Dvorak on the LinuxWorld Fracas 677
An anonymous reader writes "John C. Dvorak has entered the fray, offering his opinion on the O'Gara LinuxWorld flap. From the article: '...the Linux community is slowly evolving into a state of mob rule, with the cheerleaders being paranoid crackpot leftovers from the waning days of Amiga.' "
You dare defile Amiga!? (Score:5, Funny)
*smashes keyboard in half*
And I don't want to take your stupid little javascript survey either, damn I need a smoke.
Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:3, Insightful)
Here's Dvorak's own words about his Amiga:
http://www.cucug.org/amiga/aminews/1996/961003-pcm ag.html [cucug.org]
And only a few months ago, he was insulting the Mac community by comparing them to the Amiga:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1745930,00.as p [pcmag.com]
So why bring up the Amiga? Seems like Dvorak likes to drag a stick across the cages of owners of computers whose market share never exce
Re:Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:4, Funny)
Bah, just further proof that Dvorak is a hack. His keyboard layout sucks, too. Pay him no a[tt]ention.
Re:Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dvorak's 1996 impression of his Amiga (Score:3, Informative)
Cheap shot (Score:4, Insightful)
What the Linux community needs right now is a good leader. Someone to make everyone realize that the community is the one that is in charge of the direction of things and help them to focus their efforts.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Insightful)
When it comes to the "trash heap of history" Dvorak can claim more than his fair share of expertise. He's "seen worse on TV" and that's supposed to represent the affairs of the "sane"? No community deserves to be tarred with a single brush. That would pretty much mandate astroturfing by hostile parties.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Funny)
And he should be careful not to paint and feather into a corner. When you mess with a bull you have to break a few eggs. Or something...
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Insightful)
A:
There's too much infighting in the Linux community for it to have a leader at all. Everyone I've ever met who was absolutely incredible with computers was also quite the control freak. The reason a leader has not emerged is because the Linux community is defined by its individuals' refusal to either follow or be given a direction.
B:
Dvorak is not really a crackpot leftover. He's apparently become an authoritarian, which is quite a bad thing. Origi
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Insightful)
WTF are you talking about?
He's just a journalist. He's been writing basically the same column since at least the 80s.
You aren't confusing him with August Dvorak [wikipedia.org] of the eponymous keyboard are you?
That would be pretty damn funny.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm rather... sheepish... about this now. In fact, I wish I could delete a few posts. Why on earth would anyone listen to this guy if he wasn't the Dvorak I was thinking about?
Now I can stop reading his columns with even the shred of respect I had. Are the two related? It seems that Dvorak might be a rather rare name in the computer industry.
I still remember (Score:3, Interesting)
Turns out that his benchmark of choice read the system clock - did something then subtracted 1 from 2 and reported the time to do an operation.
He apparently didn't notice that his computer was loosing 6 hours of time a day.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:4, Funny)
;^)
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Insightful)
Being the leader of the local LUG, I can see that there are lots of people who are looking for leadership. There are many new Linux users (from the
Exactly... Very cheap. (Score:3, Insightful)
What has crazed fanatic lunatics done to set back religious groups?
Absolutely nothing.
There's still plenty of Christians, Jews and Muslims running around, even though each of those major world religions has more then a few criminally insane followe
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
We need a leader to tell everyone we don't need a leader?
No, we don't. Why bother putting the weight of a world-wide movement onto one individual, when the thing is doing fine on its own?
I'm reminded of a story from the Book of Judges (in the Bible). Israel had been more-or-less confined to the hill country by the Philistines because they kept failing to listen to their judges, who were sort of like Linus, ESR, RMS, et al. It was a meritocracy of sorts. Israel clamored for a king, though, so they could be like the other nations. Through Samuel, they were told the king would take away their freedoms and tax them for his own purposes, but they insisted. They ended up with King Saul, a megalomaniac of, er, biblical proportions.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Interesting)
He writes an article for the sole purpose of upsetting a large group of people, because he knows it will generate tons of hits (that's the name of the game). In the old days, there was a word for this, Troll.
Then in a week or two he'll write another article about how offended he was by all the lunatics in whatever community he attacked previously.
