[clue-tech] Mephis linux
Nate Duehr
nate at natetech.com
Wed Nov 19 12:51:24 MST 2008
David L. Willson wrote:
> - Not sure what you're saying here. Linux and FLOSS are growing.
I guess what I'm saying is that Linux and FLOSS are growing -- sure...
but by copy-catting better software produced by the commercial ventures.
That's not good growth, that's just being a parasite.
I don't know that copying other products poorly is in any way a good
sign that Linux is HEALTHY, just that it's growing.
Growth != Quality. Too bad Wall Street doesn't understand that very
well. (Makes it easier to game Wall Street, though.)
There's always room for lower-quality, cheaper stuff in any market.
I'd LIKE to see BETTER software quality over time, not the death of
commercial software and it's replacement by lower-quality Free software.
Other things can die or not die on their own merits. It's better for
Linux, in fact, if other things live. Variety and competition breed
core standards and true innovation. Only Microsoft is stupid enough to
think that destruction of the competition is a good thing, and I hope
they're coming slowly around on that point.
Most FLOSS folk are also out for "destruction of the closed-source
competition", and they're pretty vocal about it.
That's not any more healthy than MS wanting to see FLOSS die.
> - So, you never hear, "Is there anything free/Free/OpenSource/GPL that does that?" I do. Pretty often in fact, but then, I'm listening, because I'm a Free software enthusiast, and I am always building my software and human relationships from that "yes, plenty" perspective.
I hear it from admins but not from desktop users. Maybe I'm just
hanging with people caught in the MS "Borg Cube" or something.
My contention continues to be that if there were something *so much
better* than MS or Apple's offerings out there -- there'd be no need for
a grassroots movement to get people to switch to Linux, or Installfests,
or any of it.
If it was truly better software, the average computer user would just
"be there" running Linux already by now.
People find out pretty fast via word of mouth when a particular piece of
software does something they want to do, and does it better/cheaper than
someone else's.
They usually put the "better" metric higher than the "cheaper" metric,
as evidenced by Apple's sales numbers since OSX came out. Apple stuff
isn't cheap, by any stretch of the imagination.
Nate
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