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Yankee Group Slams Linux 'Extremists' 623

AvatarofVirgo wrote in to mention an article running on ZDNet in which the consulting firm The Yankee Group goes after folks in the Linux community who have been questioning their objectivity. From the article: "Laura DiDio, an analyst at the Yankee Group who has been at the receiving end of much of the criticism from Linux advocates, claimed the radical elements of the community could damage the reputation of open source software."
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Yankee Group Slams Linux 'Extremists'

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  • true (Score:5, Insightful)

    by the_Bionic_lemming ( 446569 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:14PM (#12181309)
    She's not too far off - Everytime I see a story on Microsoft and Linux - I see the extremists belittle, spread FUD, and incorrect information. I've long maintained that if the best you can do is tell me FUD about Microsoft as a reason to switch - then there's no reason to switch.

    One of the prime examples of winnowing me away from I.E. for instance, was that someone finally sat there for a moment and told me what Firefox could do - 10/15 messages back and forth - not a word or mention of IE, and I switched.

    I'd like the same about Linux, but always get belittled for asking.
    • Re:true (Score:5, Informative)

      by DunbarTheInept ( 764 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:22PM (#12181400) Homepage
      The problem is that you can't have a discussion on "why is X better than Y" without mentioning that there's stuff Y cannot do. I don't understand how you can have a conversation with someone on why to switch from IE to Firefox, for example, without mentioning that there's things firefox does that IE does not.

      If one person says "X is better than Y" and someone else says "Y is bad compared to X" they are both saying the exact same thing, but they seem different on a purely emotional (read: bullshit) level. I don't subscribe to the notion that sugar-coating what you say like that actually changes anything signifigant about your message.

      • The problem is (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:39PM (#12181622)
        It often degenerates into FUD. Like one of the most common ones I hear for why to switch to Linux is that Windows crashes all the time. Well, ok, maybe for that Linux user it did, I don't know, but for me it doesn't. It basically never crashes, even app crashes are pretty rare.

        Now when someone starts off with accusing your chosen thing of having problems it doesn't, you begin to think they are full of shit. Maybe they aren't making it up, maybe their experience is different than yours, but they need to base their comments off of your experience, since you are the one they are they are trying to convince.

        Another problem I find is trying to dismiss every problem Linux has, or somehow spin it into a good thing. Linux isn't perfect, nothing is. So when someone points out a flaw, and the Linux enthusist just tries to spin it as being nothing, or even a good thing, it again makes them sound full of it, and makes the rest of what they say sound less sincere.

        So it's not a matter of never mentioning the other side, it's a matter of finding out what the person wants to do, and talking to them about how Linux would be a good solution for that. Sometimes that may involve pointing out things it does better, but you do that in a constructive, not a demeaning way. Also when a flaw is noted in Linux, acknowledge it, don't pretend it's nothing.

        Generally I find that Linux people who are trying to convert someone take such a fanatical view of how cool Linux is and such a demaning view of Windows (complete with immature names like M$ and Winblows) that it's no supprise most people percieve them as extremists with no clue.
        • Re:The problem is (Score:5, Insightful)

          by DunbarTheInept ( 764 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @06:05PM (#12181897) Homepage

          So when someone points out a flaw, and the Linux enthusist just tries to spin it as being nothing, or even a good thing

          They are often telling the truth. Just because you consider something to be a bad thing doesn't mean I will. Linux has a very complete list of CLI apps and a rather incomplete list of GUI ones. For what I want to do this is far better than the Windows situation where it's the inverse of that. Therefore the feature "too much stuff done through the CLI" is not a flaw. Not to me. Obviously it's better to have both a GUI and a CLI, but if I can only have one because the developer is strapped for time, I'd rather have the CLI.

          It's not just spin. It's a difference of preferences.


          So it's not a matter of never mentioning the other side

          According to the person I was responding to, that's exactly what he claimed happened. I have my strong doubts.


          (complete with immature names like M$ and Winblows)

          Well, not to sound immature, but Microsoft started it - by picking product names that tried to supplant previously existing non-trademarked vocabulary. "windows" was the generic term for rectangles in your gui that stuff is displayed in. "SQL server" was a term that meant some kind of database that you can talk to with SQL. In my case (and I can't speak for everyone else) my strong dislike of the MS terminology is because they tried to hijack previously existing terminology and turn it into a trademark, and so it grates on my nerves to have to speak of their products using the hijacked term.

        • Re:The problem is (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Angst Badger ( 8636 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @06:38PM (#12182226)
          Like one of the most common ones I hear for why to switch to Linux is that Windows crashes all the time. Well, ok, maybe for that Linux user it did, I don't know, but for me it doesn't. It basically never crashes, even app crashes are pretty rare.

          Disclaimer: I'm a systems software developer and a moderately enthusiastic Linux advocate.

          My experience is much the same. Win2k and WinXP have been very solid for me. During the time I've been using them, I have had two or three crashes per year at most. I've had about the same number from Linux on my desktop machine. (My Linux servers, on the other hand, have only gone down when I shut them down on purpose for a hardware upgrade.)

          In short, the whole Windows-crashes-all-the-time argument is outdated. Claiming otherwise will not improve one's credibility with Windows users. Nor will offering the GIMP as an alternative to Photoshop when talking to a design professional. Offering OpenOffice as an alternative to MS Office, on the other hand, can be compelling. It all depends on your needs. I still need -- thanks mostly to Adobe -- to dual boot.

          Now, as far as Laura DiDio goes, the real credibility gap comes when you have a non-programmer examining actual source code -- as she did at the beginning of the SCO fiasco -- and acting as if she has the ability to reach an informed opinion. (We leave aside the question of whether SCO's peek-a-boo evidence displays, now long discredited in the courts, should have been taken seriously to begin with.) I'm not a doctor. If you showed me a human heart and a pig heart of approximately equal sizes, I'm not sure I could tell which was which. I know I'm not qualified to form an opinion, so I reserve judgment. Likewise, Laura DiDio is not a software engineer, and ought to have reserved judgment when she was looking at isolated code snippets that a qualified professional would have rejected as too small and too context-free to reach a conclusion in the first place.