Bonus points if he can incite someone to threaten him. If he gets 10,000 reasonble posts and one threat, he'll make the next article about that one threat, completely ignoring the rest.
Its a scam. And nobody does it better than Dvorak. He's not where he is because of the quality of his "journalism", its his ability to incite "hits".
You didn't get dirty enough. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is the way these "journalists" handle it.
Since we cannot see the actual email, he is free to describe it in any way he desires.
Given that he has already characterized the Linux community as "criminally insane" and "lunatics", you can be sure that he will be portraying the emails as from such individuals.
BUT you will also NOT see a SINGLE case of any email being forwarded to the cops/FBI for legal action regarding communicating a threat.
Not
a
single
one
.
Meanwhile, if it were you or I who received an emailed death threat, we would have the appropriate message and headers carried to the local authorities for investigation and possible arrest.
No arrests will be made.
No criminal cases will be opened.
No email will be sent to the authorities.
But much will be said in his articles about the tone of the threats he received for his unbiased and fact-filled article about Linux extremists.
Today is the 16th of May, 2005 and it is 11:25am Pacific time.
That is my prediction.
I've done this. Professionally. I'm not proud. (Score:5, Insightful)
My employer asked me to do this. We are involved with a particular industry that is rampant with Old Fogeyism. As I tend to rant anyhow, I posted a rant on a highly visible mailing list. My boss came to me and, to my horror, prodded me to keep flaming away. Flaming customers, mind you. Not usually a good business strategy...
I had my reservations, as an old-time Troll. I couldn't see the benefit. But my boss has an understanding of business that I lack, and I've learned to trust him. So I did it. I was my usual asshole self. I put fifteen years' experience in net.flaming into a post that was factually sound and very logical, but with my inner asshole coming out like Fran Drescher's voice in a granite cathedral. (Not that you have to dig deep to find the inner asshole where I'm concerned, mind you). It was so offensive, that only the people who already agreed with me already could agree with what I said, no matter how sound my logic was.
The next day, the boss told me: Now apologize to everyone.
Since then, I can actually see the repercussions. Many of them are just ripples from other things happening off in the distance, but the effect is clear: It was a kick in the ass to an industry that needed it, and suddenly people are wondering why that asshole on the mailing list was so damned mad. They're digging deeper.
You see this with SCO. Whenever SCO says something stupid and outlandish, the Free Software community will retaliate with venom, but others will also dig deeper to see: Do they have a point, and if so, how can we prevent this? Groklaw has become useful for this very reason -- for this purpose of getting the facts straight. Linus changed how he maintained the kernel. A lot of due diligence is being done on GNU/Linux that might never have been done anyway.
The whole O'Gara situation is causing people to look and think critically about the relationship between publishers, editors and content who haven't looked at such things before.
I was surprised to see the results of my little public flamewar. I wasn't surprised that people were pissed off; I was surprised that there was a genuine positive and creative response to it. My boss was fucking brilliant.
It shows that provocative writing does have a point from time to time. It is the little ego of the industry, goading people out of their complacency. Thank God this shit is not the only motivation we have, but it does have that use.
I thought the quote in the leader to this article was offensive, but it got me RTFA, and when I RTFA, I have to admit I laughed. I am laughing at myself, a true blue anti-MS zealot, when he says about the Linux community "Too nutty even for the Mac community? We welcome you!" It hits close to home, but he's right. I -am- too nutty for the Mac community.
So I think it's a bit more useful than just a scam to draw enough eyes that advertisers are happy; columnist journalism can occasionally benefit the industry.
Although most of the time, we're just trolling assholes.
Re:I've done this. Professionally. I'm not proud. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Funny)
I think that Dvorak is just upset that he can no longer write articles under his "Maureen O'Gara" penname.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Insightful)
Why can't a group of people ever do something right without resorting to being led around by some charismatic figurehead?
Christ, people, work together and do things right - without all the arguing and petty bullshit - and you will soon find out that most "leaders" (can also be read as "managers") are simply not needed.
Re:Cheap shot (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.gmu.edu/student/csl/5stages.html [gmu.edu]
We don't need no stinkin' leaders (Score:4, Insightful)
IMHO, the worst think that happened in the personal computer world was the appearance of a strong leader in the form of Bill Gates and Microsoft. MS corralled the PC industry and dominated it.
In the build up to the MS dominance was a great deal of talk about the need for a leviathan that would dominate and curtail the computer industry. We got what the pundits wished for.
What the computer industry needs is a framework that allows development on multiple fronts.
That people develop rivalries or have egoes is really not a problem. The communitarian belief is that we will have paradise when everyone has denied their ego. If no-one had egoes, then we would all be zombies. The existance of feud between two linux pundits really is not a problem. Nor is the fact that different businesses want to define their place in the market.
The fact that there's too many ideologues like me who want to bubble on about our ideologies is annoying, but not quite a category killer. Although it is a sign of problems in the linux community. Personally, I had a ton of ideas I wanted to develop. I've looked at open source as a way to bring some small new businesses into fruition, but really only see pitfalls and dead ends in linux development. Not being able to see a way to participate in open source software development that does not leave me destitute is a big problem.
It seems to me that the way for a business community to thrive there needs to be a way for the members of the community to invest their time and resources into the community, and receive returns for that investment. Historically, the best way to do that has been with the establishment of property rights.
The last thing open source needs is another leader. It needs a stronger business framework where people are making money and thriving.
Time to call out the old folks (Score:3, Informative)
Will anyone older than me testify that Slashdot was once a hallowed institution of platonic debate?
Re:Time to call out the old folks (Score:3, Funny)
You didn't read that on slashdot!
Re:Time to call out the old folks (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't say much about Slashdot. However, newsgroups have been around much longer; and this same disease of bitching about how the newbies are clueless goes back to the very beginnings of the Internet.
The use of moderation only works when the moderators themselves are actually knowlegable and civil enough to understand who is ranting, who is BSing, and what the relevant issues really are.
That's why I still feel that only you can really moderate the stuff you read. Slashdot's moderation scheme is a nice try. But ultimately, it only works after the fact --if it works at all. Participation in a discussion is the only way to smoke out who is full of themselves, and who knows his/her stuff.
Why, back in MY day... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cheap shot? No, criminal offence... (Score:4, Insightful)
Take a look at Newsweek. They got one tip and checked not facts then publish a story the looks like it got people killed! When the Challenger blew up the camera crew kept shooting the faces of the crews families while the watched there loved ones die. Now O'Gara chases down some on and invades there privacy for no real reason. And the Linux community is upset? Dvorak feels this makes them the crack pots? My goodness for all the stupid things I have seen on Slashdot this has got to be one of few examples of justified moral outrage and human compassion. The fact that Linux community said in one voice "We do not care what religion she is. We do not care that she takes care of her elderly mother, we do not care what PJ looks like. We only care about facts."
Maybe Mr. Dvorak should take a lesson from this. You maybe free to write what you want but we also have the right to hold you responsible for the quality of what you write.
Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vorak) (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, yeah, I think I see your point here, John:
We should be more understanding towards useless "journalism" and media flamebaiting, because without those practices you might actually have to come up with something insightful or worthwhile every week to fill out your column and earn page hits. Hey, I can see where you're coming from -- that'd take legwork, insight and generally staying on top of the industry. I imagine that's hard work, and trust me: I'm right there with you on the "I don't like hard work" page.
BTW, congrats on getting your flamebait article on the front page of Slashdot. It's good to know that *some* "journalists" are still able to use (a) and (b) successfully to drum up (c). It's gotta be a good feeling to walk into your boss's office at review time and wave around yet another spike in ad impressions courtesy of the Slashdot crowd -- I hope you're appreciative enough to include Zonk on your Christmas card list!
Anyhow, hope preparing your standard self-righteous indignation column for when (d) inevitably rolls around is going well. Aw, who am I kidding, I know you're an old pro -- I'm sure you were already writing that one when you handed in this last article to your editor.
A little trolling, and two columns done and in the bank. Must be a nice life.
