near future. The previous versions of Linux could always stay GPL'd, and they would remain for the hobbyists and those who just must have free software. The Linux of the future must protect itself with the security of intelectual property law, though, or else we might as well all pack up and leave right now...
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Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
If I, a relative Linux newbie, could download software, compile it, manage and upgrade packages, etc. etc. etc., then Slack's reputation as hard to use must be way out of date. The recent releases are a walk in the park.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Go away.
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
Tell me what makes you so afraid
Of all those people you say you hate
Re:Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
Tell me what makes you so afraid
Of all those people you say you hate
Is this a hoax? (Score:2)
Now I am not trying to say that I think this is fake. I just won't believe it until it is posted somewhere where I can be sure only Patrick could have put it up.
Re:So who is using Slackware? (Score:2)
Personally, I prefer a nice, tight basic system where I can add software as I need and where I want.
Recently a friend at work re-introduced me to Slackware (7.1) and what a difference a few years of UNIX experience makes! I threw it on a laptop at work and tweaked it to hell and back:
All in all, a very enjoyable experience.
Now I'm still tempted by *BSD, but at least I know there is one Linux distro that exemplifies elegance and simplicity with all the kick-ass power of Linux. I usually donate an extra $50 or so everytime I buy a new version of OpenBSD...maybe this year I'll give to Theo AND Patrick...
Kingstrum
Slackware should be a Federal Public Project (Score:2)
In the 1930s, Roosevelt spearheaded federal subsidies for the arts and sciences, and the postwar economic booms can be directly traced to these government programs. Though some of the very best (such as the Federal Theatre Project) were slashed in bouts of partisan bickering, the system as a whole benefitted greatly from FDR's vision and the Federal purse.
Free software is ideal because it doesn't belong to any single individual. It's a golden drop of communism that can be realized in our time and under our terms. With true Federal subsidies and ownership, we wouldn't have to worry about whether WindRiver will keep the project going or whoever buys them out next. (Whether that would be an antitrust concern is a different matter entirely.)
Each one of us would be able to run a truly American operating system emblazoned with the American flag flying in the wind and symbolizing freedom and liberty. We would call it "AmericanX", a play both on the words "American" and more specifically on "Americana", which the system would be a hallmark example of in all its glory.
It's time to look past the lost battles of yesterday. Distribution wars are a thing of the past. We can either continue hating Microsoft and try punishing them through the court system, which we can't seem to do without violating their rights or each other's, or we can just do the right thing and make a public operating system a reality. If Microsoft wants to compete with AmericanX, then they can do so, just as the private schools compete with public schools.
The answer is clearly more government. We need to show the rest of the world that America still has what it takes to lead into this next millennium. For about $500million in annual fiscal expenses, we could pull it off. I don't think that's too much to ask.
If Slackware does go away... (Score:2)