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Its quite different from the usual *written* by companies comments. It actually tries to describe which groups write what. Which I found interesting...but not altogether unsurprising.
The other Gem that jumps out and its on the first page is this "the patches added almost 430,000 lines, but also removed 406,000 lines, meaning that the kernel grew by just under 23,000". To be fair its nice to have an article that actually makes very little judgments.
Considering the improvements that have gone into this version...those are welcome statistics.
Unfortunately this kind of statistics mean nothing. If you've ever worked on a project under a version control system you'll know that "N lines added, M lines deleted" give absolutely no insight on the quality or even quantity of work that went in these modifications. It's a seductive play upon figures, and many first timers fall for it, but eventually learn better. The same goes for number of commits and so on.
Edited 2007-09-25 16:32
PLEASE DO NOT TAKE THIS POST SERIOUSLY!
ANOTHER ONE OF THESE ... come on there have been quite a few articles like this and most people don't really care who writes the software as long as it works. After all it's still under GPL regardless of the fact who's paying for it ...
What you probably mean is that you don't care about anything as long as you get free stuff. What you probably missed is that the companies who pay the developers who write most of Linux get their cash from somewhere, and eventually this cash comes from consumers.
Basically, you are paying for Linux, it's just that you're paying indirectly (by buying unrelated stuff from companies who pay for service contracts, by buying hardware manufactured by companies who increase their hardware costs to pay for Linux development, etc) rather than paying directly.
For an example, imagine you buy some tennis balls for $10. The store you buy them from pays Google for some advertising and the manufacturer of the tennis balls has a service contract with Redhat. A small part of your $10 ends up in professional Linux developer's wallets.
The problem is that cost of Linux development is spread across everyone - people who don't even use Linux also (indirectly) pay for Linux development, and people who do use Linux aren't paying their fair share.
Don't you think it's ironic how "software should be free" ends up ripping off people who don't even use the software? For commercial/proprietory software you only pay if you use the software and you know how much you're paying before you pay, which makes companies like Microsoft much more ethical than these open source theives.... ;-)
PLEASE DO NOT TAKE THIS POST SERIOUSLY!
Huh, so when i buy a tennis ball, and the store i buy from pays MS for their operating system, a small part of my 10$ ends up in MS employees wallets. So whats your point?






Member since:
2006-02-12
ANOTHER ONE OF THESE ... come on there have been quite a few articles like this and most people don't really care who writes the software as long as it works. After all it's still under GPL regardless of the fact who's paying for it ...