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:2)
So, yeah, Dvorak should definately start stalking Linus. And he should bring along a crew to videotape it -- when that one hit the net, I'd watch it every morning while I ate my Cheerios.
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:2)
thanks for writing it before I could.
I had all sorts of names to call him, but the polite way is always more fun. People don't expect it.
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that the Slashdot editors also seem to love the controversy a Dvorak article is sure to bring in, having someone to bash is just good for business I guess.
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:5, Insightful)
Windows over Linux == trolling.
Linux over Windows == advocacy.
Right?
Re:Brought to you by the letters A, B, C and D(vor (Score:4, Insightful)
In today's world of the so easily offended you sure look like one too, John. Otherwise I fail to see what this troll is all about. Are you protecting bad journalism here?
You should remember who your clients are before talking that much. Do you really fail to see why the kind of visibility that O'Gara received and that you seem to admire so much is actually bad?
First of all I would like to know what kind of proof you have that any of this is real. You wrote that Groklaw's claim about O'Gara working for Sco are just words, yet you publish an article saying that the death threats existed, and that they come from this community.
Get your facts straight. The whole effort that you descrive as an act of violence from this community was just a ton of complaints to Sys-Con regarding O'Gara.
Reporters have the freedom to speak up their minds just as much as we do. You should never forget that it works both ways.
paranoid crackpot leftovers? (Score:2)
Maybe this was a subconscious self-referential compliment.
Against my better judgement (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't believe that either PJ or O'Gara are paid shills and Dvorak does a good job of explaining why.
I also believe that O'Gara was merely being controversial.
Interesting conspiracy theory that the rabid zealotry may be astroturfing on the part of MSFT, etc... I'll point out that said zealotry has existed for much longer than MSFT has been concerned about FOSS as a threat. Case in point: Stallman.
Re:Against my better judgement (Score:5, Insightful)
Publishing someones phone number and address, and even their mother's address, goes way beyond being controversial. It's a privacy violation.
Re:Substantiate your claim. (Score:3, Insightful)
You can't excuse e.g. the lying of a politician by pointing to the fact that some random person on some random website did it too
MoG's motive (Score:3, Insightful)
MoG has had a hate-on for IBM since the days of the antitrust trial. If she has a chance to slam IBM, she takes it.
She sees PJ defending IBM, and so she goes after PJ. I think Darl & Co. played on her hatred of IBM, but she allowed them to, and she got what she deserved.
It was more than just being "controversial" - MoG wanted to hurt IBM by hurting PJ.
Re:Against my better judgement (Score:3, Interesting)
Where did she get PJ's phone number from? (Seems fishy to me that the same phone number was used by PJ to call into the SCO press conference a few weeks ago.
Why did McBride practically predict the article in said press conference?
And it's not as if this was the first article by MOG. How about checking out her trolling history? ("Linux kernel will be rewritten due to IP problems", ROFL)
Re:Against my better judgement (Score:3, Insightful)
Is that a mere coincidence? Are we paranoid to think there is any linkage between SCO and Ms. O'Gara? Or could it be that she took his statement as the lead for a story? Who knows?
However, it is incorrect to paint the FOSS movement as a bunch of crimina
Groklaw a front? (Score:2)
I thought Groklaw is a front for Jehovas's Witness? (No flames please. PJ is great.)
Rather be considered a crackpot... (Score:5, Insightful)
DaGoodBoy
Stop Quoting Dvorak (Score:5, Funny)
As it is, all pending Dvorak story submissions should be entitled:
Opinions are like assholes - no one wants a whiff of Dvorak's.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Dvorak trolling? (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh god not dvorak (Score:5, Insightful)
So Dvorak has seen another chance to jump in the lime light and play the under-dog
and stir up some controversy by calling all of us who called for O'gara to be fired "lunatics" (not just those who issued death threats , who are quite likely a bit mad)
Don't buy into this , he is just trying to kick up his readership .
Re:Oh god not dvorak (Score:5, Informative)
It never really went away. It was just relegated to the fringes of journalism.
Re:Oh god not dvorak (Score:3, Insightful)
The artical is pure flamebait , its written to intice an argument.
