Kevin wrote: >Um, wow. Talk about a total clue-vacuum. I'm speechless. >http://www.informit.com/articles/article.asp?p=420290&seqNum=1 > > > > When someone starts with Open/Free Software vs Commercial Software, it isn't even worth exchanging dialog with them. It is clear from that phrase alone they are completely and utterly "out of touch" with the basic tenets of our community. Commerical software implies that commerce is taking place, whether it be physical money exchanging hands for the software or service or whether it be the software providing opportunities for commerce. There are too many projects to list that are free/open that generate income directly or who aid in the propulsion of commerce through their use. The two are not mutually exclusive so trying to compare them as such is idiocy at best. I have long loved Robert Chassell's comment when someone bought a Free Software Foundation CD for $250 and a bystander said, "I thought you were the FREE software foundation!". Bob simply stated, "My friend, freedom is expensive!". I had a long phone call with a friend on the Ubuntu team the other day trying to work out a VAR distribution deal for our company and found myself telling him that if our company wanted to continue enjoying the benefits that free software like Ubuntu provides our customers we needed to be willing to find a way to money in their hands to continue their efforts. Authors like that of this article, are so out of touch they are beyond help. They equate software to things of physical production. If you have a sandwich and I eat it, you are out a sandwich. If you have a piece of software/music/video etc and I make a copy are you out your software/music/video? This is just beyond the intellect of some people. The article was a hoot to read though. :) -- Derek Neighbors --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss