MS Has Free Software Removed From U.N. Paper 303
linumax writes "Microsoft asked for references to free software to be removed from a document presented at last week's UN World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) conference, the software giant admitted on Friday. The Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) is unhappy that the document was changed and claims that even though it was on the panel discussing the document, it was not made aware of Microsoft's changes. The document (2.8MB PDF), known as the Vienna Conclusions, discusses issues around IT and creativity. The original draft of the document discussed how the free software model is changing the way people do business."
What do you even say to that? (Score:2)
Warren
Re:What do you even say to that? (Score:5, Funny)
DUDE! Watch it, don't piss them off or they'll "fucking bury that [planet], I have done it before, and I will do it again. I'm going to fucking kill [Earth]."
Re:What do you even say to that? (Score:3, Interesting)
If MS stops altering the UN reports, then the UN will alter the report on free software.
Re:What do you even say to that? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What do you even say to that? (Score:3, Funny)
No thanks! It's DRM'ed!
Commercial software buisness practices (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Commercial software buisness practices (Score:2)
MS should just be training its employees in other fields, and moving into other markets like everyone else, because paying for software is so 20th century.
Re:Commercial software buisness practices (Score:2)
The last gasps of the commercial software industry will not be nice, or any fun at all.
Commercial software is in no danger. It might not be a good time to be developing commercial operating systems, but that's a small fraction of the industry (developer-wise, not revenue-wise). The software industry is healthy overall. The loss of Microsoft's multi-billion OS and office businesses would be less problematic than the end of Enron was. There were no big disruptions when Standard Oil and Ma Bell were br
Re:Commercial software buisness practices (Score:4, Insightful)
Not really, and only for certain claasses of software. What you're actually seeing is the commoditization of a product which has a zero cost of production. In an open market, software like operating systems and office suites, which have barely improved in the past decade, would have tended towards zero price.
They have long since amortized their development costs, and since production and distribution are essentially free, their true value should be a token royalty. The computer using community has tolerated monopoly rents because we recognise computing as a field where we would like innovation to continue. We pay much more than the token value in order to provide the resources that software companies need to be able to improve the product. When you bought Office XP, you weren't jsut paying for that version, you were paying for the expectation that Office 2003 would be significantly better.
What open software does, is to demonstrate that the cost of innovation in OS and similar classes of software is much lower than the fees that Microsoft is charging. That's why Microsoft's FUDsters hate FOSS so much. It's not that FOSS is a competitor, they know how to treat them, it's because FOSS is a demonstration to the world just how much their tolerance for a monopoly is costing them.
Free software is commercial software. (Score:2)
Perhaps you meant to say proprietary software instead of "commercial" software.
Trying to stop the sea with its hands (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Trying to stop the sea with its hands (Score:2)
I don't know what Microsoft was thinking, but this move has the word DESPERATION written all over it. I hope they make the original available, so that every one can see how one entity persuaded the publishers of this document to withhold valuable information from everyone else.
Re:Trying to stop the sea with its hands (Score:2)
IBM in its heyday, probably felt the same way. That is, until the market slapped it silly.
It's not that I'd necessarily like to see the demise of Microsoft, but I'd like to see it become a competitive player in the market. All of its current status is based on a model that has consumers (relatively) locked in to a single, proprietary OS, with proprietary software that uses proprietary formats, and makes difficult, if not impossible, for anyone to offer a competitive choice.
Re:Trying to stop the sea with its hands (Score:4, Interesting)
There are certainly clever execs at Microsoft. I am not denying this. I will also say I agree about the general tone of "a coherent strategy is still being developed" bit. Indeed I figure it should be 2-4 more years before Microsoft has a real plan to deal with Linux beyond the current holding pattern.
However, this move was a serious blunder and is going to come back to haunt them, I fear. Indeed, one wonders if at some point they get sued over anticomeptitive behavior against Linux and OpenOffice, if this will be presented as evidence of anticompetitive behavior. IANAL though.
Re:Trying to stop the sea with its hands (Score:2)
Fine (Score:5, Insightful)
It's just so absurd, they walk around, flash some cash and get what they want done. This all after the whole european antitrust thing... I find it shocking they CAN have this removed. I wonder this isn't classed as attempted monopolisation, they are, after all trying to lock out other competitors from publicity.
Re:Fine (Score:5, Funny)
Both of them?
Re:Fine (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm. I must have missed the other one then. Do you have a link?
