A Community Takeover of Mandrake? 296
sombragris writes "Ben Reser wrote an interesting opinion about MandrakeSoft's current financial woes. Reser maintains that there's no great value in MandrakeSoft's current business model and that the best course of action for Mandrake Linux would be a community or non-profit takeover of the Mandrake distribution. Sounds definitely interesting..."
It's one option (Score:4, Interesting)
Non-profit does sound like a good idea.
Re:It's one option (Score:5, Informative)
Well, US companies can file under chapter 7 or chapter 11. Under chapter 7, they are closed completely, but under chapter 11 they are allowed to continue to operate while they restructure their business.
Many big and high-profile companies file under chapter 11, but in fact there are many more chapter 7 filings in total.
Tor
Re:It's one option (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's one option (Score:5, Informative)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=50817&cid=5
Quote:
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Under French bankruptcy law these penalties [getting out of E-education contracts] would be voided and the remaining company (the company that sells a Linux distribution) would be viable.
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Things are probably not as bad as they seem.
Essentially they will become a non profit (Score:2)
Basically they will be a community linux no matter what, and will be a non profit no matter what.
So it comes down to, what would you rather control, a commercial Linux that could actually make some money for us all, or would you rather own a non profit.
I'd rather be subscribed to a commercial linux myself.
A better option! (Score:3, Insightful)
Subscribe to the Mandrake Club.
Lets face it, we will be paying the same amount of money regardless of if Mandrake is a for profit or not.
Buy Stock, by owning stock if Mandrake is a for profit company and they ever do well, we all will get rich and be paid, so theres more incentive to do this than to just donate to a non profit which will never really make money back.
By owning Mandrake as a company, we will have the power of shareholders, we will be able to control a commercial entity.
We have no commercial linux which supports the community and we have enough debians and slackwares, newbies would understand supporting a company more so than trying to do the non profit thing.
The best ideal situation for us would be to control a successful company in the industry. The only way to do this is to subscribe to Mandrake or buy stock.
Subscribing gives you the same power as buying stock just without the $$ making benifits.
Buying stock is just like donating money only you have a good chance of making your money back 3-4 years from now when the Desktop Linux market actually exists.
Non Profit is an idea of last resort, but its certainly not a good idea. A non profit will have not even a quarter of the $$ support of a commercial entity.
If it truely offers nothing, why did you use it? (Score:2)
Its funny you say it offers notihng yet you used Linux Mandrake in order to have that opinion in the first place.
Offers nothing? The service is the Linux Mandrake ISO, if you want to see Linux Mandrake 9.1, Subscribe, if you think Linux Mandrake sucks, well keep your money and pay for something else which is of greater value.
Re:It's one option (Score:2)
I was robbed of several thousand dollars by unethical salesweasels who knew full well the company was going down the tubes but happily accepted my check for 7 grand in furniature. I got one piece, and a refund for less than half the remaining amount.
Sears, of course, denies all responsibility "Look, we spun them off, see? our hands arent dirty!"
Sears and whatever Homelife rematerializes into will never see a dime of my or my family's cash, and I wouldn't urinate on former employees of the Homelife store near me if they were on fire (and if they jaywalk in front of me they'd better pray to god that I don't recognize them).
the thought that under French law the principals of Homelife would be broken and destitute, and likely never eat anything more interesting than a CHUNKY peanut butter sandwich appeals to me very much. Too bad it won't happen to them. Oh well, there's always the Karma they've gotten themselves.
Mandrakes another case. It's my distro of choice, and I'm a member of the Club as well.
Re:It's one option (going OT) (Score:2)
So if a company you work for does something immoral you believe that everyone else has the right to treat you as subhuman?
I'd rather Mandrake stay for profit (Score:4, Insightful)
The community will support Mandrake via the MandrakeClub, and via stock.
I'd rather them stay for profit because people are more likely to pay for something when its a legit business than they will "donate" to non profits.
Debian? hahahahaha Debian is not for newbies.
Slackware? Hahahahahaha.
Stampede.org?
No, I'm thinking of a for profit company which survives off of its memberships but still offers free software, like AOL.
AOL gets you to subscribe then they give you all these software. I believe Mandrake can have a good business model, currently the market just isnt mature enough for them to make decent money.. Lindows is doing the same thing with their Lindows insiders and I dont see anyone complaining about Lindows business model. Now I admit Lindows does have more money than Mandrake, but Mandrake has 20,000 subscribers, this is a decent amount of money.
We have the chance here to save Mandrake or watch it die. If it dies it will never be compareable to Lindows, so once its dead everyone will move to Lycoris and Lindows and support them.
Death should not be an option, we should all subscribe to the club under the silver membership right now, anyone who has ever used Mandrake and who wants to see Mandrake release 9.1, Anyone who wants Linux to be successful on the Desktop, stop talking and do something about it.
IF people are greedy or lazy, well then Mandrake will be just like Debian and Slackware and hardcore Linux users will take over operations and make it worthless to the common joe sixpack.
We will have another worthless community distro, which is exactly what newbies HATE about linux, they HATE the debian zealots running around trying to make everyone run debian.
Re:I'd rather Mandrake stay for profit (Score:2)
When a company goes into bankruptcy, the stockholders often end up losing most of what they invested. Creditors and bond holders get first dibs at any remaining assets of the company, and companies under a high debt load (like Mandrake, read their balance sheet) often have nothing left for their shareholders if they are unable to emerge from bankruptcy and face liquidation.
Re:I'd rather Mandrake stay for profit (Score:2)
Actually im working on a p2p update system thats better than apt-get. Who knows if it will ever be completed
I'm still waiting for Gnutella2 specs.
Re:I'd rather Mandrake stay for profit (Score:2)
By the way, KDE and Gnome arent distos they are applications. Big difference here. Not to mention most KDE and Gnome developers are paid developers.
Non-profit? (Score:5, Funny)
It sounds like they're already being run by a non-profit organization...
Re:Non-profit? (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, that's likely the reason Mandrake got into financial problems in the first place. In my opinion they forgot that old maxim, that "free software" means freedom, not price. They offered for free what anyone could download. Had they sold their product commercially, along with the source code in accordance with the GPL, they would have had more paying customers. In this case, distributing the source code would allow hackers more room to tinker, but the binary cd and installation still would be infinately more useful (and necessary).
I don't understand this business about the GPL not being able to be successful; no one else can make money for your work, 90% of the customers don't want the source, and even if they do a binary copy is still important as well. Consider how much harder it would be to 'pirate' a distribution from it's source than from the binaries.
Re:Non-profit? (Score:3, Insightful)
Since they're distributing under the GPL, they can't put any restrictions on what can and can't be redistributed. The GPL says that the source code must be available along with binaries, but it also says [fsf.org] that anybody can make the binaries available for free as well. If they want to restrict access to binary versions, they would have to release under something other than the GPL. Given the fuzzy distinction [fsf.org] between "aggregating" and "combining" software for distribution, this might be tricky to pull off without risking legal problems.
Re:Non-profit? (Score:5, Informative)
Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:5, Interesting)
Lindows is using the same business plan. Thats get subscribers and sell the services.
However, Mandrake screwed up in their budget early on, and ran out of money. IF Mandrake dies all the Mandrake users will be forced to use Lindows or Lycoris.
Honestly, I think Mandrake has the perfect business plan for a Desktop Linux, Mandrake just needs investor support, if a company were willing to give Mandrake 5 million dollars of investment Mandrake would be profitable in a matter of months..
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is that? The more likely reality of it is most of them will use Redhat, or a UnitedLinux product.
It's also entirely possible that there will be a community lead effort similar to debian. They already have an insane amount of RPM contributions and such.
These are desktop linux users not corperates (Score:2)
Desktop users dont use Redhat or United Linux, they want something for the desktop,not for hosting servers.
Re:These are desktop linux users not corperates (Score:3)
Uhm no. Desktop users do use Red Hat, and Red Hat isn't a server distribution. It is a desktop distribution. It's install is very easy, just as easy as Mandrake.
I use Mandrake, and I'm a software developer. I like an operating system that works. Red Hat works, Mandrake works, Debian works. These are all operating systems that are, in fact, easy to install.
Re:These are desktop linux users not corperates (Score:2)
Ok Mr. Software developer you sure do represent the casual user.
Now go compile some software or something.
Re:These are desktop linux users not corperates (Score:2)
What about my girlfriend who uses KDE? How does Lindows support Japanese input? Is it as easy as it is in Red Hat or Mandrake? Especially if she buys it from WalMart?
I'm not that different than a casual user, because when I'm not programming, I am that casual user. I check my email, browse the web, use AIM. It doesn't matter to me what system I use as long as it works. I do not want to mess around with any form of system maintenance when I need to work, or when I just want to relax and read the news.
My servers are for customization and optimization, a desktop computer is supposed to work. Red Hat does that very well.
Re:These are desktop linux users not corperates (Score:2)
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:4, Insightful)
It's also entirely possible that there will be a community lead effort similar to debian. They already have an insane amount of RPM contributions and such.
IMHO, iif (and I say if) Mandrake dies, then the best thing to do is take their fancy control panel and graphical installer and shove them up debian's ass. Since that's really the only thing that differentiates Mandrake from Debian, then take the good stuff and give it to Debian. Then all the packagers can go learn how to make debian packages and so forth. Rather than having another volunteer distribution. I'm all for choice, but what about the idiocy of duplicating work?
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:2)
Debian has a text based installer with very very old files, its never up to date.
Why even compare the two.
Not to mention mandrake uses rpm.
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:2)
You can find apt and synaptic for Mandrake 9.0 here [ibiblio.org] thanks to Texstar [pclinuxonline.com].
I'd hate to see Mandrake die, I believe it's the best all-round distro around, easy to install yet powerful, a great learning tool.
Cheer,
max
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:2)
I think the turning point came when they still wanted to use StarOffice with their distro. As we all now it became a "pay-for" app at roughly $60! So all the silver members (people who paid $60 for that membership) were excluded from downloading StarOffice, they had to upgrade their membership. That is what totally stopped me, why did they no switch to Open Office?
Second, they are not known for great stability or a streamlined install. They always seemed to be a working Beta than a Full Release by the lack of this performance.
Any how I hope the programmers fir the distro can find good jobs else were. I don't care for the distro, but the programmers that put it together obviously have some more to contribute to the community, just hope it is in their schedule.
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:2)
Mandrake did not "burn" money, look at their revenue increases and their costs of running the company decrease.
Mandrake can be profitable, the mandrake club "IS" their revenue stream and source of income. Its a community OS, not a corperate OS, if you want corporate control of linux go support redhat.
