Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 1st Feb 2008 20:39 UTC, submitted by WillM
GNU, GPL, Open Source "Does Microsoft have an open-source strategy - beyond finding new ways to thwart Linux and other non-proprietary wares? Sam Ramji, Microsoft's Director of Platform Technology Strategy and the company's Open Source Software Lab, says it does. I met with Ramji last week when he was passing through New York on his way to Europe, and had a chance to ask him to provide a succinct definition of what Microsoft means when it refers to its own 'open-source strategy'."
Thread beginning with comment 298962
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
DrillSgt
Member since:
2005-12-02

"No, wrong. There are two editions of mySQL: the Enterprise Server and the Community Server. Source code for the Community Server (as the name implies) is available to everyone, but source code to the Enterprise Server is available only to paying customers."

Interesting. Someone better tell mySQL AB about that then so they can remove it from the download page. The difference between Community and Enterprise is support and redistribution in a commercial product, as well as patches, which will only appear as source form for the community edition, or rolled into the next community release.

http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/5.0.html

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

tomcat Member since:
2006-01-06

Interesting. Someone better tell mySQL AB about that then so they can remove it from the download page. The difference between Community and Enterprise is support and redistribution in a commercial product, as well as patches, which will only appear as source form for the community edition, or rolled into the next community release. http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/5.0.html


The Community Edition on that link is NOT the same as the Enterprise Edition that's available to paying customers. Enterprise customers have access to enhancements, bug fixes, and rapid updates that aren't listed there. Nice try, though.

http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/09/2047231&from=rss

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: -1

DrillSgt Member since:
2005-12-02

"The Community Edition on that link is NOT the same as the Enterprise Edition that's available to paying customers. Enterprise customers have access to enhancements, bug fixes, and rapid updates that aren't listed there. Nice try, though."

You should actually read the link. All those are listed there, as I pointed out in my post as well. The patches and such are what's called "support", which is what you pay for. You do not pay for access to the source code. Nice try, though ;)

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 6