Am 23. Jan, 2004 schw=E4tzte Phil Mattison so: > I've been trying to understand the economic rationale behind the open sou= rce > philosophy, and I think I see an apparent contradiction. From what I've s= een > so far it seems there are two economic motives for contributing to open > source projects. (Ignoring those who do it just for fun.) > > 1. For young programmers making their mark, it is an opportunity to gain > experience and prove their worth, enhancing potential for future paid > positions. Yup, a good way to feed the resume. If a project does well, it might also turn into a job or other income. > 2. For companies with proprietary software that doesn't sell well as > shrink-wrap, it is an opportunity A) to reap the benefit of the unpaid la= bor > of those in [1], and B) to generate revenue through support services, > because they are the only real experts with a particular package. 3. For companies who need software that isn't part of their primary busines= s model. The Cisco model, as esr calls it. 4. Interface for hardware. Some manufacturers just need the software to work, so they can sell hardware. I believe most video card manufacturers write the m$ drivers for their cards. > The apparent contradiction is that if the source code is so convoluted th= at > you really need the services of those in [2], it amounts to "vendor lock-= in" > in practical terms, which is consummate evil in the minds of the FSF, or = so > they say. If nobody really needed those services there would be no econom= ic > motive besides [A]. If there is a less cynical explanation I'd love to he= ar > it, so long as it is economically practical. As it is, it looks to me lik= e a > glorified internship program. That, at least, resolves the contradiction = in > my mind. Look at Red Hat and Monta Vista. Both companies are doing fairly well providing only Free Software services. The $monopoly is Red Hat's largest issue. I bet Red Hat has been more profitable than OS/2 was :). Also, look at it from the customers point of view. All customers of softwar= e should demand Free Software. If that's what the customers are demanding, then that's what the vendors need to provide. ciao, der.hans --=20 # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.AZOTO.org/ # kill telnet, long live ssh - der.hans