The Metcalfe-Peterely Fun Continues 159
A reader sent us the latest installment in the Metcalfe and Peterely debate that started roughly one week ago with doubts about Linux from Metcalfe, and a response from Peterly. In this round, Metcalfe repents a bit, and also brings up the current hot topic: How the Linux community reacts to questions. Short, but interesting reading, and again raises the point: Read the Linux Advocacy How-To if you have any questions.
Re:Flamers (Score:1)
So, the flames will not stop until the geeks find a bigger burr [somewhere] and direct their energy elswhere or learn that in maintaining their narrow view of the world, they have been left behind. Their archane knowledge meaningless now in the new society. New geeks will have assumed their role as flame-throwers.
These new geeks will have not learned anything and they too will not understanding people different from themselves. They will assume that by hurling insults, people will suddenly understand.
To paraphrase an old disney short...
They're stupid, but they will now know that they are stupid, and that will almost makes them smart. Almost.
Cheers!
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:1)
Why even post this as a rhetorical question? Of course, companies won't cut into their profits to support Linux, unless it's with a long term strategy of making good money in the future with it. Very few commercial ventures can afford to operate as a charity in today's competetive market.
Nobody in the software industry should view Linux as a "charity case" and feel compelled to "Do the right thing" (what ever the h*ll that would mean). If companies start acting like that about Linux, the OS is in serious trouble. The companies who have extended their line to include Linux versions (i.e. ID) do it because it's in their interest, either financially or otherwise.
That's just the way of the world.
Re:compiling kernels? SARCASM? (Score:1)
Metcalfe critics aren't even qualified to speak.. (Score:1)
1) Make Linux easier to use (KDE,GNOME, etc), so that idiots can use Linux.
2) Open-Source is the PANACEA!! horray to Programmers who supports open-source software, they can fix bugs and add enhancements in just a matter of hours.
3) Support for every piece of device you can attach to your PC!
4) Bill Gates Sucks!!! Windows must vanish!! Microsoft MUST DIE!!!
-------
With this 4 broad strategies, 90 percent of all "Linux advocates POSTING IN SLASHDOT" are doing Strategy 4....The rest are practically users..doing some sort of CGI programming, Sys Administration, Network configurations,...
What exactly have you done for Linux? the Open-Source Initiative? Or the Entire Computer Industry over all? Aside from "using" linux?
What? Before opening your wide-mouth shouting to everyone how "Linux didn't crash for 10 straight days" and how Windows sucks by being toooo easy..an OS for the lamers..crashes-alot-OS..ask yourself if your qualified to speak..
Programmers and Engineers surely doesnt need to react to this.
Which third? (Score:4)
I'd put my money on "FLAME." Metcalfe is posting immature columns, and getting upset when others respond in the same manner. If his columns had ANY substance (other than the one he smokes
My point? Ignore the man. Unless he comes out with a column that points out anything specific, then don't bother with him. "Mine's better than yours" he cries, well let him cry. Just don't cry back. If he points out any flaw or weakness, then we can address that.. until then, ignore the fool. There's no point in arguing over nothing.
I challange Metcalfe: Post a column that says something. Why should we choose an OS? Technical merit, application availibility, ease of use... Pick an issue. Discuss. When you post a real column, you will get real responses.
Fonts better? (Score:1)
X fonts less ugly than Win fonts? I'll give you some shiny beads if you perform the magic on my machine that you must've done on yours...
Re:I like the title... (Score:1)
Flamers (Score:1)
Actually, Windows could disappear if MS suddenly folded under. On the other hand, with the source to Linux and everything out there, someone's bound to pick it up again if every developer called it quits this afternoon.
"OSnic" (="ethnic") (Score:1)
Great... Now Bob compares Linux users' reaction to "inferior" nations responding to some tacky ethnic insult, and feels that he still somehow has any other option than to shut up? I completely agree with him that his insults were at exactly the same level as insults, some uncivilized people direct toward nations that they consider "worse" than their own one. And that he displays approximately the same level of immaturity, arrogance and stupidity as in any case when individuals that belong to some self-proclaimed "superior" race throw derogatory comments about the ethnicity of their opponents.
Being Russian/Jewish I think, I am qualified to make this comparison, and I don't see any way to respond to such manners other than by reminding him that they are rejected and hated by civilized people. In other words, fuck you, Bob.
Re:McCarthyism Returns (Score:1)
Didn't the word anti-American die out in the late 50's. Part of being American is being anti-American. There can be no evolution without revolution.
