Open Source: Facts and Figures 199
Eloquence writes "Much of the debate about GNU/Linux and open source is dominated by rhetoric rather than facts. David Wheeler has just released a new version of his "paper" (which, at 440,000 characters, is more of an e-book now) 'Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS)? Look at the Numbers!'. According to David, this paper 'examines market share, reliability, performance, scalability, security, and total cost of ownership. It also has sections on non-quantitative issues, unnecessary fears, OSS/FS on the desktop, usage reports, other sites providing related information, and ends with some conclusions.' May come in handy when talking to your boss about Linux."
good... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes indeed... (Score:4, Insightful)
This is true. If it doesn't come in an overpriced management tome or as a summary in some slick corporate rag, not only will the PHBs not believe it, they probably will not even read it.
Re:Yes indeed... (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember it took less than a day for REAL document experts to examine and expose the nature of those documents, while it took CBS nearly two full weeks to reach the same conclusion, with a certain person NEVER really able to admit that the documents are forged.
Personally, I trust the INSTANT peer review of the Inet more than CBSNBCABCCNNFOXMSNBCNYTIMES
If your Boss is stil looking for documentation that filters through the publishing channels, then he/she is likely to miss the curve on important issues.
If they really need a paper version, then PRINT one and hand it to them. Take it to Kinkos and have them Bind it nice and Professional. Help keep your boss on the curve.
Re:Yes indeed... (Score:4, Insightful)
As for the document, this will be handy for those companies where management does prefer the hard copy. For those a bit more comfortable with technology, the online review will work.
That said, my company recently sent a message out indicating that the use of Linux is generally prohibited with only a few exceptions. This is primarily due to the legal issues surrounding IP claims in Linux. In my case, I doubt a hard/soft copy of this document will convince management to change until the legal issues are resolved.
-1 FUD on the MQR standard (Score:2)
And what legal issues might those be? Even SCO, highly motivated and with millions of dollars to spend on the task hasn't been able to come up with one single example of a
Re:-1 FUD on the MQR standard (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:-2 FUD on the MQR standard (Score:3, Insightful)
If true, you need to get better lawyers. The fact that party A has filed a suit against party B does not automatically mean that you are at risk, even if you use the product in question. Do your lawyers tell you to turn off all your lights when someone sues the a utility company somew
440,000 characters?? (Score:4, Funny)
a 400 meg document (Score:5, Funny)
I know "irony" isn't the correct word to use, but I don't feel like thinking of the right one.
To summarize: Some blowhard likes linux and wont shut up about it
Re:a 400 meg document (Score:4, Funny)
Unless each "character" is a 1k chinese pictogram image or something
Re:a 400 meg document (Score:5, Funny)
At the end of the day... (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, kudos to the wordy crowd too.
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem that a paper like this might help solve is convincing others in a corporate/government environment that there are viable alternatives. Only a couple years ago a co-op student was considering writing his paper on Linux vs. Microsoft and wanted to know if he could ask me some questions (being the only Linux guy in the office). I gave him a lot of information and some links. When he presented the idea of the paper and his initial research, the dean laughed at him. The student was told that any competent 3rd or 4th year CS student should be able to crack a Linux box.
If this kind of attitude and mis conceptions exist in University CS departments, how do you expect our managers and directors to have a realistic view of Linux and OSS in general?
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:2)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:2)
Right now it's loaded to section A.6 Forking and showing some serious slowdown... Maybe he shouldn't have posted an image of himself in the bottom corner...
Oh well.. off to RTA.
-B
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:At the end of the day... (Score:2)
feeling happy (Score:2)
I'm feeling happy about my Linux box because with Win4Lin running over it, I can run my legacy apps on a Windows environment that almost never crashes on a Linux box that stays up until I decide to shut it down.
