The article demonstrates envy gone very bad, and this is a good reason
why it's one of the Seven Deadly Sins.

On 8/5/07, Rusty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for your comments. I have added your response to the story.
>
>
> --R
>
>
> On Sun, 2007-08-05 at 15:06 -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > OpenBSD Founder Theo deRaadt Has Conflict of Interest With AMD
> > >    By David Marcus, 2007-08-05 03:41:29
> > >    Section: Technology, Topic:
> > >
> > >    I formerly had a great deal of respect, bordering on admiration, for
> > > Theo deRaadt's refusals to compromise his open source principles, even in
> > > the face of stiff opposition. Although he has occasionally gone
> > > over-the-top, recommended some frankly very dubious changes to OpenBSD,
> > > and is regularly arrogant (which is even more annoying because he's so
> > > often right!), he's always remained consistent in his devotion to the
> > > cause of GNU/Free Software.
> > >
> > > http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2007/8/2/15233/84896
> >
> > Too bad the author of that article is totally lying.  Neither I or the
> > project have no donation relationship with AMD.
> >
> > The only donations the project ever got from AMD were three prototype
> > AMD64 machines.
> >
> > Two were given to us before the AMD64 had even shipped to the public,
> > so that they could benefit from us running on AMD64 cpus.  They were
> > desktop machines with Athlon HX processors at 1.6GHz.  One is in
> > Sweden, the other in Calgary.  One nice thing about those machines is
> > that the BIOS does no self tests, and therefore boots really really
> > fast.
> >
> > The third machine was a quad-cpu Opteron machine the size of a fridge,
> > but that was quite a bit later, and it was surplus to us.  I think
> > these were called "Melody" machines, or a name similar to that.
> >
> > I am sure that we've had more hardware donations from Intel.  I am
> > also sure we've had WAY MORE donations from VIA/Centaur, even yet.
> >
> > I'd love to know that there have been more donations from AMD.  If
> > there had been, perhaps we could spend them on a hackathon in the
> > future.
> >
> > It's amazing how people these days can just invent commentary out of
> > their ass, and have thousands of people read it and change their bias.
> > It's slander, that's exactly what it is, and I ask that the editors
> > take that article down and force some sort of apologize for it.
>
>


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