RMS vs. ESR 71
Steven Borrelli writes "AT&T as the mother of open source software? Here is a nice examination of the positions that the FSF and OSI have taken on O'Reilly's site.
Whence the Source:
Untangling the Open Source/Free Software Debate "
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
It's about freedom. The writer missed that major point.
Some of "us" are still hackers and not business people. Some of "us" still like free software...
I've felt that ESR's tried to downplay the importance of the GNU/FSF and what RMS has done. I like GCC and emacs a little more than fetchmail. Sorry ESR.
And ESR didn't create any movement. It was (free software was) already alive and well long before he pushed himself into the scene.
Repeat/Repost (Score:1)
I'm reposting my message on this from the previous thread here:
This article repeats the Big Lie (one that I've seen Raymond repeat, BTW) that somehow the free software movement pre-dates Richard Stallman. Stallman gets a lot of his legitimacy from having started the FSF back in 1983, and from his claims that he represents the original free software philosophy. I see these (false) statements about how free software is somehow pre-Stallman as nothing more than a blatant, explicit attempt by Stallman's critics to de-ligitimize his views by re-writing history so that he no longer represents the origins of free software. The people propagating this want to substitute in the Berkeley traditions as the origin of free software because those are much more friendly to the proprietary software developers these people are sucking up to.
Facts:
-- Stallman started at the MIT AI Lab in 1971, long before BSD. [ The first version of Unix was written in 1970 but was never released. ]
-- The MIT AI Lab is widely recognized as the birthplace of hackerdom and the earliest free software traditions. This dates back to the 60's and even the 50's TMRC at MIT. Stallman is a direct heir to and participant in these earliest of traditions. The AI lab traditions pre-date Unix.
-- The original "Emacs commune" license pre-dates the UCB license. (The Emacs commune license was an early form of copyleft). Actually, I can't swear that this is accurate, but I believe that it is. (Stallman wrote the original Emacs in 1975, which was before the first BSD release I believe (I think that was 79 or something)).
MIT birthplace of hackerdom? (Score:1)
Whatever the history, it is certain that AT&T and Berkeley were not the birthplace of free software in any way, shape, or form. And it is completely false to say that BSD pre-dates Stallman, which Eric Raymond did.
MIT birthplace of hackerdom? (Score:1)
See:
http://www.salonm agazine.com/21st/feature/1998/09/11feature2.html [salonmagazine.com].
ESR is not an ultra-rightist (Score:1)
Eh? (Score:1)
Yup. Minor glitch ?
Stallman may have not come up with the idea... (Score:1)
It sounds much better (Score:1)
I like that. Maybe ESR can be that explicit a little more often and a little more openly. Because the impression I got from the O'Reilly article (and some recent flamewars and articles on /.) was:
ESR: "We had to kill Free Software in order to save it."
ORA: "Agreed."
Whatever your opinions about RMS, his stances and the GPL at least provide a reference point or litmus test for software freedom. If we allow him to be FUD-ded out of the picture, it creates a vacuum in which anything (bad) can happen.
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Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Either rob has gone mad ... (Score:1)
We've already had the flamewars over this article, I don't really need the deja vu!
BTW, something is really weird in that if I post a top level comment, I have a login name, but in replies I'm an AC? How does that work? Or not work, as the case may be
Both are sort of missing the point (Score:1)
If the software is not good no one will use it. Free software that sits on a shelf unused is not helping anyone, free software that people use to get things done is.
Its not Good Software VS Freedom its Good software AND Freedom.
--Zachary Kessin
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
--Zachary Kessin
The Invention of Free Software (Score:1)
The Formalizing of free software with the GPL etc is very important.
--Zachary Kessin
ESR and the GPL (Score:1)
Does this remind anyone else of that period in the middle ages when there were 2 popes and they both excomunicated each other from time to time.
--Zachary Kessin
What a bunch of ... (Score:1)
Repeat/Repost (Score:1)
Hear! Hear! Also, wasn't the "nominal fee" for getting an AT&T UNIX license about $100,000 (not to mention inflationary adjustments) even for a university? That is hardly "Free"!
ESR has a strange attitude about all of this. When OpenSource.Org first advertised that they wanted to hear from companies providing Linux support I wrote to him about my company. He asked why I had written. I pointed out that he had asked about companies like mine. At that point he wrote back and basically said "I meant real companies -- those with more than $10M/year in revenues".
There is little doubt that ESR's agenda is self promotion whereas RMS's has always been software and the betterment of the world.
Many people try to re-write history. We need to be vigilent.
Repeat/Repost (Score:1)
I stand corrected!
I was quite certain that I was right so I went out and searched on the web. Eventually I found this URL [isep.ipp.pt] where it says: The labs made the software available to academic institutions at a very small charge. For example, John Lions, a faculty member in the Department of Computer Science at the University of New South Wales, in Australia, reported that his school was able to acquire a copy of research UNIX Edition 5 for $150 ($110 Australian) in December, 1974, including tape and manuals. (See "An Interview with John Lions," in Unix Review, October, 1985, pg. 51)
Repeat/Repost (Score:1)
Sorry!
Success Sucks Eh? (Score:1)
But most of this is people picking their heroes and pitting them against each other. Mostly harmless.
It's interesting, but... (Score:1)
"Perhaps the interval of rampant Gatesian monopolism between the blossom of BSD and the advent of Linux is just another periodic lilt of the paradigm dance."
Kuhn couldn't write his way out of a wet, brown, paper bag, but he did have some points.
