Revolutionary Chinese take on Linux 127
oneeyedman writes "Maybe this will give support to the people who
think that Linux is a communist plot. Salon has an item about
an article called Anti-Microsoft 'subculture'"
that ran in the China Youth Daily. In this reading of the situation, Linux users are angry peasants rising with pitchforks aimed at Microsoft's "hegemony." "
But will the Establishment publish it ? (Score:1)
Poor choice of words (Score:1)
Re:Biggest obstacle to Linux adoption in China (Score:1)
Re:how important is help these days? (Score:2)
If windows 2000 doesn't cost $2000 and it were to sell for $50 and has all this and included MS Office, and Dev Studio, and IIS, and a built in scripting language, and all that Linux has and 200 days of uptime it may be worth buying.
I disagree, since Linux (or FreeBSD for that matter) would still have three big benefits over such a Windows system: It's better written, more stable, and Free [gnu.org].
Fact is the only reason anyone is tied to Microsoft is becuase we almost all use Office and Word.
Speak for yourself. The fact is that many of us don't use Word except for those times when we have to deal with some bozo who insists on sending everything in one of the many Microsoft
Disappointed... (Score:2)
I was expecting something along the lines of "Arise, you cramp-fingered proletariat coders! You have nothing to lose but your licensing agreements! Cast off the chains of the imperialist running dogs at Microsoft and stand blinking in the unfamiliar sunlight of revolution!"
Man, you just don't get Communist movements like you did in the old days anymore...
The importance of the China market. (Score:1)
China is one of the biggest, if not *the* biggest market in the computer industry right now, if Linux can really penetrate into the Chinese market, well, half of the world would be using Linux on their desktops
Linux, because of its price/stability, would definitely appealing to the minds of budget-conscious chinese entrepeneurs (heh, free unix vs. $5000+ NT). As Linux is slowly getting more popular in Hong Kong(that's where i am from), hopefully that would continue well into the Mainland China and other parts of Asia (ie. singapore, etc.)
I think one of the biggest tasks we should work on right now is getting better Chinese support within Linux/X. Avalible GNU chinese inputs kits released by taiwan's Linux User groups are a good direction of what we should work on since commerical/Windoze solutions are quite expensive. multi-lingual, CJK (chinese, japanese, korean) X servers would also be interesting.
If Linux's chinese support gets to be as good as its japanese support (the japanese linux/*bsd hackers are amazing), i think Linux would be well on its way to world domination...
duncan
The importance of the China market. (Score:4)
China is one of the biggest, if not *the* biggest market in the computer industry right now, if Linux can really penetrate into the Chinese market, well, half of the world would be using Linux on their desktops
Linux has already won in terms of price in the budget-conscious chinese entrepeneurs against NT (heh, free unix vs. $5000+ NT) . Linux is slowly getting more popular in Hong Kong already(that's where i am from) and hopefully that would continue into the Mainland China.
I think one of the biggest tasks we should work on is getting better Chinese support within Linux/X. Avalible GNU chinese inputs kits released by taiwan's Linux User groups are a good direction that we should work on.
If Linux's chinese support gets to be as good as its japanese support (the japanese linux/*bsd hackers are amazing), i think Linux would be well on its way to world domination...
duncan
All Bugs Are Shallow (Score:1)
--
oh, the irony... (Score:1)
Phil Fraering "Humans. Go Fig." - Rita
Revolutionary vanguard and anarcho-syndicalism (Score:1)
A better analogy would be the anarcho-syndicalists, based on the writings of Bakunin and Kropotkin. The anarcho-syndicalists rejected structured leadership altogether, choosing instead to select leaders locally for a given farm, factory, or other work unit. Leaders are thus chosen for their leadership, not their political skills, and have no authority over those they do not work with directly. This much more closely parallels the structure of open source software projects.
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The Words of Chairman Stallman (Score:1)
Re:Ten Years? (Score:1)
>And any process that takes ten years will
>get to its destination way, way too late.
Don't tell George Lucas.
- alec
Re:The streets will run red with the blood of M$! (Score:1)
The blood of the martyrs shall water the fields of the Free!
Re:Drunken Master==Good Movie (off topic) (Score:1)
But the sequel (DM II) is pretty amazing.
