Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 2nd Jan 2012 19:12 UTC
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RE[2]: Put your work where your mouth is.
by grayskull on Tue 3rd Jan 2012 04:30
in reply to "RE: Put your work where your mouth is."
"Could people please not use this list to announce information of no particular interest to the people on the list? Hundreds of thousands of babies are born every day. While the whole phenomenon is menacing, one of them by itself is not newsworthy. Nor is it a difficult achievement—even some fish can do it. (Now, if you were a seahorse, it would be more interesting, since it would be the male that gave birth.)"
RMS
http://edward.oconnor.cx/2005/04/rms
Free Software = Good
Open Source = Good
RMS = Bad
RE[2]: Put your work where your mouth is.
by M.Onty on Tue 3rd Jan 2012 10:05
in reply to "RE: Put your work where your mouth is."
There are others way to support Free and open software, other than using it (which sometimes isn't an option). This "use it or sod off" attitude really isn't helping Free/open source software.
What helps is educating people about the pros and cons, and then let them decide for themselves. Don't force them. Don't feel morally superior or insult them. It's not their fault they're using the software they like or are accustumed with, so don't act like it is.
The best future is one where Free/open source software and proprietary software push each other to excel, for the benefit of all. We don't need an all-FOSS world; we simply need a world where FOSS is competitive and seen as a real competitor in as many fields as possible - forcing proprietary vendors to be on edge.
What helps is educating people about the pros and cons, and then let them decide for themselves. Don't force them. Don't feel morally superior or insult them. It's not their fault they're using the software they like or are accustumed with, so don't act like it is.
The best future is one where Free/open source software and proprietary software push each other to excel, for the benefit of all. We don't need an all-FOSS world; we simply need a world where FOSS is competitive and seen as a real competitor in as many fields as possible - forcing proprietary vendors to be on edge.
This is appears to be a more nuanced view than that expressed in the article itself. I would recommend appending something of the sort to the article for clarity.
RE[3]: Put your work where your mouth is.
by Thom_Holwerda on Tue 3rd Jan 2012 10:06
in reply to "RE[2]: Put your work where your mouth is."
This is appears to be a more nuanced view than that expressed in the article itself. I would recommend appending something of the sort to the article for clarity.
Actually, it isn't.
"This is why you should support Android (not Google, but Android), even if you prefer the iPhone. This is why you should support Linux, even if you use Windows. This is why you should support Apache, even if you run IIS."
Pretty much the same thing.





Member since:
2005-06-29
There are others way to support Free and open software, other than using it (which sometimes isn't an option). This "use it or sod off" attitude really isn't helping Free/open source software.
What helps is educating people about the pros and cons, and then let them decide for themselves. Don't force them. Don't feel morally superior or insult them. It's not their fault they're using the software they like or are accustumed with, so don't act like it is.
The best future is one where Free/open source software and proprietary software push each other to excel, for the benefit of all. We don't need an all-FOSS world; we simply need a world where FOSS is competitive and seen as a real competitor in as many fields as possible - forcing proprietary vendors to be on edge.