One problem and a reason why so many people think that Linux is so non-standard 
is that when (not IF but WHEN) standards are agreed by various international 
bodies then MicroSquish goes ahead putting things together the other way 
around. Since most people's experience of machines is limited to desktop usage 
their perception is that the Windows way IS the "standard" way and that 
everyone else should conform to that.
 
I remember as a child doing something similar when "helping" with the laundry. 
When "helping" put a duvet into it's cover i would agree to go up to the corner 
on my side of the cover but would instead immediately go up to the opposing 
corner as fast as possible making it very difficult for the other person to 
reach a corner without having to mitigate against the total chaos i had caused. 
Very childish but i found it hilarious everytime.  Looking back i really pity 
my poor mother. 
 
MicroSquish appears to behave much the same way. It appears to get involved 
with setting standards and then works hard against those being able to be 
delivered.  Those that do conform to the standards are then seen as "different" 
and "non-standard".
 
Note that with OpenSource Drivers there is really very little difference 
between the drivers for the various operating systems and different releases 
but each Windows platform (Xp, Vista, Win7) requires very different drivers. 
The OpenSource ones can fairly easily be tweaked for Mac and i assume for BSD 
too but an XP driver would need a substantial re-write to work with Win7. Also 
while OpenSource drivers are often tweaked for free by people interested in 
getting their own system to work (or helpful people) the proprietary ones often 
need heavy investment and resourcing from the originating company. 
 
So, instead of clever programmers being resourced to develop clever new 
innovations a lot of times they are being forced to just do re-writes of stuff 
that already exists. Their employers being quite scared of them finding out 
anything useful or interesting or "seeing the big picture". Instead of being 
treated as Rock-Stars they are often treated with suspicion & contempt by the 
very people that are paying their wages.
 
At least this is the impression i get of the current situation and i think we 
have got to do something to change this  otherwise, if we keep making extremely 
clever people bitter and resentful then instead of making good progress we will 
continue to find ourselves continually held back (at best). 
 
If writing viruses is more fun than work then of course people will write them. 
In linux-land i think most of us do begin to appreciate our developers a lot 
more and it is hopefully more fun to write something productive than writing a 
virus, which i think is one reason why we see so much development and so few 
viruses in linux-land
 
Regards from
Tom :)
 
PS Hopefully we are doing something to change the demotivating dynamic of the 
Windows-world by helping people move into linux-land

-- 
Microsoft has a majority market share
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1
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