The OS Community Embraces IBM 305
Joel Dutt writes "IBM... 'the corporation known as Big Blue has seen its reputation in the global open-source community shift from suspect sugar daddy to knight in shining armor.' Newsweek has an interesting article in its latest issue, discussing the relationship between the open-source community and the corporate giant."
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:5, Insightful)
There isn't a problem. It's more of an "odd couple" pairing sort of thing.
Where's the conflict? (Score:4, Insightful)
What would Ayn Rand [aynrand.org] have against Linux? Linux isn't communism.
Open source is either a hobby or a different business model -- and that includes the GPL. Programmers contribute to open source or free software for a number of reasons. Sometimes it's to acquire status (i.e. make business connections); sometimes it is to develop a product and establish themselves as experts in that product, which will then make it easy to position themselves as consultants; and sometimes it is merely for the joy of working on something cutting edge with a group of other intelligent, motivated people.
What in the above is anti-capitalistic?
The phenomenon that is open source or free software merely illustrates that there are a lot of talented, motivated, and ambitious individuals in programming. Additionally, it arises from the fact that software is difficult to design. A small shop or lone consultant could not design meaningful, robust software (barring very few exceptions). Open source is a way for small entrepreneurs to strike out on their own.
Sure, there are "hippies" in open source -- but so what? A capitalistic society makes room for free software as it does "free love."
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:4, Funny)
Not to mention heavy as hell
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2)
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2, Insightful)
AIX. BTW, we have a large AIX server in our test lab, and I told the IBM guy that years ago IBM was "the Evil Empire" but I thought they were redeeming themselves by supporting Linux. I think he thought I was a nutcase. He may be right, in any case.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:4, Interesting)
You should try some of us history dorks.
<quote
IBM and the Holocaust [ibmandtheholocaust.com] is the stunning story of IBM's strategic alliance with Nazi Germany -- beginning in 1933 in the first weeks that Hitler came to power and continuing well into World War II. As the Third Reich embarked upon its plan of conquest and genocide, IBM and its subsidiaries helped create enabling technologies, step-by-step, from the identification and cataloging programs of the 1930s to the selections of the 1940s.
</quote
The book is a treatise on why we should be concerned with electronic privacy and data retention. You might trust your current government but who's going to be reading *your* census forms in 50 years.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:5, Informative)
as for pencil/paper accounting, yes, it can and was done. keep in mind german fanaticalness regarding order. it was possible also because most of the prisoners went into ghettos, then later, to a final camp. (sorry to be so objective and analytical). the records were kept at each place. the germans checked in and checked out everyone who came and went. it wasn't like they let them leave or anything. now, did the nazis use ibm adding machines and stuff. hell, at that time, who wasn't?
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2, Insightful)
The Romans didn't seem to have a problem with it. Nor did the Yanks in the American South.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:4, Insightful)
Computerization was never the prerequisite for effieciency. It facilitates it but, unfortunately, hatred and ignorance have no boundaries.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2)
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:4, Insightful)
This inversion means that IBM likes to vend their hardware and software in order to make a lot more money on the upsell of services in the guise of business integration.
Now I know this can be perceived negatively, but Linux, from IBM's point of view, is a product that is offered for free, without any tier 1 service provider to make an upsell.
Their existing marketing still relies on the adage that 'no one ever got fired for going with IBM.' And it's worked well against other Tier 1 vendors, let alone smaller shops.
Now, they've got an open playing field by using free software, with free updates, and they get to profit from it for literally nothing.
This is a bargain as even their in-house products require money to be invested for support and development, let alone production and packaging.
The bottom line is as long as IBM can make $$$ from linux without any real competition they will stand behind Linux, and it looks like this situation will be a mutually beneficial one for a while.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:3, Interesting)
So the move to support Linux implies that IBM sees more service revenue coming from the Linux model. If so, and assuming that IBM wishes to maximize revenue, does this mean that Linux sales represent more volume, and/or does IBM see Linux as requiring more service than its other
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:3, Informative)
IBM aren't making any money on linux (Score:2)
What their contributions have done, is make selling linux servers a credible option for their competitors HP, dell and even Sun.