No, Jet Lee is not in it. Jackie is. I've only
seen it in US stores on LaserDisc. Viewed it at
an arthouse.
I saw the original drunken master vid sittin on
a shelf at Circuit City
-kabloie
The streets will run red with the blood of M$! (Score:1)
nah, linux is like bjj! (Score:1)
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
Linux is more like the SR's (linux is like Makhno, Stallman is Bakunin!).
BeOS is like Milukov and his party
Apple is like the Bolsheviks
FreeBSD are like Mensheviks
Microsoft is like the tzarist govt., Ballmer is Rasputin.
Oh what fun, but your post is full of factual errors and extreme opinions and there isn't any real parallel to draw. Bolsheviks were nothing more than a pack of ruthless thugs that picked up the pieces after the 1917 revolution.
Illegal == More Fun ?? (Score:1)
Sympathise with their cause.. but no thanks (Score:1)
Every collective is made up of individuals, to forget that is to void the whole reason for the collective in the first place. I think every Free or Open Software person would be aghast at the oppresion that happens in China.
It's kinda a strange thing, we co-operate because we chose to as individuals, none of us are pressed. Most of us probably would not co-operate if forced. This is what China seems to forget.
Individuals CHOOSING to work together, that's what makes good software.
China could learn alot from this.
(Go read "No Contest" and other books by Alphie Kohn... good stuff)
We are the techno-peasants.... (Score:1)
and us lowly techno-peasants, who are lucky if
we are consulted on how long it will take,
and are almost *never* asked whether something's
doable, or even whether it *should* be done,
get to do the work.
Yup, sounds right.
Lackey: Sire! The peasants are revolting!
Bill the G: They *certainly* are....
mark "you knew that was coming"
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
The "millions of starved peasants" came later, with the Ukraine famine during the Stalinist period, when Stalin collectivised agriculture. You could try to get your facts straight.
Finally, yes, Lenin organised Gulags, otherwise known as "labour camps for criminals". The US had (has?) them too, and they were originally invented by the Brits during the Boer War.
Ten Years? (Score:1)
Interesting way of thinking - that there will be a conclusion, and that it will take ten years to get there.
I don't think there is ever anything as definite as a conclusion in this biz. And any process that takes ten years will get to its destination way, way too late.
D
----
An examination. (Score:1)
Linux is free, open-source, [insert favorite buzzword here] for the common good. Now, many communist regimes have been idealized and started under the same pretense. However, I'm not aware of any communist government that has ever succeeded. [socialist != communist] Why? Because in the end, the chairman, the politburo, whatever you want to call the concentration of power at the top of the food chain, has succumbed to his own power trip, and wielded the power for his own political/social gain, as opposed to that of the people. In this sense, the people are a commune by name only.
Communism also implies a certain, ultranationalist ethos, in addition to any psuedo-communal ideals. Until we see the day that Linus shores up a vast ocean of political reserves to overthrow [er, excuse me, 'shelter from imperialism'] a people like Luxembourg or the Vatican, I don't think we have to worry about The penguin donning a hammer and sickle quite yet.
This is just more driftwood coming from the giant, rotting structure that is aging Chinese tyranny. Any close examination of today's China would indicate that, beneath the silkscreen, there's a weath of capitalism running around.
ugh. (Score:1)
First of all, let me state that I am an avid Linux user, and that
according to me, there is no other [OS]...
However, when will you (people with the same mentality as the author
of the post i'm responding to) realize that competition *has* to exist?
Competition results in better products.
If `we' didn't have any goals, like being the underdog to upset MS,
I doubt the development of Linux would have advanced at the rate that it did...
The OS/Software might not be good, but the competition is invaluable.
------------------------------------------
Reveal your Source, Unleash the Power. (tm)
Re:Drunken Master==Good Movie (off topic) (Score:1)
how important is help these days? (Score:2)
I guess the question is how important is getting technical support these days?
Well lets see. With Linux you send an email to a mailing list and in most cases you get a response within a day (or same day) and often a solution to you problem or someone experiencing the same problem willing to work with you to solve it.
With most technical support you pay for the product, you pay for the support, then you pay for the phone call and have to press lots of buttons to get support (try calling M$ tech support). Then the solution can often be somewhat costly. Often it is just a matter of downloading a new patch or verion of the software (what I had to do for my scanner with NT). Sometimes it is you must buy this to fix the problem.
