DishPVR 721 Review 171
An anonymous submitter writes "TiVo's not the only Linux based PVR in the US market anymore. Echostar's Dish Network is now offering their own Linux based PVR, the dual tuner, 120 GB DP721. The first review can be found here at DBSTalk.com." Another anonymous person (how hard is it to give yourself a handle? sheesh) describes the gizmo and notes a possible problem: "Echostar is now shipping a Linux based set-top box called the DishPVR-721 that won best of show at CES. It has a 120GB drive, a pentium like processor and supports dual channel PVR. Also, from my call to their technical support this morning, they aren't planning on giving up any of the GPLed source code they have modified. I've got one in front of me right now, ugly silver box but nice specs. I'm going to open it up this morning and start taking it apart."
Handles (Score:1, Offtopic)
I agree, it takes no effort to register an account and uses next to no private information. You'd think everyone would do it. It makes you wonder why the editors take shots at the New York Times every time there's an article posted because of their required registration, huh?
Re:Handles (Score:1, Interesting)
Too many passwords, too many cookies.
Don't trust Echostar... (Score:4, Informative)
Charlie Ergen is not a name that slips readily from medialand lips. Outside America his name is unknown. But today he has earned his place in TV history - the 48-year-old former professional gambler has torpedoed one of Rupert Murdoch's most ambitious plans - to set up a global TV network straddling America, Europe, Asia and Australia.
And although 22 years his junior, the deal to buy DirecTV in the US is a personal triumph for Mr Ergen, who fought Murdoch once before and won.
As Mr Murdoch seethes over his defeat, he will be reflecting on a personal feud that goes back five years.
The pair first clashed in 1996 when Mr Ergen bid against Mr Murdoch in an effort to force up the price of the last remaining satellite licence in the US. He succeeded, forcing Mr Murdoch to pay almost £281m over the odds for the licence.
After paying so much, the media tycoon's telecoms partner, MCI, pulled out of a proposed joint venture, forcing him to go cap in hand to EchoStar. The two rivals agreed to a merger deal that would have seen them sew up the satellite market between them.
However, Mr Murdoch subsequently pulled out in the face of opposition from the cable giants and a furious Mr Ergen filed a £5bn lawsuit against him.
The saga was eventually settled when Murdoch - left with two satellite operations and a satellite licence he couldn't fund alone, - was forced into a humiliating settlement with EchoStar. Mr Ergen ended up with the satellite business and Mr Murdoch was left with just an 8% stake in EchoStar.
Mr Ergen, who abandoned his blackjack card games in Las Vegas when one of the casinos accused him of "counting cards" (a practice sharp-eyed gamblers use to work out where cards are in the pack as they are dealt), has now gambled again and apparently won.
A workaholic, the Echostar boss knows the value of the money he has just borrowed to secure the deal. According to reports he watches every penny affecting the bottom line - he makes bearded linux hippies take night flights to save money and apparently requires them to double up on hotel rooms.
Barring a late return of Mr Murdoch to the negotiating table or a rejection by competition authorities, the DirecTV deal will be crowning glory of an illustrious career for Mr Ergen.
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:5, Insightful)
While gambling has a stigma in many people's minds, to be a successful professional gambler is actually quite demanding. Typically professional gamblers have to be very good at mathematics as well as data and strategy analysis. They also must also be able to evaluate situations logically and dispassionately (especially true in sports wagering) and not be swayed by emotions and hype. Furthermore they will also need good money management skills if they want to be around for long. Not to mention perseverance and the discipline to takes to be successful in the long run. Read any books by Ken Uston [amazon.com] or Bob McCune [amazon.com] and you'll come to appreciate the amount of work and analysis it takes to be a professional gambler. Any fool can gamble, but only a select few people can gamble successfully over the long haul.
So yes, I would trust a company whose CEO was a professional gambler. It's a better background than many other CEOs have had.