Their Linux strategy does not seem to be harming IBM terribly either, (not as much as for example apache tomcat seems to be harming websphere) so is their current support for Linux a public relations investment? Or perhaps it was meant to prevent the not entirely unrealistic scenario of a
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2)
Rubicon of Open Source: IBM Supporting Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
The rest is open-source history.
Interestingly, IBM's embracing Linux is one of the factors eliminating Sun as a viable competitor in the market for highend servers. 6-sigma Linux, backed by an army of free programmers and advice-givers, versus closed proprietary Solaris is tantamount to a battle between a F-22 (stealth fighter) and a Mig 17. No contest.
PS parts Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:2)
I managed to hack the computer to use another monitor and pulled the customers data off of it and put it all in a nice clone.
It's been nearly 20 years since that time and on
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:5, Interesting)
I disagree. Way back in the early 80's when I was graduating from college, IBM was thought of by the "smart" tech crowd in VERY much the same way as Microsoft is thought of today. If there were a slashdot crowd in 1981, they would have bashed IBM left and right for monopolistic behaviors.
The geeks were enthusiastic about Dec, HP, and later Sun.
I remember my college interview with IBM. Our college had a bidding system to land the coveted job interviews with the campus recruiters. MANY Seniors bid ALL their points for the year to get an interview with IBM. (I wouldn't necessarily call these people the "smart" crowd.)
I scooped up an interview slot for no bid-points when there was an interview candidate who didn't show. Even though I had deep-seated negative feelings toward Big Blue, I knew it could be a great job out of school. Toward the beginning of the interview, I asked the guy about the position he was interviewing for. "Oh, there's no position available. We just do these interviews for the P.R." I ended the interview, politely telling him what I thought of that! No sense in wasting my time. The 25 students that wasted all their interview bid points were furious when I walked out and told them!
Of course, I got a "ding letter" a couple weeks later.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't forget, IBM was the MSFT of the 1980's in so many ways.
Re:I swear I'm not trolling, but (Score:4, Insightful)
Since then however IBM have found much better ways to stay in business, one of them is by being a good IT global citizen. Simply selling products in growing fields, rather than trying to use the american justice system to stamp out a new innovation & a new way of thinking.
By using the american justice system to get what you want (rather than competing for it) will only foster the growth in countries outside of the USA, and ultimately put USA behind these other countries. (An example is RIAA vs P2P, imagine what would happen if the RIAA got their way.)
IBM... (Score:4, Funny)
9. Idiots Become Managers
8. Idiots Buy More
7. Impossible to Buy Machine
6. Incredibly Big Machine
5. Industry's Biggest Mistake
4. International Brotherhood of Mercenaries
3. It Boggles the Mind
2. It's Better Manually
1. Itty-Bitty Monopoly
Re:IBM... (Score:2, Funny)
How could you forget? (Score:2, Funny)
And of course for you Linux phans...
* It Beats Microsoft
Re:IBM... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:IBM... (Score:2)
IBM's Poughkeepsie site is just down the road from the Marist campus.
Fighting evil everyday... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fighting evil everyday... (Score:4, Funny)
</joke>
Re:Fighting evil everyday... (Score:2)
the evil SCOmonsters that try and terrorize the city everyday.
You mean, SCOzilla? :-P
Worst article in a long time (Score:3, Interesting)
The original article claims that SCO was formerly Santa Cruz Operation, that its stock was delisted from the NASDAQ, and other amusing mistakes. It almost seems like an ill-informed attempt to bash Microsoft, which is truly odd because they are a partly owned subsidiary....
Indeed MSNBC has tended to be far more interested in Linux than the rest of the press. Mayb
Not to be a troll (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:2, Insightful)
And if something unforeseeable happens and open source for some reason couldn't be a potential of money, well it is open, and they could just change the source so that it was a potential for money. Obviously the base is good, and from here on out they can control their own destiny with it, just like every open source programmer out there.
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course they are a company, with shareholders and the the desire to make a profit. So are Red Hat, VA Linux, and Mandrake.
There is nothing wrong with a company supporting Linux, that's exactly what Linux needs to bring it to the attention of the general public. IBM has essentially been advertising Linux for a while now. They've put more money into Linux than pretty much anyone else has. This is what Linux has lacked: big money supporting Linux.
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:5, Insightful)
Everywhere else, the press hacks mention IBM's billions of dollars in Linux-related revenue, but they don't mention that an IT staffer told to buy Windoze servers from either HP or IBM might inexplicably favor IBM because they're a Groklaw reader.
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:3)
good post, thanks
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:2, Informative)
I think they're more likely to oppose HP because of their history of _not_ supporting linux printer drivers, _not_ having most laptops work with Linux, and _not_ supporting Bruce Perens.
Eric Raymond words it better than I so I'll quote what he told carly: [newsforge.com]
"You've talked the talk. Now, can you walk the walk?"...
He criticized HP for holding on to the source code for its printer drivers, and fo
Re:Not to be a troll (Score:3, Informative)
That said, HP printers have always WorkedForMe (and for linuxprinting [linuxprinting.org]
Fits IBM's plans nicely. (Score:3, Insightful)
My impression of IBM is that they would prefer not to be in the operating system business. They would rather that there exist some external, highly portable, highly popular OS that they can base their systems on, and perhaps enhance when they have to. They don't seem to want to push AIX everywhere, and they certainly do not want to be at the mercy of MicroSoft (even if they helped create that monster).
And then along comes Linux.
T
Re:Fits IBM's plans nicely. (Score:3, Insightful)
My impression of IBM is that they would prefer not to be in the operating system business.
Even more, it is my impression that IBM would also be out of the software market as well, and comoditize it instead. The most profitable part of a solution is in professional services.
One of the most important things (Score:3, Insightful)
What's next, Microsoft? (Score:2)
Since I've now seen it with my own eyes, I have proof that it's possible that the next generation will astound many of you by embracing Microsoft as their hero.
It doesn't pay to get too carried away in your caricatures of heroes and villains.
You were warned....
Re:What's next, Microsoft? (Score:2)
Oh yes, and I can remember when I started in the industry, at the start of the 90s, that a lot of people saw Microsoft as the "white knight" who was going to save us from big bad IBM...
They did (Score:4, Insightful)
Now we just have to do the same thing at the OS and office suite levels and...
It still seems so strange. (Score:5, Interesting)
Then Sun, when they're not against us, is with us.
Finally, Novell sees positives in what we do.
We've all shown the belief that Free software can be profitable. But seeing it in action is something entirely weird and unusual, but in a very satisfying way.
Re:It still seems so strange. (Score:2)
It isn't profitable by itself. Customers pay less to Microsoft and more to IBM (and a bit to SuSE and Red Hat) for extra services they render.
There's nothing to this - IBM replaces a generic packaged service (Microsoft's installable files) with more customized labor-intensive service (IBM's Linux services). I'm not saying Linux is same expensive or Windows is better, I'm just saying there's nothing sustainable to it.
Yeah, they are doing fine no
Re:It still seems so strange. (Score:3, Insightful)
I doubt it will ever happen. I think that there will always be applications specialised enough, and costly enough to make (like some specialist program with lots of chemical data in it), that OS volunteers would fail --- say, because they lack the laboratory equipment necessary --- to recreate such piece of software. Of course, separating free software from proprietary data needed to run that software (like with quake clients --- free --- and ID
Re:It still seems so strange. (Score:3, Insightful)
You're not making any sense. You seem to be saying customers will abandon IBM for cheaper support. Well, that depends entirely on how good IBM's support is doesn't it?
IBM is a *services* company, that
Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:2, Insightful)
We learned:
a) Open Source People think SCO is evil
b) IBM sells hardware and support
c) SCO is going after IBM
d) Absolutly Nothing
So can we somehow mo
Re:Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't see anything really "interesting" about the article other than the fact it is in Newsweek.
The fact that the story has reached a major mainstream press outlet means that the stock market will now take notice of what they have seemingly been unaware of this whole time while investing in SCO. I know MS is allegedly behind SCO financially, but the mainstream non-techie stock market traders probably didn't have a clue and thought SCO was just another stock market investment. This article will make th
Re:Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:2)
Thinking back, I probably would have thought about the article a bit differently had there been some comment attached mentioning the stock ramifications.
It will be very interesting to see the stock ramifications now that this article has been published. I presume it is in the print version of Newsweek as well and not just on the web.
Re:Nothing to see here, move along... (Score:2)
1. Slashdot is the official mountpiece of OSDN and must act as such
2. Since 50% of stories are crap, they can't allow moderation of stories because that would cause significant negative publicity
P.S. I can't believe this - I created "michael filter" not to see any of his bullshit trol/FUD postings and this one still got displayed.
IBM has something to gain though. (Score:4, Insightful)
The enemy of my enemy (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux and IBM, strange bedfellows indeed. IBM is every bit the big, evil, monopolist corporation that RMS and the rest of the Linux zealots rail against. IIRC, IBM, too, is a "convicted monopolist" just as M$ is and Apple tried to be. The only difference is, IBM succeeded where Apple failed - they had the hardware *and* the software lock-in. What was the saying? Oh yeah, "nobody ever got fired for buying IBM." Today, replace IBM with Microsoft. By the way, how many American jobs has IBM shipped to India or replaced with H1Bs under the pretext of a labor shortage? And how much of the same has IBM helped others do under the same pretext through their consultancy, IBM Global Services? But since they've chosen to embrace Linux because it's in their short-term self-interest to do so, all of their many sins are forgiven.
Make no mistake about it, IBM doesn't give a ripshit about "the community" or anyone/thing else other than the Almighty Dollar. The only reason they're fighting SCO is because they're heavily invested in Linux as a way to compete with Microsoft. If IBM felt that it was in their short-term best interest to wipe Linux off of the face of the Earth, they would.
Re:The enemy of my enemy (Score:2, Insightful)
You've got it right.
In spite of what the participants in this OSS-IBM fantasy lovefest would like to believe, the "enemy of my enemy"-logic works out in the long term only if you're approximately in the same league as your temporary ally.
IBM can - and will - devour open source when it prof
Re:The enemy of my enemy (Score:3, Interesting)
In spite of what the participants in this OSS-IBM fantasy lovefest would like to believe, the "enemy of my enemy"-logic works out in the long term only if you're approximately in the same league as your temporary ally.
Right, to do otherwise is simply to embrace your corrupter. Ask Socrates about that one.
Nevermind, they don't teach that in public schools anymore. Many, if not most, public school graduates can't read their damn diplomas, much less Plato.
To put it another way (Score:2)
Godfather fans out there will get that one.
Re:The enemy of my enemy (Score:2)
In their masturbation fantasies perhaps. The only reason IBM cares about Linux is because it's free and IBM can use it as a stick to beat Microsoft with. It's an OS they can use to make gazillions of dollars on while giving precious
Re:The enemy of my enemy (Score:5, Insightful)
You're right, but you completely miss the point.
Free software has never been about "it's free but you must pay your way by worshipping the software ideals and community", no matter how much some may with that to be true. Free software has been about "use it, but keep it free" (and sometimes, "share your changes" as well).
IBM is using free software as it has always envisioned to be used. Commercial use is not merely tolerated, but has always been a GOAL. The free software ideals want corporations to rely (and play by the rules of) free software, instead of creating their own non-free solutions for people to become dependent of.
IBM is playing by the rules - not by being forced or threatened, but in good faith to the ideals and rules of free software.
Re:The enemy of my enemy (Score:2)
Free software has never been about "it's free but you must pay your way by worshipping the software ideals and community", no matter how much some may with that to be true.