Though I was not happy doing the work needed to get the Linux part of this box up to this point and I'm still picking out backup solutions for both my bootable clone drive (ok, I used dd once... looking at an rsync scrip
why indeed (Score:4, Informative)
why indeed. look at these numbers. i'll no doubt me modded down as a troll or something but when the linux community can make a powerful desktop thats not SLOWER than windows2k/xp then i will switch.
Windows XP: 233 MHZ 64MB min, 300 MHZ 128MB recommended
Xandros: PII 64MB min, 450 MHZ 128MB recomended
Mandrake: 64MB min, 128MB recommended
Fedora Core: PI 192MB min, 400 MHZ 256MB recommended
SUSE: 128MB min, 256MB recommended
Sun Java System: 266 MHZ 128MB min, 600 MHZ 256MB recommended
Turbolinux 10F: 1GHZ 512MB recommended
Linspire: 128MB min, 800 MHz 256MB recommended
Re:why indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
Most software I've seen on Windows severely underestimates "recommended", and I'm assuming Windows itself does the same.
Re:why indeed (Score:5, Interesting)
XP was workable; it didn't break any speed records, but it was OK to work with.
Debian was workable only after I kicked KDE off the hard drive and went for an slim X setup with Ion [cs.tut.fi] as window manager. With Ion it was working OK, as long as I refrained from using Qt and GTK applications at the same time. But then, I wouldn't want to force Ion on an inexperienced user.
Re:why indeed (Score:2)
This is KDE 3.2 though, so it may be better optimized than whatever version you were running.
I still find Linux to be much less of a memory hog than Windows, and much more graceful in recovering if I ever force anything to swap. You have to restart Windows to get performance back after you hit the swap file.
Re:why indeed (Score:5, Informative)
You can get a 2.4GHz machine for $350 Dell [dell.com]
Who cares if it runs on 1997 hardware? I want it to run well on todays hardware.
Re:why indeed (Score:3, Insightful)
And anyway, I have three 500Mhz machines sitting around. They would all make a perfectly usable desktop under Li
Re:why indeed (Score:4, Interesting)
In any case, I've found that lately, most Linux distros (with GUI) to require the same or greater resources to have a similar experience to Windows (not waiting for redraws and such). This didn't used to be the case. 100% of my job is developing on Linux and has been for a year now and my Linux roots go back to pre-1.0 kernel days so I've played around with it a bit.
Re:why indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
I run KDE on a laptop with a 800mhz duron, 128MB ram and a crappy 8MB "shared memory" vid card. It works fine. Never slow, sluggish or frustrating. Slackware, btw...
Even when going from my P4 WinXP work machine back to the said laptop, it's ok.
Re:why indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
it seems that to get a linux desktop as fast i have to dump the whole advanced uis and switch to really barebones stuff like fluxbox, and then run dillo or something. that says a lot. why cant a linux desktop be as powerful as windows without being a lot slower and memory hogging??
oh and try out windows server 2003, it runs fine as a desktop and is faster t
Re:why indeed (Score:3, Insightful)
let FF sit as close to the OS as IE and then compare. But wait, we don't want our apps that close to the OS because it's a bad idea.
I'll trade good ideas for a 2 second startup cost.
Re:why indeed (Score:2)
The community has already done that, many many years ago. The problem is, the distributions all insist on shipping the bloated GNOME or KDE desktops instead of something that runs at a sensible speed.
Re:why indeed (Score:2)
Linux distributors just are more honest about minimum specs, precisely because they know they get blasted by the critics if Linux is perceived to be slow.
Just try running XP on its recommended spec, and you will find out that that 300Mhz, 128MB is actually its minimum spec. What Microsoft specifies as minimum is "it boots, that's all".
Anecdotal evidence: if my laptop (an HP Omnibook 6100) throttles down to 730Mhz to conserve battery, it still runs snappily when running multiple user programs, including su
Re:why indeed (Score:2)
I'm currently running Red Hat (not the latest, but only a couple of years old) on a 120MHz (I think) with about 78MB of RAM at home, and while it's slow, it is almost usable and suprisingly stable. I wouldn't consider running even NT4 on it. (Assuming I had a copy. Which I wouldn't.)
