When I first saw "Bug" #579300 in early September I was puzzled, because
it seemed to make no sense at all.  Things are clearer now.

(1) People who have been using applications dependent on OSS are no
longer welcome on Ubuntu and must go elsewhere.  Mr Chen was given the
thankless task of making this known.  I'm not critical of him - he
thinks he is doing the right thing.

(2) Since there is no plausible technical reason for disabling OSS, we
must look elsewhere for the explanation.  No doubt this lies in the
sociology of open-source audio development and/or in the business model
for eventual monetization of Ubuntu.  I personally am not sufficiently
interested to speculate about this.

(3) I would like to think that Debian is the answer, but the very
lengthy wait for the release of Squeeze leads me to suspect that there
are serious problems (of a different kind) with Debian too.

(4) The way that the killing of OSS has been handled in Ubuntu is ugly,
but I see it as merely part of a wider malaise, just one more nail in
the coffin of Linux multimedia.  Of course, Linux will survive in the
long term - on servers.

Mike

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Please disable CONFIG_SOUND_OSS* and CONFIG_SND_*OSS*
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/579300
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