Re:Mandrakes Business plan is GOOD (Score:2, Insightful)
The key that most people aren't realizing is that MandrakeSoft didn't lose money off selling the OS. In fact they are making good money off the OS and club memberships. They lost money on their e-learning business. This unbalanced their bank account and all they need is what they are doing. They are going through a restructuring bankruptcy. Once they have cut out some of the bad investments they made they will be right back. They aren't going anywhere, they are just trying to get back to making money.
We have the chance to buy Mandrake right now (Score:2)
Buy their stock, subcribe to the club, if we become the number 1 source of their income we own them.
Re:Non-profit? (Score:2)
Re:I am quite serious, sir. (Score:2)
Dammit man you should play POKER for a living :)
No shit, dude. If that idiot played poker, I'd clean the floor with him. community buys out mandrake and forces them to open the source....
Whoever heard of such an absurd idea as buying out a free software company and forcing them to publish source? Does he want it in a computer-readable format, too? Really? Or does he intend to type it in by hand off some old 8-pin dot matrix printout?
Mandrake's Demise (Score:3, Interesting)
A manager would much rather spend money and get a lot of Microsoft product than try to understand why Linux is free. I don't care what you want to say, the savings are too great. They become confused by this and don't have any interest in Linux because of the price. Now, until "free software" and "Linux" are entirely separated, Linux won't be mainstream. I know this may sound like an awful thing to say but it is true.
Re:Mandrake's Demise (Score:5, Insightful)
MandrakeSoft has perhaps taken too strong of a position spouting off about Free-this, Free-that. You and I here on Slashdot understand that Linux is about Free Software (or Open Source, depending on which idealogical leaning you have, pro-RMS or anti-RMS). Freedom is important, Freedom is worthwhile. However, Freedom is not the same as Marketing. Selling a product is about Marketing. As I've stated before, I think MandrakeSoft would be much better off if they started charging for ISOs (or rather, making ISOs available only to MandrakeClub members), and starting focusing on marketing to businesses and home users, and spit-shining their product (get their fucking QA people in line for god's sake, and use your brain before you stamp a release as ready-to-go). If somebody in the community wants to put together a FreeDrake ISO with MandrakeSoft RPMS, let em. Hell, they could do that now, and put some spit-shine on the stuff. But they don't. People use Mandrake, and like it. They need to start capitalizing on their popularity among geeks who want a desktop Linux distro that Just Works (newbies and others), and broaden their damned market appeal and start selling some shit. If they don't, somebody else will. And my fear is that it will be Lindows or somebody equally smarmy. Ugh.
I think mandrakeclub is really the way to go (Score:2)
(I requesteed a starcon 2 rpm, and it only took a week! starcon 2! starcon 2!)
But I do agree that they should be more careful if they are going to sell plastic wrap. In fact, I think they should do the opposite: Stop selling package wrapped distros and focus on creating services and specific products like that firewall product they created. I always thought Open Source was about selling services, not software. They are trying to do both, and it is kind of cancelling out each other.
Anyway, I hope ch. 11 (or the French equavalent) will force them to make these hard decisions and focus on one strategy. I personally hope they return to those humble times when they were profitable and put out an awsome single cd distro.
I'll be making my opinion known over at the Mandrakeclub site if anyone needs me . .
Don't blame me, my English wasn't this bad before I started coming to slashdot.
Re:Mandrake's Demise (Score:2)
Linux's selling point should be that it is Open, not that it is free. $200 is how much that manager will pay the user of that computer before lunch.
Donations (Score:5, Insightful)
Debian (Score:5, Insightful)
I can see the fights over the GNU/Mandrake/Debian (or is it GNU/Debian/Mandrake) name.
Re:Debian (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Debian (Score:2)
While I agree that this seems like Debian is hardly appropriate for the desktop, keep in mind you don't need to run stable to use a Debian system. Unstable is more than stable enough for most desktop purposes and testing is even more solid.
The benefits Mandrake's input into Debian would be made in unstable and would benefit people like me who use unstable on the desktop. Eventually, they'd make it into stable years down the road, but the people on the desktop would still have the benefit of the then unstable release for the then modern linux software.
It's not fair to take away from Debian on the desktop just because only Unstable has the most recent software.
-N
Re:Debian (Score:2)
The problem, though, is trying to avoid growing into an XP: the server/Desktop OS that is a marriage of convienience rather than love. Debian is great because the developers are hardcore netjunkies serving the interests of admins everywhere. Mandrake is great because of a devotion to producing the easiest, simplest, purest linux desktop experience. If you marry those two, you get something that isn't particularly focused on either important target, though you risk destroying two of the best distros available. Better to have frequent interludes of cross pollination than a full code-synch.
-C
Re:Debian (Score:2)
The problem with many GUI config tools is that they do not respect manual changes to config files.
Re:Debian (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Debian (Score:2)
Re:Debian (Score:2)
As if that would be the only fight. Do you realize how many LUG members will literally burst into flames if Debian hooked up with Mandrake?
"Debian is the one, true dist... er, wait... Avoid Mandrake like the plague! Download Debi... er... um... Windows Me? ARGH! NOTHING MAKES SENSE ANY MORE!"
My God, think of the carnage! It will make the GNOME/KDE flamewars look like... I don't know... vi/emacs...
Re:Debian (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Mandrake started as a Redhat + KDE. In many ways Mandrake is the "home" distribution for KDE. Conversely Debian and Redhat are the core supporters of Gnome.
2) Mandrake was one of the first to compile to Pentium; Debian still compiles to 386. Mandrake would naturally after the 2.6 kernel (which is going to require a recompile) probably set up Pentium III required optomized for the Pentium 4.
