Ok, guys. New work week, I have a bunch of developers downstairs who want to rip the heads off the operations guys, so this is it for me. You'll just have to accept that you're wrong.
🙂. Some quick responses to some of the key points.
For your sake, I hope Microsoft succeeds so you can still spend $400 to read your documents.
I'm a business user. We get Office on a volume license for a _lot_ less than that, and it is an insignificant cost of onboarding a new employee. I appreciate your good wishes, but I believe there is a lot less risk of MS going away and leaving me stranded than there is of any open source alternative withering on the vine. Looking around, I guess about 99.98% of the business community agrees with me. Watch how the Massachusetts thing goes.
This is why we have things like the 'OpenGroup'. And 'Open' this and 'Open' that. It's why 'propriatory' is a dirty word in computer-land were in other industries its used as a 'good thing' to set their product apart from their competitors.
You have a very good point with regard to people getting stranded by proprietary formats. Some people bought betamax too. But the software business gives lipservice to open source for the reasons I've already mentioned. The vast majority of all software technology is still proprietary, and sold for profit. Also, there is nothing like the churn in the business that there used to be, when you could build your network on Netware and five years later it had almost disappeared. Microsoft now has a 20+ year track record of continuous support of their O/S and applications. Aside from lipservice paid for other reasons, nobody in business feels seriously fearful of being stranded on Word.
wonder how Sun, IBM, Microsoft, Novell, and RedHat, Checkpoint, Nokia, the US federal government, and just about any company that has ever used a TCP/IP stack feel about statements like that.
Haha, please, give me a break. You been in this business long? The TCP/IP stack was an open source _idea_ maybe (because it came from a time before there was much commercial software). There are as many different closed, proprietary implementations of that idea as there are companies pursuing one of... oh... a zillion different closed, proprietary versions of the Unix and other operating systems. I love when open source-heads point to Unix and its substrata and talk about "open systems." Bullshit.
Things that have absolutely no relation to software what so ever.
Those things have very strong relations to business planning, business risks, delivering value, and generating returns for shareholders. But then you guys obviously aren't very interested in businesss.
The model isn't broken for everyone, just people that care about quality.
You know, this statement sort of pisses me off. Here's my advice to the open source "community": stop mocking established, successful companies for being less than perfect. It's cheap as hell, because you have never had to deliver against the expectations of millions of users, almost nobody is using your crap, and you have nothing invested in whether it succeeds or not other than your own egos. You sound like a bunch of thirteen year-olds who are certain their parents are idiots, until someday they grow up and learn what the real world is like. When your software runs critical apps for a couple hundred million people you can come back and lecture us all on how it was done.
I've seen people get up on the desk and dance in the middle of a work day. Saying "screw it" is pretty normal at most jobs.
Now you're just being silly again.
Solaris has become low-value and low-risk now?
Haha, you said it, I didn't, but yes. In fact it is getting lower in value all the time. And WTF does Solaris have to do with anything? The vast majority of that platform is closed, proprietary property of Sun (much like Java). My point in that section was simply this: a few big companies paying a very small percentage of their workforce to spend time on FOSS because it is politically attractive to them doesn't mean ******. It doesn't change anything.
Closed source software wouldn't be bad, if it wasn't bad. There are too many flaws out there being exploited, and the users don't have a chance. At least with open source software people can audit it, they can review it, they can fix it on their own without having to rely on a corporation that only cares about the bottom line.
Dude, you can crow to me about how well the open source world does at preventing exploits when you have: a) hundreds of millions of consumers using it; and b) every scumbag on the planet writing malware to target it. You guys aren't even in the race and you're laughing at the lead runner for stumbling from time to time. Obnoxious. Yeah, you might have more people looking at open source stuff, but guess what? It's a crapload easier to find exploitable holes when I can download the source code, too. If you could snap your fingers and convert every desktop in the world to Linux tomorrow, within three months it would be a flaming wreck.
Microsoft and Apple have accepted certain models of software development, largely ignoring security along the way. They give away plastic discs and sell expensive pieces of paper allowing people to use certain binaries. The whole thing from the top down is closed to the consumer. You cannot know what is going on, do not look behind the curtain, accept these conditions and the fact that you have no control over the future of this software. If there is a bug no one is responsible for fixing it, and no one will fix it unless it makes the original company look bad.
Bullshit. First, they didn't "accept" the model. Might as well blame Dan Bricklin, or anyone else who sold their work because, you know, that's what we do here. Second, they haven't "ignored security along the way." They've been evolving their products successfully for twenty+ years. The security landscape is much different now than it was then. The consumer doesn't care what "is going on" in their computers or their source code. They just want it to work. These companies evolve their products as quickly as they can given the demands on them.
These are the kinds of companies who make people think that everything is intellectual property, no matter how ridiculous.
Give me an example of something ridiculous that is considered intellectual property, and I'll describe the investment that had to be made to create it.
There is no downside to #4, there is almost no work involved (excluding the bureaucracy that can only hold the company back). There is no need for chain of custody, business partners, ceritification, verification, exorcism, or anything else. The community will take care of itself, if given the freedom of knowing how the products they have purchased works.
There is a tremendous amount of work involved, and a lot of responsibility. I've described it several times but you just don't want to hear it.
It's evidence that it's a viable business model.
It's not a business model at all. They're all losing money on their investment in open source, but can afford to do so because it is such a small piece of what they do, and it has the political benefits that I won't describe for the 14th time in this thread.
They risk losing all of the money that they paid those developers if the project doesn't pan out. And they risk losing face if they make a big deal of the project and then it flops. But neither of those things are tied to FOSS development.
Oh yeah, you're right. There is that. It's probably nearly as much as they spent on napkins for the cafeteria last year.
So I guess TiVo, CyberGuard (now Secure Computing), Barracuda, etc don't have any timelines for their products?
I didn't say there were "no volunteers working on products with timelines", did I? Is that the same thing as saying "nothing being done by volunteers is critical to a product timeline?" Try to read the words one at a time. If you have a concrete example of a company outsourcing a key piece of a project to a volunteer group, by all means offer it up.
There you go. I'm done. Have fun with the thread.