          Now, I'm not going to cast aspersions on the independence of DiDio or the Yankee Group. There may or may not be any bias stemming from funding. There clearly is a bias rooted in simple intellectual arrogance, or at the very least a failure to distinguish between business questions and technical questions. It's not necessary for these people to be whores; it's quite possible that they are simply honest people who are out of their depth and too conceited to realize it.
          • Some good points (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Anonymous Coward
            My experience with 2000 and XP haven't been a disaster, but they still don't have the uptime of Linux boxes of the same vintage. Also, once you start getting into third party applications, from a non-technical seat-of-the-pants experience, Linux still is a set-it-and-forget-it setup while Windows 2000 and to a lesser extent XP/2003 just aren't there yet. With Windows adopting Unix permissions, and Linux incorporating SE-Linux into the distros/kernel, it looks like both systems are headed for more secure c
        • Re:The problem is (Score:5, Insightful)

          by MrNonchalant ( 767683 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @07:47PM (#12182859)
          Thank you, thank you so much. I just switched to Linux, but I've been a long time user of Windows and never had a serious problem. But the best example here is whenever somebody on Slashdot says they've been running Windows for years and haven't had a single security breach. This gets modded to +2 Informative. Then somebody says something along the lines of "Well, how do you know?" This person then gets modded to +5 Insightful.

          Bloody hell. The competent of us do have firewalls, antivirus software, Firefox, and antispyware software. We get a tick if we don't update these and the OS, and the Office suite, twice daily. We do open up task manager from time to time and look at processes (no not applications, processes). We do occaisonally cmd -> netstat. We have some idea of how a zombied machine looks like (we've cleaned out friends with such enough). We know with to about as much degree as possible whether or not we're running a compromised box.

          How the bloody hell do you Linux people know for sure you're not all compromised? (Exploits for Linux aren't completely unheard of, just harder to find) You do (or don't) the same way we do. We're not all clueless. In fact if you bothered to step outside your close circle of propaganda-spewing cronies for five seconds you'd find a surprising number of us aren't.

          I for one can't stand hearing you people talk about FUD anymore without looking in a mirror.

          Alright, I'm done, you can mod me down now.
          • For every clueful user, there are 100's that are completely ignorant. Many have a willful ignorance. I do tech support for Windows and talk to dozens every day.

            Look at what you have to do for Windows in security- Firewall (depending on Version of Windows it is a third party addon), Antivirus (Probably a pay for option and closed source), Antispyware (Probably third party and at least a seperate addon), then finally run a third party browser. In Linux, you have a firewall that comes with the system, and
          • Re:The problem is (Score:5, Informative)

            by tokabola ( 771071 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @09:35PM (#12183693) Homepage
            How the bloody hell do you Linux people know for sure you're not all compromised?

            More or less the same way competent Windows users do. Netstat, tripwire, checkrootkit, etc.

            Exploits for Linux aren't completely unheard of, just harder to find

            Actually, it's rather easy to detect a compromised Linux system, using only the tools that virtually every distro comes with "out of the box". Sure, you have to learn to use those tools, but I'm sure you weren't born knowing how to secure a Windows system.

            I get a little tired of Windows users saying "Linux is hard to use" when what they really mean is "It doesn't work like the system I know how to use and I'm too damn lazy to learn another", conveniently forgeting how long it took them to learn Windows in the first place.

            Most of the people I've met who didn't like Linux tell me the same thing. "I tried (insert long since obsolete version of redhat, usually 4 or 5 point something) for a couple days and didn't like it." Give it a chance - it'll take a few weeks of heavy use before you break out of the Windows mindset. Until you can break out of the Windows habits you'll never be able to appreciate the power and flexibility of Linux, and for Pete's sake download a RECENT distro. Comparing Redhat 5 to Win XP simply isn't fair. Comparing it to Windows 3.2, maybe.

            And it always amazes me how many Windows powerusers think nothing of reformating and throwing on a fresh install every six months just to "keep things fast" because the registry gets too much crap in it. Any website you visit can write to the registry unless you've installed a third party blocker like Finjan's Surfin Guard Pro. Your Antivirus/firewall/antispyware combo probably isn't preventing it - very few antispyware apps (and no firewalls or AVs that I'm aware of) will prevent registry writes. What a joke. If you don't believe me - get Surfinguard and watch the warnings pop up. Since people learned how to delete cookies many sites now use the registry to keep permanant tabs on you (and not just pr0n sites, either - CNN used to, among others).

            Tommy
            • Most of the people I've met who didn't like Linux tell me the same thing. "I tried (insert long since obsolete version of redhat, usually 4 or 5 point something) for a couple days and didn't like it."

              I'm using Ubuntu 5.04 (hoary) and I have no plans to switch back to Windows except where necessary (school).

              I get a little tired of Windows users saying "Linux is hard to use" when what they really mean is "It doesn't work like the system I know how to use and I'm too damn lazy to learn another", convenient
    • Re:true (Score:5, Insightful)

      by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 ( 812236 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:26PM (#12181457) Journal
      Firstly, the survey comprised of asking executives questions about various issues, rather than focusing plainly on statistics. Moreover, DiDio added that companies usually did not keep track of the operating costs, and yet the study sought to equate the costs of running Windows with that of running Linux.

      And, according to the article that detailed the survey, developing applications and securing servers were the two major cost differences. DiDio highlighted Visual Studio as a boon for Windows users in developing software, while completely forgetting IDEs that exist on Linux which help development, and are far better than Visual Studio.

      To most Linux users, and those in the know, that reeks of bias. Most executives would be more familiar with Windows systems than Linux systems, because of their experience with the former. Moreover, it is highly likely that executives wouldn't have heard about Eclipse or KDevelop as much as Visual Studio, simply because of marketing reasons.

      DiDio, herself, added that Microsoft's shift to a monthly security update cycle and increased efforts to combat security issues were the main drivers behind its new ratings. Linux's security program is not trumpeted as loudly as Microsoft's "Patch Tuesday" is.

      She deserved the criticism for not pointing out these obvious flaws. Whether the "extremists" were a bit too radical is another case altogether.
      • Re:true (Score:5, Informative)

        by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:40PM (#12181628) Homepage
        DiDio highlighted Visual Studio as a boon for Windows users in developing software, while completely forgetting IDEs that exist on Linux which help development, and are far better than Visual Studio...To most Linux users, and those in the know, that reeks of bias.

        Well, no. Your statement "IDEs...exist on Linux which...are far better than Visual Studio" is a subjective statement, backed up with nothing. That is a biased statement, or a partisan one if you prefer, and you would need facts and figures to back it up.

        Cheers,
        Ian

        • Re:true (Score:3, Informative)

          by Queer Boy ( 451309 ) *

          Well, no. Your statement "IDEs...exist on Linux which...are far better than Visual Studio" is a subjective statement, backed up with nothing. That is a biased statement, or a partisan one if you prefer, and you would need facts and figures to back it up.

          Well, exactly since unless you can develop for the other with each it doesn't really matter anyway. Xcode is extraordinary (and it's included with every $129 purchase of Mac OS X) but you can only develop for Mac and Java, so it ain't that useful for Linu

      • by kpharmer ( 452893 ) * on Friday April 08, 2005 @09:08PM (#12183502)
        Didio is just trying to discredit her critics:

        the issue *isn't* that open source advocates are attacking her analysis.

        the isue *is* that open source advocates have discovered that:
        1. she teamed up with a microsoft gold partner to perform the analysis
        2. they sent the survey to subscribers to a microsoft publication (a completely biased sample)
        3. the analysis & survey don't match up well - a considerable amount of apparently unfounded interpretation occured.

        So, are open source advocates sometimes excessive? Sure. But more to the point: Didio's analysis was beyond flawed - it was deceptive. And that discredits her as well as Forester.
    • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:27PM (#12181467)
      One of the prime examples of winnowing me away from I.E. for instance, was that someone finally sat there for a moment and told me what Firefox could do - 10/15 messages back and forth - not a word or mention of IE, and I switched.
      Why would it be someone else's responsibility to "winnow" you away from IE?

      Firefox is Free (as speech, as beer).
      I've long maintained that if the best you can do is tell me FUD about Microsoft as a reason to switch - then there's no reason to switch.
      Do you apply that same logic to Microsoft?

      If Microsoft publishes some FUD, do you immediately switch to an alternative?
    • I think one of the most fun, and sometimes frustrating things about learning linux is the MAN pages. It can be so fun when you are understanding something, and seeing how much it can do and how much control you have. At the same time, it can be very frustrating when things don't work the way you want them to. I had a laptop and I could not get a windows manager to work. I worked on the problem for 3 days, had other people look at it, and nothing. I must have changed every setting in the config file trying t
    • Chroot is one great example. It allows for segregating server programs and files away from the core system. This means that successful break-ins through the server software cannot harm the whole system (as the 'whole system' doesn't appear to even exist). Recovering from this type of break-in can be as simple as running one command (the cp command) to restore the server and related files from a backup.

      Security updates and version upgrades to most software, sometimes ALL software, can be accomplished with a
    • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:43PM (#12181661) Journal
      Laura DiDio is the one who agreed with SCO if I recall that Linus stole millions of lines of Unixware code and warned CIO's to stay clear from it.

      Just take what she says wiuth a grain of salt.
      • Ahh, I see (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Burz ( 138833 )
        Having invested so much in a heavy-handed SCO shill (DiDio), the Yankee Group finds it now has a huge credibility problem on its hands.

        So now the Yankee Group wants to blame a nebulously-defined class of scapegoats ("Linux extemists") while it tries to recover.

        Face it Yankee: Even Gartner did not make the same factual and ideological mistakes you did. Having your wagon hitched to SCO must be no fun right now and no doubt it is hurting business; THAT is the fault of noone but DiDio and her boss.
    • Re:true (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Excelsior ( 164338 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:59PM (#12181822)
      She's not too far off - Everytime I see a story on Microsoft and Linux - I see the extremists belittle, spread FUD, and incorrect information.

      The kettle called, it wants its color back. Laura Didio is the queen of OSS bashers in research analyst's clothing. Don't beleive me? Try a Google search on Laura [google.com].

      She has made a career out of bashing open source because she knows it makes her one of the most well known technology analysts around. Read a bit about this woman and the reports she writes, and then tell me you don't see a trend. Whenever a long period of time goes where you hear nothing about Laura Didio, she throws out something controversial to stir the pot.

      She's the equivalent of a troll - don't feed her.
    • Re:true (Score:3, Insightful)

      1. Laura DiDio is actually a moron. Many of the criticisms of Laura DiDio are dead on, whether or not she's being paid for her stupidity. Go look up anything she wrote or said about SCO [google.com], and see if you can keep a straight face.
      2. She's right. This is true of all extremists. There are zealots for every platform that will criticize their perceived "opposition" without cause or understanding. There are Linux & Firefox zealots, Mac & Windows zealots, GameCube/PS2/XBox zealots, and some of them spew continuou
    • Re:true (Score:3, Insightful)

      by bit01 ( 644603 )

      I see the extremists belittle, spread FUD, and incorrect information.

      That's true, microsoft.com [microsoft.com] is getting really bad. Their Get The Facts [microsoft.com] site is particularly extreme. According to them Linux is never the correct choice. ;-)

      Remember, somebody needs to balance out the M$ marketing fanatics.

      ---

      Commercial software bigots - a dying breed.

  • She should know. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by gnuadam ( 612852 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:15PM (#12181319) Journal

    She's a prime example of how pro microsoft extremism in the course of her job has decimated her credibility. Her. O'Gara ( for SCO). Enderle. No one believes them any more.

    Learn your lessons well.

    • If you're going to just copy and paste an example of the zealous nonsense she's complaining about, at least format it correctly so that we can see that it's a quote. ;)
      • by gnuadam ( 612852 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:43PM (#12181659) Journal

        It's not zealous nonesense. By any standard she's a shill.

        I'm not defending the people who call her didiot, or call to harass her. They're idiots, no question. But she's far from innocent on the zealot scale, and I thought I'd take the opportunity to point that out.

  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't "Yankee" a derogatory term for American colonists whose political views were considered part of the "extremist fringe"???
  • From TFA.. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Mr. Flibble ( 12943 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:17PM (#12181341) Homepage
    There's an extremist fringe of Linux loonies who hang out on forums and are disrespectful and threatening because you disagree with them...That can hurt the Linux community.

    On SLashdot?

    Say it aint so!
    • Re:From TFA.. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by NanoGator ( 522640 )
      What's funny is that anybody who disagrees with them is labeled an 'MS fan-boy'. Hypocrites.
      • Re:From TFA.. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by freeweed ( 309734 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @10:30PM (#12184057)
        What's funnier is the continual stream of posts claiming a single borg-like hivemind on Slashdot, that punishes you if you dare to say anything the slightest bit negative about Linux...

        Continually modded up.

        Yeah.

        Hypocrites. Every last one of us.

        If you want to turn this into a black/white Windows/Linux issue (which it most certainly is not), I daresay there are more pro-Microsoft posts on this site these days than otherwise, which makes me think there are more pro-Windows folks here than not. However, a goodly lot seem to be compelled to end their posts with "now this will just get modded down due to Slashbot hypocrite groupthink".

        Guess what, Checkers? That sort of 12-year old boy prattling deserves modding down, because it's just pure flamebait.
  • I'd rather people be excited about something they believe in (ie, Linux), rather than just another Microsoft-funded puppet.

    • Some free insight for you: There are people that can't understand how something exists, if it isn't manufactured from the ground up to be bought and sold. Linux doesn't fit that mold, not in its entirety, and therein lies the problem, for them.

      I mean, really. If we get the job done, why not act like hippies, if that's what we feel like? Does it change anything about the product? Is Hippy Linux somehow inferior to CorpDrone Linux, supposing all the underlying code is the same? It's a dangerous idea, this concept of being able to not be a serf, and still being competent to make what society needs.
  • by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:18PM (#12181351) Homepage Journal
    The reputation of GNU/Linux advocates suffers because the concept of all software being free is too hard for many of today's computer users to grasp. A lot of businesses make their money by hiring developers and selling software. This is a business model many of us would like to see die.

    The big FUD statement we always hear is how is FOSS profitable if it's all being done for free? I always cite the Linux kernel itself as a model for the future; most of the people working on the kernel are paid developers. Companies like IBM sponser FOSS development. If every company which needs software to use worked in the same manner, the world would be perfect.

    There are simply too many people who can't shake the idea that software is a "product" to be bought and sold. I've seen some pretty nasty things said to FOSS advocates. I've even seen some of the conservative opposition refer to FOSS as "Communism" and "Anti-American". Facing blatant ignorance and bigotry every day, it's no wonder that *nix people can seem condescending [halo43.com] at times.
    • If every company which needs software to use worked in the same manner, the world would be perfect

      A classic example of that they are are talking about. Do you not think such a narrow perspective puts people off, or are war, disease, disaster and famine all ok because the world is perfect so long as software is free.
    • A lot of businesses make their money by hiring developers and selling software. This is a business model many of us would like to see die.

      I dunno, I kind of like the idea of getting paid to do what I love. I would love if everything were FOSS, but chances of that happening are slim to none. The only thing we have a *real* chance at is open standards, where hopefully the opensource client will be the best.
    • by Jeff DeMaagd ( 2015 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:52PM (#12181759) Homepage Journal
      Companies like IBM sponser FOSS development.

      Companies like IBM sells hardware. If making Linux available for their servers makes it easier for them to sell them, then yes, I can see them adding to the Linux kernel. To apply this in a broader sense, only hardware companies would be able to support software.

      I've seen the claim that FOSS developers can make money by selling support for their software. That's kind of backwards as then there is no incentive to make their software easy to use or install, and actually creates a disincentive because that means hard to use software generates more support money.
      • That's kind of backwards as then there is no incentive to make their software easy to use or install, and actually creates a disincentive because that means hard to use software generates more support money.

        sendmail
      • Companies like IBM sells hardware. If making Linux available for their servers makes it easier for them to sell them, then yes, I can see them adding to the Linux kernel. To apply this in a broader sense, only hardware companies would be able to support software.

        IBM makes its money from services, not hardware. Interesting take here [djurdjevic.com]. The fact is that for most businesses, maintaining their own kernel, or web server, or mail server, won't give them a competative advantage over the competition but more cost.
    • A lot of businesses make their money by hiring developers and selling software. This is a business model many of us would like to see die.

      Reminds me of a sig I've seen here; "Information wants to be free. Mortgage wants to be paid."

      Why do you want to see pay-for software die out? Why should the creation of software be any different to the creation of any other work? Or do you believe that *all* works (music, books, etc) should be free, with the creators supported either by other jobs or - for the lucky f
  • The worst bit (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jb.hl.com ( 782137 ) <joe@joe-ba l d win.net> on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:19PM (#12181353) Homepage Journal
    Here on Slashdot, every time some mention of new commercial software being released for Linux hits the front page, the zealots start up whining that, in true RMS style, it's "not free enough". Even if it's being given away as freeware.

    Which is the problem, since it's "not free enough", the zealots simply dismiss it, and lets face it, the zealots are the ones helping spread Linux usage. It's stupid and it needs to stop.
    • Which is the problem, since it's "not free enough", the zealots simply dismiss it, and lets face it, the zealots are the ones helping spread Linux usage. It's stupid and it needs to stop.

      Maybe "zealots" don't want to help spread software that doesn't meet their criteria for good software (i.e. "isn't free enough").
      • Re:The worst bit (Score:3, Insightful)

        Yeah, because we all know that the best metric for software isn't support, quality, price (or a ratio of the previous)...

        It's bullshit political ideology, of course!
    • Agreed. Read this [zdnet.com] to see what happens when ideology clashes with wanting the best tool for the job.

      I understand where RMS is coming from - as the leader of the Free Software Foundation he needs to be squeaky clean as possible in espousing his ethics in order to be as effective as possible. I also know that as it is with most anything, Freedom is a dual edged sword, and cuts both ways. Freedom gained for some usually means Freedom lost for others.

      If I could solve that dillema, I sure wouldn't be posting he
    • Re:The worst bit (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nmos ( 25822 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:55PM (#12181782)
      Which is the problem, since it's "not free enough", the zealots simply dismiss it, and lets face it, the zealots are the ones helping spread Linux usage. It's stupid and it needs to stop.

      For some of us the freedom is the goal and Linux is just a tool to help get there. What's annoying is that people who come into this community to get away from the lock in, disrespectfull treatment by software vendors, restrictive licensing etc. and the first thing they want to do is convince everyone to submit to the same crap over here. It's a bit like someone who moves into the countryside to get away from the city and the first thing they want is to put up street lights and mini-malls.
    • Re:The worst bit (Score:3, Interesting)

      by _Sprocket_ ( 42527 )

      Here on Slashdot, every time some mention of new commercial software being released for Linux hits the front page, the zealots start up whining that, in true RMS style, it's "not free enough". Even if it's being given away as freeware.

      And, frankly, they have a point. Software freedom is an issue that occasionally gets burried by pricetags and flash. The fact that you mention "freeware" only demonstrates the point.

      Which is the problem, since it's "not free enough", the zealots simply dismiss it, and

  • by winkydink ( 650484 ) * <sv.dude@gmail.com> on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:21PM (#12181381) Homepage Journal
    she's pissed off because they call her DiDiot and her last name is DiDio? A 3rd grade schoolyard taunt gets to her? She complaing because she gets phone calls at 11pm. She lives in the public eye (whether she likes it or not, that's where she is) and her phone number is listed?

    Tell me about death threats or stalkers and I'd say you've got extremists. Tell me about name-callers and heavy-breathers and I'd say you've got the nuisance equivalent of script kiddies.
  • by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:23PM (#12181407) Journal
    As long as we're all worried about extremists damaging reputations, lets have another look at the hard right, the hard left, the mass media, the MS extremists, the Mac fans, Martin Luther, the Pope, etc. etc.....

    My point being, that the analysts damage whatever they're paid to damage nowdays, if you've been following things at all lately.

  • "The kettle calling the pot black?"
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:23PM (#12181414)
    I'm going to post this anonymously because of my job (at least I hope this "Post Anonymously" function works!)

    This statement was dismissed too quickly by Ziff-Davis:
    Some of DiDio's critics have claimed that Yankee Group's surveys comparing the total cost of ownership of Linux and Windows have been funded by Microsoft. DiDio strongly denies this claim.


    "I don't take any money from any vendor," said DiDio. "Yankee Group paid entirely for the survey. We use an independent survey house."

    The fact is that major analyst firms earn their revenue in two ways:

    1. Selling reports and consulting services to customers (IT businesses in this example) that describe the market, the vendors, and who's doing what.
    2. Selling consulting services back to the vendors to help them position their product for various markets.

    It's tough for the analyst firms to remain objective because sometimes they make more money from the latter business than the former. And in that case, the vendor can exhibit tremendous pressure to make sure that no negative remarks are made about their products or even steer analyst reports in the direction they would like.

    (Investment firms had a similar problem until recent regulations required them to maintain a split between the side that provide investment advice and the side that does IPOs for firms).

    Does this mean that Microsoft has paid Yankee Group enough money that they are saying negative things about Linux? Not necessarily. But it does call into question DiDio's statement, "I don't take any money from any vendor." I've seen at least one top-tier analyst firm (though not Yankee specifically to my recollection) who reported favorable market results for firms that paid a lot for their consulting services. And Microsoft has been known for exerting some pressure on companies it works with.

    Any time you have an entity expected to be "objective" but who's existance depends on the largess of the firms it is supposed to be objective about, you must be wary of these conflicts of interest.

    Just like how it's dubious to suggest the mainstream media is going to seriously bite the hand of the Republicans that feed it (read as, interviews, embedded reporters during war, or bigger media-consolidation regulation), the industry analyst firms can be just as susceptible to strong-arm tactics of vendors.
  • by bgog ( 564818 ) * on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:23PM (#12181415) Journal
    I couldn't care less if they disagree with me I simply take issue with the fact that they are for-sale and claim to be objective.

    They are high-tech hookers, for-sale to the highest bidder. Their opinions/results have no meaning under such circumstances.

    Get a little professional integrity and you'll get the respect you seek.
    • Get a little professional integrity and you'll get the respect you seek.

      Right back at'cha!

      • Uhhh. Ok. There is a large difference between posting a comment on an entertainment message board and publishing a professional opionion.

        Professional integrity applies to ones profession. My profession is not to post on slashdot, her profession is to publish objective opinions on technology. First she participated in research funded by one of the vendors and second she publicly whined about her critics again via her professional identity.
    • Laura DiDio is pissed because anytime she publishes a study telling the world how creamy and delicious MS products are and how open source products make the baby jesus cry the community immediately calls her on her bullshit, makes fun of her, and tells the world of all the other bullshit she has spewed in the past.

      I would be pissed too.

      Here is the problem though. Our megaphone seems to be louder then hers. Maybe, just maybe our voices are being heard louder then hers in the corporate halls. If this is tru
      • "creamy and delicious MS products are"
        and
        "how open source products make the baby jesus cry"


        HaHa! I almost fell out of my chair laughing. I had to forward your post to some co-workers :) Ha
  • In other news (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 )
    A survey of senior executives was recently completed in which they asked the various senior executives how the quality of the food in the cafeteria has changed over the last year. The results indicate that the quality of cafeteria food has improved.

    A survey of cafeteria staff was recently completed in which they asked the various staff how often senior executives eat cafeteria food. The results indicate that senior executives NEVER eat cafeteria food.

    "As the study was carried out independently, DiDio sa
  • ...then stay outa the kitchen. The market has changed and people will no longer stand by when pundits / reporters / analysts start talking smack without proper, logical, untainted research to back them up. Didiot was one of the people who signed the SCO NDA to 'see the code' back when the FiaSCO started and toed Darl McBride's corporate line. She gets no sympathy from me...

    Please allow me to introduce myself,
    I am an analyst of wealth and taste...

    DaGoodBoy
  • DiDio feels she has been unfairly criticized on open source forums, including being nicknamed DiDiot

    Reminds of the kid who stands up in class in front of everybody and complains that the kids are calling him "dick face" or something.

    It ain't helpin' yer case, kid, so siddown.
  • by John Seminal ( 698722 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:26PM (#12181462) Journal
    PETA- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

    Sounds like a nice group, I want animals to be happy too. Then one day they came around a KFC in my neighborhood and members yelled at families going in for dinner, calling them murderers and supporting animal concentration camps. They had a bucket of fake blood they threw on someone. Instantly, nobody gave a damn about their group. More importantly, people would support the opposite side just because they hate PETA.

    Same think could happen with Linux. What got me interested in Linux was friendly people who really liked it, and wanted to share what they knew about it. What turns me off, I went to a Linux group meeting and had a dual boot machine, Windows 2000 and Debian. Someone gave me shit for having Windows on the laptop. Another dork, and I use the word dork because I think nerd is too nice; anyways, another dork starts laughing and saying how Windows sucks and how easy it is to hack into. I had my machine hooked up to the LAN, and these idiots decided they wanted to try and hack my machine. They even asked me to "ipconfig" and tell them my exact IP address. They thought I was an idiot. After 5 minutes I left. Fuck them.

  • Since when is security not part of reliability?

    The article says:
    Its latest survey, published on Monday, reported that Microsoft Windows Server 2003 is at least as good if not better than Linux, in terms of quality, performance and reliability.
    I guess compromised servers are just as reliable as uncompromised ones?