Found your link (Score:5, Funny)
Hey now, microsoft doesn't suck all the time
But seriously though, googling for "Microsoft doesn't suck" [google.com] on Slashdot brings up three results, of which two are the same.
Re:Fine (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm. I must have missed the other one then. Do you have a link?
No need... it was a dupe.
Re:Fine (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fine (Score:2)
I think slashdot is about as pro-microsoft in the color schemes as it is pro "Cow Jones" UID#615566 [slashdot.org].
Re:Fine (Score:2)
Move along now...
Re:Fine (Score:2)
We know. They post to slashdot regularly.
Re:Fine (Score:2)
You should be celebrating - it's money out of MS's hands and into those of the supporters of open source.
What Microsoft doesn't understand.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry Microsoft.. you've earned your reptuation as underhanded, dirty, cheating assholes - and stupid stunts like this just continue to prove that you can't teach an old dog new tricks.
Re:What Microsoft doesn't understand.. (Score:2)
Re:What Microsoft doesn't understand.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Having actually been interviewed (and misquoted) by IT press, I have to say that I wasn't so impressed with there interest in getting the facts right. They were more interested in getting a quote about some technology of ours that was "insanely great" or about how my opinion of someone else's technology was that it was "monstrously horrible."
There was very little journalism in the piece and significantly less technical savvy than I had hoped for. (I happened to mention XDoclet and it came out in the transcript X Doplet, and I was ostensibly speaking with Java-oriented "journalists.")
For many in the IT press, talking to a Microsoft person is "a get" and the facts don't matter so much. If you actually are looking for solid computing journalism, I've been impressed with Linux Journal. It has the feel that Byte and PC Magazine used to have. If you really want to know where MS technology is and where it's going, you'd be much better off reading the MS developer blogs.
Re:What Microsoft doesn't understand.. (Score:2)
Just looking out for us (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just looking out for us (Score:2)
lets face it (Score:4, Insightful)
Recently there was an article regarding a clone researcher being looked upon as being bad, when the fact of teh matter is that he only tried to hide the dishonesty of his associates upon his finding out they had lied regarding their donorship.
Now that's a case of one level disconnection from the initial deception. And consider what happened to him for it.
This MS constant lying is first degree deception, outright intentional
So why are they still in business?
Or is this only more proof that they are not genuine researchers or innovators, just used car salesmen selling the research and innovation others outside of them have done, as their own?
Its ok to lie, if you are a salesperson, but not a genuine researcher..... right?
Re:lets face it (Score:2)
Because microsoft forged a strong alliance with the current WH administration, which enabled microsoft to essentially "press delete" on the antitrust trial.
a perfect match with politicians, don't you think?
Re:lets face it (Score:2)
I'm waiting for someone to hit the "undo" button.
Re:lets face it (Score:4, Insightful)
And which universe are you living in? I think Open Source has a lot of potential, but until its advocates remove their blinkers, industry will continue to dismiss it as a group of eccentrics on a religious crusade. It is only when open source projects take a mature and pragmatic approach that the projects become relatively successful.
Re:lets face it (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm. Can't wait until Apache becomes mature and pragmatic. Or Debian, and Slackware too. And all those immature projects on Sourceforge. When that happens well, by golly, you'll probably see these eccentric oddities at Lawrence Livermore Labs [llnl.gov] or running on Cray hardware [cray.com].
If they were really mature and pragmatic, they just might make it into government use [coverpages.org], or even become more commonplace [mozilla.org].
We can only patiently wait for that wonderful maturity and pragmatism to blossom. Until then we should be thankful that we are skillfully guided by the benign monopolists. They only have our best interests at heart.
Re:lets face it (Score:3, Insightful)
Because business -- REAL western business, and not the ideological extensions that so many around this place confuse for the real thing -- is ugly. Slashdot and those that drink the OSS Kool-Aid are hyper-sensitive to Microsoft's wheelings and dealings because it's something they care about. In reality, everyone who is very successful has pulled bullying tactics, and it usually slips quietly under the radar because it's not actually news.
I find it ironic that the same
Re:lets face it (Score:2)
Yes people know corruption exist, thats why the OSS movement exist. Ultimately its the consumers producing it in response to proprietary mentality.
Try researching the history of the likes of the FSF. Why it began.
You can only fool the consumer for so long, before you get busted...again and again...
Re:lets face it (Score:5, Informative)
math..... the difference between unix type or oriented systems and windows???
Of the unix type there is Linux, FreeBSD, MacOSX, unix (of course), etc. Due to the licensing of such FOSS amd its packaging (you don't always need a server edition of a distribution to install a server) it is difficult to genuunely track teh use of such FOSS server usage. But do the math, unix style servers are greater in number than windows based servers. and of course there will be more servers in general in use tomorrow than today...
Then there is the company compatability and administrator education/expierance being tied to a windows past, as the company grows and need to either replace their servers with newer hardware able to handle more. Such purchases often include windows server upgrades, perhaps to help take advantage of the newer hardware.
What of FOSS server software? The capabilities are not static, but improving as well. Maybe there is just less need to learn more to use its next release... making it easier for the foss experienced server administrator to not need to buy the next major release and support, but rather to upgrade less at any given time as time goes by. A process where there is less likelyhood of massive user rush to patch holes and cause a ripple thru industry from such common and wide taxation of resources from administrator to user.
So maybe foss is a slower upgrade process, but its also going to obtain in such trade off, a reduced risk base.
At any rate FOSS is not declining in use. Its growing in all the ways and places it does.
Of course non of this counters teh fact that MS lies every chance they get, about FOSS. And that's the real point. If they are as good as they claim, then certainly they must realize that lying is not consistant with public relations marketing, and certainly only shows doubt about their own product and/or sales pitch.
DOH (Score:3, Insightful)
Hello, Microsoft! Welcome to the post-GPL economy, where software income is based on services!
Re:DOH (Score:2)
I would be very wary about putting too much faith in a service-based economy. A service provider is a lot easier to replace than a manufacturing provider. This is a good thing if you are the one buying the service, but not so much if you are the one providing the service. Which, of course, everyone would be in one form or another in an entirely service-based economy, like the US seems hell-bent on moving towards.
Re:DOH (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:DOH (Score:2)
Microsoft is earning something along the lines of $30-80 on every single PC that leaves the shelf anywhere in the world. I wouldn't call that "providing stuff for free". But even that is not what people clamor about; it's that the software which every PC in the world comes installed with is closed-source, proprietary, so that nobody is able to make competing software that performs the same fu
Interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Software (Score:2, Funny)
Stage 3: fight (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stage 3: fight (Score:2, Funny)
Well, they're making others do their ignoring, it seems.
Tempest in a teapot (Score:5, Informative)
got changed to this:
These are U.N. peole (think University board members - only more useless) who play with words for a living.
"Nothing to see here, move along."
Welcome to Slashdot! (Score:2)
-everphilski-
Re:Welcome to Slashdot! (Score:2)
"Increasingly, revenue is generated."
And don't come to disagree!
Re:Welcome to Slashdot! (Score:2)
OK, you're right, you've convinced me. Censorship is a good thing...as long as they START AND END WITH YOU I'M ALL FOR IT!!! Now, go be happy.
Re:Tempest in a teapot (Score:5, Insightful)
Open dialog is something new, we've only been really trying it since the Soviet Union fell. Give it time for us to learn how to get better at it and do it right before dismissing it.
Re:Tempest in a teapot (Score:2, Informative)
It's enough for me.
Re:Tempest in a teapot (Score:3, Interesting)
The second sentence on the other hand, sounds like a Microsoft dream come true, with everyone buying their software, and paying for the extra services as well.
I think it's a big difference.
Re:Tempest in a teapot (Score:2)
Hey, just because I don't believe in it doesn't mean I can't point it out to somebody who might. After all, the other side certainly has no qualms about beating ME over the head with it every chance they get. I just fight fire with fire.
Are you living in one of the Islamic republics?
There is not, to my knowledge, the Ten Commandments in the Qua'ran. There are supposed to be equivalents scattered around, however.
here in the Western democracies have laws that are based on secu
One more... (Score:2)
UN's document is absurd and oxymoronic (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't be fooled by those "market power should not be used to dominate and restrict the free exchange of ideas", this phrase can mean of anyone but established content providers.
Immediately followed by...
ICT x Monopolies = Digital Divide This document is moronic and it's authors are nothing but paying lip service to their sponsors, Corporate America.
Re:UN's document is absurd and oxymoronic (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course they are voluntary, did Sony install a rootkit in your computer against their will? Of course not, they even thought you didn't need to bother about it because you didn't know what it was...
Is it other than market driven? The editors practically control the market. I find it harder and harder to buy Music in an unencumbered format...
Re:UN's document is absurd and oxymoronic (Score:2)
Pretty Rotten, Wouldn't You Say? (Score:3, Interesting)
What about this? (Score:5, Interesting)
This was extracted from the document under discussion. I would have expected this forum to be much more upset about this transparent advocacy of DRM than it would be about some trifling changes regarding free software. If I didn't know better I might think the disclosure that Microsoft had the "free software" language stricken from the document was done deliberately to draw attention away from it's other content. But we in
Ok, who's idea was it... (Score:2, Funny)
Makes you wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
"Microsoft asked for references to free software to be removed from a document presented at last week's UN World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) conference, the software giant admitted on Friday"
Which was worse? The fact that Microsoft askef for it to be removed or the fact that the UN happily agreed to it?
Re:Makes you wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
If I was a UN bod and was funded by MS bribes, I would be happy too. Pretty obvious what happened here.
Re:Makes you wonder... (Score:2)
The UN is a result of its members (Score:2)
Really it seems a bit shallow to start speculating on what's happened here. Claiming that "The UN happily agreed to it" is synonymous to claiming that the "US government" happily agreed to every tiny thing promoted by any and every employee or official associated with it. Clearly Microsoft got their way, but it's unclear just how involved the UN as an entity actually was. It could just
Re:Makes you wonder... (Score:2)
Because that's where the big bucks are. No one ever got rich by turning down their bribes.
TWW
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Indirect comment (Score:4, Insightful)
Every time I read that "Linux is behind, incapable" or whatever, I take note that they don't understand shit. First off, Linux is a small part of the Desktop setup. The other thing I note is I'm sitting here just happy on my Desktop running Gentoo. It does everything I want [which is more than WinXP can deliver anyways] and it didn't cost me a dime other than time to set it up.
It's good that people are catching MSFT in their lies and poor behaviour but for every MSFT person saying "Linux is bad" there is just another person using an OSS kernel with OSS userland tools scratching their heads. And in the end it's really just that. Some MSFT guy saying something. Sure there are people who buy it without question but there are still more that are aware of it and people taking action on it.
It's just far far far too late. I mean all the negative press in the world won't make the millions of OSS users switch. And as long as there is 1 OSS user out there, it won't die.
So go ahead MSFT, act all desperate marketting and FUD'ing against OSS. You could be better served by actually delivering stuff of value. It sucks that an OS has lost "value" [in light of Linux or BSD + OSS userland] but that's it. No clever amount of marketting will make something that has no value all of a sudden have value.
Tom
So where is the original draft? (Score:5, Interesting)
MS software isn't free? (Score:5, Funny)
Owell (Score:3, Interesting)
he who controls the present, controls the past
And he who can have reports and news stories edited on a whim, controls the present.
Background of the story (Score:5, Informative)
For those of you who are interested in the entire story and its background, here are the links:
The best overall analysis and description of the situation so far was written by Germanys largest IT news provider, the Heise Verlag [heise.de]. They have the story online in both English [heise.de] and German [heise.de].
Simple explanation why this happened (Score:2, Interesting)
Amount of campaign contributions made by FSF: $0
Amount of campaign contributions made by Microsoft: > $0
We elect our leaders and they appoint people who make decisions. Why do you continue to expect them to benefit you, who contributed $0 to the winning party, if the opposite decisions are desired by people/entities that contributed?
Think of it this way: politicians and those they appoint want to keep their jobs. They will help those that contribute to them keeping their jobs instead of st
Re:Simple explanation why this happened (Score:2)
Missed the point... (Score:3, Insightful)
The saddest thing about the U.N. at the moment though is the fall from grace of the once eminent Kofi Annan.
Re:Missed the point... (Score:3, Interesting)
I was wondering when someone would point that out.
And a second question I have is: Why did the UN guys go along with it? When MS told them to make changes, why didn't they just say "Who are you to order us around?"
What sort of hold does MS have over the UN guys? Why didn't the UN just publish the report as written?
Anyone know?
scared? (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow, the guys at microsoft are really scared so much that they're becoming irrational:
Just a question, how many of you have ever written free software explicitly to put a company (say, MS) out of business?
Maybe you wrote a program after seeing a commercial implementation, but probably only because you wanted to improve on it or make it available for your favourite os. OS software is written because there is a need for it, not to push others out of business.
Yes there are other companies using open source as a business strategy. A strategy that works well against competitors like microsoft, but clearly has its own pitfalls as well...
so please Bill, keep your paranoia at home and stop messing with politics
Re:scared? (Score:2)
I remeber there being an old wives tale/parable/famous quote/something of that nature which equates someone projecting their motives onto everyone who attacks them... little
Basically (Score:3, Funny)
"Nyeh, nyeh, nyeh - I can't hear you, I can't hear you!"
Is there a record of Microsoft's activities? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Is there a record of Microsoft's activities? (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.catb.org/~esr/halloween/ [catb.org]
http://archive.corporatewatch.org/profiles/microso ft/microsoft.pdf [corporatewatch.org]
http://www.proudlyserving.com/archives/2005/03/dis liking_micro.html [proudlyserving.com]
http://www.salon.com/tech/special/microsoft/ [salon.com]
http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Microsoft [reference.com]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft#1995.E2.80. 9399:_foray_into_the_Internet_and_other_venues [wikipedia.org]
http://uk-linux.news-view.co.uk/topic-6268.html [news-view.co.uk]
Unfortunately, I didn't find a comprehensive timeline of Microsoft's misdeeds.
Not un-expected behavior from Microsoft (Score:2)
From a company that claims your stealing from them when you buy a white-box (naked PC) computer. Even though you might be putting linux, OS/2, or a older version of Windows that you own on the box.
From a company you have to ask permission to install the software that you purchased.
That the software can disable itself once you change your computer seems to be of no big deal to people other than myself.
From a company who wants to install DRM to limit the DVD quality of your movies.
From a
Re:thats it... (Score:5, Insightful)
And will your "playing dirty" result in better open source software? I doubt it. That's why it is probably best for the community to just continue producing superior products, and eventually people will migrate the to the best (and likely open source) products.
Re:thats it... (Score:2, Interesting)
If companies like Microsoft can change an official U.N. paper so easily, there is no way ordinary (non-geek) people will even know about Open Source alternatives. And everything that is propagated as "free" (either as in speech or as in beer) is considered "dangerous" (like: "there is no way software can be free, it MUST contain spyware or some other malicious threat. Microsoft says so!")
Really, I hear these things every damned day. I have a really hard time telling people that installing Win XP instead
Top 10 Ways to "play dirty" with Microsoft: (Score:4, Interesting)
9. Refer all charity organizations and any group strapped for cash to Linux. Every year when my kid's school does parent-teacher conferences, I never fail to bring up open-source after the teachers mention school budget cutbacks. (there's always a good opportunity to work that in when the teachers apologize for not getting the reports printed out because XP crashed - again!)
8. Drop IE-compatibility from your websites. Use this: http://www.stopie.com/stopie/home/ [stopie.com] which will refer viewers to download Firefox. Aren't you tired of having to make your website botched up just to work for the lamest browser on the web, anyway?
7. Earn money by referring people to Firefox with Google toolbar while you're at it: http://downhillbattle.org/node/view/554 [downhillbattle.org] Who *says* there's no money in free software?
6. Go to the Ubuntu site - the page where you can order an Ubuntu disk sent to you for free - and fill in RANDOM ADDRESSES. Mystery gifts from the software fairy.
5. Anybody with a CD burner and a Linux fetish will have old Linux CDs they don't use anymore - like when you've updated to the new version. Take these CDs with you to the library, and tuck them into the Windows books in the computer books section.
4. While you're in the library, be sure to fill out those request/suggestion forms for new books to buy with the latest Linux books you're just dying to check out - and hasn't "DOS for Dummies" and "Windows 3.1 - the complete reference" gotten old, anyway?
3. Never pass a computer store without walking in and asking for software titles that run on Linux. The idea is to make them aware that Linux users *would* spend *some* money, if only anybody cared to do business with us.
2. Teach your kids Linux. This is the easiest - kids will absorb Linux like little sponges, all you have to do is install it and stand back.
1. Go to second-hand stores such as Salvation Army and Goodwill. Find a used computer on sale plugged in and running. Stick Knoppix on it. Reboot it. Walk away whistling. Trust me, I've spoken to employee and customer alike at these places - nobody would ever know the difference!
Re:Top 10 Ways to "play dirty" with Microsoft: (Score:4, Insightful)
10a) How many of us have nerd families that would appreciate this?
9. Refer all charity organizations and any group strapped for cash to Linux. Every year when my kid's school does parent-teacher conferences, I never fail to bring up open-source after the teachers mention school budget cutbacks. (there's always a good opportunity to work that in when the teachers apologize for not getting the reports printed out because XP crashed - again!)
9a) Not bad, but the teachers are clueluess in general. Your crusade falls on deaf ears. Else they wouldn't be working at a primary school. Those who can do, those who can't teach.