3) Mandrake tends to be feature rich QA poor. Debian is almost exactly the opposite.
4) Mandrake is RPM based debian is APT based. Though Mandrake isn't religious about this. However one of the key tools unique to Mandrake is an application control center which would be worthless with RPM.
5) Mandrake has never concerned itself with producing a similar feel on multiple platforms. The PPC version of Mandrake was designed for PPC users and had features not present in the x86 version that would be important for PPC customers (Wine sort of thing for MacOS, netatalk installed be default...). Debian conversely wants the distribution to be very close on all platforms. While not quite as extreme as NetBSD they certainly don't see the PPC version of Debian as a seperate but related product from the x86 version of Debian. In general they won't include software that doesn't work on multiple platforms.
Probably the best thing would be for Debian Desktop to just grab the Mandrake Wizards and use them. Perhaps they might want to consider Mandrake's automatic security level scripts. That's the only contributions I can see Mandrake making to Debian that they would want. In the other direction I think RedHat not Debian remains the best place for Mandrake to get support.
Re:Debian (Score:2)
Huh? Debian is a "supporter" of Gnome just as much as it is a "supporter" of KDE or a "supporter" of GNU fileutils. In all cases, if there is a Debian developer who produces packages that conform to Debian policy (and are legal to distribute), it goes in.
People tried to portray Debian as anti-KDE since it refused to ship KDE before Qt was GPL, but any accusations of anti-KDEism were empiracally disproven when Debian started shipping KDE the moment Qt was GPL.
Re:Debian (Score:2)
After my experience with Debian and the Debian installer, I would say expecting Debian admins/maintainers/programmers to produce a producet easy enough to install to be considered desktop is kind of like expecting RMS to make a discreet statement, Bill Gates to start promoting OSS, or Britany Spears to record a tolerable album.
It just ain't gonna happen. It's the nature of the scorpion story. (If you don't remember the story about the nature of a scorpion, go back and watch the Trek Voyager 2 parter that introduced 7 of 9.)
Re:Debian (Score:2)
I'm using this in video production, but the Debian didn't even create a mount point for the darn thing -- or even treat it as a 2nd CD-ROM.
While it doesn't take much to make these links, in my case I'm setting up boxes to use for production. I'm not using my boxes to create utilities and make programs that help me write programs. I'm using my computers as tools to get work done. While I hear Debian is easy to maintain, the fact that it's such a pain to install has kept me (and a few other people I know who want to use Linux in their businesses) from bothering it. Quite frankly, if you're business is anything other than programming or sys admin work, Debian is such a pain to install it's not cost effective to waste time learning all it requires to get it up and running.
Re:Debian (Score:4, Interesting)
You are missing my point.
Before I was even a teenager, I was putting together working Heathkit radios (and other kits). I learned to program in high school, back in the 1970's, on a PDP 11. I used to program in Assembler (often hand coded) on an Apple
While I'm sure someone will come in as a troll and think they can be clever by twisting what I say, my point is I have a background of working with technical material -- a background of over 30 years of it.
I tried a test install of Debian on my video workstation. I needed to get the system up and running, get X working, be able to use my USB ramdrive, firewire IO for DV import, get the video IO on my ATI Radeon AIW working, get a CD-RW working, get my DVD player (also the 2nd CD-ROM) working to play NON-CSS DVDs.
After a week, I still could not get X to work with my Radeon card. Even on the Debian mailing list, nobody knew what to do. Not being used to Debian, I hesitated to change from stable to unstable or testing, but I finally did it. The newer version of X worked.
While that, in the long run, was a simple fix, it's just one of the symptoms of what I see as an overall Debian problem. It takes so long for programs to be integrated in the stable branch, hardware that has been out for over 18 months is still unsupported!
As to the CD-RW and DVD, it's true all it takes is links, but there's a problem there, and I'm going to sound quite snotty in saying this (and probably get modded to troll immediately for speaking the truth). I've worked with many programmers, techies, non-techies, and the whole range. The Debian community has a BIG problem of being closed minded. In any distro discussion, there's always got to be a few Debian people who pop up and say, "Hey! Debian is the best." Look at this discussion -- it's happened here.
The problem is, at least in my experience, Debian-ites are so busy being right, they are not interested in listening to other opinions. Whenever I say the install (and post install setup) is impossible unless you're a programmer, I always hear, "But you only have to install it once!" I have never, ever, seen any case, in person, or online, where someone said, Debian has a problem with this, and that's why I don't use it and a Debian person replied, "Hmmmm, you're right. Maybe we should look into it." It's always, "But that's not really a problem. Just do it the way that works for us."
My point: I am doing a LOT of programming and I don't consider myself a professional programmer. I'm just doing what I need to do to run my business. I'm working long hours. I don't have time to fart around with adding links to get my CD-RW working. I don't have time to do a lot of post-install work. I need to put in a CD, go through the prompts, and get the box up and running so I can use it for production. If Debian were the only Linux distro out, I'd use WinXP instead. I know that a lot of Debian-ites and programmers will respond to that with something like, "Let him use WinXP..." followed by comments about incompetents that can't or shouldn't be allowed to use Linux. That attitude is doing more to keep Linux tucked away in server rooms and in a tiny corner of the market than anything M$ could ever do.
I've included more than I planned, but the point is, for those of us who have other things to do and a limited time to spend putting our boxes together so we can actually use them to produce services or products, we can't mess around with trial and error setups or researching problems because 18 month old hardware is not well supported wit ha distro. We need to install and get it working. When we have the time, then we can explore and learn.