Well, some people in other countries are very anti-American, and this can be explained rather easily. Large amound of international umm... wrongdoing, prominent crooks and assholes come from US and "third world" countries. However while in "third world" they have some excuse (poor political system, poverty, underdeveloped education), US is supposed to be democratic, rich and refined. Yet for some reason for an outsider's eye Americans' activity abroad is as much civilized as one of dictator next door (or palace). What naturally makes people angry.
Since I live in US, I can observe that _within_ the country it's not as bad as in some others (if it was I wouldn't be here in the first place). Still Americans' claim of being so much developed that the only thing they have to do is to maintain status quo inside and subjugate everything outside, is extremely overstated. And of many things that people abroad don't like in US, is exactly the existence of certain software racket that affects their lives almost as much as it affects ours here.
Re:Costs can be amortized over multiple platforms. (Score:1)
Re:FUD? (Score:2)
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:1)
Gee, we can't think of ANY examples of this behaviour in the Microsoft world, can we?
...phil
Digital camera and other things (Score:1)
First, while good, your post rambles just as badly as Metcalfe's article. You start off with some good arguments and then veer off into "This is my world".
Second, for your (future) digital camera check out gphoto (search for it on freshmeat.net).
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Put Hemos through English 101!
Re:Recompile to fix bugs? (Score:1)
I haven't actually performed my own hacks on the kernel, but I have tweaked XFMail and a few other open source programs. Source code: that's one handy feature.
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What exactly is his point? (Score:3)
The number of Linux users is largely irrelevant at this point. There is a sufficient userbase for many companies to port their software to Linux, so whether there are in fact 5 million, 10 million or 25 million Linux users is unimportant.
What matters is whether Linux will do what you need it to do. In many cases, it will; in some, it won't. That's how you decide whether to use it; not on the basis of "who's winning."
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Gotta wonder about his numbers (Score:3)
Perhaps this is a trivial complaint, but Windows 98 came out in 1998. So how could its shipments possibly go up 39 percent from 1997 to 1998?
Re:Flame-baiting (Score:1)
you so!"
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=99/06/21/12
Re:The bad reputation of Linux users grows larger (Score:1)
>Re:The bad reputation of Linux users grows larger_
??? You mean because we aren't going to let losers like yourself and Metcalfe get away with their shoddy articles we have a bad rep? Good. Maybe mags will think twice about publishing this kind of crap then.
Only a third was flames? (Score:2)
2.6 million revenue units in one year (Score:1)
Given that linux has been available commercially since 1993, and a lot of people still download linux from the net or copy it from friends, I think 10 million+ users sounds like a typical Linus understatement.
Also why does Bob Metcalfe think that anyone would be in the slightest bit interested that he's on some board? That sounds far more like self-promotion to me.
Re:Which third? (Score:1)
As for the column, he appears only to want I-told-you-so rights for twenty years from now when Linux is "dead." He also is "secretly rooting" for Linux, meaning when he's wrong and Linux doesn't die, he can claim to have won in being wrong.
Congratulations Bob Metcalfe. You can almost hear his keyboard clicking out 2019's I told you so letter.
Re:McCarthyism Returns (Score:1)
Aha! We take our freedom for granted. If the US was "as bad as" certain other nations, you would not have the option nor the capacity to leave. Even if you could leave your country, the country you wanted to go to might border-patrol your butt right back where you started.
"All nations is shite, and America is the best of the best."
Re:Thanks for mentioning it. (Score:1)
Petreley (Score:1)
Re:Can't compile=stupid! (Score:1)
aware you have to learn, that's why they haven't
given it a chance. Because you have to read
documentation.
Re:compiling kernels? SARCASM? (Score:1)
principal. Or common sense? And you don't fit
in that category, because you're one of the elite.
Correct?
Prior history (Score:1)
Re:Linux will not die (Score:2)
Re:The few, the proud, the compilers (Score:1)
Interesting--the quote you used says nothing about "by hand."
In any case, I think he's just once again trying to note how little use it will be for users to recompile their OS. And it is a tricky thing if you aren't used to it, y'know. Perhaps not brain surgery, but in any case I think we get his point.
Re:Linux will not die (digicams) (Score:1)
I decided to try gphoto (see freshmeat for more info) last week and while it is early in development (0.38 i believe), i thought it worked rather well. While it would crash instantly if I attempted to view any of the pics from my camera onscreen, it happily downloaded them to my hard drive where i could XV and gimp them to my hearts content.
I am not affiliated with the gphoto project, just a happy user. Keep up the good work guys! And by the way, i was using a Fuji DX-7 with the DX-5 drivers
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Games (Score:1)
Maybe if I played games, I'd be a bit more excited. All these advances in 3D technology don't seem to mean all too much for me, though.
Do compilers get anything from directx support? My uninformed leaning is toward "no."
"OSnic slurs"... (Score:1)
Re:Linux will not die (Score:1)
David Cutler is the guy who created VMS and went to work on NT; however, they based NT on the Mach kernel, not on VMS, and everything else was written from scratch.
Is anybody surprised? (Score:2)
Of course.
Go back and look at the original column. He starts with a terrible analogy in which compares the open source movement to various Communists. Then, halfway through the column, he admits it's a bad analogy and proposes one that's even more inappropriate. That back-to-the-earth metaphor lasts about a paragraph before he changes strategies again: He starts calling Open Source "Open Sores."
Now, most of us stopped making jokes about people's names sometime back in grade school. Those that didn't write puerile, ad-hominem flames. Or bad columns.
Is Bob Metcalfe surprised he got flamed? No. He set out to be flamed so he could talk about how irresponsible the Linux community flamers were.
I'm only surprised anyone was foolish enough to rise to his bait.
Can't compile=stupid! (Score:1)
he probably doesn't care. I started usin' LinuX
to learn, and it can make you learn (Slackware).
Now, I think that it is good to learn, but there
is the percentage of people not interested. And
they (Windows users) aren't AWARE they'll have to
learn. They can have my LinuX when, they can pry
it from my cold, dead hands.
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
o kernel
o gcc
o make
o flex
o bison
o glibc
o util-linux
That's a good bit right there... And I bet that thousands if not millions have built all of those at one time or another, even on the same box...
Hell, hundreds of kiddies have built the rootkit.. What qualifies?
Re:Recompile to fix bugs? (Score:1)
;)
Ha! Called it! (Score:2)
HA!
I'll post the e-mail later, when I get home from work (overtime sucks...).
Re:FUD? (Score:2)
1) Lies
2) Damned Lies
3) Statistics
- M. Twain
Re:Ha! Called it! (Score:2)
Mr. Metcalf is entitled to his opinions and predictions. In regarding this article, however, I have very little respect for Mr. Metcalf's opinions, and Infoworld had lost quite a lot of respect from myself and others for printing such an obvious attempt to bait the Linux community into a reaction. I'm sure Mr. Metcalf will use all the flame mail he gets and turn it into his next column about how illiterate and immature the Linux/Open Source community is.
It seems to be a pattern in technical journals...
Re:FUD? (Score:2)
Look at http://www.xs4all.nl/~jcdverha/scijokes/1_2.html#
jf
The few, the proud, the compilers (Score:1)
What, does he mean by hand ? I have compiled Linux a couple dozen times over the last 3 years - but I used 'make'.
Re:The few, the proud, the compilers (Score:1)
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:1)
Commerical Developing for Linux is right now a major risk, in the fact that something far better to your commerical program becomes avalible for Linux for free (under the GPL). Think about the risk. You would quickly lose user base, even though your product has special features not in the GPL version of the program.
This has been a problem with the MacOS and speech software. Companies are afraid to develop speech software for the Mac, because they are afraid Apple will make Speech software part of the Mac OS for free.
Re:Is anybody surprised? ...And some (Score:1)
It seems to me a bit like those hoax virus messages where the actual virus is the propogation of the message willy nilly.
What is the Point? (Score:1)
Well he should know (being one of the few people to have compiled a OS) more oftern than not the way statistical figures r read is the way answers will be.
The most important point which he he may not have understood or he greatfully ignores is actually society decides the life of a product and not the marketing force of a company.
This community has come together to do something good which they could all use. Now after finding it is good they are sharing the idealogy and the results of that with all others. Practically free of cost.
Over the years in Social Revolutions we have seen that the most successful once have been the once where comman man felt comfortable in a belief and started following and slowly everyone seemed to follow them. More often that not the person did it because he felt good and also someone else started feeling good and so on and on.
Here i think the primary problem is that many people for some vague reason have a inhibition against UNIX like system. This more of a pschycologial fear which has been there for as long as UNIX.