Oh wow! Just what we need (Score:5, Insightful)
Dvorak is on crack if he thinks that there are any businesses that are going to give a shit about the MoG/PJ flap. Businesses adopting Linux and other FOSS products are looking to reduce TCO and also trying to make sure that they don't end up being 0wnz0r3d by Microsoft into perpetuity by having their corporate data locked into proprietary file formats that change from release to release and by being locked into licensing schemes that become ever more onerous and increasingly expensive as time goes on. The antics of the various players in the MoG/PJ flap are going to have about as much impact on the adoption of Linux and FOSS as Steve Ballmer's video, the one where he jumped up and down like a chimp, had on the adoption of Windows XP.
Re:Oh wow! Just what we need (Score:4, Insightful)
re paranoid crackpot leftovers from the waning day (Score:2)
Now we know.
I find it rather contradicting (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I find it rather contradicting (Score:3, Interesting)
In any event I've met quite a few Microsoft Loonies on the net, and the only thing interesting about them is they are not just insane, they are usually on the mild end of retarded.
Crackpots and ignorant teens are going to be around, there's nothing we can do about it. Here let me try: "Crackpots, get out!" Hmm, nothing happened. M
One of the few occasions I agree with him (Score:2)
Thanks (Score:2)
You don't have to be a lunatic to hate Ms. O'Gara though.
Paranoid crackpots (Score:2)
Suits me. I loved my Amiga. It was a great machine for its time and got me through university just fine.
Re:Paranoid crackpots (Score:5, Funny)
Just ignore him people (Score:2)
No more trolls (Score:2)
Observations (Score:3, Interesting)
2) Linux will not wither because of the nuts -- there's too much value in Linux to business and as long as the value proposition is there, so will Linux.
3) John, and almost any journalist, is probably feeling a little threatened by the MOG story.
Ethical Issues (Score:5, Insightful)
I think that that point was lost on Dvorak. Whether or not O'Gara is a paid shill or not is beside the point- what she did was not, and should not be considered by Sys-Con, to be appropriate.
That isn't missing. He doesn't think she did. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nope. He just doesn't believe that she violated anything. From TFA:
What MOG did wasn't so bad. He's seen worse.
Dvorak's article betrays him (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, brother. In the olden days, O'Gara would have been given a medal for generating readership. But in today's world of the so easily offended, she's apparently let go instead, and things calm down as the hissy fit subsides.
This is the key, right here. It's actually slightly shocking that he let himself shine through so clearly in this paragraph. Dvorak is actually just upset because, y'know, that's his schtick. Generating readership by making inflammatory and offensive articles? That's pure Dvorak. It strikes fear into his black little heart to see someone get fired for doing exactly what he does, so he lashes out at it.
Who needs to be right when you can be controversial?
Re:Dvorak's article betrays him (Score:3, Insightful)
If the average
Re:Dvorak's article betrays him (Score:4, Insightful)
A pundit moth chasing after the flames (Score:5, Funny)
Earning another medal then, John?
Write the editor (Score:2)
I'm not defending O'Gara - I think that her article was appalling - but I don't defend the unthinking responses that were generated either.
Dvorak's Logic Bypass (Score:5, Insightful)
And there's only one thing wrong with that logic.
It's complete bollocks.
Re:Dvorak's Logic Bypass (Score:4, Funny)
Well, I didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition.
Dvorak is just pissed because he's going extinct (Score:2, Insightful)
Funny thing, I've been using linux since SLS, I use it every day, I stay in tune with what's going on within the Linux world (or at least I like to think so) and I had no idea what Linuxworld was or who maureen o'gara is until this thing blew up. From what I gather, she's just a tool like Dvorak who still doesn't "Get" the 21st century and the changes in media.
Good editors always fire the incompitent (Score:3, Insightful)
There is such a thing as journalistic integrity. Apparently Dvorak doesn't believe in it, but most people do. When a reporter doesn't stand up for doing the right thing people get mad. Then heads have to roll. You can ask a number of people who used to work for CBS news until they faked a report on Bush's service just before the last election.
Come to think of it, yesterday NewsWeek was forced to retract a story, because they didn't check the facts sufficiently. I wouldn't be surprised if someone resigns at NewsWeek of the issue.
