Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Rony

Abhishek Daga wrote:

--- Dinesh Joshi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Saturday 28 October 2006 18:53, Philip Tellis wrote:

He's not saying that the GPL should allow proprietary software or
that it's bad.  All he's saying is that the GPL takes away one of

the

developer's freedoms.



Hi folks, this thread is an excellent example of tenacity. If we could
get this going till year end, we'd probably have enough material for a
book?

What say?

Can't agree more. What is happening is that they are going round in 
circles discussing the same thing again and again in the same thread. No 
one has actually quoted any clause in gpl3 thats objectionable and the 
actual topic of the thread.


Regards,

Rony.



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 28-Oct-06, at 8:19 PM, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:



Freedom is important to me because I get the benefits of being able
to change the software and distribute the improvements because there
are many brilliant programmers out there in my community who improves
the software from time to time and are happy to see the members of
this community using their improvements. I get to use all new
functionalities, less bugs and new contents like themes even though I
cannot code a single line


if freedom is important you should go for the freest licence of all -  
pure bsd and not the most restrictive - gpl



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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 28-Oct-06, at 9:26 PM, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:


GNU/Linux got popular


it never got popular - 99% of the world have never heard of it - and  
couldnt care less about it



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 28-Oct-06, at 8:48 PM, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:


We started GNU project to create a complete Free Operating System. We
now have such a Free Operating System with important contribution from
Linus Torvalds


w00t - linus did do something, although his contribution (he merely  
wrote the kernel and successfuly guided its development over all  
these years) is negligible compared to the power of the gpl license  
and protective mantel of the fsf



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 28-Oct-06, at 10:14 PM, Rony wrote:


Please end the thread now.


why?


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Kenneth Gonsalves
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 29-Oct-06, at 11:38 AM, Rony wrote:

Can't agree more. What is happening is that they are going round in  
circles discussing the same thing again and again in the same  
thread. No one has actually quoted any clause in gpl3 thats  
objectionable and the actual topic of the thread.


i quoted a full paragraph asking for an explanation - nothing has  
come so far



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 29-Oct-06, at 12:58 PM, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:

and again in the same thread. No one has actually quoted any  
clause in gpl3 thats objectionable and the actual topic of the  
thread.


i quoted a full paragraph asking for an explanation - nothing has  
come so far


and here it is again:

quote

 The System Libraries of an executable work include every subunit  
such that (a) the identical subunit is normally included as an  
adjunct in the distribution of either a major essential component  
(kernel, window system, and so on) of the specific operating system  
(if any) on which the object code runs, or a compiler used to produce  
the object code, or an object code interpreter used to run it, and  
(b) the subunit (aside from possible incidental extensions) serves  
only to enable use of the work with that system component or compiler  
or interpreter, or to implement a widely used or standard interface  
for which an implementation is available to the public in source code  
form.


/unquote

So whats wrong with this paragraph? It is gobbledygook. I am a lawyer  
and i wish to make certain points clear:


1. It is a foul canard to say that legalese is obscure and confusing.  
It need not be. Where the motives of the drafter of a law are pure,  
where he is interested in justice and fairness - the resulting law is  
clear, concise and understandable. As is most of the Constitution of  
India and the constitution of the US for that matter. The Indian  
Penal Code as orginally drafted by Macaulay is a model of clarity and  
conciseness - it is a work of literature.


2. When legalese becomes obscure is when amendments are made for  
ulterior motives - to cater to vested interests, to be unfair and  
unjust - then you need to BS to escape censure. Like exemptions to  
our income tax act, excise act - and exemptions anywhere (i'm sure  
jtd would provide enough examples here).


3. Good law is always reactive - a specific response to a specific  
problem. It is practical and usually clear and concise. Bad law is an  
attempt to generalise - anticipate every possible thing that may  
occur and provide a remedy. This almost always backfires.


4. Strangely enough the foss development cycle also follows this  
paradigm. Solve a problem facing you, code it, release it. Rather  
than one monolithical solution to all the worlds problems, lots of  
small solutions to small problems. Yes, think ahead - have some  
vision - but one step at a time. Or, in other words, think globally,  
act locally.


5. The authors of the gpl v3 are planning to solve all the world's  
problems in one go. Wont work. This is over-engineering. If you  
design one shoe to fit all - it fits no one. What we need is a set of  
licenses - specific to different types of programs and specific to  
different types of legal systems. Lots and lots of little little  
licenses. Maybe, in course of time, these will converge. Maybe not.


6. Frankly i feel that the ambition of the fsf to legislate for the  
planet is (i dont want to use the word - but you can guess what it is)


7. Commit early. Commit often. This is the foss way of doing things.  
And release when it is ready. Commit once in 15 years, anounce your  
schedule, set a release date, call for world wide conferences, waste  
money conducting those - is this vista? or is this gpl v3? Both have  
much in common - monopoly fighting freedom.


Prediction: gpl v3 is doomed to failure. Sure, fsf loyalists *may*  
opt for it. Those who have handed over their code to fsf will *have*  
to opt for it (think fsf is going to ask them for an opinion?),  
50,000 members of sourceforge will click for it - but thinking people  
who are interested in writing and developing code and making a living  
out of it?



--
regards

Kenneth Gonsalves
Associate, NRC-FOSS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nrcfosshelpline.in/web/




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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/29, Kenneth Gonsalves [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


if freedom is important you should go for the freest licence of all -
pure bsd and not the most restrictive - gpl



The restrictions GPL require is to protect freedom of all users and
not just the first layer (those who get the code directly from the
main developers)  who can then make it proprietary.


--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman
Me scribbles at http://www.pravi.co.nr

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Baishampayan Ghose
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Saturday 28 October 2006 08:19 PM, Devdas Bhagat cobbled together
some glyphs to say:
 if license is all that important, how come hurd is where it is?
 Because Linux is GPL. Hurd was started because GNU project wanted a
 Free kernel tocomplete the GNU Operating System. Once Linux is
 available under GPL that goal is alreaday achieved, we have GNU/Linux
 as a variant of complete GNU Operating System . Only motivation to go
 
 So why won't the FSF finish off the HURD and get a proper GNU OS out
 under the GPLv3? Because Linux is *NOT* a GNU project.
 
 I promise, I will call it GNU/HURD.

Once HURD is finished, the OS will be called only GNU.

Regards,
BG

- --
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Ubuntu -- Linux for Human Beings
http://www.ubuntu.com/

1024D/86361B74
BB2C E244 15AD 05C5 523A  90E7 4249 3494 8636 1B74

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread Sudhir Gandotra
On Sun, 2006-10-29 at 01:07 +0530, Philip Tellis wrote:
 Sometime Today, Dinesh Joshi assembled some asciibets to say:
 
  I understood what he was trying to say. But according to Stallman
  creation of proprietary software was of no consequence. Hence it doesnt
 
 Each person needs to decide for himself what is of consequence and what 
 isn't.  It is unhealthy for society if everyone has the same mind.
 
Well said. If this, just this that you have written, Philip, was
understood by people, the world would be different.
Its just that some try to impose their landscape on others that we have
violence and problems begin in an endless loop.
-- 
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OpenLX Linux OS, Linux Training, Support, Services, Product Development
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread jtd
On Sunday 29 October 2006 13:36, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 On 29-Oct-06, at 12:58 PM, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
  and again in the same thread. No one has actually quoted any
  clause in gpl3 thats objectionable and the actual topic of the
  thread.
 
  i quoted a full paragraph asking for an explanation - nothing has
  come so far

I replied. Quote
Or providing hardware (reprogrammable), an intermediate layer 
(interpreter for eg) which is closed and designed by u, and gpl 
software which cannot run without the interpreter is not allowed. 
Your example in a previous mail is what is being referred to.

 and here it is again:

 quote

   The System Libraries of an executable work include every
 subunit such that (a) the identical subunit is normally included as
 an adjunct in the distribution of either a major essential
 component (kernel, window system, and so on) of the specific
 operating system (if any) on which the object code runs, or a
 compiler used to produce the object code, or an object code
 interpreter used to run it, and (b) the subunit (aside from
 possible incidental extensions) serves only to enable use of the
 work with that system component or compiler or interpreter, or to
 implement a widely used or standard interface for which an
 implementation is available to the public in source code form.

 /unquote

VM sitting between machine hardware and gpl software requiring either 
vm and or special libs and or complier to compile which therefore 
will allow gpl software to run only on that machine+ vm combo


 So whats wrong with this paragraph? It is gobbledygook. I am a
 lawyer and i wish to make certain points clear:

 1. It is a foul canard to say that legalese is obscure and
 confusing. It need not be. Where the motives of the drafter of a
 law are pure, where he is interested in justice and fairness - the
 resulting law is clear, concise and understandable. As is most of
 the Constitution of India and the constitution of the US for that
 matter. The Indian Penal Code as orginally drafted by Macaulay is a
 model of clarity and conciseness - it is a work of literature.

 2. When legalese becomes obscure is when amendments are made for
 ulterior motives - to cater to vested interests, to be unfair and
 unjust - then you need to BS to escape censure. Like exemptions to
 our income tax act, excise act - and exemptions anywhere (i'm sure
 jtd would provide enough examples here).

