+--------------+ | PLEASE | | DO NOT FEED | | THE TROLLS | | --The Mgt.| +------++------+ || o o o || * ,,\|/,,,||,,,/,,, ---+-------------- On Fri, 24 May 2002, T wrote: > ...at least, according to this article it seems to... > > > http://www.worldtechtribune.com/worldtechtribune/asparticles/buzz/bz05222002 > .asp > > > A May 2002 news story from News Corporation’s Australian IT website > illustrates how the open source method of software development for Linux is > vastly overrated for business customers. According to a story on May 21, > 2002 titled "IT Workers poorly skilled: report" by Karen Deane “Internet > Business Systems chief executive David Brykman said he was shocked to find > many candidates with university degrees and years of experience couldn't > pass a simple skills test. The Melbourne-based company has been seeking > Visual Basic and SQL programmers over the past six months to handle its > business in industrial strength applications that run through a browser or > over the web. ‘In the past two months we've reviewed about 500 resumes, and > out of those we’re lucky if we can distil one or two people who are what we > would call qualified,’ he said.” > > It is a grim statement on the state of software programming, but you might > ask: “What does this have to do with Linux and open source?” Okay, think of > it this way: What makes open source the secure, stable and elegant software > panacea open source cultists claim it is? The Linux crowd point to the > “thousand eyes” in the vast and benevolent Linux community that view the > code and the ability to reuse this secure, stable and elegant code in > numerous projects. These thousands of eyes are supposed to be able to spot > weaknesses in the code and fix them immediately without bureaucratic hassles > found in corporate software development. > > Because of the General Public License that virtually all Linux/open source > apps are subject to, Linux/open source programmers are within legal rights > to cut-and-paste pieces of code from any other open source app into their > project. For example, say you are the IT director at a bank and you buy > into the Linux is stable, secure and bulletproof hype. The bank’s CEO > mandates that all loan officers to have a custom software package to track > customer credit ratings. Your main applications programmer tells you that > he knows a perfect piece of code he can use on SourceForge (an open source > code clearinghouse website) that will drastically cut development time and > costs. You can legally cut-and-paste this code into your credit software > and supposedly make your system “stable and secure.” > > What do business people involved in software development think of this > approach? David Brykman lamented that most software programmers have become > lazy due to the prevalence of open source development methods. > “Unfortunately we find people try to look up existing code and then want to > copy and paste it, rather than being able to do the task themselves.” > Brykman said. “[P]eople still need those skills.” > > The attack on Brykman’s views from the Linux crowd will be: “He’s working > with Microsoft tools like Visual Basic that are inherently too closed > because of Micro$oft’s monopolistic bullying. If Brykman worked with open > source tools, he wouldn’t have this problem.” > > Such an attack is pointless because it doesn’t address the business aspects > software development. If Brykman could use a > “free-as-in-beer/free-as-in-liberty” piece of code to accomplish his > business goals for almost no cost, he would. Brykman's business is creating > browser-based Intranet software - Usually that business segment prides > itself on being “platform independent.” Wouldn't Brykman prefer open source > development methodologies due cross-platform nature and its ability to > use/reuse code for “free-as-in-beer/free-as-in-liberty?” Linux cultists are > so fond of saying there’s nothing in the GPL keeping businesses from > charging for code (a semantic gymnastic feat to prove to anyone with half a > brain), so why wouldn’t Brykman welcome programmers whose method is to > cut-and-paste snippets of open source code? > > No, the problem is that even these supposedly skilled programmers who “hack” > couldn’t get a functioning application out of the millions of lines of code > floating out on the Internet. If they could, Brykman wouldn’t be > complaining about the lack of programming skills found amongst most job > applicants. > > Businesses in the post dot-com-bomb era will need real programmers, not > spoiled lazy kids stealing from true geniuses. The Microsoft .Net framework > is poised to be the formidable computing platform in the next few years; > mainly due to the innovation required in the C# programming community and > their commitment to intellectual property rights. The Java cross-platform > programming language has been around for almost a decade and Sun has never > been able to work it into their “the computer is the network and the network > is the computer” strategy. Maybe it’s because so much Java code is used and > reused? JBoss anyone? Does IBM’s “Jikes” ring any bells? Notice all the > Java code on SourceForge? See the press releases from Sun trumpeting their > alliance with Apache “to make the Java platform even more open”? > > Welcome to the lazy, cut-and-paste world of open source “innovation” where > people who should be smart enough to know better still think you can get > something for nothing. It would be humorous if it wasn't so pathetic... > Email me with your opinion > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >