Agree, It's good to see them moving this direction, doesn't matter if they gain or the public gain at the end. You can't expect everyone selling just service to make their stock holder happy, I never have any bad experence with them in the past. We used alot of open source product in our envirment, but they are all in Solaris with sun hardwares, v1280, e4500, 450, v440, v240, and dumpping all ultra now. Sun rep is amazing locally, he will respond within the same day, show up with parts in 48 hours, last time they shipped parts by dropping boxes at commercial flight and have them here for replacement very fast. He told me the parts took a day or two longer since we have the one and only v1280 on this island, and they don't store them locally, but he called the office to make that change after I corrected him that we have three v1280, he only saw one at a remote site. I don't think the license make that much difference when the majorty of their os uses are tied with their hardwares, making money to pay their bills is the goal, that's almosts everyone's goal, without that.. I wouldn't be able to buy the hardwares to play with Linux, bsd and whatever at home. I love open source, but that doesn't make me hate every thing else, this world have enough room to fit all flavors, even SCO has it place to make Linux adopt faster. Thanks to Solaris that I can lay back at work except when the Winbloze PDC and SDC start screaming at me to kick them. Do I like taking care of Winbloze servers also? no, I don't, but it's part of my job as a SA.
Just my personal view who have to pay his mortage(wish it's free too) at the end of each month. On 6/14/05, Tim Newsham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > The CDDL is yet another reason why the OSI (started by Perens, Raymond and > > > others to "re-brand" Free Software) was a really > > bad (and dangerous) idea. > > > > I complained to Larry Rosen (who approved CDDL as an OSI-compliant > license) > > and others about this back at TPOSSCON. > > > > I'm concerned about "Free as in speech". Its not clear that the CDDL > permits > > software Freedom. > > *shrug* They come in all flavors. I don't mean to start a licensing > war, but all licenses have some restrictions or other (and hence > not strictly "free"). The only truely free IP is in the public domain. > > I have my favorite and licenses I care less about. I'm glad to see > sun grant access to their sources, no matter how you want to > categorize their license. Would I want to use it in a product? > Probably not, but it will be useful the next time I need to know > EXACTLY how something works. > > > Jim > > Tim Newsham > http://www.lava.net/~newsham/ > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > http://lists.hosef.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/luau >