Dont get me started. Just had a spat in the customs over another 
mindless rule that actually rewards the crooks.
 

 3. Good law is always reactive - a specific response to a specific
 problem.

Correct. In this case the extremely treacherous issue of hardware 
lockdown.

   It is practical and usually clear and concise. Bad law is 
 an attempt to generalise - anticipate every possible thing that may
 occur and provide a remedy. This almost always backfires.

So headover to gplv3 site and suggest simplifications.

 4. Strangely enough the foss development cycle also follows this
 paradigm. Solve a problem facing you, code it, release it. Rather
 than one monolithical solution to all the worlds problems, lots of
 small solutions to small problems. Yes, think ahead - have some
 vision - but one step at a time. Or, in other words, think
 globally, act locally.

 5. The authors of the gpl v3 are planning to solve all the world's
 problems in one go. Wont work. This is over-engineering. If you
 design one shoe to fit all - it fits no one. What we need is a set
 of licenses - specific to different types of programs and specific
 to different types of legal systems. Lots and lots of little little
 licenses. Maybe, in course of time, these will converge. Maybe not.

The simplicity of v2 stemmed from the fact that copyright law is well 
established and almost similiar in every country and country specific 
variations were still covered by the gpl (by fortunate circumstances 
than design).
Patent law and drm are the exact opposite of the above. Infact DRM is 
meant specifically to usurp the rights provided by copyright law not 
by modyfying copyright law whch would uncover the real motive, but by 
mandating restrictions on hardware and software. V3 has to deal with 
this while being disadvantaged by not being a law maker but merely a 
copyright holder / advisor to copyright holders.

 7. Commit early. Commit often. This is the foss way of doing
 things. And release when it is ready. 

Exactly what the v3 committee is doing.

 Commit once in 15 years, 
 anounce your schedule, set a release date, call for world wide
 conferences, waste money conducting those - is this vista? or is
 this gpl v3? 

That is because drm / software patents and it's impact have happened 
very recently (infact software patents until last year were being 
granted only in the US and until they were considerd for legeslation 
in the EU, India and other countries via WTO, v2 did not need any 
urgent change.  Fortunately software patent provisions were 

Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-29 Thread jtd
On Sunday 29 October 2006 12:46, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 On 28-Oct-06, at 8:19 PM, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:
  Freedom is important to me because I get the benefits of being

 if freedom is important you should go for the freest licence of all
 - pure bsd and not the most restrictive - gpl

Popular misconception. A third party confered (or rather not removed) 
right to exploit is not freedom.
Reminds one of the MAD theory of detente. Only more warped. I have 
created this catapult for knocking down mangoes. I known it can kill 
people. But then other people can kill u. So go ahead and use it and 
dont be an idiot. Which to some read as kill everyone who might even 
think of killing u at the earliest. U know the guys who took the bsd 
stack no.


-- 
Rgds
JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread jtd
On Friday 27 October 2006 17:44, Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
 On Friday 27 October 2006 16:10, jtd wrote:
  The gpl does not ask u to give up freedom. It
  tells u treat others exactly equally. .

 GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software
 though. 

Please read my mail. Freedom to exploit (prevent, injure, restrict, 
make difficult, allow misuse etc. etc.) is not freedom. It's 
exploitation.

 Sometimes it can be necessary.

The exploiter always finds umpteen reasons of how important it is for 
him to be allowed exloitation, but not one reason to change his 
behaviour.

 People always shout at NVIDIA or ATI for making closed drivers.
 But, say if you release the drivers and the specs, isn't it
 possible that someone else might copy your design or steal your
 ideas? 

Welcome to the real world my friend. U think competitor sifts thru 
source code to get to your hardware design ?. He buys a couple of yor 
boards and triapses off to Taiwan where guys with etchers and 
steppers strip away your design layer by layer. then duplicate it. 
But this happens only for super hit products with long life cycles 
(read greater than 3 yrs) eg. game machines . The above companies 
products dont last 2 qrts. The real reason is that the designe are so 
full of bugs that it would qualify for recalls (if not lawsuits). One 
of the drivere writers admitted as much.

 I heard (I said, 'heard', I don't have a definitive proof 
 for this..) that KDE 4 people are not releasing too many 'visual'
 details on Plasma just yet just to prevent people from copying
 their ideas.

 I could be wrong here. Please correct me if I am.

 I don't agree with RMS when he says that GPL is defending freedom
 this way. I think it enforces freedom. 

Nobody's asking u to use gpld software. Use any of the prop stuff. If 
u use gpl the licence terms requires u to not exploit or treat others 
differently. And V3 is trying to close the loop holes afforded by new 
tech developments - encryption at the cpu, VM like zen.
Note that as an end user u can use any of these to protect your 
machine. And as a vendor u can use any of these subject to not 
preventing the user from removing or modifying any gpld stuff and the 
same being allowed to execute on the hardware in question.

-- 
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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread jtd
On Saturday 28 October 2006 09:37, Devdas Bhagat wrote:


   IBM happened.
 
  why did it not happen to BSD? couldnt be the licence?

 Customers were asking IBM for Linux. Keep in mind that the biggest
 driving factor for IBM was server sales. IBM was basically losing
 out to whitebox vendors on the basis of price alone. That was due
 to quite a bit of hype being garnered by Linux (and the fact that
 newer admins tended to be more familiar with Linux than *BSD). 

Inspite of BSD being more complete and useable before linux was being 
written?. BSD 4.3 (afair) was available for $100 on 30 5.5 floppies 
( and ran a whole lot of engineering software in 1988 (afair). (That 
was why i had written to them for a set of floppies. )
Logically it should have had far more traction than linux inspite of 
the legal hassles. And it would have made sense for IBM or anyone 
else to use BSD. But the problem was (imo) the licence. Others could 
take away your code, screw the market and sit back. Bad for u in the 
short term and the longterm.


Rgds
JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Devdas Bhagat
On 28/10/06 11:35 +0530, jtd wrote:
snip
 Inspite of BSD being more complete and useable before linux was being 
 written?. BSD 4.3 (afair) was available for $100 on 30 5.5 floppies 
 ( and ran a whole lot of engineering software in 1988 (afair). (That 
^^^
ATT happened.

 was why i had written to them for a set of floppies. )
 Logically it should have had far more traction than linux inspite of 
 the legal hassles. And it would have made sense for IBM or anyone 

It did. But managers tend to take a dim view of lawsuits (unless the
company involved is really, really big, like IBM or MSFT). ATT vs BSD
was Goliath vs David.
Also, *BSD at that time did not run on IDE disks, which most home users
had (and still have).

 else to use BSD. But the problem was (imo) the licence. Others could 
 take away your code, screw the market and sit back. Bad for u in the 
 short term and the longterm.
 
If you pay IBM enough money, they will even support *BSD, and provide
code.

Devdas Bhagat

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 28-Oct-06, at 11:35 AM, jtd wrote:


the legal hassles. And it would have made sense for IBM or anyone
else to use BSD. But the problem was (imo) the licence.


if license is all that important, how come hurd is where it is?


--
regards

Kenneth Gonsalves
Associate, NRC-FOSS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nrcfosshelpline.in/web/




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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Devdas Bhagat
On 28/10/06 19:45 +0530, ???|Praveen wrote:
 2006/10/28, Kenneth Gonsalves [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 if license is all that important, how come hurd is where it is?
 
 Because Linux is GPL. Hurd was started because GNU project wanted a
 Free kernel tocomplete the GNU Operating System. Once Linux is
 available under GPL that goal is alreaday achieved, we have GNU/Linux
 as a variant of complete GNU Operating System . Only motivation to go

So why won't the FSF finish off the HURD and get a proper GNU OS out
under the GPLv3? Because Linux is *NOT* a GNU project.

I promise, I will call it GNU/HURD.

Devdas Bhagat

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/28, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


3. Users (mere Mortals -  I belong this category :-)) -

These are the people who want usable, quality software / content which
is reasonably priced (preferably gratis ;-)). They are not very much
bothered about freedom and source code as it mostly irrelevant for
them. The FSF GODs and Devils and Demons (described below) are
competing for their souls. :-)


Freedom is important to me because I get the benefits of being able
to change the software and distribute the improvements because there
are many brilliant programmers out there in my community who improves
the software from time to time and are happy to see the members of
this community using their improvements. I get to use all new
functionalities, less bugs and new contents like themes even though I
cannot code a single line


--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman
Me scribbles at http://www.pravi.co.nr

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread jtd
On Saturday 28 October 2006 19:12, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 On 28-Oct-06, at 11:35 AM, jtd wrote:
  the legal hassles. And it would have made sense for IBM or anyone
  else to use BSD. But the problem was (imo) the licence.

 if license is all that important, how come hurd is where it is?

microkernel architecture. Which had to be designed from scratch. 
Unlike linux which had bsd and unix to fallback on.