8. Drop IE-compatibility from your websites. Use this: http://www.stopie.com/stopie/home/ [stopie.com] which will refer viewers to download Firefox. Aren't you tired of having to make your website botched up just to work for the lamest browser on the web, anyway?
8a) Yeah, that's realistic. Do you have a job?
7. Earn money by referring people to Firefox with Google toolbar while you're at it: http://downhillbattle.org/node/view/554 [downhillbattle.org] Who *says* there's no money in free software?
7a) I agree.
6. Go to the Ubuntu site - the page where you can order an Ubuntu disk sent to you for free - and fill in RANDOM ADDRESSES. Mystery gifts from the software fairy.
6a) Yes, adding useless costs to free software projects is helping the cause. They don't mind paying to send those CDs out because it earns a new user. When you send out 1000 and 2 people install them, that's not helping.
5. Anybody with a CD burner and a Linux fetish will have old Linux CDs they don't use anymore - like when you've updated to the new version. Take these CDs with you to the library, and tuck them into the Windows books in the computer books section.
5a) Um, yeah. People stick random CDs into their computer. Then get confused when Windows won't run the installer. Case closed.
4. While you're in the library, be sure to fill out those request/suggestion forms for new books to buy with the latest Linux books you're just dying to check out - and hasn't "DOS for Dummies" and "Windows 3.1 - the complete reference" gotten old, anyway?
4a) I like this, around '97 when I first tried Linux it was frustrating there were no books at the library. (I was 13, then.)
3. Never pass a computer store without walking in and asking for software titles that run on Linux. The idea is to make them aware that Linux users *would* spend *some* money, if only anybody cared to do business with us.
3a) You're the Jehovah's Witness of Linux. Neat.
2. Teach your kids Linux. This is the easiest - kids will absorb Linux like little sponges, all you have to do is install it and stand back.
2a) This is a huge disservice, unless your kids already know Windows. They're going to need Windows for school and job skills, not Linux. Sorry.
1. Go to second-hand stores such as Salvation Army and Goodwill. Find a used computer on sale plugged in and running. Stick Knoppix on it. Reboot it. Walk away whistling. Trust me, I've spoken to employee and customer alike at these places - nobody would ever know the difference!
1a) Interesting, but who's going to know what it was running? From my experience when people don't recognize Windows and see a GUI they assume its a Mac, since thats all they know.
Re:Top 10 Ways to "play dirty" with Microsoft: (Score:3, Insightful)
2a) This is a huge disservice, unless your kids already know Windows. They're going to need Windows for school and job skills, not Linux. Sorry.
Rubbish. a) Windows is easy to pick up for anybody familiar with Linux. b) From my experience, Linux knowledge is worth significantly more in the marketplace than Windows knowledge. Windows jobs are mostly McJobs, Linux job
Re:Top 10 Ways to "play dirty" with Microsoft: (Score:2)
Oh? How do you think mailing people free samples of your product DOESN'T COUNT AS ADVERTISING? And yes, I think most people WILL run free CDs they get in their mailbox, once they've failed to figure it out on their stereo's CD player and couldn't make sense of it when they watched it on their DVD player.
Evengelical religious...*nod* *nod* yep, that's just what I had in mind. _Heeeeeenccce_ _theeeee_ _tiiiitllllee_ _seeeeezzz_ "plaaaayyyy deeerr
Re:thats it... (Score:2)
every time a spyware or spread-only worm gets loose modify and re-release with a drive scrambling or drive encrypting timebomb
Re:thats it... (Score:3, Funny)
The only way to fight a rabid dog is to put it down. Use a gun!
But Atticus Finch, who used the gun, was a really a lawyer. The reversed symbolism here is killing me. Can somebody please bring in an English Lit professor from the EFF to clear this up?
Re:thats it... (Score:3, Funny)
M$ has been playing dirty since the days Bill posed for "Teen Beat" magazine http://blog.monkeymethods.org/2005/01/bill-gates-s trikes-pose-for-teen-beat.html [monkeymethods.org]
Re:UN in general (Score:2)
Well, you might form a panel which includes forces in the technology sector, like MS and the FSF. Seems reasonable.
How does this not resemble exactly what is described?
So, what do you suggest? (Score:3, Funny)
Parent is a troll (Score:2)
But (Score:2)
-everphilski-
Re:You know what I do? (Score:2)
Yeah, see "Top Ten way to "play dirty" against Microsoft. If for no other reason than because you'll be one of the few who *get* it.