Yes in many ways LINUX does resemble UNIX and with more improvements which the UNIX market has also acknowledged. Why should LINUX not be like UNIX. I am yet to see a programming language which has replace C. I do not see that happenning. So effectively LINUX is an improvement of an idealogy which was born some 20 odd years ago. For sometime during in its teens it was wild then go into its business perspective and later matured to be dependable.
It is still growing......
Now Windows
I am yet come across a situation where people have pointed out that a particular feature was first implemented by WINDOWS which has been later on copied by UNIX world.
The point everyone is against is very simple. How many of us have not seen a WINDOZEEEEEEEEEEE or WINDOW crash ?
This factor has been going on and MS has been getting away with it so often that it does not seem to be of any use in testing one of their products. Either we whave not finished installing all the patches and upgrades and started our actual work or the product is killed by miscrosoft for something else.
Effectively the scoiety is being treated as a gueniea pig for MS whims and fancies. The best part is we pay them for that.
I think most of the problem MS is going to have in the coming years is the Quality of the product and NOT the product by itself. Because none of the products they have are their own creation, they are features added to idealogies which people had created long time ago.
Society has show once they do not believe in the quality of a commodity they do not have any qualms in turning their back on it.
This is something where LINUX might have a lead. Because it is the society which willingly doing the QC and the same society which make them work. So this might be just the edge that LINUX community has to prove that a society is more important than the product.
When did politics came to the thech ground? (Score:2)
A technology has no political content, is just a way to do things. Metcalfe tries to bind microsoft success to the notion of "pro-american" and linux for contraposition to "anti-american"...well, I'm American, South American in fact, and I gladly perceive Linux as a "World" thing, not just one country thing, and there's were the magic lies at the end.
Then again, anti-social...well, I made MANY social contact with other linux users in the last years, and happily avoided contact with corporate "User Support" employes who are always 2nd years students that don't have a clue about what they are supporting anyway.
Anti-capitalism? Well, people who is actually porting apps to Linux must be happy for having another reason to get new contract time, more work os more services to sell.
Many companies are implementing Servers under Linux and I readed a Price Waterhouse Coopers manual for Linux, and if this guys are getting their employees used to linux, they must have a good reason...(And if PWC is not a good example of capitalism, I'm really lost)
I do not think that linux is anti microsoft, is just plain better if you got a clue, but if you are old and slow to learn, well, that up to you Bobo...I'm in command of my destiny and I choose the OS that will take me there...Is it clear? Right to Choose, that's not american, not capitalistic, not communist, not socialist, not social is UNIVERSAL)
Who cares how many users? Thanks god there's DIFFERENT CHOICES and people uses them, imagine a world where everybody dress the same, eat the same, drives the same and installs the same, PLAIN BOARING!
What' s the point with those numbers if at the end Bob accepts that nobody knows real numbers anyway?
What's the point of this article??!!
My Advise to Bob is to perform brain surgery on himself, it's clear he has nothing to loose anyway...
Hmm... (Score:1)
I think those who are saying Metcalfe is out of touch may have a point. Check out the bottom of the article- "Bob Metcalfe is one of very few people who've ever successfully recompiled an operating system." I can only wonder whether he has no clue about Linux, or he really counts the hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of Linux hackers who have done a kernel recompile over the years as "very few."
Re:A Kernel is Not an Operating System (Score:1)
OK, I get it. Mea Culpa.
Metcalfe Hatred Blindness (Score:1)
Metcalfe's article is hatred. For what reason he is doing this I can only make guesses. But the worst is the blind way he makes his flamework. It sounds typical of Cold-War times when journalists and politicians droped cheap highly flamatory articles over each other. One may remind that sometimes this propaganda war went quite surrealistic. Disregarding any realities and good-sense, people went just flaming away its enemy.
That is what Metcalfe is doing. He even calls Linux Anti-American. We all know that Linux has a political flavour in it but anti-american?????? Hu-oh well Mr. Metcalfe can you tell me who boosted Linux distribution system more than anyone else? Yes, Linux is international. And this means the americans are in. And means they make a lot in it. Even Linus has gone to America. Strange thing for the founder of the "anti-american" OS...
Maybe for Mr. Metcalfe this "international" characteristic is seen as the greatest threat to America's establishment. Some sort of masonic conspiration to undermine America. If so then it is better to hunt down Intel too. And the founding fathers of the computer industry. And don't forget all those Russians over there. Oh! and the all those Jews, Indians, Chinese and Japanese of course. Save America Mr. Metcalfe, but don't forget to rip off the whole computer industry...