-- 
Rgds
JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/28, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


1. GNU and FSF People and their fans -

These are GODs themselves with halo and all. Their goal is to
liberate the soul and give freedom to user (another actor in the
game/play). The latest weapon in their arsenal is GPLv3. They think
that the previous weapon they had (GPLv2) has some flaws and other
licenses like - *BSD, NLP, Creative Commons are useless.


You wouldn't want to work on code for a proprietary company unless
you are a BSD developer

There are a lot of different licenses under the creative commons
family some of them impose restrictions on Freedom which we don't
approve

We created a Free Operating System so that all users live an ethical
life in Freedom, so you don't have to break law to help your best
friend with the cool new graphics program which you like very much

We hacked the copyright law to give away the some of our rights
which would subjugate you and called it copyleft so that you could
live in freedom

We don't want anyone to steal our code and subjugate users so we
protect our code and fight for freedom when people want to use our
code and subjugate their users using new technics like tivoisation

--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman
Me scribbles at http://www.pravi.co.nr

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/28, Devdas Bhagat [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


So why won't the FSF finish off the HURD and get a proper GNU OS out
under the GPLv3? Because Linux is *NOT* a GNU project.


We started GNU project to create a complete Free Operating System. We
now have such a Free Operating System with important contribution from
Linus Torvalds and we want to give credit to his work we call it
GNU/Linux (Linux based GNU system, GNU plus Linux)

Once we had Linux available as Free Software our main aim is achieved
(to give users freedom) and the reason why we didn't stop Hurd because
it is designed to be better than Unix.But since we already achieved
our main goal (a Free Operating System that respects its users and
help them live an ethical life), the technical merits are only less
important than Freedom. So we give less priority to Hurd and give more
priority to fight new threats to users Freedom like DRM and Software
patents ( so GPLv3 is more important to us than Hurd).

But if you are interested in the technical merits like flexibility for
its users, more power to the administrators, security of the system
and much more from the micro kernel design

( Read what Andrew Tanenbaum thinks about these
http://www.cs.vu.nl/~ast/reliable-os/ )

Join with the GNU Hurd hackers and help us finish it.

You can try how it works. http://lily.nipl.net:/ you can get a
shell account to the GNU system and see it for yourself what all cool
new features it offers.

Or try a live CD from http://superunprivileged.org/

Or you can get some guidelines from http://hurd.in/bin/view/Hurd/HOWTOs


I promise, I will call it GNU/HURD.



Sure. We will call it just GNU :-)


Cheers
Praveen A
--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Saturday 28 October 2006 15:18, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:
 Sure. We will call it just GNU :-)

You know, there are things which are practical and which are 
theoretical. Linus made something that was practical while GNU guys are 
trying to make something that is theoretical ;) Not that its 
unachievable but sometimes its more important to get your product out 
the door than make it a idol of perfection! :P

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/29, Dinesh Joshi [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

You know, there are things which are practical and which are
theoretical.

You mean to say gcc is theoretical, glibs, emacs, gnome ... are theoretical?

Not that its

unachievable but sometimes its more important to get your product out
the door than make it a idol of perfection! :P


Our priority was users' freedom and we are PRACTICAL, that is why we
chose Linux for a kernel rather than waiting for Hurd to finish
(perfection, may be not?). We did release the product in time and it
is selling hot, though they have forgotten about our contribution
don't want to talk about us when they have everything got working. If
Linux was not there we would have gone ahead and finished Hurd or may
be chosen BSD or something else? Do you think Linux would be what it
is today without GNU projects contribution and pioneering efforts?
There weren't many Open Source or Scratch my itch people before
GNU/Linux got popular. GNU project was started in 1984 and Linux was
released in 1992 and Open Source movement was started in 1998. The
idealism got us what we have today.

Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman

Regards
Praveen
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Saturday 28 October 2006 15:56, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:

Ah...what has happened to the art of subtle hinting! :P

Linux kernel == something practical
Hurd kernel == something theoretical

Hurd looks nice on paper and as even Tanenbaum agrees Microkernels are 
more of research thingies than anything else!

Yes, I am in the Linus camp. Microkernels are PITA to get working 
correctly. They look attractive thats all!

Now PLEASE dont start a Linux vs Hurd or Monolithic ( or Hybrid ) 
kernels vs Microkernels!


-- 
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Rony

Hello All,

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/rhasan/linux/

Please read the article above and come to your own conclusions about who 
came first, the egg or the chicken.


Please end the thread now.

Regards,

Rony.
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Devdas Bhagat
On 28/10/06 21:26 +0530, ???|Praveen wrote:
snip
 There weren't many Open Source or Scratch my itch people before
 GNU/Linux got popular. GNU project was started in 1984 and Linux was

Well, the FSF was mostly started as a response to then new closed
source culture. It wasn't idealism, as much as the fact that there was a
bunch of people who wanted to do things differently from the closed
source vendor and use whatever was available. There was the BSD camp,
and the FSF. The BSD folks didn't write their own compiler because the
output of gcc is not GPLed.

Devdas Bhagat

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Philip Tellis

Sometime on Oct 27, Dinesh Joshi assembled some asciibets to say:


of ignorance. Boss, what was GNU project started for? It was started
precisely _BECAUSE_ Stallman was completely opposed to proprietary
softwares. Why? Well he was not allowed to fix some source! Why the
heck do you think will GPL support creation of proprietary software if
the creator of the FSF was completely against the entire ideology of
proprietary software.


He's not saying that the GPL should allow proprietary software or that 
it's bad.  All he's saying is that the GPL takes away one of the 
developer's freedoms.


That's not entirely correct though, at it stems from the fact that 
proprietary software is incorrectly named.  The word proprietary means 
owned or belonging to someone.  All software is owned by someone (the 
author) unless explicitly placed in the public domain.


So, if there's anything that isn't proprietary software, it's public 
domain software.  Everything else is proprietary, including GPLed 
software, BSD licenced software and restrictive EULA wrapped software.


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Philip Tellis

Sometime on Oct 28, Devdas Bhagat assembled some asciibets to say:


I promise, I will call it GNU/HURD.


You don't have to call it GNU/HURD.  You have to call it GNU.  GNU is 
the name of the OS (and also the name of the project to create said OS). 
Hurd is just a kernel.


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Saturday 28 October 2006 18:53, Philip Tellis wrote:
 He's not saying that the GPL should allow proprietary software or
 that it's bad.  All he's saying is that the GPL takes away one of the
 developer's freedoms.

 That's not entirely correct though, at it stems from the fact that
 proprietary software is incorrectly named.  The word proprietary
 means owned or belonging to someone.  All software is owned by
 someone (the author) unless explicitly placed in the public domain.

 So, if there's anything that isn't proprietary software, it's public
 domain software.  Everything else is proprietary, including GPLed
 software, BSD licenced software and restrictive EULA wrapped
 software.

I understood what he was trying to say. But according to Stallman 
creation of proprietary software was of no consequence. Hence it doesnt 
even count as a freedom. I am taking the historical meaning of 
proprietary software and not the one that you just defined.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Philip Tellis

Sometime Today, Dinesh Joshi assembled some asciibets to say:


I understood what he was trying to say. But according to Stallman
creation of proprietary software was of no consequence. Hence it doesnt


Each person needs to decide for himself what is of consequence and what 
isn't.  It is unhealthy for society if everyone has the same mind.


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Abhishek Daga
--- Dinesh Joshi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Saturday 28 October 2006 18:53, Philip Tellis wrote:
  He's not saying that the GPL should allow proprietary software or
  that it's bad.  All he's saying is that the GPL takes away one of
 the
  developer's freedoms.
 

Hi folks, this thread is an excellent example of tenacity. If we could
get this going till year end, we'd probably have enough material for a
book?

What say?

Cheers
abhishek


 

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(http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com) 


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-28 Thread Dileep M. Kumar

On 10/28/06, Devdas Bhagat [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


I promise, I will call it GNU/HURD.


It should be GNU HURD (no / in between). Since Linux is not a project
of GNU, its called GNU/Linux.

Regards
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Devdas Bhagat
On 27/10/06 11:23 +0530, Baishampayan Ghose wrote:
snip
 I really fail to understand the reason behind your fascination for BSD /
 MIT style licenses. Do you really think Linux (the kernel) would have
 been as powerful as t is now had it been released under, say the BSD

Yes. Linux happened at the right time. In case you didn't know your
history, the original BSD group was sued by ATT for releasing BSD in
the late 80s/early 90s. The suit was eventually won by the BSD hackers,
but they lost crucial momentum in the early 90s (till ~ 1994 or so).

After ths, the BSD project forked, with FreeBSD focussing on x86, wile
NetBSD focussed on portability.

 license? Exactly why do you think FreeBSD doesn't support half the
 hardware that Linux (the kernel) supports today? Even 5-6 years back

Because Linux ran with the PC, while BSD ran on far more servers. Until
2.6, the BSD kernel was far superior to Linux. With 2.6, Linus had
resources from IBM and the NSA thrown in to help, making it take a
slight lead over FreeBSD 5.x. Also, FreeBSD 5.x was the first BSD
version which had kernel threads, and was basically an experimental
release (think Linux 2.5 quality).

Today, more developers use Linux and are happy if their code works
there, rather than writing portable code. Earlier, developers would
write on *BSD at home, and test on Solaris at work, with the resultant
benefits of stability and performance.

 FreeBSD was considered far more superior than Linux (the kernel), so
 exactly what happened to the Linux kernel project in the recent times
 and how did FreeBSD lose the race?

IBM happened.

 Now don't talk about the licenses of Python, PostgreSQL, etc. They are
 in BSD style licenses because those projects are relatively smaller in
 scope and size as compared to say gcc or the Linux kernel. None can take

What does size have to do with it?

snip
 kernel or gcc, you need to give up some freedoms to make sure the
 essential freedoms are maintained no matter what. Otherwise you may

Do you understand the meaning of irony?

 suffer as FreeBSD is suffering these days. Theo de Raadt (hacker
 extraordinaire) has absolutely no way to make sure people who use
 FreeBSD source contribute back in some way, and thus the only thing he

Theo De Raadt is the lead developer for OpenBSD, not FreeBSD. His goal
is to ensure that _all_ the code out there is good, regardless of whther
it is closed source or not. This is a different goal from RMS, whose
goal is to ensure that hackers can always modify the code and make their
systems do what they want done.

 can do is cry out loud and beg people for code and or money.

A lot of GPLed projects also ask for donations. Keep in mind that
OpenBSD has avoided a lot of security exploits because of their
insistence on source, not binary blobs.

snip
 in any sense and yet they are not so simple. What you need to understand
 is that the GPLv3 text _is_ legalese, and legalese is never simple.
 
The problem is that legalese looks like English, but isn't. I am sure
that the lawyers will actually understand the GPLv3, and the preamble
will explain the intent to the non-lawyers out there (for those who
actually read licenses).

Devdas Bhagat

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread jtd
On Friday 27 October 2006 14:36, Devdas Bhagat wrote:
 On 27/10/06 11:23 +0530, Baishampayan Ghose wrote:
 snip

  I really fail to understand the reason behind your fascination
  for BSD / MIT style licenses. Do you really think Linux (the
  kernel) would have been as powerful as t is now had it been
  released under, say the BSD

 Yes. Linux happened at the right time. In case you didn't know your
 history, the original BSD group was sued by ATT for releasing BSD
 in the late 80s/early 90s. The suit was eventually won by the BSD
 hackers, but they lost crucial momentum in the early 90s (till ~
 1994 or so).

That apart, the majority of coders prefer that their works are not 
misapropriated and hence prefer to gpl their work, which results in a 
one way migration of code from bsd to linux.


 After ths, the BSD project forked, with FreeBSD focussing on x86,
 wile NetBSD focussed on portability.

NetBSD has fallen back to the point of being unusable according to the 
founder in a long rant on the netbsd list.

  license? Exactly why do you think FreeBSD doesn't support half
  the hardware that Linux (the kernel) supports today? Even 5-6
  years back

 Because Linux ran with the PC, while BSD ran on far more servers.
 Until 2.6, the BSD kernel was far superior to Linux. With 2.6,
 Linus had resources from IBM and the NSA thrown in to help, making
 it take a slight lead over FreeBSD 5.x. Also, FreeBSD 5.x was the
 first BSD version which had kernel threads, and was basically an
 experimental release (think Linux 2.5 quality).

 Today, more developers use Linux and are happy if their code works
 there, rather than writing portable code. Earlier, developers would
 write on *BSD at home, and test on Solaris at work, with the
 resultant benefits of stability and performance.

  FreeBSD was considered far more superior than Linux (the kernel),
  so exactly what happened to the Linux kernel project in the
  recent times and how did FreeBSD lose the race?

 IBM happened.

why did it not happen to BSD? couldnt be the licence?


 snip

  kernel or gcc, you need to give up some freedoms to make sure the
  essential freedoms are maintained no matter what. Otherwise you
  may

Misconception (or inapropriate words).
Permission to treat others less equally than yourself is not freedom, 
it's exploitation. The gpl does not ask u to give up freedom. It 
tells u treat others exactly equally. .


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Mrugesh Karnik
On Friday 27 October 2006 16:10, jtd wrote:
 The gpl does not ask u to give up freedom. It
 tells u treat others exactly equally. .

GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software though. 
Sometimes it can be necessary.

People always shout at NVIDIA or ATI for making closed drivers. But, say 
if you release the drivers and the specs, isn't it possible that 
someone else might copy your design or steal your ideas? I heard (I 
said, 'heard', I don't have a definitive proof for this..) that KDE 4 
people are not releasing too many 'visual' details on Plasma just yet 
just to prevent people from copying their ideas.

I could be wrong here. Please correct me if I am.

I don't agree with RMS when he says that GPL is defending freedom this 
way. I think it enforces freedom. But, I don't mind that. Even the good 
things need to be enforced at times. Whatever it may be, I don't have a 
problem with the way GPL works.

-- 

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GPG Key 0xBA6F1DA8
Public key on http://wwwkeys.pgp.net



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Friday 27 October 2006 17:44, Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
 GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software though.
 Sometimes it can be necessary.

I've been keeping away from this thread but this is an exemplary example 
of ignorance. Boss, what was GNU project started for? It was started 
precisely _BECAUSE_ Stallman was completely opposed to proprietary 
softwares. Why? Well he was not allowed to fix some source! Why the 
heck do you think will GPL support creation of proprietary software if 
the creator of the FSF was completely against the entire ideology of 
proprietary software.

If you want to write proprietary software then use BSD style licensed 
software.


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Mrugesh Karnik
On Friday 27 October 2006 23:10, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
 On Friday 27 October 2006 17:44, Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
  GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software
  though. Sometimes it can be necessary.

 I've been keeping away from this thread but this is an exemplary
 example of ignorance. Boss, what was GNU project started for? It was
 started precisely _BECAUSE_ Stallman was completely opposed to
 proprietary softwares. Why? Well he was not allowed to fix some
 source! Why the heck do you think will GPL support creation of
 proprietary software if the creator of the FSF was completely against
 the entire ideology of proprietary software.

 If you want to write proprietary software then use BSD style licensed
 software.

Boss, have you actually read my entire message?


-- 

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Friday 27 October 2006 23:36, Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
   GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software
   though. Sometimes it can be necessary.

 Boss, have you actually read my entire message?

Yes. And I've justified my reaction... There is no question 
of sometime. GPL doesn't allow for proprietary software. End of 
story.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Mrugesh Karnik
On Friday 27 October 2006 23:53, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
 On Friday 27 October 2006 23:36, Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
GPL does take away your freedom to make proprietary software
though. Sometimes it can be necessary.
 
  Boss, have you actually read my entire message?

 Yes. And I've justified my reaction... There is no question
 of sometime. GPL doesn't allow for proprietary software. End of
 story.

Exactly. Whatever may be the reason behind it, but one of the freedoms 
has been sacrificed. Whether its a good thing or a bad is another 
matter.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-27 Thread Devdas Bhagat
On 27/10/06 16:10 +0530, jtd wrote:
snip
 That apart, the majority of coders prefer that their works are not 
 misapropriated and hence prefer to gpl their work, which results in a 
 one way migration of code from bsd to linux.
 
I know more people who put out code under the BSD license than the GPL.

snip
  IBM happened.
 
 why did it not happen to BSD? couldnt be the licence?
 
Customers were asking IBM for Linux. Keep in mind that the biggest
driving factor for IBM was server sales. IBM was basically losing out to
whitebox vendors on the basis of price alone. That was due to quite a
bit of hype being garnered by Linux (and the fact that newer admins
tended to be more familiar with Linux than *BSD). The fact that the BSDs
took longer to support IDE was a significant factor in admins being more
experienced with Linux than *BSD.

The license doesn't have _much_ to do with the populatiry of Linux.

 
  snip
 
   kernel or gcc, you need to give up some freedoms to make sure the
   essential freedoms are maintained no matter what. Otherwise you
   may
 
 Misconception (or inapropriate words).
 Permission to treat others less equally than yourself is not freedom, 
 it's exploitation. The gpl does not ask u to give up freedom. It 
 tells u treat others exactly equally. .
 
 
 -- 
 Rgds
 JTD
 
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 http://mm.glug-bom.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxers

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 23:15, Philip Tellis wrote:
 Sometime Today, jtd assembled some asciibets to say:
  Notice how a whole lot of wall street and hollywood types use
  gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
  convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is
  these

 and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke to told me
 that they used linux because it was technically superior to any of
 the alternatives.  
Convienence = tech superiority = stability+speed+effeciency+reduced 
maintanence+upgradibility+customizable... Take your pick.

 It wasn't the cost - they were already spending 
 several hundred million dollars on hardware that they would have to
 throw out as soon as the film was done.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Thursday 26 October 2006 06:53, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 On 25-Oct-06, at 9:08 PM, jtd wrote:
  the case of Linus he does not want to be poltical and resents the
  kernel development being made a political battle ground (IMO
  primarily because companies likely to be affected are substantial
  resource contributors)

 and do you have anything to substantiate this? 

Linus is on record abt the politics. lkml for the details
And his logic is that he does not care if someone uses any means other 
than hiding the source to hide whatever it is they are hiding. Things 
like cellphones (A780 has a drm partition), Tivo, PS3 etc.

 Is this the case 
 also with apache, subversion, postgresql, sqlite, python, php,
 perl, django ... Or is it that there are also sensible non-fanatics
 in the foss world - who are also doing most of the development

What is fanatic about the V3? As i said earlier plenty of 
misconception but very little logic. Give me logic.
Past success is no gurantee of future success, particularly in the 
light of recent events like tivosiation, drm and new bioses (EFI ) 
that will not boot an unsigned blob. Buy a preloaded doze or RH or 
even my box and u cant load anything else.
To me it seems arrogance and overconfidence about technical ability by 
developers who think that they wont be affected.
Otoh imo the only downside is v3 might stiffle deployment in mass 
markets (already) controlled by incumbents and hence stiffle 
standards. And this arg is just cause i have to make one against v3 
rather than supported by facts.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 26-Oct-06, at 1:59 PM, jtd wrote:



primarily because companies likely to be affected are substantial
resource contributors)


i was talking of substantiating this (quoted above)




Is this the case
also with apache, subversion, postgresql, sqlite, python, php,
perl, django ... Or is it that there are also sensible non-fanatics
in the foss world - who are also doing most of the development


What is fanatic about the V3?


v3 is not fanatic - many proponents of v3 are fanatics. The problem  
with v3, like the problem with hurd, is that it is overengineered -  
and hence will not be effective. Small incremental changes is the way  
to go - not huge over-hyped, overplanned changes.



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regards

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Philip Tellis

Sometime Today, j cobbled together some glyphs to say:


gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is
these


and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke to told me
that they used linux because it was technically superior to any of
the alternatives.

Convienence = tech superiority = stability+speed+effeciency+reduced
maintanence+upgradibility+customizable... Take your pick.


So why is it wrong (your words) to pick technology because it is 
technically superior?


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/26, Kenneth Gonsalves [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

you seem to be unaware that the gpl (any version) represents only a
small subset of licenses available.


NO. GPL is _the_ most popular FOSS License.

See http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/gpl-compatible.html

quote
SourceForge.net reported on November 10, 2003 that the GPL accounted
for 71% of the 45,736 projects it hosted with OSI-approved open source
licenses (next most popular were the LGPL, 10%, and the BSD licenses,
7%).
/quote

In fact, as of now, the most

popular license appears to be the Mozilla Public License.


Can you provide a link to your claim that Mozilla Public license is
the most popular license. You can see Mozilla is not even coming in
the first three positions. May be you mis understood the information
from opensource.org

quote The classic licenses, GPL, LGPL, BSD, and MIT, were the most
commonly used for open-source software before the Mozilla release in
early 1998. The Mozilla Public License has since become widely used.
/quote

It does not imply MPL is the most popular license.
Further, i

just went through the draft of v3 - it is a nightmare. If adopted by
anyone, it is going to cause endless confusion.


Can you specify which portions are not clear and why you think it
causes confution?

V2, on the other hand

was a model of simplicity compared to this.


And it has loop holes which are being exploited by the likes of Tivo.

Compare the gpl to

creative commons licences and you will understand the difference.


Creative commons is meant for digital content and not software.

Regards
Praveen

--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
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Me scribbles at http://www.pravi.co.nr

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen

2006/10/25, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

What credible answers we can provide? Instead of RMS refusing to talk
to this fellow just because he calls GNU/Linux as Linux, is just a
lost opportunity to make your *point*.


RMS is the founder of Free Software movement, so anything he tells
will be associated with Free Software Movement. He started the GNU
project so that all computer users will be Free, when you call it just
Linux more than the technical reason you are completely ignoring the
importance of GNU project and Freedom (Linux is never associated
himself with Freedom).

It would have been a no issue if we already won the game, but it is
more important than ever that we speak about Freedom and teach others
why Freedom is important as there is greater threats to Freedom. If
Software Patents becomes a reality (everywhere) Free Software
development becomes illegal as it is not possible to keep track of the
patents you might violate and comply with all. Also when devices that
use Free Software but deny the Freedom becomes more common it is not
enough that we get the source code.

RMS clearly understand the importance of Freedom and why we should
teach people to respect Freedom. So it is quite natural that he insist
using the right words and he stresses Freedom above all other
motivations because it most threatened.

Regards
Praveen

--
Value your freedom, or you will lose it, teaches history.
`Don't bother us with politics', respond those who don't want to learn.
-- Richard Stallman
Me scribbles at http://www.pravi.co.nr

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Toufeeq Hussain

Hi,

On 10/26/06, പ്രവീണ്|Praveen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

It would have been a no issue if we already won the game, but it is
more important than ever that we speak about Freedom and teach others
why Freedom is important as there is greater threats to Freedom. If
Software Patents becomes a reality (everywhere) Free Software
development becomes illegal as it is not possible to keep track of the
patents you might violate and comply with all. Also when devices that
use Free Software but deny the Freedom becomes more common it is not
enough that we get the source code.


/me wonders..

Is the GPL v3 a futuristic Free/OpenSource license whose true value
will only be appreciated after 10 years have passed ? By looking at
short term gains and saying GPLv3 is bad for business (as the Forbes
article says) are we repeating history ?

Surely when GPL v1 came out, the same anti-freedom sentiments we hear
today would have been mirrored in technology circles then. Usage of
the GPL v2 by the Linux kernel community and it's success in the
tech-industry has proved that 'free as in speech' is not just a dream
but a reality. On similar terms, will it require a GPLv3-project
(similar to the linux kernel) which gains largescale business momentum
to show that software under that particular license and free from DRM
and patents can survive ?

I guess the answer to the GPL v3 debate will take some time. If say,
after 10 years business' see that GPLv2 has failed, we can always say,
'I told you so..'

just my $0.0002

-Toufeeq
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 26-Oct-06, at 3:49 PM, പ്രവീണ്‍‌|Praveen wrote:


2006/10/26, Kenneth Gonsalves [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

you seem to be unaware that the gpl (any version) represents only a
small subset of licenses available.


NO. GPL is _the_ most popular FOSS License.


there are around 45 licenses available - gpl is one of them


See http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/gpl-compatible.html

quote
SourceForge.net reported on November 10, 2003 that the GPL accounted
for 71% of the 45,736 projects it hosted with OSI-approved open source
licenses (next most popular were the LGPL, 10%, and the BSD licenses,
7%).
/quote


how many of these 45,000 projects are live? i am talking of live and  
useful projects. Also dont forget that in sourceforge the default  
choice for license is gpl and most people just click that without  
knowing or caring what it is. But look around at the best and most  
used applications - what is the percentage of gpl stuff?




In fact, as of now, the most

popular license appears to be the Mozilla Public License.


Can you provide a link to your claim that Mozilla Public license is
the most popular license. You can see Mozilla is not even coming in
the first three positions. May be you mis understood the information
from opensource.org


no link - danese cooper  mentioned it during a talk, saying that  
mozilla style licenses are most popular now a days - and by popular i  
mean people who think long and hard about what license they are going  
to use.



just went through the draft of v3 - it is a nightmare. If adopted by
anyone, it is going to cause endless confusion.


Can you specify which portions are not clear and why you think it
causes confution?


I cant - because most of it is obscure and would cause confusrion,  
for example explain this:


The System Libraries of an executable work include every subunit  
such that (a) the identical subunit is normally included as an  
adjunct in the distribution of either a major essential component  
(kernel, window system, and so on) of the specific operating system  
(if any) on which the object code runs, or a compiler used to produce  
the object code, or an object code interpreter used to run it, and  
(b) the subunit (aside from possible incidental extensions) serves  
only to enable use of the work with that system component or compiler  
or interpreter, or to implement a widely used or standard interface  
for which an implementation is available to the public in source code  
form.




Compare the gpl to

creative commons licences and you will understand the difference.


Creative commons is meant for digital content and not software.


even i know that. I was talking about the importance of a license  
being clear and simple. Which creative commons is and gpl v3 is not.



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regards

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Associate, NRC-FOSS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Thursday 26 October 2006 14:54, Philip Tellis wrote:
 Sometime Today, j cobbled together some glyphs to say:
  gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
  convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is
  these
 
  and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke to told me
  that they used linux because it was technically superior to any
  of the alternatives.
 
  Convienence = tech superiority =
  stability+speed+effeciency+reduced
  maintanence+upgradibility+customizable... Take your pick.

 So why is it wrong (your words) to pick technology because it is
 technically superior?

The problem is in using this tech to hobble others. And the ones who 
are primarily clamouring for this are the very same media companies 
who are picking gnu/linux for it's tech superiority. Thus it becomes 
imperative to have protection mechanisms to prevent the hobbling. The 
v3 licence is primarily aimed at this particular aspect. It also 
helps to keep pointing out the freedom part - as RMS and the rest of 
the FSF does.

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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Thursday 26 October 2006 16:46, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:

 even i know that. I was talking about the importance of a license
 being clear and simple. Which creative commons is and gpl v3 is
 not.

You cant have a simple licence. There will be too many loop holes.
The complication is because u dont want to turn away business. Thus u 
can drm the content but not the content player.  U can encrypt 
provided u provide a mechanism to remove the encryption in it's 
entierity or provide the keys. In short providing the software but no 
mechanism for using it on hardware is not allowed. Or providing 
hardware (reprogrammable), an intermediate layer (interpreter for eg) 
which is closed and designed by u, and gpl software which cannot run 
without the interpreter is not allowed. Your example in a previous 
mail is what is being referred to.

BIG FAT WARNING: i too am still trying to understand this thing.

And the more i think of it the more convinced i am of it's neccessity.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Thursday 26 October 2006 16:40, Toufeeq Hussain wrote:

 Surely when GPL v1 came out, the same anti-freedom sentiments we
 hear today would have been mirrored in technology circles then.
 Usage of the GPL v2 by the Linux kernel community and it's success
 in the tech-industry has proved that 'free as in speech' is not
 just a dream but a reality. On similar terms, will it require a
 GPLv3-project (similar to the linux kernel) which gains largescale
 business momentum to show that software under that particular
 license and free from DRM and patents can survive ?

My guess is u wont. The kernel coders will switch - with neccessary 
changes - once they start applying their fomidable intellect to it.


 I guess the answer to the GPL v3 debate will take some time. If
 say, after 10 years business' see that GPLv2 has failed, we can
 always say, 'I told you so..'

Unfortunately, without hardware to run on it might well be a bit too 
late.

-- 
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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread jtd
On Thursday 26 October 2006 14:24, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 On 26-Oct-06, at 1:59 PM, jtd wrote:
  primarily because companies likely to be affected are
  substantial resource contributors)

 i was talking of substantiating this (quoted above)

IBM and Cell processors (on which afaik only linux runs). Intel and 
EFI.  AMD with something called VSA. Notice all are hardware vendors 
and should not be affected by what runs on their processor. Then why 
the effort to lock down hardware? And include bits in the kernel to 
cement it down?. One such effort is on on the OMAP devel site. Omap 
is the TI processor embeded in most middle and highend phones, and 
wifi routers and adsl modems.

MY My. And now Oracle fud about RH and RH playing the same game. 
Things could have been different if RH would have made freedom it's 
usp. Larry Ellision would have looked like BG trying to out RH on 
freedom. Play the incumbents game and u are in deep sh..

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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Rony

jtd wrote:

On Thursday 26 October 2006 16:46, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:


even i know that. I was talking about the importance of a license
being clear and simple. Which creative commons is and gpl v3 is
not.


You cant have a simple licence. There will be too many loop holes.
The complication is because u dont want to turn away business. Thus u 
can drm the content but not the content player.  U can encrypt 
provided u provide a mechanism to remove the encryption in it's 
entierity or provide the keys. In short providing the software but no 
mechanism for using it on hardware is not allowed. Or providing 
hardware (reprogrammable), an intermediate layer (interpreter for eg) 
which is closed and designed by u, and gpl software which cannot run 
without the interpreter is not allowed. Your example in a previous 
mail is what is being referred to.


BIG FAT WARNING: i too am still trying to understand this thing.

And the more i think of it the more convinced i am of it's neccessity.



No idea of any license details but I feel that using libre software to 
create softwares that prevent user access to hardwares or other 
softwares is wrong. What is taken free ( libre ) from society should go 
back free to it. Otherwise let them make their own closed softwares 
using their own team of programmers.


Regards,

Rony



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 26-Oct-06, at 7:46 PM, jtd wrote:


even i know that. I was talking about the importance of a license
being clear and simple. Which creative commons is and gpl v3 is
not.


You cant have a simple licence.


you can - if the license is evolved in the foss way - as all the  
other licenses are evolving, and as far as i can see, getting more  
and more like each other. As i said before comparing the non- 
religious licenses to the GPL v3 is like comparing Linux to Hurd.



--
regards

Kenneth Gonsalves
Associate, NRC-FOSS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nrcfosshelpline.in/web/




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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-26 Thread Toufeeq Hussain

Hi,

On 10/24/06, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux revolution.
Now he threatens to tear it apart.

http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html



A good rebuttal to the Forbes.com article,
http://www.linuxtechdaily.com/2006/10/stallman-gplv3-attack-by-forbes-is-ridiculous/

-Toufeeq
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Dinesh Joshi
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 05:55, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
 i agree 100% with jtd - but didnt say anything because i knew he  
 would word it much better than i ever could

Uh...people...why give so much importance to a retarded article like 
that? Objectively speaking, everytime someone is quoting the OP, that 
AH is getting more backlinks to his article boosting his rankings on 
google search.

-- 
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 11:05, Harsh Busa wrote:
 On 10/24/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Tuesday 24 October 2006 15:39, Dinesh Shah wrote:
   Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux
   revolution. Now he threatens to tear it apart.
  
   http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html
 
  Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
  pontificate about.

 didnot expect this from JTD or sud I say I sud have expected this
 from you ?

The reasons for calling the author that: He takes off on a personal 
attack on RMS with crap about socialism, personal habits, inuendo 
like Stallman labors mightily to control how others think, speak and 
act,  and a whole lot of other bull which has absolutely nothing to 
do with the merits or demerits of the gplv3.
No problem about opposing the gnu movement with FACTS but never with 
personal attacks, since i (and others) can indulge in exactly the 
same pointless behaviour.

-- 
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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Abhishek Daga
--- Harsh Busa [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On 10/24/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Tuesday 24 October 2006 15:39, Dinesh Shah wrote:
   Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux
   revolution. Now he threatens to tear it apart.
  
   http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html
 
  Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
  pontificate about.
 
 didnot expect this from JTD or sud I say I sud have expected this
 from you ?

I know. wrong spelling. 


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 17:12, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 October 2006 05:55, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
  i agree 100% with jtd - but didnt say anything because i knew he
    would word it much better than i ever could

 Uh...people...why give so much importance to a retarded article
 like that? Objectively speaking, everytime someone is quoting the
 OP, that AH is getting more backlinks to his article boosting his
 rankings on google search.

Very true. Unfortunately i do check periodically articles written by 
AHs and repos of shit. And since Dinesh Shah posted a link i thaought 
i might as well check.

-- 
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Dinesh Shah

Hi Falks,

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Very true. Unfortunately i do check periodically articles written by
AHs and repos of shit. And since Dinesh Shah posted a link i thaought
i might as well check.


The idea behind the posting the link is to make aware how the
popular press/media perceives Free Software.

Any amount of name calling or rhetoric is not going to help Free
Software. Whether we like them or not these popular media shapes the
opinion of the people, more important of them is decision makers.

What credible answers we can provide? Instead of RMS refusing to talk
to this fellow just because he calls GNU/Linux as Linux, is just a
lost opportunity to make your *point*.

We, as community, have to seriously learn to *manage* the media.


Rgds
JTD


With regards,
--
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 25-Oct-06, at 5:30 PM, Dinesh Shah wrote:


What credible answers we can provide? Instead of RMS refusing to talk
to this fellow just because he calls GNU/Linux as Linux, is just a
lost opportunity to make your *point*.

We, as community, have to seriously learn to *manage* the media.


rms and his followers also need to realise who the *real* enemy is


--
regards

Kenneth Gonsalves
Associate, NRC-FOSS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nrcfosshelpline.in/web/




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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 17:30, Dinesh Shah wrote:
 Hi Falks,

 On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Very true. Unfortunately i do check periodically articles written
  by AHs and repos of shit. And since Dinesh Shah posted a link i
  thaought i might as well check.

 The idea behind the posting the link is to make aware how the
 popular press/media perceives Free Software.

 Any amount of name calling or rhetoric is not going to help Free
 Software. 

If i would actually condescend to talk to such AHs (note i maintain my 
stance and have justified it too) my take would have been different. 
Since i am preaching to the choir i said what actually needs to be 
said.

 Whether we like them or not these popular media shapes 
 the opinion of the people, more important of them is decision
 makers.

Notice how a whole lot of wall street and hollywood types use 
gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to 
convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is these 
same types who want drm. As long as they can shoot u but u cant it's 
fine. In the past it was called Overlordship. Which is why RMS is so 
important. Using GNU/linux merely for it's tech superiority would  be 
acceptable. But using it with drm to subvert other's freedom is 
definetly reprehensible. The logic touted by the media companies is 
full of holes and stems from the fact that they have been fleecing 
artists and are sticking to old business methods, whereas some who 
had nothing to do with the media have minted billions leveraging new 
tech - Apple and a japanese company whose name i forget. 

 What credible answers we can provide? 

To personal insults? i am afraid none - well maybe a kick in the 
groin.

 Instead of RMS refusing to 
 talk to this fellow just because he calls GNU/Linux as Linux, is
 just a lost opportunity to make your *point*.

I am sure there are better media persons out there to talk to.