Don't trust Professional Gamblers? (Score:2)
From memory, the gambler had a combination of "mathematics as well as data and strategy analysis" and combined that with knowing a few little tricks, like side betting. Strictly not allowed (like all money-making schemes in a casino) side betting involves ignoring the house, and betting on outcomes privately between gamblers. He would overhear "I'm sure this next spin will be black, I just know it", and casually reply "I bet it's not". That sort of thing. Anyway, read the book.
My badly laboured point is, a professional gambler is someone who knows the rules intimately, knows that the odds are heavily stacked against him, and therefore knows that he has to play slightly outside the accepted rules in order to win.
Sounds ideal for a CEO of a company selling Linux-based products..
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:3, Interesting)
It's kinda funny how that article has absolutely no clue what "counting cards" at blackjack means. Despite what Rain Man may have led you to believe, counting cards requires nothing more than remembering which cards have been dealt and keeping a mental count of how likely you are to get a 10 when needed. If you do this correctly and spread your bets so you bet more when the odds are better, you gain a 1-2% player edge of your action - average return of ~1.5% of every dollar bet.
(Yes, it's a little more complicated than that, but I'm a poor student and I've never been to Vegas, so i'd appreciate no overly disparaging criticism. Think: if you understand counting cards so much better than me, why are you posting on Slashdot instead of counting your casino-won money? hehe)
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:1)
Heh, as much as I have flamed you in the past, I have to say, that was a slick one. I laughed.
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:2)
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:3, Informative)
Seems like a great reason not to trust him.... and anyone who knows anything about gambling, to become a professional (and successful) at it requires an amazing amount of skill. If he is applying this skill and is watching every penny affecting the bottomline, why shouldn't I trust him? Any other CEO's out there I shouldn't trust based upon how they acquired the management skills? Anybody trust Andersen, Worldcom, Enron, or Martha Stewart before they went tits up? (yeah, I know Martha hasn't - yet)....
Stop worrying over the professionals' personal lives -- check their record - if they are getting the job done, great. Hell, we elected Clinton and Bush, so don't tell me about trust!
Re:Don't trust Echostar... (Score:2)
-jon
Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1, Offtopic)
You could just make your own. (Score:2, Troll)
I'm currently using a setup like this with another debian [debian.org] box running samba [samba.org], so I have near unlimited storage space.
Re:Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone know any solutions with keyboard? (Score:1)
Scott
DBStalk.COM
Model 921 will include HDTV recording (Score:4, Informative)
Dish Network is planning a late 2002 introduction of a new model 921 STB that combines a HDTV receiver for both over-the-air broadcasts and Dish satellite programming with a HDTV capable personal video recorder (PVR). The PVR is reported to incorporate a 160 GB hard drive that will provide for somewhere between 10 and 20 hours of HDTV recording capacity. This unit will also include provisions for web browsing. It will include a DVI/HDCP digital video interface in addition to the standard analog monitor interfaces.
Re:Model 921 will include HDTV recording (Score:1)
be buying one.
Re:Model 921 will include HDTV recording (Score:1)
Re:Model 921 will include HDTV recording (Score:1)
> * Down-rezzed HD material will be sent at 540i, which should be a bit better than SD (at least, that is their spin on it).
Also all the current HDTV satellite receivers have a down-rez flag that the provider can set. I don't believe they're currently using it, but I don't want to spend my money on a future crippled product.
I won't ever buy it (Score:1)
If they're attempting to breat the GPL then I say screw 'em. Either someone *will* get ahold of it and post it on the internet, or they'll (hopefully) never sell another unit once it's made known they don't respect the GPL.
Re:I won't ever buy it (Score:2)
In the past the companies that have tried this have backed down before things got legal, which means that the GPL has never been tried in court. It remains to be seen how this one gets sorted out.
Re:I won't ever buy it (Score:2, Funny)
Well I dunno about u guys, but when I go shopping for PVRs I always look for the "GPL Inside" sticker. I won't buy a PVR without it!