The computer, to many of us, is nothing more than a tool. A good craftsman, in any field, needs good and reliable tools, but they also have to be able to focus on their work, not on fixing or setting up their tools.
If/When Debian can fit my needs, and can do it without me having to go through and re-adjust everything AFTER an install, I'll be more than happy to use it (the idea of keeping a system up to date w/ a 1 line nightly cron job is VERY appealing), until then, in its present form, Debian is by programmers and for programmers. Unfortunately, this group of people seems incapable of understand there is more than one way to do anything and that their way may work for them, but may not work at all for others.
Yeah, let the community have it (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be a shame for Mandrake to go the way of the dodo, so I personally hope that members of the community step up and support it.
Personally, I use Mandrake 9. Previously, I was running Red Hat 7.3, and since I didn't like what Red Hat did to KDE (which I prefer to GNOME, though GNOME is definately not without its merits), I decided to give Mandrake a try - and I've been running it since. Other Linux distros would do well to take a look at Mandrake and see how easy they make it to install and set up a Linux box. While not for everybody*, the drakconf utilities can be extremely useful.
*Perl script wizards need not apply!
any closed-source stuff in there? (Score:3, Insightful)
Is there any closed-source stuff in the distribution? Is the installer open-source? Mandrake Control Center?
If it's all open-source, then what's the big deal? Just fork it. It would be nice, but not vital, if the user community could cough up enough money to keep, say, one former Mandrake coder employed full time. But there are other distributions that work on an all-volunteer basis.
But if there's important closed-source stuff in there, then I don't see how it can happen. The parent company and all the creditors will presumably want to monetarize all Mandrake's assets, not give them away for free.
Let Mandrake Die (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Let Mandrake Die (Score:2)
Re:Let Mandrake Die (Score:4, Informative)
3d issues? I've never had a problem with 3d in Mandrake. I download the Nvidia RPMs and go. On my ATI system, the dirvers were automatically installed. I've never had a problem running games such as UT2003, RTCW, or Counter-Strike (through WineX).
If Mandrake dies, I will be faced with a tough choice. I had problems with RedHat (plus I'm a KDE nut),SUSE refused to work properly with my video card (an nVidia card), and I don't think I'd like Lindows or Xandros (though I'd try them if Mandrake died). I would probably end up going to Windows, something that I swore I would never do.
So, all of you wanting Mandrake dead - just remember that if Mandrake dies, a LOT of people (their employees as well as their users) will be left out in the cold.
-Jim
"Amich"
Re:Let Mandrake Die (Score:2)
It does a lot of things (desktop and server related) really well. For example it was the first distro that out of the box worked with my video card, scsi card, sound card, ReiserFS partition and FreeSWan connection. Right now I'm using Gentoo just because it's easier for me to administer but I still think Mandrake deserves a lot more credit than it's given.
Why mandrake will be a good non-profit (Score:2, Insightful)
It's MandrakeSoft idea... (Foundation) (Score:2)
http://www.ofb.biz/modules.php?name=News&file=art
I think a non-profit organization is something that could actually fit the ideals of Mandrake Linux, and according to this interview, it's a project that MandrakeSoft had for a long time. I think it could work, especially if it's launched by MandrakeSoft team.
Re:It's MandrakeSoft idea... (Foundation) (Score:2)
I think mandrake should stay for profit, and just have a non profit foundation be formed for development purposes to hire extra developers.
Re:It's MandrakeSoft idea... (Foundation) (Score:2)
That would give much more security for the distro itself.
On a second note, there were some interesting comments on the different Mandrake mailinglists.
Mandrake can already choose to build a non-profit organisation. Just let MandrakeSoft die, set up a non-profit. Get all the open-source software from the cvs server, and there you go. Nobody could stop them if they wanted to, and they wouldn't have massive debts from their previous management.
It might not be the best solution though. It will piss off some investors, which are often users that have shares of MandrakeSoft. It might scare away partners that they have. It might break the social structure of the company, the employers and the contributors.
But actually, they could do this right away, but they don't. So they must have a reason for it. Probably because there is a chance that the company can go on after this Chapter 11 thing is over. Or because they are working hard to form a non-profit behind the schemes, and we'll see breaking news tomorrow
My personal preference is to wait for MandrakeSoft to make steps. If the company continues, I expect them to evolve into partly non-profit and partly for-profit. If the company goes under, I expect they do take steps to setup a non-profit. Probably in cooperation with Ben Reser.
if it comes to that, sounds like a good idea (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, I hope that the current bankruptcy filing means consolidation rather than dissolution. Let's say it does, though: if Mandrake sinks, then I hope that a lot of good things about Mandrake are either a) maintained in one place as this article suggests or b) looked at thoughtfully by the makers of other distros.
Attention to user friendliness is the way I'd sum up Mandrake's best qualities, and (even though it's not part of the distro per se) the mandrakeforum.com website is one I wish more distros would emulate. PHPnuke / postnuke / slashcode -- whichever! -- systems with actual company involvement are a good idea, in computer or any other business. They're a good way to make announcements, to help users help each other, etc.
timothy
Full Circle (Score:3, Insightful)
Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
It would make more sense to me to carve it up for parts, taking those parts of it that are worthwhile into other distributions, commercial like Red Hat and non-commercial like Debian, and then letting the distribution itself die. The fragmentation of distributions is already annoying.
And frankly, if I ever see another damn "mdk" rpm again, it will be too soon.