But there is one thing that amazes me more than anything else. The huge blindness of his hatred:
"let's count Linux versus W2K users"
I didn't know that NT and 9x could be considered as W2K... It is amazing how Mr. Metcalfe manipulates statistics. A "magic wand" and suddenly all Windows users become W2K statistics...
I perfectly understand Mr. Metcalfe's acrobacies. One of the reasons why people is turning to Linux is.. after seeing W2K in action. I hold my words on it because I saw this happening. And this seems to worry too much Mr. Metcalfe. So much that he doesn't worry to flame away in fury. and when he catches fire to drop hatred in all ways.
It is hatred and blind hatred. His article is nothing more than a "Hunt for Red October" in the cheapest tone.
Let Metcalfe be Metcalfe (Score:1)
So, that's fine Bob. I think you should just use Microsoft products. After all, isn't that what they're paying you for?
Re:FUD? (Score:1)
Re:FUD? (Score:2)
Recompile to fix bugs? (Score:2)
I'm curious: out of all of the OSS operating system users out there, how many actually do fix bugs or add features to their kernel? I'm not talking about applying someone else's patch, either! This is constantly used as an argument for using Linux, but I think it's misleading.
Before all the flamers come after me, think about it for just a bit. I realize that it's nice to have this capability and I'm not trying to slam any advocates. It just seems a bit silly since very few of us ever try to do this in the first place. It's like saying DOOM was better than Wolfenstein just because id published information on how to make add-ons. A nice feature, yeah, but that's not the reason most people played the game.
It seems to me that perhaps we should be concentrating on the reasons Linux runs better than Windows that typical users would understand.
Re:Gotta wonder about his numbers (Score:1)
Re:Gotta wonder about his numbers (Score:1)
Well, if you regard Win98 as a bugfix release for Win95 with a few extra utilities thrown in (and there's not a lot more to it than that), thus making all the numbers relate to versions of Win95, I guess this becomes totally trivial rather than almost totally trivial.
Who cares?
Numbers mean sweet FA to the average user anyway. Individuals and companies choose the OS's that best fit their needs, present and forecast, at a particular time. More often than not, they'll be unable to get by with a single OS and need to use a mix. Buying (or obtaining for free) decisions on OS's based on market share or penetration would be a foolish strategy. Fitness for purpose (which to some extent includes value for money) is the overriding concern for anyone with a clue.
Re:Linux will not die (Score:1)
He is trying to save face (Score:2)
Metcalfe is saying nothing coherent at this point. His one weak attempt at lucidity -- his claim of the third reason why Linux is doomed, that being its flameful advocacy -- was implicitly contradicted just a couple of paragraphs above, when Metcalfe, in answering the 'first third' who claimed that more coding and less talking will allow Linux to push ahead, answered that he does not believe that will happen.
Which one? Is too much talking and not enough coding the reason why Linux is behind, or is it irrelevant to Microsoft's market penetration lead?
All in all, this article looked to me like Metcalfe's attempt, after having realized that he put both of his feet and his left hand into his mouth, to salvage what little is left of his face -- by kinda agreeing with his previous column, but without being either too aggressive or too comittal in stating his point (or so detailed and coherent as to have accidentally put the abovementioned appendages into his mouth once again).
Yet another under-informed over-opinionated person trying to back out of the corner they painted themselves into. Film at 11...
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Re:Was that the article, or did I miss something? (Score:1)
Ooops..
Interesting though.. this is the first time I've actually
read a response to one of my posts..
(articalis interruptus)
Thanx
Was that the article, or did I miss something? (Score:3)
Really?
You're quite sure now.?
Hmmm... He should have cut out all the rambling,
and put the 3 sentances of _actual_ content as a
caption under a picture or something.
I'll wait for better stuff before I waste another
10 seconds reading that tripe.
As for all the flamers? Sheesh... grow up.. wouldja?!
Here are some tips for flaming...
1) Think carefully about your response
2) Refer back to the origional post you are flaming
frequently to make sure you aren't going off
topic.
3) Write your response.
4) USE YOUR SPELL-CHECKER!
5) WATCH YOUR GRAMMER!
6) Re-write, repeating steps 1-5 until it has you
chortling in self satisfaction for hours.
7) (and this is the most important one) DELETE IT!
8) Pat yourself on the back for being human and
resisting immaturity.
Save your flames for warming your loved ones on a
cold winter's eve.