Also with Linux for $50 you get the operating system which can be used on SMP, you get a desktop enviroment with X, you get Apache, you can get office tools, and lots of utilities. You get a C/C++ compiler and perl, Fortran, and lots more.
If windows 2000 doesn't cost $2000 and it were to sell for $50 and has all this and included MS Office, and Dev Studio, and IIS, and a built in scripting language, and all that Linux has and 200 days of uptime it may be worth buying.
Fact is the only reason anyone is tied to Microsoft is becuase we almost all use Office and Word. If there was a version of Word that ran under UNIX and LINUX I think we'd all stop using Microsoft products.
Hmmm, another project ot take on.
Drunken Master 2 - Excellent Jacky Chan! (Score:1)
If you like kung fu, or Jacky Chan, or action, or anything, go see this movie. You won't be disappointed!!
Re:Biggest obstacle to Linux adoption in China (Score:2)
Internationalization becomes a major selling point here. It may be that Micros~1, recognizing that it won't actually sell much software in China on account of rampant piracy, may not bother investing much in making Windows friendly to a Chinese audience. If that's the case, Linux may win by default.
Re:Um.. no (Score:1)
Don't forget the other key feature: Linux runs, and runs well on old hardware. A pentium 66 with 16M runs X in a useable way. Even a 386 is useful, although you may not want to run X on it. Developing countries have few new machines.
Opportunism? (Score:1)
The Communists: "Linux is communist!"
The Anti-Communist Chinese: "Linux is anti-communist!"
The Randists: "Linux is randist!"
The Libertarians: "Linux is libertarian!"
The Open Source Initiative: "Linux is Open Source!"
The Free Software Foundation: "Linux is Free Software!"
The only one who isn't playing that game right now is Microsoft, but only because it's in their legal interest to play up Linux as a competitor. But wait until they have been punished by the DoJ, and you know what you'll hear:
"Linux is Micro$oft software!"
Bah.
More Chinese metaphors (Score:1)
Windows is more of the Jackie Chan Wong Fei Hung, arrogant, confident of its ability but ultimately destined to receive a kicking.
Will W2K be Drunken Master 2? Only time will tell.
Re:The importance of the China market. (Score:1)
Re:You know nothing about China (Score:1)
"Since when did I"... well, I've lived in the Chinese world most of my working life, and only returned to Europe this year.
Second, I can't speak for the US Media - I'm not American.
Re:exactly, people need to read between the lines (Score:1)
Article is just copy fodder (Score:3)
Bashing the West is also pretty safe ground, and that's why this article was written. Remember that the impression it'll create in China is somewhat different to the impression it creates on
It's a good job most people don't read the official press any more and get their content smuggled in from Hongkong.
Re:Bootleg copies of Red Hat? (Score:1)
By not offering the source :)
Seriously, in this instance Linux and MS products have to compete on equal terms... it'll be interesting to see what happens.
Biggest obstacle to Linux adoption in China (Score:2)
fact that, for many, if not most people, Microsoft
software costs the same as Linux: nothing.
Piracy is everywhere.
On the bright side, though, the pirate CD vendors
have started selling bootleg copies of the latest
Red Hat releases, and Linux is gaining ground in
the growing ISP industry.
Drunken Master==Good Movie (off topic) (Score:1)
So what OS would Su Hua Chi (the drunk uncle) be?
wa- hao jiu!
Re:Drunken Master==Good Movie (off topic) (Score:1)
Re:how important is help these days? (Score:1)
*However*, this is in Hong Kong and the characters used on the mainland are subtly different. I would hazard a guess that once unicode/multi-byte character support is in there, then the actual language is a minor detail.
Linux (or free Unices in general) are probably the way for China to go, but Microsoft has a big foothold in there already.
lau dai wai-ah
Re:exactly, people need to read between the lines (Score:1)
Re:Well, I'm disappointed... (Score:1)
"Render unto Caeser..."