The Linux community did nothing unexpected when you consider the facts. Some reporter did something unethical, and the community forced his/her bosses to fire him/her. It has happened before, it will happen again. The only thing that has really changed is that today someone who discovers media abuse has an easier time letting people know.
If only the world judged Windows by Windows users (Score:3, Informative)
Talking about the death of Linux guarantees that he's full of shit. Linux will be imortalized in routers and handhelds and webhosts until the end of time. No matter what John C. Dvorak thinks of the comments here on Slashdot.
What would the death of "Linux and the open-source movement" even look like? What would the Amiga lunatic community look like right now if their holy OS had always been available as source code? IMHO, a lot like it looked in it's fucking heyday (not that that's a good thing), even if they were abandoned by the platform provider. Kill Lunix how??
what is this guy smoking? (Score:5, Insightful)
First let's get a few things straight. All of O'Gara's assertions are nutty.
Some of them go way beyond nutty. Dvorak acknowledges that O'Gara tracked down and photographed PJ's home and PJ's mother's home and posted pics in her column
But rather than point out the problem with this type of "journalism", he praises it.
Oh, brother. In the olden days, O'Gara would have been given a medal for generating readership. But in today's world of the so easily offended, she's apparently let go instead, and things calm down as the hissy fit subsides.
Right, thank god we have PC Magazine to sustain the flame of responsible journalism. What an asshole.
LinuxWorld isn't the only one (Score:3, Informative)
Do Not Feed the Troll (Score:5, Insightful)
In recent years, he has become a professional internet Troll. He knows that he can get a lot of page views by saying things to inflame passionate groups (Mac users, OpenSource advocated, etc.) and he does so at every opportunity.
My advice for you is the same as with any other Troll: Do Not Feed.
Journalists - We are watching (Score:5, Interesting)
What is new these days, and I think Dvorak and other "journalists" are having trouble grasping, is that the media is now being held accountable. Since the late 90's there's been a larger number of reporters who have had to resign in disgrace over fabricated stories. Jayson Blair, Dan Rather, and just this week, Newsweek is being raked over the coals. News execs are certainly afraid with some comments lashing out at "bloggers." They should be afraid because in their history, they've never been under more scrutiny by their audience. Journalists are more afraid these days, and I don't think that's a bad thing. For once, there's a checks and balances system for them.
It's worse than that. (Score:4, Interesting)
The ONLY substantiated evidence is that the cops were called when MOG was harassing PJ's mom. Be careful, that could be taken as a "threat" by one of those "journalists".
And that is the biggest problem with these "journalists".
They don't know the tech or the industry, so they attempt to get by on National Enquirer style sensationalism and rumour.
Read John's column again and you'll see him reporting the allegations of "death threats" as if they were established fact.
Pure sensationalism and sensationalism can be had from any "journalist". It is harder to maintain readership for a sensationalist rag than for a real tech magazine.
John Dvorak, Apologist of poor journalism (Score:3, Insightful)
First of all, PJ's articles have been very accurate.
MOG took a role in media sensationalism, inaccuracy, and FUD. When her articles descended into ad hominem attacks, people reacted.
People emailed SYS-CON advertisers.
Fuat Kircaali called up individuals emailing advertisers, and threatened to sue them.
Instead, the OSS community threatened a boycott of SYS-CON. We made our positions on anti-OSS publications well known.
I guess because I received an unfriendly phonecall from Fuat Kircaali threatening to sue me over my emails, that I am somehow one of these crackpots?
Instead, I will rebut with this:
John Dvorak is not fully acquainted with the overall tone of the MOG articles, and the SYS-CON support for her anti-OSS sensationalist agenda.
If threatening a boycott, is somehow construed as a death threat, John Dvorak should stop pointing fingers and instead enroll in english 101.
We still haven't seen any evidence of a DDOS. No logs, no IP addresses, no documentation.
We still have an unapologetic publisher (Fuat Kircaali)
We do have "media analysts" pontificating on subjects they appear to be thoroughly ignorant in.
I guess John Dvorak is following in the MOG tradition. Will he be syndicated by SYS-CON next?
