Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 22nd May 2009 13:58 UTC, submitted by shaneco
GNU, GPL, Open Source Keith Curtis worked at Microsoft for 11 years, coding on Windows, Office, and at Microsoft's research department, before leaving the Redmond giant. Call it a revelation, call it giving in to the devil's temptations, but he's now a complete open source and Linux advocate, and in his new book, "After the Software Wars", he explains why open source will prevail against Microsoft's proprietary model.
Thread beginning with comment 365040
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: Wow...
by abraxas on Fri 22nd May 2009 20:42 UTC in reply to "Wow..."
abraxas
Member since:
2005-07-07

Wow! Very clever guy! Just genius...

"Free Software" will kill ANY "software company", not just "evil" "guilty in all sins" Microsoft. Communism is good only in theory. It was never built and never will.


Free software isn't communism. Giving away something for free doesn't qualify as communism and neither does collaboration. There is no authority by vote or otherwise that can force a free software programmer to code something he doesn't want to code. In fact it's probably a lot closer to absolute free market capitalism than proprietary software. Free software springs from an individual need and is distributed by the author under his own free will. Competing solutions will win or lose the market depending on their merit not proprietary lock-in or some other artificial method. The whole free software landscape is like a completely deregulated economy where there is no barrier to entry and no regulations to prevent you from creating whatever you want.

Proprietary software like Microsoft on the other hand is much more like a planned economy. It's a system that doesn't depend on merit but the fact that it is the only choice. It doesn't coexist well with competitors and it never intended to. When Microsoft's latest operating system flops we cannot purchase another OS with the same API that will allow us to run all of the software we ran before. With vast patent regulation it is virtually impossible to create a competing system.

With that said neither are communist or capitalist. They are not entire economic systems and describing them as such isn't really helpful.

Reply Parent Score: 4