    -- Terry
  • by Anonymous Coward
    ... and harassing this poor analyst instead of spending your time making Linux better?

    Note how earlier today, the story on Microsoft creating software for police to crack down on child pornography was greeted on slashdot with paranoia and conspiracy theory. How it is purely a move by Microsoft to do marketing. It doesn't matter what Microsoft does, it's always a conspiracy with you guys.

    How about Mono? Mono is an amazing piece of OSS. But because it was based on something Microsoft did, it's considere
  • Executive Survey??? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Shadow Wrought ( 586631 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <thguorw.wodahs>> on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:31PM (#12181514) Homepage Journal
    Yankee Group surveyed executives at over 500 companies, asking them questions on factors that influence TCO such as deployment costs, the cost of downtime, and the time and staff associated with security attacks.[emphasis added]

    Maybe if Yankee Group asked the people doing the work and not the PHB's (who usually admit to not understanding the technology anyway), they would have gotten different answers. Perhaps its the frustration of the professionals who see their work summarized by higher-ups who don't understand it that is leading to such harsh criticism? DiDiot's pretty funny, too.

  • Dead on (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Apreche ( 239272 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:32PM (#12181521) Homepage Journal
    This lady is absolutely right. There are crazy zealots out there who hurt Linux while trying to help it. These nutcases are usually the types who have no social skills, no friends and no lives. It's very frustrating for them to know they are, and be, technically correct (Linux IS a better operating system from a CS standpoint) however at the same time have people not listen to them because they present themselves at nutcase shitheads.

    It reminds me of the other day in the subway when this crazy old guy was yelling about the trains running on different lines. He was actually correct, but nobody listened to him because he was a crazy old guy.

    If we could somehow shut up these zealots and let only the presentable and friendly members of the Linux community do the talking we would be much further along. But I guess that's not the way its going to be.
  • I can think of absolutely agnuone who could be classified as a GnuLinux extremist. After all, everyone gnuws real extremists have such a narrow view of the world that the absolutely insist that others adopt their gnu terminology for the sake of ideological correctness. Certainly, I don't gunw agnuone in the GnuLinux community that this criticism applies gnu.

  • "Nutjobs" have been doing this stuff to Linux critics for about 10 years now. If any damage were possible, it's long been done. Instead, Linux has grown steadily and rapidly in respectability. It would appear the market has the ability to distinguish between enthusiasts and the thing they're enthused about.

    Football-team fan maniacs don't detract from the respectability of the team itself, for instance.

    Calling people at home with abuse is way over the line and certainly nobody should approve of it. I t
  • by decep ( 137319 )
    Generally, when Linux is used, it is because someone wants to use it. This immediately puts people on the defensive when criticized about their decision. When Windows is used, it is usually because someone has to use it or does not care.

    In many ways, this makes their zealotry a simple defense mechanism which will cause them to become unrealistic and unobjective for no reason other than they see criticism of Linux as an attack on themselves.
  • One of the most important parts of any propaganda war is the concept of defining the terms of the debate. Usually, if you can define the terms of the debate, you win the debate. This is why the neo-conservatives are so good at winning propaganda wars, despite their positions and politics being so sketchy.

    Here's an example: Politician A says, "My opponent supported a bill that would increase the number of kill shelters in their district. Therefore, my opponent supports the killing of puppies." Then, an
  • by mr.dreadful ( 758768 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:35PM (#12181560)
    Trying being a Mac user... Every time someone in the mainstream press critizes apple, they get tons of hate mail saying what a boob they are for not automatically bowing before the magnificance that is Apple.

    I'm a huge OS X fan, and its done my heart good to see more and more acceptence of OS X at the enterprise level, but problems still exist, and until they are worked out, I wish the extremists would just shut up.

    Chad Dickerson writes a column for InfoWorld, and a few weeks back he mentioned some issues he has with OS X. He had the nerve to mention that perhaps OS X wasn't meant for everyone and got a firestorm of hate mail. His blog offers more detail:

    http://weblog.infoworld.com/dickerson/001225.html

  • by flaming-opus ( 8186 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:36PM (#12181576)
    Because linux is free (in some part speech, but in this case mostly beer is relevant) it's been able to develop a huge following of users and supporters. Any time a group of any sort gets that large, you end up with a more perceptible concentration of idiots.

    To quote Twain: "The pitifulest thing out is a mob." The democratic nature of OSS development gives strength (in terms of control) to anyone who wants it, but you have to work for it. Anyone can contribute to the linux kernel, but only a couple thousand do. It takes a lot of work, and it's not an easy way to earn respect.

    Criticism, on the other hand, is easy. It doesn't take to much effort to tare someone down. Especially if you do it in an internet forum where you don't even need to look them in the eye.

    The only silly thing about the article is that these groups are somehow surprised that the internet is mostly full of idiots, and that the people with enough time to flame research groups are teenagers. You'd think they'd have done their research... well, we won't get into that.
    • No, Criticism is a valid form of response. In opensource you will be criticized, and usually harshly. Developers, Users, etc all put up with it. Read the mailing list on a random opensource project and you'll see it.

      Constructive criticism is good, it's what produces quality in opensource. It's what keeps it viable and useful. Useless criticism is just that, useless. It provides nothing and should not affect the one on the receiving end. It simply adds or contributes nothing in any form or fashion.

      That is
  • Hypocrisy. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by happymedium ( 861907 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:38PM (#12181597)
    From the Wikipedia article on DiDio:

    "The thing about Linux is, you can talk about a free, open operating system all you want, but you can't take that idea of free and open and put it into a capitalist system and maintain it as though it is some kind of hippie commune or ashram, because if you can do it like that, at that point I'm like, 'Pass the hookah please!'"

    "I'm all for open source, and competition serves everyone's interest. But if Linux is really to take its place alongside Windows... then the vendors in this space cannot act like a bunch of hippies in a '60s commune or ashram. There really is no such thing as a free lunch."

    She has a definite predisposal not to like open-source, right down to rejecting its philosophy and its ability to exist in a capitalist system... yet claims to be unbiased when her organization concludes that an open-source product inferior. She hates name-calling... but calls open-source developers communists and hippies.

    As far as I'm concerned, she's getting what's coming to her.
  • by rnturn ( 11092 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:38PM (#12181605)

    And for proof of that, check out her video here [microsoft.com]. Now, Laura, tell us again how objective you are again. (I could use a good laugh.)

    • +6, Incredible (Score:3, Interesting)

      by cyberformer ( 257332 )
      Wow. Wished I hadn't burned all my mod points about the spammer. I've seen Bill Gates make presentations that are less enthusiastic about Microsoft or hostile to Linux.

      The open-source community's basic problem, as far as Didio et al are concerned, is that it doesn't give the Yankee Group enough money. It really is that simple.
  • by Jboy_24 ( 88864 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:39PM (#12181617) Homepage
    The article is a little misleading. It seems to imply that Didio was first harrassed by zealous linux supporters with her TCO survey.

    She doesn't mention her quick involvement in the SCO case, where she was one of the first and only Analysts to sign the SCO NDA and claim publically they had a solid case. She wasn't all to forthcoming to her 15 year friendship with everyone's fav marketing vp, Black Stowell either.

    http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/06/09/105501 09 12770.html?oneclick=true

    Quickly after that initial report she produced a report that critized Linux vendors for failing to indemnify customers, the exact same line Darl McBride was telling.

    http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/31252.html

    Then she produces a TCO report on Linux vrs Windows development that uses BEA and Oracle on the Linux side vrs IIS and SQL2000 on the MS side and reports MS is much cheaper then the linux solution. Which i belive is the one the article mentions.

    So to say Didio was unfairly attacked because she objectively came out with reports that critize linux is quite wrong. She was questioned because of her seemingly permament bias against Linux.

    If the source of this is not monetary, I'd hate to know what some Linux developer did to her to make it so Personal.
    • She doesn't mention her quick involvement in the SCO case, where she was one of the first and only Analysts to sign the SCO NDA and claim publically they had a solid case. She wasn't all to forthcoming to her 15 year friendship with everyone's fav marketing vp, Black Stowell either.

      And if some are inclined to dismiss the above as trivial ("there are always stupid people out there, no need to pay attention to them"), read this statement [groklaw.net] at Groklaw.

      For those not aware of what had happened in the past few

  • Nut Jobs??? (Score:3, Funny)

    by natet ( 158905 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:43PM (#12181658)
    "I've had these nut jobs calling me at 11 o'clock at night," said DiDio.
    Inconsiderate people call at 11:00 pm. Nut jobs call at 4 am, and tell you what you are wearing in your bed as they watch you through a telescope from the apartment across the street.

    I should know. The court appointed Psychologist told me I'm a nut job. She said that was the technical term for it...

  • by GPLDAN ( 732269 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:48PM (#12181718)
    In politics, the first rule is to define your opponent. It really doesn't matter what your are about, it matters how you get others to percieve the opponent.

    This works as corporate marketing as well. Ads which are the most effective are ones that frame the competition as being idiots or ridiculous. The Coke vs. Pepsi truck driver commercials, etc.

    This is strategy. Frame Linux advocates as fringe element types. Frame the open source movement as un-American, hippy idealism. Cast aspersions, and most importantly, PUT A WOMAN UP FRONT TO PLAY THE VICTIM ROLE.

    Oh no, she's been flamed and horrible emails have been sent. Linux zealots are RUINING things. They are vociferously countering our FUD and constantly shedding light on our spin and half truths. We need to stop them!

    This is a war. It's a war against a monolithic corporation which controls the operating system market with an iron grip, and is co-opting the mainstream press and buying favorable press. On the other side is the open source movement, now potentially aided by companies like IBM which will genuinely help it achieve legitimacy in the corporate and academic worlds. European and South American countries are realizing they get escape debt cycles by simply getting out from under the thumb of insane software license schemes.

    In this war, you can expect every trick to be used. Linux users will be cast in the vein of the Simpson's comic book guy. Sarcastic nerds, nobodies, people who are wacko. People who hate capitalism and hate intellectual property law.

    It's ordinary every day programmers contributing to something for the gerater good vs. Madison avenue types running bought and paid for marketing campaigns. You need to defy them by refusing to be defined by them. You need to recruit other people to the benefits of OpenOffice and OpenVPN and Linux and away from corporate juggernauts who will try and FUD this thing to kill it.

    • You're absolutely correct on every point.

      And that's why people hate these clowns like DiDio - because these clowns are fundamentally vicious assholes who think nothing of lying and stealing and using the state to crush their opponents.

      Back in the 1960's, one of the Situationist International people made the point that the hot violence of mobs and riots - so often derided as mindless violence - was precisely the right antidote to the cold, malicious thwarting of human potential which the state and the corporations DELIBERATELY engage in for their own benefit.

      And as Bush and his cronies have demonstrated, these kind of people will kidnap you, torture you, and kill you and everyone around you to get their way - and then smirk about it at press conferences.

      Unfortunately for them, so will I (leaving out the press conferences). Worse, I'm willing to wait for the right technology to perform a "Final Solution" on their asses.

      Meanwhile, you are correct that the appropriate response is to keep producing good stuff and show it to people. Things will keep getting better if we do.

      And that's why, as someone else posted, DiDio is "squealing like a pig" - and so is Bill.

  • by trelanexiph ( 605826 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @05:59PM (#12181824) Homepage
    Laura, how have you been since we talked on the phone? I'm hardly a terrorist, I gave you my name and position in the open-source community when I called you, and you know as well as I do the reason for that call, but I will re-iterate it here. If you call us ankle-biting terrorist car-bombers, we can and will make this a self-fulfilled prophecy. My intent in calling you was not to terrorize but to ask you why you would say such things about a productive and creative community? While it may have been 11pm there it was 7pm on the west coast.
    Stick to your analysis and don't preach, it makes you look ever so slightly less biased. SCO found this out, you found this out, do not fuck with a community of people who have put their talent, and their names on the line to write code, and support the community. We have a thin, thin tolerance of people publically abusing us for no good reason other than that you seem to feel like it. I wonder, was William Genevesse (arrested for stealing the winows 2000 software and reselling it) ever convicted of being an "open source terroist" or perhaps and "ankle-biter" (I might agree with you here).
    Truth be told you were dead wrong and instead of waiting for LAW ENFORCEMENT to do their job and arrest the cracker responsible for this, you launched a slur campaign.
  • Damaged Reputation (Score:3, Insightful)

    by _Sprocket_ ( 42527 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @06:31PM (#12182169)
    It's rather facinating that the article quotes some rather infamous sources. Mi2g's security analysis has been constantly criticized. Laura Didio's analysis of OS issues, and even the legality of code in the SCO case has also been under constant question. Google around; criticism isn't hard to find. It's not that the opinions of these analysists are unpopular; they're simply suspect.