Ethics (Score:3, Interesting)
To which olden days do you refer, Mr. Dvorak? Perhaps you mean those olden days of yellow journalism [pbs.org]. Sorry, but I prefer a more ethical style of online writing. Dan Gillmor says it best: Be honorable [typepad.com].
Been saying this for a while now. (Score:3, Insightful)
With all of that said, I cannot survive in the industry, if I am viewed as belonging to a group of fanatical left wing blow hards who absolutely refuse to look at the pros of anything that competes with their prize product. It would shut the door for me as professional. I have also long stated that the fanatical representations of Linux and the over-bashing of MS shed a poor light on the community and cause outsiders to shy away. Very few people wish to be associated with a group that refuses to acknowledge that any choice but theirs is a ticket to damnation (accept maybe in the case of the factional Christian faith denominations). If Dvorak is stating this, should it not be clear to everyone that there are a fair number of ot Iher important people who also have this perception? I am not saying it is right, but we HAVE TO do something to correct it, or we all are going to painted in the same light. That is not what Linux is and it is not what it's future could be. If the perception rules over the facts, as Dvorak said, the trash heap of history is where this (linux) is - headed.
Hmmm (Score:4, Funny)
O'Gara = Jones!
This was just a scam to escalate O'Gara/Jones to a media frenzy!
Don't forget, Einhorn WAS Finkle! Finkle WAS Einhorn! Einhorn was a man!
Just another Dvorak Troll (Score:4, Insightful)
A) Dvorak thinks this is within the bounds of ethical journalism, or
B) His articles weren't getting much attention lately, and he knew which buttons to push.
I vote for (B).
Machine compliment/insult recognition results! (Score:5, Funny)
Cheerleaders: Score +12. Hopefully naked cheerleaders.
Paranoid: +2. Everyone should be paranoid.
Crackpot: 0. Have you ever tried to smoke crack from a pot?
Leftovers: 0. Ambiguous score. Are they chinese takeout leftovers from last night, or 3 month old covered in an as yet unknown species of mold?
Amiga: + Eleventy trillion.
Author: +2. Has-been industry sycophant with mediocre technological expertise -3, shares surname with inventer of superior keyboard layout +5.
Total score: Eleventy trillion + 16. Dvorak would never compliment linux advocates, so this confirms my theory that he has mercury poisoning and is saying random things in his mad ranting. I vote to remove his feeding tube.
LinuxWorld automated the editors (Score:5, Informative)
Remember, LinuxWorld's "staff" wasn't paid. So with no pay and no control, of course they quit. "Quitting" is barely a meaningful concept in a situation like that.
Gotta appreciate a good conspiracy... (Score:5, Funny)
It may be that this is actually a deep Astroturf PR campaign orchestrated by Microsoft to discredit open source and Linux.
Yeeaaahhhh.....that's the ticket: PJ isn't a stooge for IBM as O'Gara would purport. She's a stooge for MICROSOFT! Yes! That's it! Microsoft pays...no, no, wait, Microsoft invents PJ and has this so called "journalist" post some seemingly insightful but in hindsight clearly superficial and superfulous pro-Linux articles to gain acceptance and credibility among the Linux wackos. Now they pay O'Gara to pretend to aggrevate "PJ" with real and veiled threats, which sends PJ -- and therefore all of the Linux wacko sheep -- spiraling into oblivian and the entire Linux community implodes under its own weight.
That, my friend, is some solid investigative reporting.
Article Text (don't give Dvorak a raise) (Score:5, Informative)
So over the past week O'Gara tracked down and photographed PJ's home and PJ's mother's home and posted pics in her column, with veiled accusations that the entire Groklaw site is a front for IBM in its battle with SCO. Once this article appeared, all hell broke loose in the Linux community, with editors scrambling. There was removal of the offending article with apologies all around. Then came accusations of this and that; staffs of editors quitting in protest; publishers befuddled; veiled threats of lawsuits; vituperative attacks on multiple parties, including the LinuxWorld publisher, editors, O'Gara, and PJ; several worldwide denial-of-service attacks on LinuxWorld's parent company, Sys-Con Media; calls to Interpol; O'Gara's "firing"; and a flamestorm on Slashdot and elsewhere.
