OSS and Linux coming through 27
Roxus sent us
a nice little article in the Melbourne Age extolling the
Virtues of OSS.
It's a nice little article. Nothing remarkably insightful or
new, but further proof of what we already know.
UNIX was half a billion (500000000) seconds old on Tue Nov 5 00:53:20 1985 GMT (measuring since the time(2) epoch). -- Andy Tannenbaum
Enough is enough! (Score:1)
It's not news, and hasn't been for MONTHS!
It seems like every day there are at least one or two fluff stories about Linux showing up on Slashdot. I am soooo tired of seeing these articles on Slashdot! WHO CARES if Lancastershire World Weekly News Special Sunday Edition or *whoever* does an article about how great Linux is and how interesting this cool new "open source" stuff is. IT'S NOT NEWS AND IT IS NOT STUFF THAT MATTERS!
1985 Era OSes (Score:1)
Just as DOS (or CP/M) is the basis for what is today Windows, UNIX is the basis for Linux.
(they weren't *finished* in 1960, you freak...)
"Lintel"? (Score:1)
If we already know, then why bother telling us? (Score:1)
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
"Conventional wisdom"? Yuck! (Score:2)
Why do people always tend to lose sight of what is "conventional"? "Guarding" source is a recent trend, started in the late 70s; computers are here because before that it was "conventional" to share. Copyrights are here since the Renaissance when the press was invented; arts are only here because, before that, it was "conventional" to share. And I fail to see any "wisdom" in not sharing... is there? Why are people's heads so fscked up? Yes, I'm starting to believe in the results of the IQ poll. Perhaps we are here because we think, we are able to see what for us seems obvious but for "them" seems to be a wonder. Go figure.
It's LOGARITHMIC growth, not exponential (Score:1)
I give it 20 years (Score:1)
current job (sysadmin for a university department)
in 20 years, I'll have moved everyone to free
software.
I figure it will take that long.
Danny.
"Lintel"? (Score:1)
Slight nit: who made the abbreviation "OSS"? (Score:2)
Bruce Perens
ego stroking (Score:1)
One would think such a simple solution would be obvious to most any sentient being.
*shrug* Human stupidity knows no bounds...
Many people actually *like* the fact that their hard work is starting to get some press coverage. Some of them don't care. Those that whine about links to such coverage apear to be idiots.
good day.
scottwimer
Servers to Desktops (Score:1)
I'm not sure if Linux really does have faster TCP/IP any more. I've heard that Microsoft is incorporating networking code from FreeBSD into Windows, which should make it about as fast as Linux.
Can anyone confirm or deny this?
Servers to Desktops (Score:1)
Face it, if you're sitting in front of a single user PC, doing email, Web surfing and running games, what do you care if your system crashes once in a while??? Linux will eventually make its way into that market, but not for a while.
Hey!, I care if my box crashes all the time (Score:1)
True enough, but I'm willing to bet you're the exception rather than the rule. Most people get upset when their game crashes (or their letter to Grandma is lost, or their latest checkbook updates get scrogged), but how many get upset enough to abandon their comfortable MS "womb"?
Don't get me wrong - home users will come in time, but it's going to take a while.
Exponential growth (Score:1)
2.2.0-pre9 == 2.2.0-final (Score:1)
Repeat repeat repeat... (Score:1)
Perhaps Slashdot could create a sidebar devoted to keeping an eye out on OSS/Linux/whatever publicity and just list the latest URLs instead of making them stories...
Exponential growth (Score:2)
This gives us one to two years to develop the "killer" desktop, one that beats the Mac (a much better environment than Windoze, all stability issues aside). Linuxconf has come a long way, but needs more polishing, and COAS sounds promising. System configuration is probably still the area where the most improvement can be made. (I'm still getting a good feel for the new linuxconf that comes with RedHat 5.2, as I usually do my system configuration stuff with vi...) Will GNOME 2.0 (or KDE 3.0) be it?
Linux itself is rock-solid. We just need to make it a little more accessible for the clue-impaired. That, and help out the Wine developers, cut off Microsoft at the knees...
Free software == GNU ???? (Score:1)
--B
Actually, it's an "S" curve (Score:1)
That being said, I still find it difficult to beleive that millions of people that struggled for years to learn the Windows interface will be willing to learn another new interface -- regardless of how superiour it is! The M$ experience has trained everybody to beleive that new releases are always buggy, documentation is always poor, new software is frustrating and difficult to learn, and support is either non-existant or prohibitively expensive. They will apply these lessons learned to Linux, and will shy away from anything new, prefering the evil they know to the "evil" they are unfamiliar with.
This seems to be a principle that all us geeks and early adopters have trouble grasping -- not everybody in the world thinks the way we do!
One of them.... (Score:1)