My favorite line from the article (Score:1)
Linux-isms (Score:1)
Can we add Laissez-Faire Torvaldianism to the list?
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As long as each individual is facing the TV tube alone, formal freedom poses no threat to privilege.
I'd like so say a word on ESR's behalf... (Score:1)
I think this "split" is cooked up by others. ESR may have different ideas, but he speaks to a different crowd. I don't think he begrudges RMS credit for founding the whole thing.
Also, it may be worth noting that ESR is an ultra-rightist who seems to like quoting the NRA. RMS, while probably not a Marxist, is decidedly Populist in his views on ownership and freedom. There's bound to be some differences between the two.
(The Marxist bit is not intended to be an indictment or flamebait. That's just how I read the situation.)
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As long as each individual is facing the TV tube alone, formal freedom poses no threat to privilege.
The concept. (Score:1)
I think you'll find there is no such thing as a 100% new idea.
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As long as each individual is facing the TV tube alone, formal freedom poses no threat to privilege.
Ken Arnold was original curses author (Score:1)
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
Although I also like emacs, I prefer the xemacs implementation and the jed pseudo-emacs implementation. Xemacs is far more featureful and complete than GNU/Emacs, jed is far smaller. Stallman does deserve credit for the initial development of emacs though.
However, remember tha ESR has done more than just fetchmail. Your emacs would not compile without ncurses, which ESR is very much responsible for.
No Subject Given (Score:1)
Free software predated the FSF by perhaps 2 or 3 decades. It just wasn't called that. It was called research. RMS was not the founder of free software, he was just someone who refused to change from the old ways when commerce found its way into an academic pursuit. Not that this is a bad thing, but he certainly did not invent the concept.
More FUD (Score:1)
Second of all where's the fear, uncertainty or doubt in what I said. Free software has been in existence since the first software was wirtten. It was a tried and proven method in academia back when Stallman was in diapers. It has proven the test of time, and shown itself, again and again to be a strong development model. Hell, Stallman started the FSF when he was working at MIT. It's just the way everyone was done at the universities, and at many is still the way much is done. Just because I state factually that RMS didn't invent free software doens't make me a FUD-spreader.
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
Furthermore, just because something compiles on gcc doesn't mean it will compile elsewhere. This is especially true with c++, where gcc does not comply with accepted ISO standards on the language. As for the C world, ever try compiling the linux kernel with and compiler other than gcc-2.7 (including gcc 2.8 and egcs), and then say starting X. No, well it's because you can't without modifying the source. Linux-2.0 had bug for bug compatability with gcc-2.7. Linux-2.2 corrected this flaw.
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
Xemacs and GNU?Emacs will probably never merge. Xemeacs development has just progressed too far, and xemacs developers, past and present have too much of a dislike of Stallman and his brood. Witness why-cooperation-with-rms-is-impossible.au of JWZ's web page (which is of course Stallman's rediculaous "join us now and share the software" song. I don't see a lot more possitive attitude amongst more recent xeamcs developers towards Stallaman.
The reason I think Raymod makes a better spokesman for OSS, is that he is far less arogant, obnoxious and fanatic than Stallman. Stallman tends to drive people away from himself.
MIT birthplace of hackerdom? (Score:1)
Free software in no way started with MIT, Stallman or BSD, although all three certainly have contributed to it. There is no "Big Lie" -- only different perspectives. If your first exposure to UNIX was through Linux, then Stallman and the FSF seem really important. If your first exposure to UNIX was some form of BSD, then that seems really important.
BTW: Don't confuse BSD UNIX with AT&T UNIX. BSD only had a cost because it still had some AT&T code in it, and so an AT&T source license was needed.
MIT birthplace of hackerdom? (Score:1)
Can find the exact quote from ESR that says that BSD pre-dates Stallman? If he said free software predates Stallman, well that's true (And Stallman admits it -- he started the FSF to *preserve* free software traditions). If ESR said BSD predates the FSF, again a true statement.
I'm not a big ESR fan myself. Certainly the amount of code he's written is less than RMS' ut both ESR and RMS seem to be spending more time talking than working these days
Celebrity Death Match (Score:1)
Re: Success Sucks Eh? (Score:1)
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ESR and the GPL (Score:1)
.
Yes, but... (Score:1)
(No, I can't tell if I'm kidding or not, either)
Repost, so I'll repost (Score:1)
afc@orion:~/src/perl$ ldd `type -p xemacs`
libXm.so.3 =>
libXpm.so.4.7 =>
libDtSvc.so.1 =>
libtt.so.2 =>
libXmu.so.4 =>
libXt.so.4 =>
libXext.so.0 =>
libX11.so.4 =>
libSM.so.6 =>
libICE.so.6 =>
libkvm.so.1 =>
libkstat.so.1 => lib/libkstat.so.1
libm.so.1 =>
libsocket.so.1 =>
libnsl.so.1 =>
libelf.so.1 =>
libdl.so.1 =>
libc.so.1 =>
libmp.so.2 =>
I see no curses here, do you?
Also: this yada-yada about egcs is somewhat off mark. Egcs is to gcc, as XEmacs is to GNU Emacs. They share a lot of source code, and it's not unlikely that they'll merge again in the future.
It is absolutely laughable to compare Stallman's deeds with those of Raymond. Just read up your history, buddy.
Adjectives suck (Score:1)
ESR is not an ultra-rightist (Score:1)
his social and political views tend toward moderate-libertarian.
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