Oh, brother. In the olden days, O'Gara would have been given a medal for generating readership. But in today's world of the so easily offended, she's apparently let go instead, and things calm down as the hissy fit subsides.
Although her article was removed, you can usually find it on the Google cache (an interesting situation if you think about it), and I'm sure someone will mirror the piece eventually. Whatever the case, I've seen this feud become ridiculous and invasive, but I've seen worse on network TV with less-public figures than PJ. I would have paid no attention to the whole thing if I represented the collective thoughts of the Linux community. What difference does it make?
First let's get a few things straight. All of O'Gara's assertions are nutty. And I'm not talking about the yet-to-be-proven assertion that PJ is a 60-year-old dowager stooging for IBM. That's just ludicrous on the surface. Yet that is what is claimed.
First of all, IBM has lawyers, and it sure doesn't need to have someone find out via the discovery process that it's fronting a Web site about this case. That would simply never happen. Besides, IBM is not that clever. There are also enforced policies against this sort of thing.
It's wrong to assume that IBM expected the SCO battle to drag out like this from the outset. Unlikely! And I should mention that just because I, for example, developed an early timeline of the SCO history doesn't mean I'm a stooge for SCO or IBM either.
That said, the Linux community figures that O'Gara is being paid by SCO or Microsoft or someone bad. Again, if this were so, and if it was ever proven or stumbled on during the discovery process (nothing to take lightly), it would be a disaster for the litigation chances of the company doing the paying. It just wouldn't be worth the risk. It appears to me that O'Gara is just being overly provocative to get readers. And apparently it doesn't take much provocation, as the Linux community is slowly evolving into a state of mob rule, with the cheerleaders being paranoid crackpot leftovers from the waning days of Amiga. "Too nutty even for the Mac community? We welcome you!"
Now these lunatics are issuing death threats? I can tell you that my mere mentioning of any of this will result in incredibly hateful attempted postings on this forum and on my moderated blog. What is wrong with these people?
If anything is going to kill Linux and the open-source movement, it's the presence of certifiable lunatics in the ranks representing the users. It may be that this is actually a deep Astroturf PR campaign orchestrated by Microsoft to discredit open source and Linux. It sure seems like something weird is going on.
I can tell you this much: Normal people do not like being associated with fanatics and lunatics. Once Linux gets the image as the OS for the criminally insane, it's a dead duck. Unless the community gets a handle on this, grows up, and rebukes the extremists, the trash heap of history is where this is all headed.
Needs a new category (Score:3)
Thanks,
Bryan
Dvorak confirms Linux community is dying (Score:3, Interesting)
So the question here is, which side are the lunatics and fanatics on? The community rises up against mudslinging journalism, Sys-con editors resign when it becomes clear that their CEO is a sociopath, and these are the signs of a community imploding? Standing up for your principles is fanatical? And of all of the incidents that he could have chose to support the idea that the Linux community is full of nutcases, he chooses this one?
Dvorak's really stooped low on this one. The reason is clear: If more communities responded to sleazy journalistic behavior the way the Linux community has in this case, he'd be out of a job.
I think I'll email him now:
Can't we PLEASE ban Dvorak from /. (Score:3, Insightful)
His argument is:
(1) Sure O'Gara tried to instigate stalkers to commit violence against PJ and/or her family.
(2) Sure O'Gara violated privacy rights and trespassed.
(3) Those hysterical "Linux fanatics" get worked up over the silliest things.
This matter is *not* about merely bad journalism, which O'Gara (and Dvorak) have been doing for a long time. OK, fine, publish another "study" that proves Linux will irradiate your brain, and Windows will bring you inner peace. Whatever. It's propoganda and fluff, but ultimately within free speech rights.
What O'Gara did is criminal incitement of violence, and probable RICO violations.
This jerk is a waste of time (Score:3)
Are you still reading this? You better not be.
Re:What an asshole. (Score:2)
They all exist, but are quite rare and have been replaced by more popular and often more powerful alternatives.