Heh.
Re:I won't ever buy it (Score:1)
Re:I won't ever buy it (Score:2)
Re:I won't ever buy it (Score:1)
When you use something that belongs to someone else you have either to accept the conditions of the owner or stop using it. When you write software you have the right to keep your own work for yourself, or choose how it can be distributed and or used, at least to a certain degree.
If someone choose to support open source/free software by writing some piece of software he has the right to decide that it has to remain open/free, and this is what the GPL is about.
Apart from the philosophical reasons, on which not everybody may agree, there are still the pratical advantages of open source over closed source: not only faster innovation from reducing the need to duplicate the work, but also improved security because of the check on the sources by many people. Maybe in this case the first part does not apply (as long as they only changed something here and there to let it work on their hardware), but the second does, as without source code you can't be sure that they didn't include some backdoor or undocumented feature to their own advantage.
Of course they wouldn't have to give the sources with every DishPVR, also because I don't think that the average buyer will ever need them, but have to give the full sources they've actually used to anybody who asks them, for moral, practical, and legal reasons.
The way they choose to give them is less important, as long as it's reasonable: the GPL requires them to be willing to send them via mail with no additional charge (except P&P etc.), but they're free to offer other ways (like their own ftp or similar) in the hope that none of their customers will ever need the mail alternative.
How do you know? (Score:2, Insightful)
How do you know they modified any? If they did, I doubt it's much, or would be of any use to anybody anyway. TiVo's modified code is only to get linux working on that box. All the stuff that makes a TiVo useful is not GPL. My guess is the same would be true for this box.
Re:How do you know? (Score:1)
Jeroen
Re:How do you know? (Score:2)
To which they would no doubt reply you can get the source from any Linux disto site on the net. If you read the GPL you will note that it is sufficient to provide an ftp site for the source code.
I am much less interested in getting copies of linux from dish tv that being able to mod the hardware to put a decent size disk drive in it. We fill 30 hours very easily, 90 is not going to be a heck of a lot better.
What I really want is a system with a firewire port on it that will allow me to plug in a RAID array with a Tb or so.
Re:How do you know? (Score:2)
If you read the GPL you'd know that pointing to someone else's ftp site is not sufficient. They have to mail the sources to any customer who asks for them, for the cost of shipping only.
Re:How do you know? (Score:1)
Re:How do you know? (Score:1)
I've read the GPL and I remember this little tidbit, which falls in line with the parent post of the guy you replied to.
GPL Section 3
However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable.
The previous poster had said the following:
> How do you know they modified any? If they did, I doubt it's much, or would be of any use to anybody anyway. TiVo's modified code is only to get linux working on that box. All the stuff that makes a TiVo useful is not GPL. My guess is the same would be true for this box.
Considering that the article states that this is a pentium-like CPU, then it's probably running a standard linux x86 kernel. The rest is probably done in a proprietary module (which Linus has said is OK, but discourages). The useful stuff (a la TiVo) is probably not GPL anyways like the poster said.
Re:How do you know? (Score:2)
Bottom line is: if you ship a box that's running Linux, modified or not, then you have to provide access to Linux sources.
Re: Assumptions (Score:2)
No. They distribute vanilla Linux in binary form, therefore they are required by the GPL to make vanilla Linux source available. They *cannot* point at someone else's FTP server. If they normally distributed their binary vanilla Linux from their FTP server, then they could offer the source up via FTP. But they don't.
If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place
They don't distribute their object code via FTP; they distribute their object code by shipping a box, so this section doesn't apply. Furthermore, the "special exception" of the GPL doesn't apply either, since the executable is itself a (vanilla) kernel and doesn't run on any "operating system". So, even if everything were completely vanilla GPL, they still would have to ship full source. However, it is very likely that they had to make some tiny changes to the vanilla kernel source in order to accomodate their proprietary module, if only to the complilation scripts. So it's not vanilla anymore and full source (not just patches) has to be mailed on demand anyway.