Re:An examination. (Score:1)
For anyone who's actually experienced the change from a Socialist system towards one based on markets and private ownership of production a few things are clear: the standard of living goes down (in Russia life expectancy decreased by 6 years in the first decade of a market economy), production goes down (GDP fell by about 60%), and crime goes up (from practically nonexistant to American levels and higher). Some other changes - deterioration of public schools, hospitals, roads, pretty much anything that wasn't making money, but existed to be used by the public. And yes, corruption went up too, for a very simple reason - if a society is based on "everyone for himself", as opposed to "equal benefit to all", you can't really blame people for trying to get a larger slice. If they don't take it, someone else will. Well, Communism (Socialism, whatever you want to call it) was the first system that eliminated this Wild West attitude to life. It was a managed society, as opposed to one where a person can get rich from speculating in stocks (paper essentially), or remain poor in spite of having worked all his life.
As with any large system, Communism had its drawbacks (e.g. there was no real freedom of speech during the whole Communist period in Russia), but in my opinion they were far outweighed by the benefits. It was a sanely designed, humane society, which is probably gone now forever.
When people criticize Communist systems, they don't usually take account of what came before them. It is true that the Chinese, or the Russian version of Communism excluded free speech or voting, but neither of these things have ever existed in Russia or China before. Prior to the Comunist revolution Russia was poor, authoritarian and corrupt. Then there was a period when it was middle class, authoritarian, and extremely law abiding. Well, guess what, it's now returned to its original state of chaos, poverty and authoritarianism. The reason this hasn't really happened to China yet is that China is so enourmous, and any change is bound to be slow. But from what I hear, things are moving in the same direction there too.
I'll finish my off-topic rant with this thought: imagine a society without ads. Anywhere. Not a single one. No one trying to sell you something against your will, or scheming to make money from you in other ways. Yes, Communism really was like that.
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
The tradition of sending prisoners to Siberia was started by Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century. Known by many names, it continues to this day.
Stalin was a traditional Russian despot in the manner of many of the czars. Lenin on the other hand was an intellectual, probably the only one to ever rule a major country.
Immediately after coming to power Lenin pulled Russia out of World War I, undoubtedly saving millions of lives.
The Civil War was started by the Whites (contra-revolutionaries). They fought for monarchy and the return of land to rich landowners (land reform was one of the first Bolshevik achievements).
After being shot in 1918 Lenin went through a series of illnesses. He became completely incapacitated in 1922, and died in 1924. Things took a completely different turn after that.
Nevertheless:
As late as 1929 Russia had a total freedom of the press and the New Economic Policy (Lenin's attempt at a regulated market system) was still active. That's the year when Stalin took over, killing most of Lenin's ideas and instituting his cult of personality.
Although Stalin was not technically a Russian (he came from a region known as the Caucasus), the major features of his rule would be very familiar to anyone who knows Russian history: centralized government control, imperialism, and brutal repression of any kind of opposition. All of this has existed in Russia centuries before Communism was ever concieved. To call these things Communist is to really misunderstand the point IMO.
Chinese Unix (Score:1)
(And of course, I would search for it, but I'm getting about 10B/sec from
Um.. no (Score:1)
And the fact that most people dont have the hacking ability to make linux work properly makes Linux less likely to gain widespread support.
It may gain support in the government/university areas, though, like all over the world.
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
--> R
Re:Well, I'm disappointed... (Score:1)
Re:More Chinese metaphors (Score:1)
Is this really a good idea? (Score:1)
Let's be realistic here: Microsoft isn't going out of business anytime soon. Trying to destroy it completely is as futile as those two peasants who died in their revolution. But provide an alternative, and now you have something. After all, the problem with Microsoft is not that it exists, but that it doesn't have any real competition to increase value, whether that be in price competition or feature competition.
Re:An examination. (Score:1)
The "Linux Movement" (I know, I know, I know) might be a communal effort, but it reminds much more of the voluntary cooperations of Anarchist socialists, then anything Marx and Engels spoke of.
One of the truly great things about Linux is that it gives almost complete freedom to the (informed) individual user, while other operative systems tend to dictate what someone "above" has found is "for the general best".
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
-'The cold war's over, Austin!'
Re:how important is help these days? (Score:2)
Erm. You mean a Word-like app, right? If you are comparing like-for-like, then what is wrong with Star Office compared with Office 2000? KOffice is on the way, and the new Wordperfect Office 2000 suite is also coming.