No usability or features? (Score:5, Insightful)
Cant help but notice that usability and features aren't listed. There's a reason I still use Photoshop. Its features and ease of use make it worth the price.
Re:No usability or features? (Score:5, Interesting)
=Smidge=
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2, Insightful)
In my opinion TCO is also subjective.
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2)
Foo Inc., has X stations running system Y which cost me $z a year to maintain. Foo Inc. changes to system B, which now costs $c a year to maintain.
Ignoring the cost of the changeover (Since that is NOT indicitive of the TCO, although it should definately be considered by any company thinking about switching...), you can then compare $z to $c and determine how you made out.
And/or you then compare that company with other companies of similar size running either the same or a different system, and see
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2)
Re:No usability or features? (Score:3, Insightful)
Features is slightly more relevant. But what these things both point to is there isn't something exactly like Photoshop that runs natively in Linux.
For some people it's a trade up. For you it may not be.
If you are productive and familiar with a piece of software and can live with the drawbacks that it or the OS it's running on might bring al
Re:No usability or features? (Score:3, Insightful)
CEOs and CIOs don't care about usability beyond 'can we use it to do our jobs?' The other points the paper does cover answer that question.
What tools to use has a personal impact. It doesn't necessarily support the work being performed cross the company. (Photoshop, while not OSS, does run under Linux with Wine -- if not perfectly.) [codeweavers.com]
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2)
As I'm not a Photoshop nut, I have no idea what the differences are between Photoshop under Windows and Photoshop under Linux + Wine.
If he's like some of the Disney anamators, the rest of his tools might be on Linux...so why have a whole other computer or a VM just for 1 program?
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2)
OK. Sounds reasonable.
Am I missing something?
Re:No usability or features? (Score:2)
You the developer may not like having to do it one way but from a managers perspective whatever get's the job done is the most important thing.
Really appealing to the developer is a waste of statistics (and the main point of slashdot) as they don't think about what the purpose of their action is going to be.
Microsoft sure as hell isn't using their marketing/statics gatherers to prove it's "more fun for developers" Jesus.
Either it's war or not, if you want to com
Open source is great and all... (Score:4, Insightful)
I work in a small medical device company writing java, and I could not imagine them using my software for free -- I need to eat too.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2, Informative)
Isn't it funny, how you
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:5, Informative)
You had to post this just as I got mod points, and was going to start using them in this forum...:).
I find what you have to say very topical, because I was in talks earlier today with an MD who holds a chair at a west-coast University who is interested in contracting me out to write Open Source code based on my Open Source, pure-Java jSyncManager Project [jsyncmanager.org].
Oh the parallels :). This project is receiving some public funding, so the doctors and developers currently involved are striving to use as much OSS as possible, and to release their custom code pieces as Open Source software. They want to contract my services to help them integrate handheld systems into their groupware/messaging applications they're building.
As such, it looks like I'm about to start getting paid to write Open Source Java code for the medical field. Yay for me!
Yaz.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:4, Insightful)
There's none. You can tout open source and hide large system integration bill (also known as IBM way), since rarely an open source package works out of the box.
Or you can tout open source and hide the support bill (the RedHat way), and make money on support.
Few of the billable hours generated here are development work, most of it is IT and support.
Large systems and support (Score:3, Informative)
Doesn't matter how much you pay for closed-source software, if you're intending to use it in even a small enterprise, you'll be paying more money to integrate it. And the company that sells you the software is probably also selling you the services to make it work. T
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
You can develop a proprietary application and still need a web-server for some reason, and go for a OSS/FS web-server rather than Win2003.
You can develop a proprietary application and still need a word processor to type reports and stuff, and go for OpenOffice rather than MSOffice.
You can develop a proprietary application and still need a browser, and go for Firefox rather than Internet Explorer.
