Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 21st Jul 2012 23:06 UTC
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RE[2]: How to live from open source.
by moondevil on Mon 23rd Jul 2012 07:14
in reply to "RE: How to live from open source."
"Sure there are lots of benefits in using open source applications, even I use lots of open source applications.
Don't feel bad. Even hardcore open source haters use open source now. It's unavoidable. "
Why should I feel bad?
My employer is able to charge the same consulting prices as with proprietary tools, but get the source code and the project tools for free, without giving anything back, thus increasing profits.
Edited 2012-07-23 07:16 UTC
RE[2]: How to live from open source.
by zima on Sat 28th Jul 2012 23:59
in reply to "RE: How to live from open source."
Even hardcore open source haters use open source now. It's unavoidable.
Now, if only some OSS-devotees - who likewise absolutely can't avoid depending on closed software behind large part of our modern world (perhaps even to a more fundamental degree) - would stop hatin'...
Edited 2012-07-29 00:08 UTC




Member since:
2007-04-25
Don't feel bad. Even hardcore open source haters use open source now. It's unavoidable.
Most large successful and high-quality open source products work because they receive corporate backing.
Android Linux is probably the best example, with IBM and Red Hat providing steady revenue for the kernel, Sun for the VM (at least pre-Oracle), and Google for the userland. Google also largely funded Firefox, which kicked proprietary monopoly IE's tail from Scranton to LA, and then Chromium, which made the browser market a three horse plus change race.
Small indie developers sometimes make good and change the world, of course (BitTorrent, anyone?), but the big names in large open source projects are funded by corporations that profit from them - for better or worse.