To get back on topic, I think that the more publicity Linux gets in China, the better. Think about how much the Linux market grew last year (212% in the server market alone.) Now, if a similar rise will start happening in China next year, that will mean a phenomenal surge in the number of Linux users worldwide, and perhaps a few Chinese distributions (are there any yet?) I always believe that the more people get exposed to Linux (and other, similar OSes like FreeBSD,) the more people realise that MS is screwing them.
Bootleg copies of Red Hat? (Score:1)
Microsoft did NOT start out poor. (Score:1)
Re:how important is help these days? (Score:1)
i were rich...someone else paid for them...
AND they ran under linux
(or another stable, open, well documented OS)
Marketing aside, its the OS, not the apps, that
i dislike.
Re:An examination. (Score:1)
Playstations? (Score:1)
I wonder if it's possible to cluster and network a bunch of playstations to run nuclear simulations?
Now THAT would be cool.
Later
Erik Z.
This is not good...... (Score:1)
-Linux/FreeBSD user=commie revolutionary
-BeOS and/or MacOS X users=socialist revolutionaries because BeOS and MacOS X are half way between OSS and commercial software and socialism is 50/50 capitalism and communism. (Most of BeOS's tools are GNU tools)
Re:In Communism you have no options (Score:1)
1) keep the machine powered down
or
2) crash
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
The Civil War was started against the Bolsheviks by the SR's and the Whites. After a Civil war in a land that isn't very fertile to begin with, where a lot of the workers die there is going to be starvation. Sure the requisition of grain from the peasants wasn't conducted very intellegently and caused more hardship than was necessary.
As for the GULags, they were essetially started during the Feudialist times, they just weren't called that at the time. Although Solzhenitsen gives a very good acount of what happened in the GULags, and is one of my favorite authors mainly because of Achipalag GULag odin dva e tre (I II and III), he is also a very biased in his opinion. After reading Achiplag GULag I, I had the opinion that Lenin was as evil as Stalin until I took several classes in college, mainly a class on the Russian Revolution and a couple Russian Culture classes. Lenin had some really good ideas, Stalin corrupted them and formed a new type of communism that is not Leninism.
Yes Lenin did do some horrific things at times but to compair him to Stalin is wrong. In his will he specifically stated that Stalin was too brash to rule. Trotsky and Lenin's wife tried to bring this up to the Soviet but it was shot down by the Troika before it could get aired to the public. There IS a differance between Leninism and Stalinism, people generally get them confused because we have been brought so as to believe that Lenin created the version of Communism that ruled the USSR, which in fact is not true. He built a base but was, in a sense, unable to finish the house before he died, and have you seen Stalist achitecture, it's as ugly as Stalin is evil and as ugly as his form of Communism.
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
Also, it wasn't so much a majority in the Soviet, in fact I don't think they had a pure majority but damn close, but the fact that the Soviet gained control of the armories in October due to distrust of the PG and that, I believe it was Trotsky, was in charge of that branch of the Soviet. By gaining access to the weapons, the Battleship Auroria (I think thats its name), and popular support they were able to take over fairly quickly. Also, Lenin and the Bolsheviks moved to control the city before the elected government (I can't remember the name of it) had their first meeting thereby removing any of its power before it formed.
I don't think that there will be any real weapons of any decent power to seize from MS nor any Battleships worth keeping. So I guess we will just have to rely on the popular support.
Thanks again for correcting me
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
I guess that the army is the computer manufacturers, the armory is periferals manufacturers, and the Battleship Aurora could be someone like Compaq or IBM, maybe Intel?
As for the Constituent Assembly being lopsided, I guess the Bolshevik troups in the entrances and in the seating area could be considered lopsiding the floor.
As for the Soviet, I will look in my books and notes when I get home but if I remember it started before the revolution, was shutdown, and then reformed right after the revolution. It started out as a second choice for a government but wasn't very powerful, gained more support and power, gained equal power with the Prov.Gov. and decisions in one had to be ratified by the other, then eventually overtook them, allowing for them to order the Prov.Gov. to give them control of the troups and armories in Petrograd.
This could be used as another metaphor. The Prov. Gov. was ineffective due to it being a temporary government and generally inept but held a lot of power. Sounds like MS. Eventually the Soviet gained power as the support of the people grew. Eventually overtaking the Prov. Gov. before a more permenate government could be properly formed. Linux is gaining populariety and as it does so more and more computer companies are supporting it. If the progression continues as it is going now Linux compatability will almost be necessary for a computer, part, or software. That is until it surpasses MS before they can come out with something well formed. Hopefully by then we will be able to have our troups sitting at the entrance taunting them.
