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To: Cyber Liberty
"Nothing is as expensive as that which you get for 'free'."

This letter shows an incredible ignorance about "free software." It's free as in "freedom" not free as in beer.

In very short: You give away your code because you used someone else's code (freely given) to build it, and they probably used someone else's code, and so on. And you're all using a license that requires free distribution.

The ability to use these tools makes my job easier - yes, my job. I work for a living, just like everybody else. The concept of somehow living off of making the world a better place is something you get from social workers, not programmers.

I try to give back to the community of free software developers because they've been very good to me. The closed-source folks have not been good to me. They just keep raising prices without making things any easier. So I steer my company away from them at every chance.

Not all cooperation is automatically communist. Open source software works because it benefits everyone involved. It's called enlightened self interest (For those of you from Rio Linda, that's a capitalist concept).

If you don't believe me, don't use open source. That's a simple freedom (there's the real free in free software!) closed-source companies don't want you to have.

19 posted on 03/01/2004 9:07:06 AM PST by irv
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To: irv
Sure, there are so many pinkos out there talking about free software, that it is hard to notice that the most successful free software projects are being done by cooperative efforts of people working for money.

For example, in the embedded tool space situation was nothing but horrible with buggy expensive tools and practically nonexistent support and the market was too small and too fragmented to justify a massive commercial investment by a major player. The same goes to UNIX on x86. First ATT, then Novell and then SCO simply dropped the ball on this viable technology. There were a lot of developers who did want to use UNIX, and who could not justify the price of SUN hardware for the privilege.

Another often-overlooked part is the relative size (it is huge) of contributions made by for-profit companies working on this space (Cygnus, Red Hat, IBM).

34 posted on 03/01/2004 10:01:20 AM PST by alex
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