    It must be very convenient for them to have a few zealots around to distract from the question of the quality of their work.
  • by samdu ( 114873 ) <samdu@NOSPAM.ronintech.com> on Friday April 08, 2005 @06:40PM (#12182245) Homepage
    ...damaged the reputation of Linux, then there's little chance they ever will. Linux adoption has increased every year for at least the last five years and the rabid voices were loudest in the early days. I don't see how they can halt the momentum at this point.
  • by jht ( 5006 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @07:20PM (#12182564) Homepage Journal
    First of all, I support, use, and sell Linux in my daily work. I also do the same for Microsoft products, Novell products, and Apple products (whatever fits a client best). I don't really have an OS dog in this particular hunt.

    That said, in my prior professional life I was a corporate-type IT manager. For two different companies over an 11-year period. During that time an old college friend of mine went to work for Computerworld as a reporter, and through her I met and occasionally worked with Laura DiDio back when she was covering the Novell beat for CW (old Google searches will probably turn up a quote or two from me in articles of hers). I can't directly speak of her attitudes now, because it's been a couple of years since I've spoken to her (I've talked to her about stuff since she joined Yankee, though). Here's my take on Laura, and where she's coming from:

    Laura is not a tech geek like most of us are. She's also not specifically a fanboy of any particular company or technology. Laura's strength at CW was in insight - she did a good job of seeing through the fluff that companies were spewing and getting to the "real" impact behind it. Covering Novell back when Microsoft was first starting to take a big bite out of their business, she recognized then that it wasn't the superiority of the product that was winning the battle for Microsoft, it was the marketing. She also saw what Novell was doing wrong, but wasn't in a position to do much about it other than point it out in columns.

    As an analyst, I'd say her work (that I've read) is usually solid. I don't agree with all her conclusions, but remember - her job is to figure out what mainstream business is doing and is interested in. It's not to rave about one platform or another. And since mainstream business is on Windows, converting would incur costs and complications that don't exist if they stay on Windows. Some companies would save money by moving to Linux - some would not. Sometimes it's worth it for a business. Sometimes it's not. And sometimes she's spot-on - sometimes she's not.

    The folks who post flames about her and other analysts who say anything other than "Linux rocks and Windows sucks" regularly are giving Linux a bad name, Slashdot a bad name, and the whole open source/free software community a bad name. There are valid criticisms one can make of some of DiDio's work. Flaming the messenger personally because you don't agree with her professional conclusions - that's just stupid.

    Even Rob Enderle deserves better.

    OK, maybe that's going a little too far...
  • by mojoNYC ( 595906 ) on Friday April 08, 2005 @07:21PM (#12182574) Homepage
    it seems it takes an extremist to know one:

    Yesterday, Brent Noorda posted an open letter on Groklaw Brent Noorda Sets the Record Straight [groklaw.net] --here's a key quote:

    While the information provided by analysts like Rob Enderle and Laura DiDio weren't incorrect, their statements represented speculation more fitting to a daytime soap opera than to the business section of a newspaper.

    this refers in part to DiDio's many inflammatory statements, in particular one from the SLC Tribune on March 9:

    No one could say for sure Wednesday, although Yankee Group analyst Laura DiDio had some advice for those watching the fortunes of both Canopy and the Noorda Family Trust - two entities controlling hundreds of millions of dollars. "This is all about the money, and the ones most closely following the money are the Noordas' [four] kids," she said. "Who stands to gain the most? And what's the only thing that stood between them and the money?

    "That was Ralph Yarro. So, good-bye, Ralph," DiDio added. "I don't think Yarro will be reinstated. I find that highly unlikely. . . They will just pay him off and send him on his way - but they won't countenance anyone who's a threat" to their monetary access.

    People following the case know about Val Noorda Kreidel's tragic suicide a few weeks ago, and evidently, Brent Noorda felt compelled to address the out-of-bounds tactics of these so-called 'analysts.'

    While it could be agreed that there are individual extremists among the pro-FOSS crowd, DiDio and her fellow neo-cons (Enderle, Maureen O'Gara) consider Groklaw itself to be a radical extremist site, despite the solid legal reportage done by Pamela Jones and company (so good, in fact, that SCO raided Groklaw's documents to seed their own prosco site).

    While DiDio is crying harrassment, one could have a sense that the best defense is a good offense, as in she'd rather take offense than apologize for her own transgressions...

    I encourage everybody who hasn't already, to check out Brent Noorda's open letter on Groklaw, and then decide for yourself who's the real extremist!

  • by alizard ( 107678 ) <alizard@@@ecis...com> on Friday April 08, 2005 @09:23PM (#12183603) Homepage
    an article running on ZDNet in which the consulting firm The Yankee Group goes after folks in the Linux community who have been questioning their objectivity. From the article: "Laura DiDio,

    My, that name sounds familiar. I remember her repeating SCO's unsubstantiated claims about Linux being stolen SCO code.

    You mean people haven't been questioning their competence?

    I think the problem that Yankee Group has is indeed that Open Sourcers are questioning their competence in inconvenient places like the offices of CIOs and CTOs, and if the direct customers for Yankee Group publications and analysis start hearing enough questions as to whether or not the products are a rational use of company funds, Yankee is likely to find their customers going to the competition or even bringing analysis in-house.

    Yankee doesn't sell to end users, their only market is corporate/investor, and ALL they have to sell is their credibility.

    They should concentrate on finding facts to analyze, not trying to spread more Linux-related FUD. The only credibility that sort of thing hurts is their own.

    This isn't "Linux zealots hurting. . ." anything but Yankee Group. I'm sure the Gartner people enjoyed reading the article.

  • Some quotes (Score:5, Informative)

    by bruns ( 75399 ) <[moc.tibm2] [ta] [snurb]> on Friday April 08, 2005 @09:35PM (#12183698) Homepage
    One of the quotes that helped Laura earn the name DiDiot:

    "Within the open source community, there are a large percentage of tinkers and 'ankle biters' who are trying their hand at hacking. Some are even communicating with each other. So it only takes one or two of these groups sharing information to be able to pull something off. When you have this type of passion, it's hard to fight because these people are like virtual suicide car bombers."

    If you can't stand the heat Laura, don't keep throwing fuel on the fire.

    Even though Billy boy over there says that you can't get burned by being his shill, you might get an unpleasant surprise...

If you steal from one author it's plagiarism; if you steal from many it's research. -- Wilson Mizner

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