
Those up top (the Presidential Inaugural Committee)
chose to utilize Microsoft's Silverlight technology to stream the upcoming inaugural events for the new president of the United States. Though Microsoft certainly likes this idea, this leaves out thousands of people in the US and elsewhere who still cannot run Silverlight or an open source alternative on their systems from viewing the streamed video online.
Update by Thom: Linux and PowerPC Mac fans rejoice, as they can watch the inauguration as well using Moonlight.
Migel De Icaza wrote:
"Microsoft worked late last night to get us access to the code that will be used during the inauguration so we could test it with Moonlight." Microsoft and the Moonlight team fixed this issue
in one afternoon, so it might be a little rough.
Member since:
2005-11-13
I understand and agree that the government should've used something more open than Silverlight. That wasn't really my point.
I just found it a little ironic that this issue was raised by (according to the OSNews piece) a self-professed open source advocate, when it is clear that there are no open source alternatives that have the capability to currently do with Flash and Silverlight can do.
Even if your number of 99% is correct (though I believe that to be a little optimistic), there's still a lot of stuff that has to be worked around, even if you can get it to work. In other words, you basically have to hack it, and that can be a pain sometimes. But the zealots who are urging people to jump ship from Windows don't bother to inform people of this, talking about how grand life is going to be on 'GNU/Linux'... "format your hard drive, pop in the Ubuntu CD, and life is bliss. Got Windows games? No problem! Just throw on Cedaga, and all your games will run just as good as they did in Windows!" The actual reality of the situation is hardly presented in those '7 Reasons You Should Switch To Linux' articles.
Of course, as someone pointed out, there are also a lot of BS-Linux campaigns. But these are put on by billion dollar corporations who are looking for a profit, not by normal end users of their products.