Re:Revolutionary vanguard and anarcho-syndicalism (Score:1)
The vanguard was to help ease into socialism, by protecting it until it was fully formed. Then it was to be disbanded. didn't happen that way though. But the idea of having a small group of hard core professional Linux programers being a vanguard, but permenate, is a useful thing.
Quick Russian Revolution History (off topic) (Score:1)
The first Soviet was form during the October General Strikes, which started on October 20th 1905 (using the old calander).
The Soviet, translated roughly to councel, was of workers deputies. It was created so that workers had the ability to speak out.
Due to the October General Strike Nicholas II issued the "October Manifesto" wich granted people civil liberties, and allowed the recently formed Duma to pass laws. At this point it was still St. Petersburg, and didn't change to Petrograd until 1914.
The Duma members were the first to create the Provisional Government. Unfortunately they were weak, and were always going to be weak for several reasons.
They had "Dual Power" with the Soviets. The Petrograd Soviet was spontainously created and was mostly SR's and Menshivicks. They actually voted to tolarate the Prov. Gov. because they felt they needed it. And the Prov. Gov. could not disband the Soviet because the Soviet had the real power, the people.
Lenin returns in April. In May the Prov. Gov. calls for a coalition Gov. with a merging of the Prov. Gov. the SR's and the SD's. Only the Bolsheviks don't join. During the July days there was massive riots, Bolshevik power increased during these riots. Then there was a backlash against the Bolsheviks when the Prov. Gov. said that Lenin was a German Spy, and that the Bolsheviks were receiving German money. Lenin leaves the country.
Kornilov attempts a counter-revolution and fails. This allows for the Bolsheviks to gain more power, and the Soviet gains more Bolsheviks in it. By September 10th, old calander, the Bolsheviks controled the Petrograd and Moscow Soviets. The MRC gains control of the weapons, and is controled by Trotsky. Power is taken on October 26th while the Second congress of Soviets is meeting.
etc...
Russian Revolution (Score:2)
A Monarchy that censers the populus. Small groups of intellectuals fighting for the freedom of the people. Multiple failed attemps to usurp the government before the revolution of 1917 where several groups all with a good chance of victory striking at an opportune moment.
If it is really looked at there are some striking comparisons. Apple could be considered the Socialist Revolutionsaries, or SR's. The BeOS people, originally helped by Apple now thrown out due to conflicts of interest sort of fit the Left SR's who were too radical to be really considered by the SR's, and who were simpathetic and helpful to the Menshevic and Bolshevic groups. *BSD fits very well with the Menshevic group, very radical, good ideas, intellegent, but no really strong single leader (by really strong, I mean very noticeable).
Which leaves Linux with the Bolshevics. A good fit in my humble opinion.
Let's look at the comparisons.
The Bolshevics were a small radical group that were originally part of the same group as the Menshevics but broke off due to a dispute. The Bolshevics were more radical than the Menshevics.
Linux in a sense breaking away from UNIX, being newer and similar but more radical.
The Bolshevics had a strong ideology. Fight for the ultimate freedom of the people. Allow the people to rule themselves if they wanted to.
Linux has a strong ideology. Fight for the ultimate freedom of the people. Allow for the people to change their OS as they please, while still allowing for those who choose not to rule their OS to still have a lot of freedom.
The Bolshevics had a very far sighted, open minded, brilliant leader, aka Lenin. Strong central leadership is argueably the reason why the Bolshevics won. Lenin knew when to fight and when to run. He also was able to adapt so that control that was gained was not lost, ie abolition of the death penalty in 1918 and the New Economic Policy (1).
Linux has a far sighted, open minded, brilliant leader, aka Linus. Having a central leader to regulate the code that goes into major improvements in Linux has been a key to the ability for Linux to become what it is today. Plus the ability to adapt has been a major necessity to keep alive.
The Bolshevics gained popular support quickly due to ingenius propaganda techniques and due to the inability of the other groups to connect with the populus. The Bolshevics showed themselves as a group of the people. The other groups, especially the SR's, were eccentially decendents of the Populists, who, although dedicated to helping the people, couldn't relate to them because of their up-bringing in different society. Although the Bolshevics also were brought up in a different society they were able to adapt to draw in the masses.