 We, as community, have to seriously learn to *manage* the media.

 Aha. How about some unmanaged truth. All the crap u watch on tv, read 
in the print and hear on the radio is managed. And it got to this 
state by managing. But i am getting seriously ot and political. 

The bottom line is that V3 is very clear about it's goal of preventing 
misuse of FOSS in restricting freedoms and the media managers dont 
like it one bit. And should artists catch on to the basic tenets and 
principles of FOSS, media companies will be museum pieces. Never mind 
the crap about starving artists and copyrighted works and all the 
other crap dished out in the media.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Dinesh Shah

Hi!

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
pontificate about.
The gplv3 prevents a distributor from preventing users excersing the
rights guranteed under gplv2. It does not prevent the service
provider from preventing use of his services if the user changes the
default blob. where is the question of violating others copyrights.
The gplv3 also explicitly prevents using of patents against any
recipient of gplv3 code.
If the crooks who use GNU feel otherwise they are welcome to spend a
zillion in rolling their own stuff and see if their business
survives.


You are just telling people that it's only our way. Take it or leave it. :-(

And if someone does not agree to GPLv3 becomes crook! Thank you very
much for all the freedom and software freedom propagated by FSF!


And btw forbes is yet another M$ schill. Similiar articles published
in the past few yrs - including complete support for SCO (the author
was dan lyons afair) - would fill a couple of pages.


Why the moment someone talks against FSF they become MS agents? :-)


Seems to me Vista is in line for another quarter delay.


Who care? If it's release tomorrow or after 10 Years!


Rgds
JTD


I would suggest that we start respecting other peoples view, opinions
and FREEDOM!

With regards,
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Wednesday 25 October 2006 17:30, Dinesh Shah wrote:
 Hi Falks,

 On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Very true. Unfortunately i do check periodically articles written
  by AHs and repos of shit. And since Dinesh Shah posted a link i
  thaought i might as well check.

 The idea behind the posting the link is to make aware how the
 popular press/media perceives Free Software.

 Any amount of name calling or rhetoric is not going to help Free
 Software.

If i would actually condescend to talk to such AHs (note i maintain my
stance and have justified it too) my take would have been different.
Since i am preaching to the choir i said what actually needs to be
said.

 Whether we like them or not these popular media shapes
 the opinion of the people, more important of them is decision
 makers.

Notice how a whole lot of wall street and hollywood types use
gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is these
same types who want drm. As long as they can shoot u but u cant it's
fine. In the past it was called Overlordship. Which is why RMS is so
important. Using GNU/linux merely for it's tech superiority would  be
acceptable. But using it with drm to subvert other's freedom is
definetly reprehensible. The logic touted by the media companies is
full of holes and stems from the fact that they have been fleecing
artists and are sticking to old business methods, whereas some who
had nothing to do with the media have minted billions leveraging new
tech - Apple and a japanese company whose name i forget.

 What credible answers we can provide?

To personal insults? i am afraid none - well maybe a kick in the
groin.

 Instead of RMS refusing to
 talk to this fellow just because he calls GNU/Linux as Linux, is
 just a lost opportunity to make your *point*.

I am sure there are better media persons out there to talk to.

 We, as community, have to seriously learn to *manage* the media.

 Aha. How about some unmanaged truth. All the crap u watch on tv, read
in the print and hear on the radio is managed. And it got to this
state by managing. But i am getting seriously ot and political.

The bottom line is that V3 is very clear about it's goal of preventing
misuse of FOSS in restricting freedoms and the media managers dont
like it one bit. And should artists catch on to the basic tenets and
principles of FOSS, media companies will be museum pieces. Never mind
the crap about starving artists and copyrighted works and all the
other crap dished out in the media.



list admin requesting you to force end of this pointless thread.
everyone knows RMS is not evil . he has an opinion that not everyone
subscribes to . no one in the list is endorsing the article. there is
no disagreement that floss is for good. then why a 14mail long thread
already.



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JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi Falks,

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We, as community, have to seriously learn to *manage* the media.



yes dinesh you are right. i dont know what anyone achieves by public
display of anger. had these statements gone to the editor it wud have
made sense.

JTD learn to be tolerant like Nagarjun. I m sure your so called
kwwwlll language appeals only to a small chunk of ppl

 Rgds
 JTD

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 19:38, Harsh Busa wrote:


 JTD learn to be tolerant like Nagarjun. I m sure your so called
 kwwwlll language appeals only to a small chunk of ppl

Stop patronising me. I am not playing to the gallery and dont use 
intemperate language to score brownie points. Imo the author is 
precisely what i called him.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 19:40, Dinesh Shah wrote:
 Hi!

 On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
  pontificate about.
  The gplv3 prevents a distributor from preventing users excersing
  the rights guranteed under gplv2. It does not prevent the service
  provider from preventing use of his services if the user changes
  the default blob. where is the question of violating others
  copyrights. The gplv3 also explicitly prevents using of patents
  against any recipient of gplv3 code.
  If the crooks who use GNU feel otherwise they are welcome to
  spend a zillion in rolling their own stuff and see if their
  business survives.

 You are just telling people that it's only our way. Take it or
 leave it. :-(

I am not. I am saying they dont have an alternative except taking 
unacceptable risks. Yet they think that curbing other peoples freedom 
is fine.

 And if someone does not agree to GPLv3 becomes crook!. 

 If u dont agree with v3 roll your own and release under v2. However 
if i write something under v3 everone HAS to accept cause i own the 
copyrights.

 Thank you very much for all the freedom and software freedom
 propagated by FSF!

Your args are naive or devious.
Software freedom to subjugate sombody else's software, hardware and 
device usage freedom is not freedom - it's overlordship to those who 
control those rights and serfdom to those who dont. AND u have an 
option to execute such a scheme - roll your own. Just dont use the 
works of people who put out these enabling and empowering tools to 
disable and disenfranchise others.


  And btw forbes is yet another M$ schill. Similiar articles
  published in the past few yrs - including complete support for
  SCO (the author was dan lyons afair) - would fill a couple of
  pages.

 Why the moment someone talks against FSF they become MS agents? :-)

Read carefully the abv and google (baystar, deutsch capital, dan 
lyons). U will find precisely such articles devoid of logic but full 
of insinuations. I NEVER make a comment unless i verify. U will also 
find court depostions by Baystar employees.

  Seems to me Vista is in line for another quarter delay.

 Who care? If it's release tomorrow or after 10 Years!

U find such articles evertytime M$ has to announce a delay. But yes 
who cares.


 I would suggest that we start respecting other peoples view,
 opinions and FREEDOM!

The link was not a view. It was a personal attack on RMS. Not one 
sentence had any logic.

And the reason for replying was not merely the language of the 
article, but the twisting of facts to denigrate V3, which too i have 
stated in my reply.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur customers
ever call you back for help ?

HRB

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Baishampayan Ghose
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Wednesday 25 October 2006 08:42 PM, Harsh Busa cobbled together some
glyphs to say:
Harsh,

 JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
 effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur customers
 ever call you back for help ?

Now _this_ is purely a personal attack on JTD. He has the right to stand
by his own opinion, you have the same too. But you have _no_ right to
launch a personal attack against him, not on this channel.
It's recommended that you refrain from posting such messages again,
we've had too many flame wars already.

Regards,
BG

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Ubuntu -- Linux for Human Beings
http://www.ubuntu.com/

1024D/86361B74
BB2C E244 15AD 05C5 523A  90E7 4249 3494 8636 1B74

-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.2.2 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQFFP4B6Qkk0lIY2G3QRAmWbAJwLQZh6i5g+9N2mcT0pkSLLJV+dCQCdH+Mw
sZmGP41pasFaJj86NVqMYPs=
=koV+
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, Baishampayan Ghose [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Wednesday 25 October 2006 08:42 PM, Harsh Busa cobbled together some
glyphs to say:
Harsh,

 JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
 effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur customers
 ever call you back for help ?

Now _this_ is purely a personal attack on JTD. He has the right to stand
by his own opinion, you have the same too. But you have _no_ right to
launch a personal attack against him, not on this channel.
It's recommended that you refrain from posting such messages again,
we've had too many flame wars already.


So why dont you recommend the list admin to put me on moderation or
better block me ?


Regards,
BG

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 20:49, Baishampayan Ghose wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 October 2006 08:42 PM, Harsh Busa cobbled together
 some glyphs to say:
 Harsh,

  JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a
  side effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur
  customers ever call you back for help ?

 Now _this_ is purely a personal attack on JTD.

Err BG I think he means it in (sharp) jest.
Yes Harsh it is actually because of that. Customers rarely call once 
things are setup. And rarely is it something that requires my 
prescence.

Also Harsh my reply was not merely about the attack on RMS, which as u 
point out nobody on the list believes is evil but abt gplV3 which is 
very important, irrespective of wether it is adopted by many or not. 
It has focussed things on the external factors which are going to be 
major impediments in the progress of FOSS. So far the opposition to 
it is more due to confusion and corner cases rather than logic. In 
the case of Linus he does not want to be poltical and resents the 
kernel development being made a political battle ground (IMO 
primarily because companies likely to be affected are substantial 
resource contributors)

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Baishampayan Ghose
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Wednesday 25 October 2006 09:01 PM, Harsh Busa cobbled together some
glyphs to say:
Harsh,

  JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
  effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur customers
  ever call you back for help ?