Court Test of the GPL (Score:3, Interesting)
I mean, I really don't want to see the GPL thrown out or anything, but it's got to go to court eventually. Then, somehow, the world will change.
I remember reading that the FSF encourages people to license with the specification that newer versions of the GPL will apply. I know lots of people purposefully exclude that out of distrust for the FSF's motives. It would be ironic, albeit sucky, if being able to update the GPL would save a lot of code from badness.
I mean, usually that "future changes apply" clause usually bites people in the butt. It seems about time that it got used for something beneficial.
Has anyone ever considered a sort of "future updates to the GPL apply if a) the author is dead or b) the author files an agreement to update form with the FSF"?
It seems that would protect against fears that the FSF may sell them out in the future. At least then users would be safe unless both the FSF *and* the author wanted to sell out. Seems much less likely.
Also, does the redistribution clause of the GPL apply when it's distributed embedded or just as a software package. If I build a USB widget and distribute the widget running the Linux kernel with scheduler changes to accomodate my widget's real-time foobazzle, does it need to be GPL? Even if it is only allowing my widget to simply run? I don't have a problem with that (I actually kind of like it), but a lot of the less committed to free software would.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
Also, does the redistribution clause of the GPL apply when it's distributed embedded or just as a software package.
If it's in someone's hands but yours, you distributed it.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:3, Interesting)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but that is entirely the reason you would bring Echostar to court in the first place...
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
"This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version."
This applies to the recipient, not the author. It basically says 'Use any version of the GPL that suits you.' If the FSF created a GPL3 that required you to sacrice your firstborn to RMS or something there is no requirement for anyone to use it.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
But if GPL3 says 'You can distribute modified binaries without releasing the source.' then it would be kinda bad, because all the evil companies would use version 3 then. Am I correct?
-jfedor
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
Good point. The present wording that you may use the as-released GPL or a later one (at your option) presents a potential loophole. The FSF is naively saying, in effect, "Trust us, we'll never gut the GPL." But the GPL itself contains no language that prevents any later versions from eviscerating its essential copyleft nature. Could this really ever happen? Well yes, almost anything is possible.
The FSF should fix this. One way to do this while protecting users' key rights and obligations might be to refine the "current or later version" section to identify what provisions of the current license must survive in any later version in order for it to be valid and that, in these specified respects, the terms of the as-issued license will remain in force and prevail over any later version's provisions with respect to those terms. The lawyers over at the FSF need to sharpen their pencils and repair this little oversight.
GPL won't get thrown out... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:1)
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:1)
But you can't un-licence. People that already have it under the GPL can still use it and distribute it.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:1)
Basically, Eben Moglen, general legal counsel for GNU, was saying [gnu.org] that GPL is safe because it does not restrict things that you are entitled to by other laws (ie. fair-use etc). The article is a good read.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
I've been playing with a 3com NBX 100 which uses a number of Open Source tools all linked in one big a.out image. Just because the souce code is GNU'ed, that doesn't give me any rights to reverse engineer the device or touch the compiled code. I had to specificly get a license from the person that was listed as the copyright holder to legally rip it apart.
Remember old Copyright violations mean civil court, DMCA means you go to jail. The GPL needs to address this issue.
Re:Court Test of the GPL (Score:2)
Throw it out. That would be great. That way all software licence agrements would then be null and void. There would be no more copy right, and ideas could flow freely.
Bullshit (Score:1)
Um, no. The issues is whether the General Public License is legal. Ruling it illegal does not mean that all software license agreements would be 'null and void', but rather that GPL'd software would suddenly become undistrobutable until all the people who have contributed code have been contacted and agree to allow their code to be relicensed under a different software license. In effect, it means a stop on Linux kernel distrobution for a period of unknown length, and a death-blow to many free software projects who have some authors who cannot be contacted or who's heirs refuse to relicense.