FUD? (Score:1)
inappropriate (Score:1)
Costs can be amortized over multiple platforms... (Score:1)
fear not (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
I like the title... (Score:4)
What was that quote? Something like there are more cockroaches on the planet than people, so does quantity really mean that much?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Linux will not die (Score:1)
The NatWest bank in the UK has NT running in all over its ATMs. They don't seem to crash any more than other ATMs ( often OS/2 based I believe ) and they look prettier/better as well.
Linux will not die (Score:5)
Why do I think Linux won't kill Windows? Two reasons. The Open Source Movement's ideology is utopian balderdash. And Linux is 30-year-old technology. And he's contrasting this to Windows 2000? Ummmm....waitaminit...W2K is just NT5.
Windows NT was originally written by a bunch of guys from DEC who wrote VMS. Hence, NT can be said to have derived much from VMS, which is well over 20 years old. What does that mean for NT?
Clearly, that age doesn't mean a damn thing. Newer does not necessarily mean better. I'd rather have an OS that has evolved from decades of trial and error than something just out of Redmond, and I'm sure many others would as well.
I've been running Linux intermittently for several years (and exclusively for the last 6 months). I've also run windows 95/98, and NT4, and a beta of W2K when it was still NT5. NT5 is a pretty cool OS -- the relative (to win98) reliability and security of NT, and directx for games--yay.
This seems to be where everything is headed currently -- what used to be solely server/workstation operating systems are now becoming gaming platforms. NT is adopting directx6; Unix is getting XFree86 4.0 with all sorts of cool additions. This is A Good Thing (tm), which you should acknowledge even if you hate NT.
Curiously, the same reason that I used Windows is the reason I switched from Windows to Linux. Linux support for hardware used to suck. My TV card didn't work, there was no 3d acceleration (for my TNT), the games sucked. So, I used Windows and put up with the occasional reboot. Eventually, I got fed up with Windows. I hated having to run Exceed to be able to access some of the programs I needed for classes (Matlab, Maple, LaTeX, etc.). So I installed Linux and dealt with the lack of good hardware and game support.
I can get my TV card working with a 2.2 series kernel (which I still haven't gotten to work without breaking AFS, which kind of defeats the whole purpose), and now with NVidia releasing open source drivers, I don't have to worry about 3D acceleration. I really don't have a single qualm about not running Windows...the only games I play are Q/Q2/Q3 anyhow.
Simply put, I have no need for Windows. I haven't booted up Windows in months (I'm pretty sure mucking around with VMWare killed it anyhow), and if I do need it for anything (say, if I buy a digital camera and need to get the pictures off it), I can use VMWare (damn that's an impressive program).
Windows is not going to disappear any time soon. Neither will Linux. Both OSes have built up way too much steam to just roll over and die. Deal with it. Use whichever suits you best. Believe it or not, Linux is not the best OS for some (gasp! blasphemy!) -- my mom still has problems copying and pasting -- I don't think she's ready to be configuring XFree86 (which, while RedHat 5.2 has made some significant changes to make configuring XFree easier, still requires some knowledge about your computer's hardware, which most people haven't a clue about [horizontal refresh frequency? dot clock?]). If you want to use Linux, use it. But don't unnecessarily evangelize an OS that is not ready to replace Windows yet.
Better yet, use Linux conspicuously. Answer questions about Linux. Let them come to you -- don't force it down their throats. Then prove the esteemed Mr. Metcalfe wrong.
98 vs 95 (Score:1)
it also said that DOS sold more for the client then Linux (but I don't know how dos could be a "client" as in connected to a server)
_
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
http://archive.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayN..... (Score:1)
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"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Re:Prior history (Score:1)
Re:98 vs 95 (Score:1)
N.B. Mr. Gates: You're the richest man in the world. You won. Lighten up.
Re:Flamers (Score:1)
Flame-baiting (Score:5)
Re:Costs can be amortized over multiple platforms. (Score:2)
Linux *instead of* Windows
Right. My point was that the *incremental* cost of porting an app to Linux probably cannot be easily justified (in most cases, I would guess) by increased revenue. The point about getting sales because an app *is* cross-platform is certainly valid, although that may be even harder to predict than just the size of a potential Linux commercial software market.
Corel is a different example because they do already have an established product, with dwindling win32 market share, that obviously was ported to other platforms. In their case it may have been an easier decision since the windows word-processor market is obviously dominated by the competition, so making a Linux port was probably an easy business case.