You can develop a
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh My! (Score:2)
Good lord! You actually need to make a living from your work? Back to the re-education camp with you! But all kidding aside, I have yet to see a reasonable answer to this question. While it is true that there are many paid programmers writing Open Source for a variety of companies
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:5, Insightful)
And that is one of the often overlooked benefits of Open Source(tm) software, people actually will pay you to write it if it contributes to the greater good of the world.
What they won't often do is pay you to write piece of uneeded and ill conceived piece of dreck just because the company needs something new to sell.
YMMV, of course, but I don't enjoy tossing rocks over a wall then tossing them back again simply as an excuse to earn wages. I'd rather flip burgers than write that kind of software, because at least I'd be contributing the greater good. People have to eat. They don't have to have software that they only bought because some salesman who thinks he has to do it to eat convinces them they need it.
There are better ways to run an economy than filching money from each other's pockets.
And sometimes, here and there, people don't get to do what they want, but rather what is needed. Good people actually like it that way.
KFG
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:5, Insightful)
Think of programming as necessary infrastructure for a business, not as its core business. Businesses have a lot of costs that aren't related to the core business.
For instance, employees need a place to park their cars when they come to work. Most businesses don't charge their employees to park; they don't consider the employee parking lot as a profit center. And yet, the people who build and maintain the parking lot have to eat too.
Just because the business doesn't charge its employees money to park, doesn't mean the guy laying down the tar and painting the lines in the parking lot has to work for free. And just because the business makes its software open-source, doesn't mean the programmer that did the work-for-hire won't get paid.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
Quite often the answer is "yes," especially now that more OSS projects are maturing to the point where required customizations are smaller. Of course, the answer can only be "yes" if
HI, I'm an occasional open-source developer (Score:4, Insightful)
I work for a company whose business is not software. We need a webserver, operating system, database, etc.
Sometimes, what comes in an open source package doesn't meet our needs, so I fix it. Sometimes I think others might want the same changes, so I submit them (like when I changed the behaviour of a device driver to be more configurable). Sometimes I don't think others would want the same changes, so I don't submit them (like when I made dbmmanage able to be called from a shell script).
I get paid to solve my boss' technology problems. OSS is the most flexible way to do that.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:4, Insightful)
Provided you aren't releasing trade secrets, your company may see significant benefit to releasing this software. You were going to write it anyway, by releasing it perhaps someone else can improve it or send you bug fixes for free.
So, you get paid because you are employed by your company. The company benefits with better quality software.
No great secret, but something people tend to forget when they think of software programmers.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:4, Insightful)
I got into computers back in the 70s because I loved computers and had natural talent. I often wrote code for friends and families for free because I enjoyed it. Even though I started out as an operator, I wrote code for my company to help automate simple processes.
Later on I got a full time job writing NEAT/3 assembler and COBOL because one of the members of the local astronomy club was also a manager at a bank. I had written a simple mailing list system to automate our mailings and he knew I had at least some programming ability. Writing for OSS also brings you contacts and networking is more important than a resume if you are looking for a job.
Working on things that you don't get to work on at your job teaches you new things. My bank employeer didn't use BASIC or FORTRAN. Helping out friends and families let me use those skills so later on when I went to get a new job, I could at a minimum list a passing knowledge of them.
Who would you hire? Someone who has 3 years Java experience writing web applications, or someone who has the same 3 years experience but was also doing free side work for his local church, astronomy club, stock club, or writing drivers for Linux? I'll choose the second because it appears that they enjoy what they are doing and are probably not just in it for the money.
And I will probably be willing to pay them a higher salary because they have a broader range of skills and possibly more self-motivation.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
The answer is complex and multi-part...
First, not all programmers require financial incentive. Where is the financial incentive for, say, musicians? Someone who starts a band for the money is a fool. Some Free software will be written just because the person loves doing it. Some will be written because the author wants the product for themselves.
Second, huge numbers of programmers write software that is strictly used by their direct employer.
Re:Open source is great and all... (Score:2)
Other large companies, like your average co
Show me the money! (Score:2)
Increasingly, people are being paid to work on OSS/FS software. That's how X and Apache were developed, so this isn't new. The Linux kernel is almost entirely developed by people paid to do so (37,000 out of 38,000 changes a few months ago). There are lots of articles about this trend, referenced in the paper. Also, nearly all software is not developed for sale, bu
Fairly informative and open (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah but... (Score:5, Insightful)
You'll have rhetoric as long as you allow people to make sense out of facts... For example, the same fact (let's say, "source code available to the world") can be interpreted two ways: "More secure because it has been scrutinized by all sorts of people" and "Less secure because it can be scrutinized by every possible hacker."
What follows is the rhetoric...
Show to your boss, get them thinking! (Score:2)
Why do people care so much? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've developed both.
I'm not a disciple of either.
They both have their place.
As a wise man once said, can't we all just get along?
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:5, Interesting)
As do I, although most of what I use is on Linux. That may be hard for Windows people to believe, but it is true. I fire up the Windows box when I want to render videos (tmpgenc) or burn DVDs. That is where the DVD burner is installed. (Although k3b is AWESOME). I wish that Irfanview was available on Linux, it just rocks. I haven't found anything I like as much on Linux.
As a wise man once said, can't we all just get along?
Well, that is the kicker. We should all just be able to get along, but then you get proprietary software companies (no names mentioned) that have a heavily vested interest in NOT getting along. The OSS community is more than willing to just get along, but all parties have to be willing.
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:2)
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:2, Insightful)
But more on the point, I use Free Software exclusively (to the extent that it is within my control) for philosophical reasons. I think that those reasons should matter to you, so I do evangelize Free Software sometimes.
What's wrong with that?
-Peter
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:2)
since when are they mutually exclusive?
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:4, Funny)
I've developed both.
I'm not a disciple of either.
They both have their place.
Not a very poetic Haiku...
How about
I use Open Source
and closed source software as well
They both have their place
In Japan, it was funnier.
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:2)
Open Source,
Closed Source,
Bits on my disks.
Re:Why do people care so much? (Score:2)
OSS has definitely produced good language tools (Score:5, Insightful)
But perhaps the best thing about OSS is that it has helped to return a bit of an "ownership society" to software development. The GPL despite its problems says that it doesn't apply to you if you are just a regular user who isn't going to modify the code and redistribute the changed binaries. For all intents and purposes, you "own" that code until you do something public with it that takes commercial advantage of it without meeting the GPL's requirements. That's a hell of a lot more property rights-centered than a typical industry EULA.
Re:OSS has definitely produced good language tools (Score:2)
A GPL violation doesn't have to be for money. Violation is a violation even if no money is involved. See the X-chat mess.
Trying to convince my boss to read... (Score:2, Funny)
Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:5, Insightful)
OpenOffice.org, Mozilla Firefox and many other products off the SourceForge.net have a Windows binary available for download. Windows itself provides great hardware support with almost anything imaginable out there, and has nice OS-level features like fast GUIs and built-in support for burning CDs and what not.
If you look at a Linux box and a Windows box, the price difference from the vendor is generally $50-60. If you use the computer for 5 years, the cost of Windows is $10-12 a year. What's the incentive to go "free" and deal with ugly fonts, hardware issues and other problems related to Linux nowadays?
Moreover, promoting open source on Windows nowadays would set the ground for switch to Linux in the future. Guess what - the aforementioned OO, Mozilla and other apps work exactly the same way either with Linux or Windows. Thus a switch to Linux later on would not require such huge re-education costs, since the user lives in app world, not in OS world, and doesn't care whether it's kernel32.dll or kernel.org latest version, that's running on his machine.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:2)
Isn't this what is happening? I seem to remember a huge buzz a month or so ago where even some in the "mainstream" press where pushing Mozilla/Firefox as a better option to IE.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Insightful)
Currently it would be very difficult to develop for the
Currently I am using Java/Eclipse and I'm looking at SWT/HTML for my GUI needs.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Informative)
Huh? Everything you need to develop
(I'm using the MS
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Interesting)
I can't use KDE on Windows.