These software would then be legally undistrobutable -- i.e. you could not offer them for download, in either source or binary form. The copyright rules of NO distrobution would apply. The GPL (and any other software license) gives rights, it does not take them away.
Face it, copyright isn't going away any time soon. The best we can hope for is that our little corner of protection is held up in a court of law.
GPL'd Code (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:GPL'd Code (Score:1)
Re:GPL'd Code (Score:1)
Re:GPL'd Code -tech support (Score:1)
Last year, my PVR 500 box would occasionally just cross-link clusters of one recording on top of another. Both shows would be hosed. Since the box is always recording/buffering, you were guaranteed to lose a show or two every few days.
I called the tech support, and the guy said he'd never heard of the situation (even though the boards were full of complaints). He then recommended I not use the surge suppressor, since those had been causing some "static problems" for these boxes. I chalked it up to the fact that he was an idiot, and they eventually pushed down a software update that stopped the problem. Of course, this wasn't announced as such - the software version numbers just changed one day and the problem stopped.
Fast forward to last week. The box showed signs of a crashing hard drive, and tech support put me through to "Replacements", and even gave me authorization for replacement. "Replacements" figured out that the box was one month out of warrantee, and said that a replacement would run $70, or I could sign up for a "house warrantee" for both of my boxes and the dish for $2/month (one year committment), and that would chop $20 off of the $70 replacement. I took a pass on it for a while, since the box still plays, but won't record or essentially PVR.
While I had the guy on the phone, and asked him if they had lowered the data rate / increased the compression on the local channels, since the locals were getting lots of motion artifacts recently. I said since the box uses MPEG-2 compression, that's a trade-off they could be making.
He informed me that they don't use compression in the same way a computer signal does, and that such artifacts may have been introduced along the way by another link in the distribution chain, and that MPEG-2 didn't mean what I thought it meant.
I nodded and smiled over the phone to get off the phone with the guy, but something bothered me before we even got to talking about compression...
It was the same guy (by name) who told me not to use the surge supressors the year before.
I'll continue to use the service, but won't trust the tech support for anything other than putting in the occasional record that I complained about something.
Re:GPL'd Code (Score:1)
Replay 4500 is also a Linux based PVR (Score:3, Informative)
According to this [sonicblue.com] Sonicblue's Replay 4500 is also Linux based.
Re:Replay 4500 is also a Linux based PVR (Score:2)
I would presume that they have had to modify some existing GPL code... but even if they haven't, then still must make the source code available at no cost/cost of media for any GPL'd binaries that they distribute.
Re:Replay 4500 is also a Linux based PVR (Score:2)
The 4000 series runs VxWorks which is not Linux or Linux-based. I severly doubt that they re-wrote all of the functionality of the 4000 to run on Linux for the 4500 series.
Then again, I don't know why their own FAQ would say in a couple places that it is Linux-based? Just because people would recognize the word Linux more than VxWorks?
Jeeeze..... (Score:5, Informative)
This is a new platform for Echostar and it may take a while to get everthing in place. Based on my understanding, they have every intention of following all GPL requirements.
If they wish to be compliant... (Score:2)
It's only slightly more comforting to hear from an anonymous source that Dish Network plans to follow their legal duties and responsibilities with the licensing agreements of the code they are using. But I (and I think many others) would feel much better once they comply and make available their derived source. Until then I would suggest the authors of that source, and the free software community in general, are within their rights to complain vociferously. In fact, I would argue that
Cheers,
--Maynard
Why do you assume they've modified the kernel? (Score:1)
Cool! (Score:2)
Just have to build my raid array a little bigger.
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
Re:Motorola DCT5000 (Score:2)
Unix Penguin? (Score:1)
"Ok here we are playing LPairs, the memory game where you have to match pairs. Notice the Linux Devil is one of the playing cards. (You will also find the UNIX Penguin as well!)