I guess all I'm saying is that it must be problematic for companies to justify development of Linux software in tandem with Win32 projects because of the uncertain market for commercial Linux products in general. I'm not sure that's the kiss of death, just an observation to go along with the point that the number of Linux users is not easily measured.
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:3)
If I'm a successful software company and I write windows-only products, I have a known cost for developing and testing my software and a (pretty-well) known market for my product. I can forecast my sales revenue against my cost to produce the product and make a business case for Return On Investment.
But if that same company were to decide that there are 10 million potential customers for a Linux port, the business case may get a little hairy. Now your costs for development, testing and support are increased (not 2x, but by some factor). You probably have to decide if this increase in the cost to produce your product is warranted by the potential market increase.
If there is no reliable way to size a market for your product, it could be a tough sell to management based on the economics. Of course, a few companies (like id Software) have the luxury of putting economics on a lower priority than "doing the Right Thing", but this is the exception (for now).
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:2)
meaningless research group numbers (Score:1)
I can't think of any "prediction" that these
groups made that turned out to be both correct and valuable. The PHBs allocated money according to those predictions, which is part of why that company no longer exists.
I mean really; does anyone think Netware's market is actually growing?
garyr
MS casts spell. You will switch when W2Kbug wins. (Score:1)
Be courteous to our bright and afraid acolytes. Fuck the mainstream public. They're a bunch of whiny Fascists who can't have a good time without the latest UltraStrength Headache medicine.
Heck, Put the local Boys/Girls Club on Linux. Harvest a couple of geniouses.
Peterely? (Score:1)
Charlie
McCarthyism Returns (Score:3)
Is this Bob MetCalfe or Senator Bob McCarthy?
Didn't the word anti-American die out in the late
50's.
Part of being American is being anti-American.
There can be no evolution without revolution.
Maybe Linux and OSS is a revolution of some sorts?
A revolution that some people find threatening because it forces them to reevaluate how they
view capitilism and the marketplace.
Ummm... (Score:1)
As for Nicholas Petreley, he is the "editorial director of LinuxWorld"... He continues to write well thought out, if somewhat religious
Re:Was that the article, or did I miss something? (Score:1)
improvement.... (Score:1)
Re:is this a joke? (the REAL Linux=Communism) (Score:1)
So.... How does the development of Linux expropriate resources from me to give to those without resources?
Many people use Linux, which is the fruit of the labor of those with the means to produce an operating system. These people who use Linux may not have the means (ability) to produce any code, but they do have a need for the OS. SO, again, there is some communistic facets to the Linux community.
There is nothing preventing a convergence of Libertarianism and Communism. In fact, I would say Libertarianism would be an evolutionary step toward voluntary Communism. Of course, by that time there will be a new name for Communism.
is this a joke? (the REAL Linux=Communism) (Score:2)
On the Linux=communism note:
I cannot completely disagree with the idea that Linux promotes some degree of communism. Let us take a look at the word:
communism \Com"mu*nism\, n. [F. communisme, fr. commun common.] A scheme of equalizing the social conditions of life; specifically, a scheme which contemplates the abolition of inequalities in the possession of property, as by distributing all wealth equally to all, or by holding all wealth in common for the equal use and advantage of all.
The areas that Linux falls under are the ones that touch on possession and wealth.
In the Linux community (notice the similarities between community and communism? I knew you could!) the code is open to all, everyone has an equal chance of utilising the code to suit their best interests. For those of you challenged ones, this is the abolation of the inequalities in the possession of [intellectual] property, as by distributing all wealth equally to all, or by holding all wealth in common for the equal use and advantage of all.
It's not a bad thing! Really. The communism of this century was not real communism. There was no equality. The communism that has been shoved down our throats is more of a beurocracy. Communism is a social system with one class, the USSR had two classes.
I am a communist. I dream of a world where everyone is seen as equal, not the backwards heirarchy we see today. Linux, to me, is a step in the direction of world-wide utopia!
From my [X]window, Linux is everything that is good about communism!
Re:Flame-baiting (Score:1)
Another thing that I've noticed is that they are starting to use "Slashdot reader" in place of "Linux user" if they want to seem really hip and up-to-date.
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:2)
They also, however, base their decisions on "who's winning". Why? Large userbases, large development communities, large support networks, etc. (all of which Linux has to some extent, but Microsoft moreso) help provide the user a "safety blanket" in making their decision as to which OS to use, since they may not have the time nor the expertise to make the in-depth analysis that you may.