Reading /. you'd be hard pressed to think otherwise.
Actually, I think the best thing that would happen for Linux and the software industry in general is that the whole cult mentality with its "bring me the head of Darl McBride"-attitude went the way of the dodo-bird.
The people who actually make useful OSS should not have their imag
Flashbacks (Score:5, Funny)
IBM: Linus, I am your father!
(Queue Imperial March)
Re:Flashbacks (Score:2)
Yaaaaaaaaaaaeeeeeeehhhh! (Translation: All your patent belongs to me when you die after you killed emperor Ballmatine.)
Re:Flashbacks (Score:2)
Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:5, Insightful)
In my opinion, other companies (i.e. Sun) are jealous of IBM's unique position and would like nothing more than to ruin that relationship.
IBM, while not entirely faultless, has taken a huge risk in tying some of its business and marketing campaigns to the success of Linux. Even while having AIX. I wish the same could be said for Sun. Glad to see it's paying of for IBM, in the form of profits and community goodwill.
Re:Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:4, Interesting)
The Open Source community will benefit greatly from two companies vying to outdo each other in a quest for our affections by seeing who can contribute the most.
- Brian.
Re:Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:3, Insightful)
The funny thing is, this is exactly WHY the open source community respects IBM and not Sun. Rather than fixating on "how can I make Sun positive to the open source community" Schwartz is fixating on "how can I
Linux is the pretty girlfriend. (Score:3, Funny)
So Sun and IBM can hate each other, but Linux measures IBM's sincerity against his $$$
However Linux is no simple girl and really shes planning to have a kid from both, and to take both IBM and Sun away from their children from previous marriage, AIX and Solaris. This way Linux's children will inherit the fortunes from both companies.
In the end Linux is a tramp. Shes already had SGI's XFS in her, toyed with HP, and now
Re:Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:2)
On a similar vein, perhaps Sun's hubris is their pride? Perhaps Sun is more focused on screwing a competitor that they end up screwing themselves. Sun has a right to be proud; I think that they have some of the sharpest minds working for them, more so than IB
Re:Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:2)
With the exception of OpenOffice what else has Sun contributed to the open source community, not standards? And I mean full out contribute - not along the lines of shared source licenses. Any GPL stuff? JFS from IBM comes to mind, I'm sure there's a lot more. Besides patches to the linux kernel.
Re:Sun Jealousy towards IBM (Score:3, Informative)
I'll be convinced IBM contributes as much as Sun to OSS when I see that IBM has GPLed AIX like Sun will GPL Solaris...
Funny, the latest I've heard was that Sun still isn't saying [eweek.com] what license they plan to use for Solaris. Do you have a link to an article where Sun claims they will use the GPL? All I've heard from them [cnet.com] is that they want to "take the model with Java and bring it to Solaris."
Personally, as a Linux user, I'm much interested in IBM's real contributions to the Linux kernel. Their intent i
Show me the money (Score:5, Insightful)
Software is an overhead for IBM. It's a distraction from hardware and services. Open Source allows IBM to sell hardware and services without having to pay to develop the software to run on it and/or implement on behalf of customers. That's the reason, and the only reason, IBM is into Linux.
Re:Show me the money (Score:2, Informative)
Interesting: 'shrinkwrap' software is becoming a commodity, while 'custom' (integration, customer/vertical-specific software) software will remain high-margin. Services (or at least a large and profitable part of 'services') is just another name for custom software, which requires smart, creative people and provides higher margins than commodityware.
I don't think IBM will get out of the overall 'software' business anytime soon, though they will probably get out of the co
Re:Show me the money (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Show me the money (Score:2)
Re:Show me the money (Score:3, Insightful)
In other words, IBM's business model is exactly the way open source advocates want the entire industry to be. And that's a good thing. Hardware and services are things with tangible value. Software is just a bunch of
Who else to go to? (Score:5, Interesting)
HP: When we're not whoring to Microsoft, we'll be more than happy to sell Linux to our cutomsters, but then we'll go right back to our buddies in Redmond.