It's pretty cool though, and I bet they will release the GPL, the tech support guy may have just been clueless. If he didn't know what the GPL is then he would just think you're randomly calling requesting the source code for the unit.
Its decent, but I would scarecely call it a PVR (Score:1)
Re:Its decent, but I would scarecely call it a PVR (Score:2)
Looking at the screen shots, this thing looks like only a commetic difference from the UTV. Give them some time. If they are developing the system themselves instead of letting M$ screw it up, it'll get better over time. Even the tivo was pretty crappy in the early days.
Re:Its decent, but I would scarecely call it a PVR (Score:1)
I LOVE my Dish500 PVR. This new one looks even better.
- Necron69
They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:1)
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:2)
If you distribute the binary, then you must make the source code available at no cost/cost of media. So Dish is required to provide source.
However, it sounds like they are still quashing a lot of bugs, and so I wouldn't expect the engineers to make a source release available until things have stabilized a little. People seem to be calling tech support and those people are not likely to know Linux from a hole in the ground.
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:1)
But that has nothing to do with the parent post.
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:1)
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Sigh.
< bite> Some time in 1991, Let met quote from the www.linux.org [linux.org] webpage: "Linux is a free Unix-type operating system originally created by Linus Torvalds with the assistance of developers around the world."</bite>
Insisting on calling Linux "GNU/Linux systems [gnu.org]" is like insisting on calling a car a "horseles carriage".
Wat we call Linux today is an OS, deal with it.
Note that there are also other OS's that use FSF/GNU tools (such as the gcc compiler). You can find some more information here [bsd.org].
And if you put the representatives from those three websites in the same room, you've got yourself a really nice family reunion: they're all related but they don't really enjoy it. But they are family and will have to get over it.
Re:They don't need to GPL their own work... (Score:1)
>"Insisting on calling Linux "GNU/Linux systems [gnu.org]" is like insisting on calling a car a "horseles carriage".
Is it possible you missed his point?
"Insisting on calling Linux an 'OS' is like insisting on calling an engine a 'car'"
I don't agree w/ tacking the "GNU/Linux" phrase everywhere you see "Linux", but it sure does take out alot of the ambiguity. GNU/Linux is a good term for a 'generic' linux based OS.
Mascots! (Score:1)
Wow! I never knew that Linux had a devil for a mascot! Or that the UNIX mascot is a penguin! Or even that UNIX had a mascot! You learn something new every day!
Or, the author of the review needs to do some research. You decide.
Damn.. beat me to it. (Score:1)
Re:Mascots! (Score:1)
Two things: (Score:2, Interesting)
Honestly, they most likely did it as a kernel module (which doesn't need to be GPL'ed; see Nvidia). Oh well.
Re:Two things: (Score:1)
Ergen does not want another Direct TV on his hands.
What's the cost? (Score:1)
Dish support doesn't have a price yet as they claim to not beselling it direct, only via resellers. any my reslellers aren'y open on weekends.
Re:What's the cost? (Score:2)
The only models that Dish sells direct are the 301 and 501, but we do support all models.
Strange Moderation? (Score:2, Interesting)
include('moderation_abuse_rant.inc');
Perhaps i'm foolish to not AC this post... but I didn't think the point of slashdot was to live in fear of moderation while trying to make a valid point. I guess I'll get my answer.
Any roll your own products that control DSS (Score:1)
Re:GPL (Score:1)
Re:GPL (Score:1)
"If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all."
Also, section 8 provides for geographical limitations of program distribution to handle the case of other countries having different restrictions.
I would also like to add, in general (not just for the above post), that according to section 3 of the GPL, Echostar is required to provide the source code (make it available) for *all* GPL'ed software they distribute, not just GPL software that they modify.
Re:GPL Source Code (Score:3, Interesting)
Won't work....
You would have to buy one from them first, then you can demand the source from them.