I can't use k3b on windows, I have to spend $100 on Nero.
I can't use TV Time on Windows, and the WinTV drivers on windows don't deinterlace for my card, so TV time is unquestionably better.
If you're going to use open source software, Linux simply has more of the be
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, you've been lucky. I've frequently had to go a long way out of my way, spend hours in research, and order more expensive equipment in order to get hardware that will work with Linux. My main problems were with ISDN hardware a few years back and wireless networking adapters right now. In both of these cases, everything I have available from my usual local suppliers was/is based on unsupported chipsets, meaning I had to purchase vi
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, you wouldn't be able to label my post "the most ridiculous on Slashdot" if you didn't assume the most unlikely meaning of my statement.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3)
their interfaces don't compare to Nero or Alcohol or K3B
For that matter, Nero's interface doesn't compare to K3B's. K3B is better than any Windows-based burner I've seen.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:2)
Windows 2000 Professional, since you ask.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Informative)
Realize that any current distro of any importance has fast GUI's (more than one of them, unlike Windows) and built in support for CD burning and DVD burning (unlike my Windows box at work that intermittently decides that it doesn't recognize CDRWs until I've rebooted twice).
You clearly haven't used linux in a few years if you thing that ugly fonts and hardware issues are still the norm.
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:2)
What bloody idiots marked you insightful with ridiculous flamebait like that in your post???
Re:Why is open source usually about OS? (Score:3, Interesting)
Well not from a developer's perspective. Every commercial OS requires you to pay to play; it protects their API and incidentally makes good money. A FOSS OS is better for developers because that barrier to entry is gone, and they benefit from FOSS sourcecode, which means the user SHO
Damned Statistics (Score:5, Insightful)
One case where it's fine not to RTFA (Score:4, Funny)
/.'ed (Score:3, Informative)
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:c8XPqYPcEggJ
Why I use open source - $$ (Score:2)
I've paid for my open source support software when I've placed in on deployed servers. Without Apache/Linux/Php/mysql I wouldn't be able to afford to work on side projects as the overhead of windows
Keeps my prices lower so the software is more affordable and I take home more.
Everone wins, except proprietary expensive software makers.
ends with what? (Score:5, Funny)
You fools! That's exactly what they expect! You can't fight the system playing by their rules! It should end with a tangent. Or an introduction. They'll never see that coming!
You damned fools, you've played right into their hands! We're doomed, doomed, doomed ...
Facts have a date, too (Score:4, Interesting)
GNU/Linux is the #1 server OS on the public Internet (counting by domain name), according to a 1999 survey of primarily European and educational sites
Interesting -- using a survey prior to the release of Windows 2000, XP, or 2003 server as the basis for trends today. Reading the article critically (as the hypothetical "boss" would), those numbers aren't as significant as the state of the world today. I may be completely ignorant to research turnaround, but doesn't it seem more recent data would be more relevant?
Consider this one as well:
GNU/Linux is more reliable than Windows NT, according to a 10-month ZDnet experiment
How many companies today are deciding between Linux and Windows NT?
Clearly there are reasons today that companies / governments / users are seriously considering OSS. However, to try to convince through comparison with 5 year old OS is probably not very effective.
Re:Facts have a date, too (Score:2, Informative)
Most of them. Windows NT is a product line that includes the following products:
Windows NT 1.0-4.0
Windows 2000
Windows XP
Windows 2003 Server
Asking that question is like saying most companies are looking at using RHEL, and then saying "How many companies today are deciding between Windows and Red Hat Linux?", as if "Red Hat Linux" did not apply to their new RHEL product...
Sounds like... (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds like a commercial for potato chips. However, I'll admit that I can't download just one OSS/FS product.
Open Source on Cell Phones (Score:2, Insightful)