Linux is the fastest growing OS, and partially due to great coverage in the news, and partially due to the fact that our word spreads quickly. Although the other groups, Apple, BeOS, *BSD, UNIX, are all great they are all very separated from the general populus. They have their supporters who are all out to make life better for people but all have some sort of hang-up with people. Apple is "seen" (seen and truth are two different things! ok!) as overly basic, simple, and generally underpowerd. BeOS isn't know of very well outside the respective community of well, us. UNIX and *BSD are still "seen" as text based and very complicated. Linux has been able to adapt.
There are a great deal of other similarities that I don't want to go into right now because I have already been too long winded.
(1) The New Economic Policy actually allowed for some capitalism, as sort of a transition over to Communism. Lenin saw this as a necissary to help rebuild and stablize. In a sense the idea of selling Linux as a product is like that. Use it until people get used to the idea of free software being powerful and useful.
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
--------------------------
The Bolshevics gained popular support quickly due to ingenius propaganda techniques and due to the inability of the other groups to connect with the populus. The Bolshevics showed themselves as a group of the people. The other groups, especially the SR's, were eccentially decendents of the Populists, who, although dedicated to helping the people, couldn't relate to them because of their up-bringing in different society. Although the Bolshevics also were brought up in a different society they were able to adapt to draw in the masses.
---------------------------
This isn't wholly accurate. Here is where I see thre Bolsheviks acting just like the FSF and RMS. The Bolsheviks were successful because they did not join the Provisional Government when Kerensky and the other socialist parties won majorities in the elections of summer, 1917. The Bolsheviks attempted a coup and lost. Kerensky, afraid of the true appeal of the Bolshevik party, did not pursue them. He even invited Lenin and Co. into the government.
Meanwhile, WWI was dragging on, and the Provisional Government (which had grabbed power with no real mandate from the peopl--remember that it started with the liberal nobles) grew increasingly discredited through its reluctance to abandon the old order. Lenin knew that the longer the ProvGov delayed pursuing a truely socialist policy, the more support decayed. The ProvGov never addressed the lack of food for the workers or Russia's role in WWI.
By late October 1917, the Bolsheviks had gained majorities in the Soviets and Lenin felt that popular support for the other socialists (then firmly identified with the ineffective Provisional Government) had decayed to a point where he and the Bolsheviks could snag power.
And that's RMS. He has maintained his ideology all along. At no point has he compromised with the 'capitalist/imperialists,' and plans to use this unsullied record to form the basis of a true appeal to the people.
The problem is that the people in charge are still the Romanovs, and the masses have not yet overthrown Tsarist government. The majority of people are not yet ready for the pure ideology of Mr. Stallman, so he'll have to remain pure for a little longer.
One might wonder--after the revolution and RMS's seizure of power--and the internally destructive Civil War--will RMS pursue a quasi-capitalist policy (NEP) to restructure software?
Great comparisons, though!
With Free Greetings, (anyone remember that old C*mmunist signoff?)
-awc
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
One of the reasons that the Bolsheviks lost their attempted coup in the summer was that there was little popular support in the countryside. Lenin was out of the country at the time, and was horrified. By October, Lenin was confident that the Bolsheviks had popular support. The reason for that was that they had solid majorities in the Petrograd and Moscow Soviets, and in the other Soviets (councils) around the country--even in the countryside--they were making strong gains if they didn't already have majorities.
That the Bolsheviks had a majority in the Petrograd Soviet is inherently linked to the fact that the Military Revolutionary Committee (MRC--Trotsky's little military-control group) had gained control over the army. By October, Lenin had demanded from Krensky, and secured, the right for the MRC of the Petrograd Soviet to countersign all orders for the P. garrisson. The Bolsheviks were very strongly supported by the army, and Kerensky knew that. He had no choice but to grant that power to the MRC, which was not even a governmental entity.
At that point, the MRC--an organ of the P. Soviet in the control of a Bolshevik (Trotsky)--was in the position to leverage a significant portion of the military forces of the area. What surprised everyone was that Lenin decided to make his bid for power completely independent of the Soviet. By bypassing the Soviet, and taking the MRC as his own, he got the army without the baggage of the democracy of the city Soviet which would have bogged him down fatally.