 Now _this_ is purely a personal attack on JTD. He has the right to stand
 by his own opinion, you have the same too. But you have _no_ right to
 launch a personal attack against him, not on this channel.
 It's recommended that you refrain from posting such messages again,
 we've had too many flame wars already.

 So why dont you recommend the list admin to put me on moderation or
 better block me ?

I don't need to recommend anything to the list admin(s). They can see
what you are doing. The only thing that I'd recommend is to keep your
cool. JTD is a senior person and he deserves our respect even if he is
wrong (which he is not, obviously).

Regards,
BG

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Ubuntu -- Linux for Human Beings
http://www.ubuntu.com/

1024D/86361B74
BB2C E244 15AD 05C5 523A  90E7 4249 3494 8636 1B74

-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.2.2 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQFFP4YeQkk0lIY2G3QRAhf8AKC8CAMQXuCrP9rEU60itdJ5VmQz+QCeN8me
OT/2uhyodOyO1iOX2nsD36M=
=gl/t
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 21:13, Baishampayan Ghose wrote:

 I don't need to recommend anything to the list admin(s). They can
 see what you are doing. 

Cool down. He isnt doing anything and is a nice guy (subject to chai 
next time we meet ;-)

 JTD is a senior person and he deserves our respect
 even if he is wrong (which he is not, obviously).

Ha Ha. Flame me to death with logic. No problems. While seniority does 
bring wisdom, it all too often results in ossification and decay. I 
would rather be flamed and singed then ossified and decayed.
One can also discern patterns in the motivations of the younger 
generation, which is equally important to understand, so that society 
can benefit from their energy and refreshing (skewed?, different?) 
view of things.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread jtd
On Wednesday 25 October 2006 21:08, jtd wrote:
 So far
 the opposition to it is more due to confusion and corner cases
 rather than logic. In the case of Linus he does not want to be
 poltical and resents the kernel development being made a political
 battle ground (IMO primarily because companies likely to be
 affected are substantial resource contributors)

There is also the very genuine fear of the V2 crowd being left behind. 
I would put the traction behind v3 at 70% and climbing. If Linus digs 
his heels in HIS kernel development will suffer. And Imo he will have 
to switch.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Rony

Harsh Busa wrote:

On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur customers
ever call you back for help ?



Relax Harsh,

Some of the good things in life are free and that includes JTD's 
comments every time someone attacks libre software. :)


Regards,

Rony.
Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com 



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Abhishek Daga
--- Rony [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Harsh Busa wrote:
  On 10/25/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
  JTD is your ability to devote so much time to replying mails a side
  effect of using linux and providing linux seervices ? do ur
 customers
  ever call you back for help ?
  
 
 Relax Harsh,
 
 Some of the good things in life are free and that includes JTD's 
 comments every time someone attacks libre software. :)

Oh for cryin out loud. Stop this discussion already. It was just a
wrongly spelt slang cuss term. 

You want him to bend over now? forget it now. relax. and let this be
the last post on this topic.




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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Philip Tellis

Sometime Today, jtd assembled some asciibets to say:


Notice how a whole lot of wall street and hollywood types use
gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is these


and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke to told me that 
they used linux because it was technically superior to any of the 
alternatives.  It wasn't the cost - they were already spending several 
hundred million dollars on hardware that they would have to throw out as 
soon as the film was done.



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, Philip Tellis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Sometime Today, jtd assembled some asciibets to say:

 Notice how a whole lot of wall street and hollywood types use
 gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but merely due to
 convienence and costs. Is something wrong with that? YES. It is these

and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke to told me that
they used linux because it was technically superior to any of the
alternatives.  It wasn't the cost - they were already spending several
hundred million dollars on hardware that they would have to throw out as
soon as the film was done.



yes i have also interacted with 2 animation studios in bombay and they
loved linux coz it did wonders for them.


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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Rony Bill

--- Philip Tellis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Sometime Today, jtd assembled some asciibets to say:
 
  Notice how a whole lot of wall street and
 hollywood types use
  gnu/linux not out of any love of freedom but
 merely due to
  convienence and costs. Is something wrong with
 that? YES. It is these
 
 and they told you this?  The pixar guys that I spoke
 to told me that 
 they used linux because it was technically superior
 to any of the 
 alternatives.  It wasn't the cost - they were
 already spending several 
 hundred million dollars on hardware that they would
 have to throw out as 
 soon as the film was done.
 
 
 

How do you and others feel about drafting a letter of
protest from this list with inputs from you, JTD and
other senior members who are conversant with gpl, with
all our signatures of support and posting the letter
to Forbes and requesting them to post the letter in
the same space that was used by the earlier writer. 

Regards,

Rony. 





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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, Rony Bill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



all our signatures of support and posting the letter
to Forbes and requesting them to post the letter in
the same space that was used by the earlier writer.



something like petitiononline types ? no harm

Regards,

Rony.





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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Anurag
Sometime on Thursday 26 October 2006 00:26, Harsh Busa said:
 On 10/25/06, Rony Bill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  all our signatures of support and posting the letter
  to Forbes and requesting them to post the letter in
  the same space that was used by the earlier writer.

 something like petitiononline types ? no harm


and no gains

Anurag
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/25/06, Anurag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 something like petitiononline types ? no harm


and no gains


well this thread will finally end. wudnt that be a gain ? or u suspect
there another thread if online petitions are cool

HRB

for those who donot understand sarcastic humor . this is supposed to
be humorous. smiling doesnot strains muscles .


Anurag
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 25-Oct-06, at 9:08 PM, jtd wrote:


the case of Linus he does not want to be poltical and resents the
kernel development being made a political battle ground (IMO
primarily because companies likely to be affected are substantial
resource contributors)


and do you have anything to substantiate this? Is this the case also  
with apache, subversion, postgresql, sqlite, python, php, perl,  
django ... Or is it that there are also sensible non-fanatics in the  
foss world - who are also doing most of the development



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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-25 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 25-Oct-06, at 8:23 PM, jtd wrote:


And if someone does not agree to GPLv3 becomes crook!.


 If u dont agree with v3 roll your own and release under v2. However
if i write something under v3 everone HAS to accept cause i own the
copyrights


you seem to be unaware that the gpl (any version) represents only a  
small subset of licenses available. In fact, as of now, the most  
popular license appears to be the Mozilla Public License. Further, i  
just went through the draft of v3 - it is a nightmare. If adopted by  
anyone, it is going to cause endless confusion. V2, on the other hand  
was a model of simplicity compared to this. Compare the gpl to  
creative commons licences and you will understand the difference. Or  
compare it to the MPL.



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[ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-24 Thread Dinesh Shah

Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux revolution.
Now he threatens to tear it apart.

http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-24 Thread Pradeepto Bhattacharya

Hi

On 10/24/06, Dinesh Shah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux revolution.
Now he threatens to tear it apart.

http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html


lol

A quote from the second para -
Richard M. Stallman is a 53-year-old anticorporate crusader who
has argued for 20 years that most software should be free of charge

 I think that's complete wrong interpretation of Free Software.
Wonder if this chap has any clue about anything he wrote.

 Cheers!

Pradeepto
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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-24 Thread jtd
On Tuesday 24 October 2006 15:39, Dinesh Shah wrote:
 Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux
 revolution. Now he threatens to tear it apart.

 http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html

Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to 
pontificate about.
The gplv3 prevents a distributor from preventing users excersing the 
rights guranteed under gplv2. It does not prevent the service 
provider from preventing use of his services if the user changes the 
default blob. where is the question of violating others copyrights.
The gplv3 also explicitly prevents using of patents against any 
recipient of gplv3 code.
If the crooks who use GNU feel otherwise they are welcome to spend a 
zillion in rolling their own stuff and see if their business 
survives.

And btw forbes is yet another M$ schill. Similiar articles published 
in the past few yrs - including complete support for SCO (the author 
was dan lyons afair) - would fill a couple of pages. 

Seems to me Vista is in line for another quarter delay.

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-24 Thread Harsh Busa

On 10/24/06, jtd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Tuesday 24 October 2006 15:39, Dinesh Shah wrote:
 Software radical Richard Stallman helped build the Linux
 revolution. Now he threatens to tear it apart.

 http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html

Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
pontificate about.


didnot expect this from JTD or sud I say I sud have expected this from you ?

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Re: [ILUG-BOM] Forbes.com: Toppling Linux

2006-10-24 Thread Kenneth Gonsalves


On 25-Oct-06, at 11:05 AM, Harsh Busa wrote:


Asshole author who does not know the abc of what he is trying to
pontificate about.


didnot expect this from JTD or sud I say I sud have expected this  
from you ?


i agree 100% with jtd - but didnt say anything because i knew he  
would word it much better than i ever could



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