Even though I use Linux, I can understand the MS community's use of a "safety blanket". It's a throwback to the old maxim "Safety in numbers."
better X than Win (Score:1)
Yeah, the interface to exmh works a little differently than the interface to Netscape. So what? They're point and drool interfaces anyway; I could use 'em with one cerebral hemisphere tied behind my back. Speed? Only really an issue in games, so I run the SVGA version of Quake.
Re:Fonts better? (Score:1)
xterm -fn "-*-lucidatypewriter-bold-r-normal-sans-14-140-*" -fg white -bg black
Can't get a DOS window to look so good.
I've got no problem with the Times and Courier that I use as a default in Netscape; I use the same settings on my Win95 box at work, and like the X Courier more than the Win95 one.
WordPerfect for Linux is ugly, but so are all WYSIWYG word processors. Things that are supposed to be easy to read on paper are rarely easy to read on screen, and vice-versa.
When required, I compose in emacs then import into the word processor for formatting. But I still prefer to use Lyx for short letters and LaTeX for longer dead tree documents. (HTML for electronic ones, of course.)
Re:Linux will not die (Score:1)
Now that's ridiculous. The "Server OS" term came into being long before Microsoft had a product in that space, before Microsoft even included networking with their client products. Does anyone remember Netware? Banyan? Actual server operating systems, since one couldn't actually use the server as a personal workstation at the same time.
The bad reputation of Linux users grows larger (Score:2)
Then I read all the slashdot followups and, aside from being called "rambling" and "out of touch," every sentence is taken out of context and nit-picked to death. That hair-trigger defensiveness is what has been associated with "advocacy" since the Amiga days.
Re:Linux will not die (Score:1)
I don't know what OS was running under Netware
but considering Netware was really nothing more than a file server, it would have been deeply weird for anyone to call Netware a "Server OS".
Re:Linux will not die (Score:3)
Think of what computers will be like 20 years from now. Can anyone honestly say that they can picture a Windows-based OS in their car? Or in ATMs? Or IP-based phone-switches? (Will we need to reboot your neighbourhood exchange when the phone company adds a new user?) Or in robotics? Of course not. Microsoft couldn't even maintain a PPC port of NT.
Can you envision Linux/Unix in any of these applications? Most definitely.
If you stare hard at the technology Microsoft is banking on, its pretty evident that they are on shaky ground.
I can't imagine Windows being around in 20 years but I also can't picture Unix not being around in 20 years.
Re:Prior history (Score:1)
His articles in InfoWorld and... Byte? have always been fluff. Frankly I'm surprised people are still listening (or hiring) him as columnist and speaker. I'm also surprised people still use the word "pundit" about these guys. It's supposed to mean "learned person; an expert or authority". Which is a word I'd use about Nicholas Negromonte, or Eric Raymond, but certainly not of Metcalfe, or any of his wannabe cronies (including the complete cast of PC Magazine columnists, whose job seems to be to jab about their telephony jacks not fitting their hotel room sockets, and the fancy new projector system that makes their PowerPoint slides dazzle). Really, you are these guys still around?
Much is made of the fact that Metcalfe invented the Ethernet; maybe it's time for the guy who invented fiberoptics to take his place.
Free Software as Communism explained: (Score:2)
Re:What exactly is his point? (Score:2)
I think its also true that businesses may be conscious of the strength of free domain software in the linux community. I know that even if a commerical paint program showed up for Linux, I'd still use the GIMP, and I have a feeling that with how loud some people get about free and open source software, businesses probably percieve a large risk in an entree into linux development.
Metcalfe ascendant (Score:5)
He has long battled entrenched monopolies--telcos of all stripes, and Microsoft, of most note. This latest "flame against Linux" was an attempt to challenge the Linux community to correct what Mr. Metcalfe sees as its worst shortcomings. It's similar to, but less clumsy than, when your father said "Bet you can't clean up your room in ten minutes flat." Except Mr. Metcalfe has your number pretty well, and judging by the vehemence of responses he reported, the Linux community never saw him coming. Stop and re-interpret his comments as if Mr. Torvalds or Mr. Stallman had made them instead. What could possibly cause them to say such a thing? Ah, now you are getting into the proper mindset!
What, you're still here browsing the web, instead of chasing bugs, cutting code, or writing docs? Why, exactly?
Okay, boys, coffee break's over--back on your heads!