Yup, I'm pretty sure Microsoft execs and other representatives have publicly said stuff to this effect before. Microsoft could easily kill piracy if they wanted to. It will never happen, though, because then the third world would move to Linux and other free alternatives. Microsoft would rather eat the loss now and keep market share. Then when standard of living improves in countries like China and people can actually afford to buy the software, they'll choose Windows.Microsoft would prefer they use pirated Windows than Linux.
Wow, crazy. If I write some Code, it's my IP. If I choose to give it away for Free, that's my Right to do so. If it undermines the Industry, too bad, sucks to be You.
Kind of like how Kazaa was built to take down the music industry, and Skype was built to take down the telecoms
Neither of them achieved their goal, but that was the idea.
IMO, digital technology poses one of the greatest threats to our civilization ever. Protection for the compensation of content creators for sales goes back to the very first reproduced items.
Nobody says you cannot sell open source software, people sell it all the time. And usually make a pretty penny in profit on it.
Technology changes, content mediums change. If you don't change and adapt with it, you will become obsolete and irrelevant. The monks hand scribing books probably cringed when the printing press was invented. The RIAA could have cornered the market with digital, MP3 music downloads, but instead shot themselves in the foot and doomed themselves to irrelevance.
Half of what you just wrote didn't even correlate with what you replied to, are you high or just fucked in the head?
This discussion is over.
Forty percent of servers run Windows, 60 percent run Linux
Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO (September 2008)
Text
According to the IIPA, official government endorsements of open source software create "trade barriers" and restrict "equitable market access" for software companies.
Hey look - a thread about the US government publishing propoganda, and then a pissing contest about whether or not Linux is a mainstream desktop capable OS.
Try asking yourself what the average salary of a windows user is, and what the windows licence cost is, as a percentage, spread over a 2-4 year refresh cycle. Because that's the available savings that has to pay for the retraining and learning curve.
As for this open source crap, the position of the American government on IP is pretty ridiculous. And I'll add another 'open source doesn't mean free' to the pile.
IIPA can go the same place as RIAA and MPAA belong.
Fallujah?
I was thinking someplace a little warmer, but okay!
Just the differences from excel would be enough to stop most places from adopting. Too many internally developed excel/VB apps out there.FLOSS is more than the GNU/Linux OS. Take a look at all the new Linux derivatives that run appliances, cell phones, TiVO and so on and so forth. Take a look at any major organisation with larger database requirements, storage requirements and so on.
And take a look at a desktop computer running Linux or *BSD with 20k applications available at no cost.
Learning how to type in Write instead of Word is ... well perhaps that retraining isn't too bloody hard, learning how to click a different looking symbol and clicking write instead of word might not be either, using firefox instead of ... firefox? Well perhaps not all that much training required, using Thunderbird instead of ... Thunderbird? Well perhaps not all that much there either, eh?
Truth is, a regular user would be able to sit down and run any newer linux distro with KDE without any training what so ever.
Just the differences from excel would be enough to stop most places from adopting. Too many internally developed excel/VB apps out there.
The fact is I could sit down and use Linux, though I don't, but average users needed retraining for the new windows start menu!
And I suspect there are a lot more Exchange/Outlook corporate users than thunderbird users; another area where even minor incompatibility will cost uncountable time to most companies.
I did use Open Office for windows for a while; maybe it's better now, but a few years ago it had nothing like the polish of Office, and with the cheaper home-user editions available, it was a no-brainer.
I support open source in theory, but quite honestly I don't support it with my time, or my wallet.
You don't just have Open Office, you have five other suits and the one i'd recommend is koffice.
You have 20 000 apps at the tip of your fingers, all of them free and most of them better than anything else, like MySQL, Koffice, slick, mainstream and polished.
I recommend that you sit down with KDE4.3 and use Koffice and THEN you can talk to me about integration or what excel can do.
How the fuck do you even try to spout off about something you haven't used for years?
I'm not saying that windows + office isn't good because it is, it's bloody great, but you don't have to educate a user regarding how to type, e-mail or whatever since the most popular programs are actually cross platform these days.
IOW, until you actually know what you are talking about perhaps you should STFU?
Well, you are underestimating the stupidity of the average user.
The average user is too stupid or unwilling to learn the differences between Firefox and Internet Explorer. Functionally, these programs are about the same, but the average user is just scared off because it looks different.
Now then, throw in a more drastic change with something like the iphone, and suddenly the average user can adapt because it's a completely different device, and not something similar but different. People get annoyed with familiarity that isn't exactly the same (look at all the bitching from XP to Vista). Most people just aren't comfortable enough with computers to accept change.
Good idea, you probably shouldYou don't just have Open Office, you have five other suits and the one i'd recommend is koffice.
You have 20 000 apps at the tip of your fingers, all of them free and most of them better than anything else, like MySQL, Koffice, slick, mainstream and polished.
I recommend that you sit down with KDE4.3 and use Koffice and THEN you can talk to me about integration or what excel can do.
How the fuck do you even try to spout off about something you haven't used for years?
I'm not saying that windows + office isn't good because it is, it's bloody great, but you don't have to educate a user regarding how to type, e-mail or whatever since the most popular programs are actually cross platform these days.
IOW, until you actually know what you are talking about perhaps you should STFU?