Yeah (Score:2)
Libdetect, made by Mandrake, is coming close. If Mandrake dies, that project will be taken up in a heartbeat by its supporters in Mandrake for a move to other distros.
Then we can all have it.
Not that Debian, Gentoo and Slackware users aren't trying right now...
Eventually, complaints will get smaller and smaller until choice of distro is only a matter of which packages are on the distro's source tree.
And even that might go away if all the distros start adding support for source based package installation straight from the supplier's websites.
why not fold into Debian? (Score:4, Insightful)
*MandrakeSoft* launched the MDK Foundation idea... (Score:5, Interesting)
Interview [ofb.biz]:
For the future, we are thinking about a "Mandrake Foundation" which would be a non-profit organization that focuses on developing the Mandrake Linux distribution exclusively. It would be financed partly by Club memberships and/or donations and/or by a "Street performer"-like system, and partly by companies that make money with Mandrake products, including MandrakeSoft. We think this approach would be much clearer for everyone to understand, and would also provide a more secure future for the Mandrake Linux distribution. It would also help MandrakeSoft become a more successful and profitable company by cutting most of its development costs.
The problem, as I see it... (Score:5, Insightful)
IMHO, if Mandrake is to become as user-friendly as it hopes, Mandrake needs a contingint of professional coders/GUI designers. If it becomes non-profit, Mandrake will only be coded by hackers.
Not to look down on hackers; I'm one myself, but I'm making a serious effort to move my programs toward user-friendliness and performance. But hackers will not make a user-friendly OS with a good GUI; they will make a hugely powerful OS with a ugly, horribly unintuitive interface, and complete user-hostility. Mind you, this isn't a bad thing; for things like servers, no problem. But Mandrake is aimed for the desktop, and that will just not do.
I'd hate to see Mandrake go, as it had a great goal. But I fear if it goes this route, it will fade into the sunset, a lot like Slack sadly has.
Re:The problem, as I see it... (Score:2)
Re:Answer to: Why is Slackware hard (Score:2)
Seriously, if it takes a moderately computer literate person several hours to configure X on the system, then either the software is broken, or the documentation is poorly written.
Because something takes hours to figure out doesn't mean it is difficult. It just means the documentation is poorly written. IMHO Slackware embodies everything that is wrong with Linux and highlights everything which will cause Linux to fail as a desktop OS. Slackware is the AMISH of Linux.
Adding to you glorious post. (Score:3)
I think Mandrakeclub addresses this issue, and we will soon see a 9.1 version coming from a profitable, but very humble Mandrakesoft this spring. They will still be paying off debts for the next year or so, but they will, hopefully, have returned to a simpler time when life was just about getting an easy distro available to the public.
That is why I am a Silver member for the next 584 days and will probably renew way before that period is up. Call me stupid, but what do I have to loose? I am still paying MUCH less than I would have for MS, and I am helping others have an excellent distro for free. And for someone who will never get his name written down in history books, this will be as close as I can ever get to having an effect on the world.
Anyway,thanks again for the great post.
Bravo (Score:2)
-C
Mandrake: Sell Your Assets to Apple (Score:3, Troll)
Apple could take Mandrake's slick new graphical installer, Konqueror Web browser, and other great pieces of software made by the French developers and really make their OS X product shine.
I think this sounds pretty feasible, and could at least serve as a nice parting gift to the Mandrake creators as they enter unemployment.
It's sad things have come to this, but at least get out while you can. I admire the Mandrake folks and think they changed the Linux world, community, and followers forever.
Computing will never be the same, and we have Mandrake to thank. It's just a shame things didn't end up better.
Re:Mandrake: Sell Your Assets to Apple (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Mandrake: Sell Your Assets to Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it every time a computer company is in trouble, someone roots for another company they like to buy it out? I've seen it here so many times it makes me sad. Here are the ones I remember off the top of my head:
"Why doesn't Apple buy Mandrake?"
"Why doesn't Apple buy SGI?"
"Why doesn't IBM buy Eazel?"
"Why doesn't IBM buy Loki?"
"AOL should buy Red Hat."
"HP should buy Compaq."
Uhhhmm...forget that last one. But get over it. Companies don't acquire unprofitable debt-ridden companies unless the payoff is worthwhile.
The best way to take over mandrake (Score:3, Insightful)
Buy their stock.
Subscribe to the Mandrake Club.
By doing these two things Mandrake will remain operational, but they will be forced to obey you because if they dont you'll just unsubcribe or sell your shares, not to mention you can sue them.
I want Mandrake to be a private company because this allows them certain freedoms. I'd rather support a private company which can benifit from the features of capitalism, one reason is because we all can earn money by owning their stock while no one earns any money by just having them be a non profit.
second if we do it like this, we can buy other companies if we ever get enough power. All we'd have to do is pressure Mandrake.
We dont need another community Linux, we have Debian, Slackware, Ark Linux. We need a commercial Linux for the desktop thats supported by the community.
Re:The best way to take over mandrake (Score:2)
Re:The best way to take over mandrake (Score:2)
Not exactly the same word for word, just the same ideas and opinions.
Each comment gives different details but the main idea I'm pushing is, we should just support Mandrake, they exist, they have employees, and currently we have the power.
It would be better for us as a community to run a for profit company, it would also prove that its a viablee business model.
We can let Mandrake die, but Lindows will just take its place, I'd prefer Mandrake compete with Lindows than to give Lindows a monopoly.
Mandrake is only dying because it ran out of money, not because of a flawed business model, it sucks to see a company which could be profiting which isnt.