Jeroen
Re:GPL Source Code (Score:1)
Re:GPL Source Code (Score:2)
* b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange;
Re:GPL Source Code (Score:2)
Accompany it with a written offer
Which would mean that you would first have to buy it to get this written offer...
Jeroen
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:2, Informative)
Excellent point.
If they've made modifications to the Linux kernel itself, they're legally obligated to release their modified kernel source. But in all likelihood, all they've done is develop dynamically loaded device drivers for their hardware. If that's the case, then there's no legal requirement whatsoever for them to release their device driver code.
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:2)
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:1)
Quite the contrary, I'm afraid. Look around - Plenty of folks here are demanding source code before it's even been established that there is any legal obligation to release it, and few of the ones who are loudly complaining are making any distinction at all between kernel modification and device drivers. They don't really care whether they're entitled to source code or not; they want what they want, and they want it now.
It's this small but vocal minority of complainers the subject line of this thread refers to. These people, because they're so vocal about demanding source code from anyone who even thinks about using Linux in their product, are the ones who give the whole movement a bad name.
Ambiguity helps nobody, and saying 'f**k you' to the (presumably polite) enquiry
Unwarranted assumptions are not particularly helpful, either. We have *nothing* to go on here, besides the submitter's original statement, which was highly confrontational in tone. Judging solely by that, as I have nothing else upon which to base my opinion, I think it's likely that he simply called up their phone drones and demanded source code. I also think it's quite likely that the people he talked to were simply front-line tech support people who had no idea what he was talking about.
I'll go one step further... (Score:2)
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:3, Interesting)
Tip: The Linux kernel is licensed under the GPL.
Tip: You catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar. Don't call their tech support and rag on them, you write them a nice letter on paper and request it, mentioning their 'oversight'.
Good point.
And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters
You go through all the trouble to develop, design, construct, and market a box that does something damned useful, and then a snot-nosed 14-year old who can't program other than running a vbs worm starts calling your tech support demanding your "GPL" code.
If their product is based on Linux, they did not go to all the trouble to develop, design, and construct the product. If they don't want the benefits and obligations of the GPL, they can use BSD, sell their souls for a closed source alternative, or write their own code.
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:1)
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:4, Insightful)
Tip: Not everything is GPL. Those that that aren't should have written from scratch, or from licensed code. According to the story, Echostar used GPL'ed code, and hence, are required to, by the GPL license, to GPL their code.
What if this was proprietary code that they took and used? I believe you'd have a different view then, because it's generally called "IP Theft." Keven Mitnick served years in jail for something similar, and he wasn't even getting any financial benefit.
Well, guess what? If they don't GPL their code, they violated copyright. Plian and simple.
Stop yelling, start thinking. (Score:2, Insightful)
"When you assume, you make an ASS out of U and ME.
Dude, they don't have to GPL THEIR code, as long as they didn't use someone elses code as a base.
The kernel is just one small part.
As countless other people have said, they probably have a nice module or even *gasp* a user-space program that does all the neat stuff.
How they license that stuff is their choice, much like how I license my KDE applications is my own choice.
Re:Stop yelling, start thinking. (Score:1)
Re:Stop yelling, start thinking. (Score:1)
Otherwise every single linux app would need to be GPL'd (hello, system calls.)
Re:And you wonder why people hate Linux Supporters (Score:3, Interesting)
My company is currently selecting the next platform for our software. (You've never heard of it, so don't bother trying to guess.) Some of my staff (I'm the CTO) are lobbying for a Linux port, mostly for business reasons but also to support Linux as an alternative to Windows on the Intel architectures.
I have vetoed that proposal summarily. My reason is mostly based on technology-- Linux doesn't have very good support for some advanced hardware that we depend on-- but the last nail in the coffin was politics. I don't want to even dip a toe in the GPL pool as long as there are vocal and influential people out there trying to make life hard for for-profit businesses.
We're porting from IRIX to Solaris. Linux is just more trouble than it's worth.
Re:Yay (Score:1)
Scott
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