So, with the army, the armory, and the mutiny aboard the Aurora, Lenin had the firepower and the people to take power. And he did.
W/regard to your comment about the elected governemnt. That was the Constituent Assembly. The ProvGov had promised that a Constituent Assembly would be created to replace it (the ProvGov), and elections were held. When the Bolsheviks seized power in October, that happened before the CA met. You are right in saying that Lenin didn't want the CA to meet and create a government that would have any legitimacy. He couldn't very well take power from a popularly elected government in the name of the people. Ultimately, he did permit one meeting of it, but it was so completely lopsided that it, in effect, voted itself out of existance.
There really arn't any weapons to seize from MS. You're right. That's the major difference between 1917 and the Open Source movement. It is quite possible and effective for the computing world to be under two or more "governments" (Windows & Linux, etc.), whereas the Russian state could really only have one government at a time.
Well, i might be wrong. Look at the period between the February Revolution and the October one. The Soviets had some role (nobody know what it was, really. They were a mysterious result of the revolution with no true place--Linux?) and the Provisional Government was the self-proclaimed true government. Microsoft?
Two governemnts worked simultaneously on the state, but they didn't work well together, and one finally beat the other one out.
And the metaphor continues.
With Open Source greetings,
awc
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
You are right about the parallel development of Soviet power and the ProvGov. The military aspect of the relationship that you mention is the MRC, the Military Revolutionary Committee. Ultimately, the MRC had to countersign all orders to the troops, so they had equal influence over the ProvGov's military policy. Regardless, the troops were, for the most part, loyal to the MRC and the Soviet.
I like the alternate metaphor. The Romanov family could be IBM, whose decline prompted the growth of MS (the ProvGov was initially the liberal nobles--not supporters of the old order, but not revolutionaries). The ProvGov (MS) later shared power with the soviets (linux).
Unfortunately, the Soviets did not make a bid for power in October, the Bolsheviks did. So, who is going to grab all of this from underneath us? As I pointed out above, the Soviets were bypassed by Lenin so that he didn't have to share power.
I love Soviet history (in case you couldn't tell) and am now going to go reread the appropriate parts of Trotsky's magnificent work, "History of the Russian Revolution," to make sure that I have the details correct.
-awc
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
-awc
Re:Revolutionary vanguard and anarcho-syndicalism (Score:1)
After all, in the end, there are very few people who have control over the kernel (the true government).
-awc
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
-awc
Re:Russian Revolution (Score:1)
-awc
Re:Microsoft is a Communist country. (Score:1)
The are no dictatorship of the proletariat.
There might be a case to be made that argues that Microsoft is a state socialist country, but even that is on thin ice, IMO.
-awc
Chinese Language Support (Score:1)
Turbolinux came out a couple of months ago with both Traditional and Simplified Chinese distros. People in the States tend to ignore Turbolinux but folks, it ROCKS.
Re:All Bugs Are Shallow (Score:2)
"Childhood"? "Fat"? "Red"?
What does Santa have to do with the Linux revolution?
OH! I get it.
Santa => 'Giving presents to all the little boys & girls' => Communism => China.
Got it.
Re:Business Practices? (Score:1)
most other enterprises is that Bill Gates makes
no secret that his goal is to crush all opponents
from existance thru his actions and statements.
Our auto manufacturing industry is a good example
where one will challenge another to produce a
better product. Competition is pointless with
no opponents.
Bill Gates is afraid of real competition!!
Microsoft's investment in China (Score:1)
for example. Their new office is really nice, too.
PS, to anyone attending O'Reilly's Open Source: come here my talk on Tcl (and other free software) in China.
Re:how important is help these days? (Score:1)
Windows 2000 pushes mostly standards now, TCP/IP, DNS, LDAP, SNMP etc.
Office 2000 uses fully compliant xml, and the document formats are the same as Office 97. Since noone can complain about the fact that Office breaks compatablity, I guess they'll take the oppurtunity to attack Office 2000 from the other side and point out the same file format indicates Office 2000 is no improvement and not worth it - it would be typical of a slashdotizen.
And there are "word" like and
I'm using Linux simply for a network gateway at home these days, i do development on Windows, for Linux at work.