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I do not want market share. I want freedom!

4 November 2006 By Avinash Meetoo 11 Comments

Microsoft is now officially a supporter of Linux and opensource software.

“Microsoft and Novell Announce Broad Collaboration on Windows and Linux Interoperability and Support”

Simply said, Novell has sold its soul to the Devil…

The main aspects of this “collaboration” are:

  • Microsoft acknowledges that Linux is enterprise-ready (“Microsoft and Novell are enabling customers to take advantage of each other’s products where it makes sense in their enterprise infrastructure” from the press release for example)
  • “Microsoft will make a onetime upfront payment to Novell for the cross licensing deal. Moving forward, Novell will pay a fee for each support Suse support contract that it sells” as stated by Tom Sanders on VNUnet. As said by Bruce Perens, this means that “Novell and Microsoft are entering into a patent cross-license [and] Microsoft is promising not to assert its patents against individual non-commercial developers. The bad part is that this sets Microsoft up to assert its patents against all commercial Open Source users”. It’s clear that we are talking of Red Hat here who has an official reaction to all this. By the way, this seems to be in direct violation of paragraph 7 of the GPL under which Novell’s SuSE Linux is released.
  • OpenOffice.org, Samba and Mono are explicitly mentioned. Novell is working on integrating Microsoft’s Office Open XML into OpenOffice.org (in an attempt to kill the OpenDocument format which is an ISO and IEC standard)

An unexpected consequence (?) is that all major “computer” companies are delighted: Intel, AMD, HP, IBM, Dell and SAP are cited in the Microsoft press release. Another development is Oracle’s recent intention to have its own Linux distribution in favour of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Ok. Let me think… I get it!

Microsoft and the other big companies like Oracle, IBM, Intel, AMD, Dell and HP (notice that I don’t mention Novell which will be irrelevant in some years) know that Linux has won and now they want to control it. They need to eliminate Red Hat. And they also need to stifle the creativity of open source developers who might compete with them (i.e. by creating innovative commercial software to be sold to their customers).

In the coming years, Linux (or should we call that Microsoft Linux?) will become more and more visible. Linux will get major market share in the corporate world.

There is a risk we’ll all lose our freedom… In fact, now that there is a Microsoft-approved way to use Linux (that is, use SuSE), many corporate clients (and even individuals) might be tempted to follow that route instead of choosing whatever might be best for them.

Personally, I believe freedom is more important that some bloody market share. So I choose freedom. And I’m not alone/ For example, check this or this.

F**k Microsoft, Novell, Oracle, IBM, Intel, AMD, Dell and HP!

To all my dear readers, this is a message from the heart. I would like to ask you to use Red Hat Linux products. Please also use Debian Linux, Ubuntu Linux, Kubuntu Linux or any other Linux distribution not made by Novell and Oracle. Feel free to indulge in FreeBSD. Why don’t you give (if possible) Mac OS X a try?

Thanks!

An update: Novell’s CEO, Ron Hovsepian, has written an open letter to the opensource community (us!) where he says:

We disagree with the recent statements made by Microsoft on the topic of Linux and patents. Importantly, our agreement with Microsoft is in no way an acknowledgment that Linux infringes upon any Microsoft intellectual property. When we entered the patent cooperation agreement with Microsoft, Novell did not agree or admit that Linux or any other Novell offering violates Microsoft patents.

Can you hear, Balmer?

Filed Under: Linux, News, Technology

Naughty naughty Bill…

2 November 2006 By Avinash Meetoo 1 Comment

…for posing like this in a teen journal around 1984. But the fact that you have an Apple Mac in the background shows that sometimes you do have some good taste…

Lately, Microsoft (and Bill by inclusion) has been very very vulgar. First of all, when the Zune MP3 player supposed to compete with the iPod was announced,

“A Microsoft spokeswoman in Montreal told CanWest News Service that ‘it was pointed out to us’ during focus groups in the province that the proposed brand name [Zune] sounded much like a French-Canadian term used as a euphemism for penis or vagina.”

Ha! Ha!

And cerise sur le gateau, yesterday, while browsing on some website, I got the following advert for the newly announed clone of Apple’s Spotlight called Windows Live:

If you look closely, you’ll see that Bill (I guess) is looking for some Coit Tower. For those who are still in the dark, in French, coit means sexual intercourse… So I can only conclude that he is looking for a place where he can have some sex. With Steve Balmer I suppose…

:-)

Filed Under: Apple, News, Technology

The problem with documentation…

29 October 2006 By Avinash Meetoo 7 Comments

… is that many teachers and students “focus’ has been for decades on developing […] documentation, while the true reasons for which they have been developed has slowly been forgotten, transforming them from means to ends“. This is what Giancarlo Succi, author of Extreme Programming Explained says about what I really consider to be our most important failing.

Documentation is important for one reason only: to explain something!

Heck! It does not even need to be a paper report. It can perfectly be a wiki, a podcast or even the back of an envelope provided it is informative.

Teachers should tell students that trivialities like the number of pages and the typeface to be used are only trivialities (sic!). What is crucial is the exactness and precision of the contents! When I did my MPhil in Computer Science at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Lyon in France, I was told to write a 30-pages thesis or risk penalties.

Now, students from the University (for example) routinely write (or are asked to write) 100-pages or even 200-pages reports with only one logical consequence. They have discovered the Joys of Plagiarism…

Do I blame those students? Of course not! We should not ask them to write that much!

(As an aside, all my students are doing oral presentations right now (exposés) and, except for a few groups, most presentations have the same failing: lots and lots of drivel but no real meat!)

Let’s get back to basics!

(Comics courtesy of Piled Higher and Deeper)

Filed Under: Education, News

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed by Avinash Meetoo under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Unported License.