Why should they give it away? (Score:2)
The new business plan... (Score:2, Redundant)
2. ???
3. Profit!!
They should (Score:2)
Somehow parolling them or putting to easily slashdotted servers or... ( a lot of options).
I downloaded Mandrake ISOs most of the time, while in December I finally bought Mandrake 9
Power Pack off the shelf. If it would be a little harder to get those ISOs - it would be more options for me to convince my management to buy packaged Mandrake.
the question is (Score:4, Insightful)
Most of the OSS projects that are polished enough for the average joe are products that were either started as closed sourced and opened up or are managed by a OSS company. Mozilla and Staroffice are good examples of closed -> open. Ximian's products are good examples of OSS managed by a company.
What is a good example of a community application that was developed entirely by a community and has the polish and interface of a major closed soured project and is targeted towards the average clueless user? I guess Gnome and KDE could be good examples but what other apps are out there besides window environments? There is lots of great OSS software out there but not many community projects have a professional look and are targeted towards non-techies.
The community already * has* Mandrake! (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe change the business model (Score:2, Interesting)
Give the name to the community? Or the code? (Score:2)
Out of the box, it comes more secure than I tend to believe Redhat or SuSE does; particularly with the high and paranoid options. It's easy to set up and they have a ton of contrib packages, I rarely find them lacking an RPM for anything, which is very important for RPM based distributions, nothing can screw them up faster than willy-nilly compiling and installation of packages from source that the RPM database can't manage. I like that packages are there when you want them.
Now there are some stylistic things, but I can't find anything to complain about with Mandrake that I couldn't complain about in all non-BSD platforms. It's also just style, if you're admining all day then you're probably not writing code or being productive. I don't know maybe I'm not "IT department" enough to be able to bitch about admining a box. I throw Linux on a box and write code. I guess if you don't like graphics for some reason or really dislike GUIs then you probably wouldn't be happy with Mandrake. Big deal. Again, follow up with some specifics if you'd like to refute this.
Now in the 8.2 days I personally think they lost a bit of their edge, primarily because they've been running like a bat out of hell from financial problems and because Redhat is looking hard at the desktop and produced a killer app with blue curve. Nothing that can't be fixed but definitely not the same quality we were used to. Also there has been a lot more input and submissions from the user community at large. 9.0 is a bit better and you can easily see them getting back to form as they get used to the new operation style. It already looks like a community driven distribution. So what do you mean Ben? Do you want to fork? Go for it, like you've said, their code is GPL, I might go with you. Are you asking for someone to rise to the occasion and start driving project "Freedrake"? Or are you throwing salt in the wounds? I don't want them to go away exactly but I'm not sure what you're advocating here.
So basicly this is a hijacking. (Score:2)
Mandrake is a fork off of Red hat is it not?
I like Mandrake and use if for basic samba file servers and my own desktop. I would be more suportive of a new handler would keep trying to make it user friendly AND upgrade the security of it.
Good luck Mandrake (Score:2)
Even though I am not a direct customer of theirs (just the wrong flavour for me) as anyone else using Linux you will be an indirect customer. Of course same goes for other distro's.
StarTux
worst comparison ever. (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider for a moment Microsoft Corporation. Between 1998 and 1999 they had a 29% increase in revenues. 1999-2000 16% increase. 2000-2001 10% increase. 2001-2002 12% increase.
Mandrake went from 500k to 3.5M in 2 years... Microsoft went from $6 B to $8 B. The two are so vastly different even hearing this comparison makes me want to cry. It's like saying last week my parents paid me $5 for cleaning the garage and this week they paid me $15 for cleaning the attic and painting a fence. I have a revenue growth rate of 300%! I should be valued 30x more than MS who has only a 10% increase y/y!
WTF?? (Score:2, Funny)
Why bother with Chapter 11? (Score:2)
1. Go out of business,
2. Apologise to schmucks holding bag,
3. Start new Mandrake business and pick up where they left off...
It would probably be cheaper than 4 million euros!
Mandrake, take a lesson from Ximian. (Score:2)
That said, I never like the whole street performer concept. The reason is that it will never provide more than a minimal existance. People will give as long as they feel it's a worthy cause. As soon as people see any form of real financial succes the giving will all but stop. It's just human nature. So I think Mandrake needs to quit pretending that it's enlightened financial model is going to work. I think Mandrake needs to offer more services for a fee. For example US mirrors of Mandrake suck. I can rarely get a connection and when I can the files are outdated. I would be willing to pay well for a descent update service. I want to issue a command, get some feedback about what's going to be installed and proceed. Signed files would be nice too. I'm a big fan of open source but companies need to be smarter about how they are going to make money in an open source market. For some it's not hard but you can't model yourself after closed source companies and you can't expect windfall profits from what is really a non-profit business model. Maybe Mandrake going non-profit is a good idea. I think that's the best idea so far as long as enough money can be raised to support it's excellent programmers and designers.
Sort of like... (Score:2)
I don't know if this sort of thing would even be possible in the US; it seems to work "over there", though.
Does anyone actually read anymore (Score:5, Insightful)
Mandrake is not going out of business, they are seeking protection from their creditors and will reorganize their business model. Bankruptcy allows a good business to overcome a mistake which would normally destroy the company. Selling enhancements to a free product is a good business model and one which can be highly profitable. The core of Mandrake is solid, it is the other avenues Mandrakesoft took to increase revenues which have faltered.