Dell: We are such corporatist tools that if it is remotely risky we won't touch it with less than a 10 foot pole. We'll sell a few Linux boxes, but claim the way most families claim a gay cousin.
Microsoft: I really hope no one has to explain this one to you.
IBM: Linux lets us standardize and save money. We build on Linux a little, we save tons of money, thrash our competition and make tons of money. Invest over $1B today, and we make many times more than that. Not only that, but Linux is a great stick to beat Microsoft with.
I wonder why IBM looks like such a good ally. Maybe it has to do with them seeing the growth of a robust Linux platform and community as the fastest way to them not only getting revenge, but being the preeminent IT company in the world.
No company will actually side with OSS for altruistic reasons, but it isn't hard to guage motives. IBM's motives are the most sympathetic of all of the big IT companies to Linux. IBM sees guiding Linux into the big time as the best way to become a massive force unto itself. Most other companies like to ride the fence and only occassionally flirt with Linux which is the enemy of their ally, Microsoft.
The problem with most OEMs IMO is that Microsoft is more than just a supplier to them. They don't have the business sense to see that dependence on Microsoft Windows means that they cannot act in their own interests if Microsoft makes the XBox2 essentially a real computer for John Q. Citizen. It makes them like a cheap fuck buddy, and when Microsoft is through with Dell, HP, etc they will be discarded as quickly.
The only thing I personally wish that an OEM had the foresight to do, was for Apple to give a few million dollars to the OSI with a tacit purpose of working on the OSX port of open office and general open office improvement beyond that.
Re:Who else to go to? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's because Linux is no threat and never has been one. Neither did it threaten AIX as their Unix-OS due to the many hardware specific improvements and development tools of AIX, nor did they have to kow-tow before Microsoft to sell their hardware.
Linux adds the kind of flexibilty they have tried to go after with project Monterey, with the big advantage that Linux already offers a variety of platforms that are interesting for IBM as a hardware vendor: Power-
IBM is in the service industry (Score:3, Informative)
Cheers,
GPL (Score:2)
Interesting way to mention GPL.
Even more interesting is the fact that this article's on msnbc that is owned by microsoft.
Good to see an article that doesn't take any side in particular
vested interest (Score:3, Interesting)
IBM is pushing the opposite. The OS is free and people have to pay for the hardware.
Re:vested interest (Score:2)
The way it should be. The tangibles that require substantial physical resources to manufacture are sold to us, and we own actual, tangible property. The information required to use that property is free.
Imagine if Sears gave out free tools but you had to pay a subscription to use them. I know some will take issue with this comparison, but I think it's a good one. If we let them shift the paradigm, we as consumers will lose alot of our power and r
Re:vested interest (Score:2)
Maybe someone else has the exact quote, but didn't Bill Gates say that he sees the future of computers as when people will pay for the OS (subscription of course) and the hardware will be free?
I recall seeing something on television where he was quoted as saying something like his vision was that their software would drive all computers. I think they even had a plaque of it somewhere on some MS building. I thought it was really creepy because the documentary was portraying him as some kind of hero when
Re:vested interest (Score:2)
Compared to HP (Score:3, Interesting)
Since HP killed thier Open Source strategy [newsforge.com] thanks to signing "new patent cross license with Microsoft that protects HP in the sort term", they've been nothing but a mouthpiece for MSFT fud.
Remember, HP are the guys who saw the SCO opportunity as a way of trying to scare people into paying HP more for "indemnification from SCO" than SCO was even asking for! And they had the gall to claim that this extortion fee was "support" of linux and accused IBM of not doing the same.
IBM certainly won my respect, thanks to their respect of the GPL.
IBM is not your friend (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:IBM is not your friend (Score:5, Insightful)
To be fair, you were talking to sales people. There are few sales people who don't have this kind of attitude.
Re:IBM is not your friend (Score:2)
Their Apache scores over the regular, more pedestrian work in two important respects.
First, it slightly more expensive; and secondly it has the words IBM inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover.
Typical major media take on linux (Score:4, Insightful)
"...and what the open-source community sees as a Microsoft front company bent on destroying their free paradise."
Once again, the linux community is portrayed as a bunch of geeks pinching pennies, not worried so much about free software but rather free (as in healthy beer) software.
Kudos to IBM for vision (Score:5, Insightful)
IBM realized that the software industry would change the most from the era of the Internet, unlike hardware and consulting services. A company expecting to make its bread and butter from software will be in a constant rush to stay one step ahead of thousands, if not millions, of unpaid software developers who write software for no other purpose than to have it the way they want. The Internet made it possible for those legions of volunteers to congregate internationally, as well as publicize and distribute for free.
If only other companies had the vision to look that far ahead and make the hard decisions necessary to evolve.
IBM and OSS (Score:5, Interesting)
Sugar Daddy? Knight in shining armor? (Score:2, Insightful)
Knight in shining armor
Natty
[who worked for Big Blue once upon a time
The Mainstreaming of Open Source Geekery (Score:3, Interesting)
Open-source geeks are devout in their belief that software should be free to all, and hold as their icon the Linux alternative to the Microsoft commercial empire. As unpaid volunteers who collaborate to develop open source code, they tend to be anti-corporate types.
foil my head (Score:4, Insightful)
"The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist."
- Verbal, The Usual Suspects
I beg to differ (Score:3, Interesting)
says free-software guru Eric Raymond. "Folks like me have an ingrained hatred for lawyers. But at that point hackers will lift IBM's lawyers on their shoulders."
they tend to be anti-corporate types
I would suggest that only a small number of the free software advocates are anti-corporation, anti-business, anti-everything-not-free. It may appear so when you look at Linux distros like Debian, who makes such a big deal out of the idea and purpose behind the software, but I believe that the average FLOSSer is just you're average joe. Well maybe not average...
From looking at the comments posted on slashdot, it seems that most of us are reasonable people, able to understand the benefits of an open market. The only thing is that we believe that free software can be part of this market. From TFA, you'd think we're all living in communes!
Therefore I don't find it that unbelievable that the OSS community would accept IBM as our knight. The only thing we object to is a company taking advantage of the freedoms that our software and the GPL provide. We don't hate the idea of a big company (after all, many of us get our paychecks from one!), we just don't like being abused by them.
On a slightly different tact, I would also suggest that Novell has been a strong defender, perhaps taking bigger risks than IBM. Novell is in direct competition with Microsoft, and has been so for years! And more to the point, they still pull a profit! IBM has a different focus than Microsoft, but Novell is right in the line of fire. Despite that, Novell manages to completely embrace SUSE and Ximian and turn it into a corporate backed project with a real future. Now there's a hero!
Either way, seeing the media begin to accept FLOSS as a viable business method is a good step. We've known it for years, and clearly some corporations (IBM, Novell) knew it as well. The only real hurdle left is the media and the public. When these are overcome, we'll start to see real competition between the proprietary and the open source camps.
No strong allies on the desktop (Score:2)
Careful how you think about it. (Score:2)
Lets say IBM loses against SCO (yeah, we all know better, but for the sake of arguement).... Will tying the OS community to be followers of IBM.... bring Linux down?
Sorry but FOSS is simple stronger in foundation than even the largest and longest standing of companies, for it is of people not legally created and defined enities.
Always the usual responses (Score:3, Insightful)
Every time someone mentions Company X as a FLOSS friendly, or Company Y as the evil enemy of FLOSS, the same type of responses come. Some are for, some are against, and the various reasons are listed and debates ensue ...
Think about these points:
So let us get over this bickering and know that this is happening and is going to happen for the forseable future.
Re:You have to be careful (Score:2)
When everybody gets naked and jumps in a pile, the deal will get done and you can be sure you will not be on the top.
I see that you are browsing for porn at the same time as you are reading Slashdot. :P