Looking at Mandrakesoft's investors, Vivendi [vivendiuniversal.com] is a major investor in the company and has deep pockets. Why do you think a relatively obscure French company can get highly visible and valuable shelf space at US stores like CompUSA.
I find the "Mandrake is for newbies" comments on Slashdot worse FUD than anything Microsoft puts out. Mandrake is a Linux distro and can be as easy or as difficult as on wants to make it. Nobody has to use or even install the the usability features of Mandrake and experienced users can do an expert text based install and create EXACTLY the system they want. This is not to mention that ease of use != newbie. Many highly experienced users prefer the simplicity which Mandrake offers knwoing that underneath it is Linux and can be adminstered either through the convenient supplied interface or via the command line ro by directly editing the configuration files.. Once you have gotten past the NEWBIE stage of impressing yourself with Linux, you realize it is just another OS spending hours configuring a machine is a waste fo time since that time could be spent actually doing something productive with the system.
A summary of posts following any Mandrake story (Score:2)
2. I love it, let's keep it alive. Can I sell my liver to donate cash?
3. Debian, gonk gak Slackware.
4. Goatse.cx
5. Bla bla bla pontification of free software, soapbox sermon on business and management tactics, waste of space.
6. Why should I support free software? I don't use it. Wait..I do run linux but...nevermind. Debian.
7. Mandrake is for noobs, I'd never be caught dead with it on my computer. Gentoo arg ack ports system.
8. In Soviet Russia, Mandrakes attack people.
9. Some nonsense from a non-native english speaker that leaves everyone scratching their head.
Well that about sums it up. Keep this in mind next time you see a mandrake announcement and save yourself the time of reading the redundant posts on it.
Slackware "business model". (Score:2)
Proprietary drivers? (Score:3, Interesting)
What makes Apple os X slick & cool? After all it's a ppc port of a BSD kernel and apps... it's drivers, it's having the hardware you bought working at it's best without fiddling with it to desperation. So Mandrake, or any distro, could sign NDAs and get the source to those damn drivers (3d accel) and patens (freetype, legally) and release dual licensed boxes. That is, sell the box with GPL only components and access the FTPs with the license number to get the extra you pay for.
Ok, you can do that already for free (beer) but having them work clean and out of the box is what the consumer target would want and pay for.
I would certainly pay for encrypted XFree sessions, alphablended HW accelerated KDE/GNOME themes and not the current hacks that turn performance to ground (very clever... but still hacks).
Infact Desktop Linux efforts are stifled by XFree and it's lack of focus on these key issues (to be fair, they don't have the resources to keep up with the pretending users). Get some X hackers, pay them, build a value-added X; don't embrace & extend a là M$ but place the option for high performance at a price.
Afraid of breaking up the standards and the opennes? Ok, give back the code if you like, but at least lead the innovation and pretend the $$ to get it done!
Re:Dun Dun Dun... (Score:2, Interesting)
Fact is yes I have loaded Mandrake from free down load disks to try, and yes it is not for me so yes I did not pay for it. My personal machine is dual bootable to Windows and Debian. In my business dealings with companies I use Red Hat (and yes I have bought many copies of Red Hat). By the way Red Hat is in profit as I believe IBM is. These firms sell service based on Linux so yes you can make money. I find Red Hat an easy sale to many small companies now not because of its low price but because of its flexibility and low maintenance costs.
Such is the fate of those who try to play capitalism with a bunch of communists who "boycott" the RIAA because they're too cheap to buy CDs
Fact is that the "capitalist" of the RIAA do not much understand marketing - They won against napster -- pushed many others out of music sharing as well -- But their sales have fallen at something above twice the rate of other merchants. Videos actually increased movie sales and profits -- and yet they don't have a clue yet.
Re:Dun Dun Dun... (Score:3, Interesting)
You seem to think I have something AGAINST open source software. I don't. It's good, nice, and useful.
I was merely highlighting the stupidity of the people who try to make money off of it. You've got to be kidding citing IBM's profitability as proof of a sound Linux business model. Red Hat is the exception to the rule.
Honestly, aside from Red Hat's service revenue, their ability to sell boxed copies of Linux in the store is a small miracle of old fashioned American marketing. See, I could download Red Hat, burn it to a CD, and sell it to some guy for $2 legally, but Red Hat has been able to convince people to buy the pretty shrinkwrapped box in the store for $60 (or whatever it is now.)
So basically, you're paying $58 for a cardboard box, a little booklet, a few CD envelopes, and an installation 1-800 number IIRC.
By making the box pretty and making it extremely unclear that you can in fact get Red Hat without paying for it, they've become the PHB's Linux company. The nice little thin manual smells nicer than a greasy CDR touched by a few smelly geeks at a LUG meeting, too.
Of course, I was also citing the hypocracy of those who want Linux to become mainstream yet do not buy products by companies whose goal is to invest that R&D money necessary to bring Linux usability, L&F, and compatibility out of the 1970's.
Your stupid rant about Bill Gates just paints you as a bitter retard.
One problem (Score:2)
Nice theory though; shame it conflicts with the facts.
Re:Uh huh.. (Score:2)
I think thats also why Eminem and Britney Spears are at the top of the charts.
Face it, people do pay for stuff when its valueable. The only reason people pay these folks is because they are fans and they want to see new versions produced.
I went to see Lord of the Rings Two Towers, I will go see the Matrix 2, not because I cant watch it for free, but because I want to see it in the high quality theater, and I want to the Matrix 3, 4 and so on to be released.