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#1
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I've been following these Linux threads with some interest because I
personally feel that Linux is going to, at some point, overtake Microsoft and I also believe that it will be a Linux/Apple world with Microsoft a way distant 3rd. What I fail to understand however, is why Linux users seem to be so nasty, obscene and self righteous. Some of the comments made to the fine folks in rec.audio.pro are just uncalled for. Is this what Linux advocacy is about? You people seem to strut your operating system all over the place claiming how superior it is to other systems, yet when you are called to produce any kind of proof, you go scurrying about calling people trolls, changing the subject, going on the offensive and so forth. It seems that the Linux ehthusiast's bag of tricks is stuffed to the brim with various techniques designed to deflect the shrapnel that flies your way. That's all well and good, but to put it simply it just makes most of you look like a bunch of pablum puking babies. Most of the discussions in rec.audio.pro revolved around making audio at the professional level using Linux. Who cares if I can alter the source code? Who cares if there are 300 different versions of Linux? Who even has the time to play with an evaluate them? We need a tool to do a particular job and spending $500.00 for a piece of software is an investment. I want to USE the noise reduction plugin for SoundForge, I don't want to design one nor do I have the skills to do such. For 99 percent of the rec.audio.pro community, having the source code means nothing and having 300 different versions of Linux just clouds the issue. Can Linux do what Samplitude/Sonar/Protools etc can do? Doubtful, but it can come close and for some close is good enough. For others, they need to use the heavy guns. However, the Linux enthusiasts had better start learning how to deal with laypeople who are not programmers, but may be experts in THEIR chosen field. Doctors running a practice are interested in healing people not sorting thorough source code and certainly not using programs that make it difficult to share their data with their collegues or insurance companies (OpenOffice for example, nice program but everyone on earth is using Micorsoft Office). If I can leave the Linux people with one parting thought, it is to stop acting so dammed arrogant and start realizing that not everyone is a geek whose life revolves around an operating system that few outside of the Linux world even know about. When you post in groups that have nothing to do with Linux, please leave your arrogance at the door. Thank you for your consideration. Jackson Pyle |
#2
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#3
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#4
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#6
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I've been following these Linux threads with some interest because I personally feel that Linux is going to, at some point, overtake Microsoft and I also believe that it will be a Linux/Apple world with Microsoft a way distant 3rd. Color My World... seems to fit your optimistic hope. It is not just about marketing, but about the ability to meet the needs of the broadest customer base. ![]() As time goes on I realize Just what you mean to me And now, now that you're near Promise your love That I've waited to share And dreams of our moments together Color my world with hope of loving you Thanks, Steve |
#7
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#8
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#9
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begin virus.txt.scr Dana wrote:
snip Hi flatfish Or Aftab Singh, allison_hunt1969, Anna Banger, anonymous, Archie Watermann, Baba Booey, Babu Singh, bill.gates.loves.me, bison, Bjarne Jensen, BklynBoy, Boyce Mabri, Buster, Charles LeGrand, Charlie, Choppers McGee, Christine Abernathy, Claire Lynn, Collie Entragion, dbx_boy, Deadpenguin, Elliot Zimmermann, Fawn Lebowitz, flatfish+++, foamy, Gary Stewart, gilligan, Greg Finnigan, Greg Laplante, Hans Kimm, Heather, Heather69, hepcat, Ishmeal Hafizi, itchy balls, Ivan Mctavish, IvanaB, Jeff Szarka, juke_joint, kaptain kaput, kathy_krantz, Les Turner, Lilly, Lindy, Lisa Shavas, long_tong_ling, Lukumi Babalu Aye, Major Mynor, McSwain, Moses, , nate_mcspook, okto_pussy, Paddy McCrockett, Patricia, Peter Gluckman, Phillip Cornwall, phoung quoak, pickle_pete, Poopy Pants McGee, Quimby, Richie O'Toole, Robert Strunk, rothstein_ivan, Sammy, Saul Goldblatt, Schlomo Smykowski, Sharon Hubbasland, Sean, Sean Fitzhenry, Sean Macpherson, Sewer Rat, sewer_clown, Spammy_Davis, spanny_davis, Stephan Simonsen, Stephen, Stephen Townshend, SuckyB, SunnyB, Susan Wong, Suzie Wong, Swampee, The Beaver, Thorsten, Toby Rastus Roosovelt III, Tori Wassermann, Tracee, trailerpark, Trina Swallows, Walter Bubniak, Wang Mycock, Whizzer, Wilbur J, Willy Wong, Winnie Septos,Wobbles and zyklon_C. Plus many, many, many more. -- Windows was created to keep stupid people away from UNIX." -- Tom Christiansen |
#10
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The Linux Advocates bitter wanna-be's.
Plain and simple. They do nothing, produce nothing, and live off the work of others. |
#11
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Dana writes:
On Sun, 05 Jun 2005 00:30:49 +0200, Peter Köhlmann wrote: begin virus.txt.scr Dana wrote: Is there some reason why you are attempting to post a virus to newsgroups? He is not. That text triggers a bug in the Windows email software. |
#12
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On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 18:50:44 -0400, Dana wrote:
On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 22:48:45 +0000, Unruh wrote: Dana writes: On Sun, 05 Jun 2005 00:30:49 +0200, Peter Köhlmann wrote: begin virus.txt.scr Dana wrote: Is there some reason why you are attempting to post a virus to newsgroups? He is not. That text triggers a bug in the Windows email software. Ok. But why would anyone want to do that? Seems silly to me. It's a good demonstration of just how badly put together Microsoft's software is. They've known about it for years and done nothing but tell people, "don't do that." |
#13
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Dana schrieb:
So what does it do? It may enlighten you ![]() All I could see was an attachment, which I assumed was a virus so I didn't download it. No, there was no attachment. There was just plain, normal text. You might want to ask some Outlook Express newsgroup, how you can circumvent that bug. One way is to use the "source" view of the message. Alexander Skwar -- National security is in your hands - guard it well. |
#14
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Dana wrote: It's a good demonstration of just how badly put together Microsoft's software is. They've known about it for years and done nothing but tell people, "don't do that." So what does it do? Nothing, really. All I could see was an attachment, which I assumed was a virus so I didn't download it. You couldn't have, anyway. It's not an attachment. See this knowledge base article for more information: http://support.microsoft.com/default...en-us%3b265230 IMHO, not fixing such a trivial bug for so extremely long is nothing short of showing contempt for their customers. This bug, in connection with another bug that has since been fixed, actually allowed any properly formatted Usenet message to crash OE when you clicked on it. It's therefore not as harmless as it might seem at first glance. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFCojgEd1ZThqotgfgRAoj/AKC983aGAYws63rBpLneP6enCzS2QQCdFgQR BhNIaAvxChlrYsvna3h9vWU= =mEfi -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- PeKaJe Crow- these stupid head hunters want resumes in ms word format Crow- can you write **** in tex and convert it to word? Overfiend \converttoword{****} |
#15
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Liam Slider writes:
It's a good demonstration of just how badly put together Microsoft's software is. They've known about it for years and done nothing but tell people, "don't do that." Of course it affects ordinary users and does nothing to MS, and furthermore, the user has no idea that he is being affected by a bug in MS rather than due to the bad behaviour of some poster. Ie it is not a terribly effective demonstration. |
#16
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#17
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tab wrote:
The Linux Advocates bitter wanna-be's. Plain and simple. Wow, talk about bitter! They do nothing, produce nothing, Then where does the code comefrom? and live off the work of others. Actually, I participate in beta testing, contribute money (and pizza) to different projects, participate in installfests and administer Linux, that is hardly living off the work of others. That is called contributing where I can. But the simple truth it, the "work of others" has voluntarily been contributed in such a way that anyone can use it at no cost. If the people that write to code have no problem with the end user using it for free and the end user has no issues with using it for free, then just why should it matter to TAB? The truth it, it is none of his business, it is between the user and the developer. I think Tab should stop sticking his **** stained nose where it does not belong. |
#18
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Yo Mike,
Not *everyone* uses M$ Office - the OpenOffice users for example. Absolutes like "everyone" and "never" are easy to shoot down... like you just did. But the majority of people out there do use MS Office. Not everyone, but most people do. Furthermore, if someone sends me a M$ office file, I can read it with OpenOffice but they can't use M$ office to read an OpenOffice file. This is the reality of how it must be done. Being the underdog trying to unseat the king, OpenOffice must be able to read MS Office files. Not being able to read .doc files would be a huge hurdle for OO users simply because of how common .doc (and .xls...) files are. MS-Office had to do the same thing when it was trying to establish itself. It had to read WordPerfect documents and Lotus-123 Spreadsheets. Similarly neither WordPerfect nor 123 could read MS-Office files at that time. Does M$ office allow you to export documents as PDF file? OpenOffice does. MS-Office does not have this ability. I don't see that happening anytime down the road either. Doing so would be damaging to the relationship they have with Adobe. On Windows PDF export works at the printer driver level. You get (buy) a special printer driver from Adobe and "print" to a PDF file. This way any and all applications can generate PDF files. There are also a number of free PDF print-drivers available as well. (I never use them though... I just email .doc files.) |
#19
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On Sat, 4 Jun 2005 21:35:28 UTC, Tim Smith
wrote: - In article .com, - wrote: - [blah blah blah] - - Why do you keep posting under different names, through open proxies? - Maybe mail.microsoft.com is down because of a virus. Mark -- From the eComStation of Mark Dodel http://www.os2voice.org Warpstock 2005, Hershey, PA, Oct 6-9, 2005 - http://www.warpstock.org |
#20
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![]() "Unruh" wrote in message ... Liam Slider writes: It's a good demonstration of just how badly put together Microsoft's software is. They've known about it for years and done nothing but tell people, "don't do that." Of course it affects ordinary users and does nothing to MS, and furthermore, the user has no idea that he is being affected by a bug in MS rather than due to the bad behaviour of some poster. Ie it is not a terribly effective demonstration. Well it is a pretty good demonstration of Peter's mentality and adult approach to matters as well as that of his followers. |
#21
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Unruh wrote:
Liam Slider writes: It's a good demonstration of just how badly put together Microsoft's software is. They've known about it for years and done nothing but tell people, "don't do that." Of course it affects ordinary users and does nothing to MS, and furthermore, the user has no idea that he is being affected by a bug in MS rather than due to the bad behaviour of some poster. Ie it is not a terribly effective demonstration. It gets discussed enough that they soon learn. But the bottom line is, THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH WHAT IS BEING DONE, PERIOD. |
#22
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![]() On Windows PDF export works at the printer driver level. You get (buy) a special printer driver from Adobe and "print" to a PDF file. This way any and all applications can generate PDF files. There are also a number of free PDF print-drivers available as well. (I never use them though... I just email .doc files.) This is pretty close to how Linux does it too. Because all Linux progams speak PS ghostscript does all the work translating into data the printers understand. You can just print to file and translate to PDF even if the application doesn't directly support it. You can get ghostscript for Windows and I believe there is a way to set it up to do what the Adobe printer thingy does. It is likely to be a lot more work to set up, but also a lot cheaper. |
#23
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#24
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On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 18:04:16 -0700, lqualig wrote:
snip Furthermore, if someone sends me a M$ office file, I can read it with OpenOffice but they can't use M$ office to read an OpenOffice file. This is the reality of how it must be done. Being the underdog trying to unseat the king, OpenOffice must be able to read MS Office files. Not being able to read .doc files would be a huge hurdle for OO users simply because of how common .doc (and .xls...) files are. MS-Office had to do the same thing when it was trying to establish itself. It had to read WordPerfect documents and Lotus-123 Spreadsheets. Similarly neither WordPerfect nor 123 could read MS-Office files at that time. Oh sure...that's why we lso read files for an old DOS version of StarWriter...as well as Metafiles for OS/2. Spot the flaw in this argument. Does M$ office allow you to export documents as PDF file? OpenOffice does. MS-Office does not have this ability. I don't see that happening anytime down the road either. Doing so would be damaging to the relationship they have with Adobe. Too bad. What about Flash? No flash integration either? On Windows PDF export works at the printer driver level. You get (buy) a special printer driver from Adobe and "print" to a PDF file. This way any and all applications can generate PDF files. There are also a number of free PDF print-drivers available as well. (I never use them though... I just email .doc files.) Yeah, works that way on Linux too really. *Any* app *can* do pdfs that way on Linux, but with OO it's just built right into the menu to export as PDF. |
#25
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* * * Y o u r . S h e p h e r d . A q u i l a . D e u s . ( d 2 0 0 5 x
x , d 2 0 0 4 x x , d 2 0 0 3 x x , d 2 0 0 2 x x ) * * * wrote: wrote: having source code means you're kept safe! Not unless you are actively looking at all the code you install and are a secure programming expert. I don't, and I am not. Since exploitable code is widely installed and used, obviously having source code isn't a free security blanket. It does mean independant review is available, and without source code this is just impossible, but it doesn't guarantee security. For it to provide any security benefit you also have to stay up on those independant reviews and pay attention to your distro's updates. Having source code available does bring a LOT of benefits, but I think the security card is a little overplayed quite often. |
#26
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#27
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(Much Gloved Applause)
On 6/4/05 5:20 PM, in article , " wrote: I've been following these Linux threads with some interest because I personally feel that Linux is going to, at some point, overtake Microsoft and I also believe that it will be a Linux/Apple world with Microsoft a way distant 3rd. What I fail to understand however, is why Linux users seem to be so nasty, obscene and self righteous. (SNIP) please leave your arrogance at the door. Thank you for your consideration. Jackson Pyle |
#28
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TIM Unruh and robert failed to reply and then:
On 6/4/05 5:51 PM, in article , "anahata" wrote: Rest assured that the majority of Linux users (like me) are not like that. Nor can we be bothered to particpate in all the mud slinging... Nice to hear from one of the (hopefully) Silent Majority. thanks |
#29
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#31
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Mike wrote:
wrote: Doctors running a practice are interested in healing people not sorting thorough source code and certainly not using programs that make it difficult to share their data with their collegues or insurance companies (OpenOffice for example, nice program but everyone on earth is using Micorsoft Office). Not *everyone* uses M$ Office - the OpenOffice users for example. Furthermore, if someone sends me a M$ office file, I can read it with OpenOffice but they can't use M$ office to read an OpenOffice file. Does M$ office allow you to export documents as PDF file? OpenOffice does. What a useless debate ! I use neither. LaTeX is the only way to produce portable, professional looking documents. Once you have tex source code, you can produce pdf, dvi, ps, anything. |
#32
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SSJVCmag wrote:
On 6/4/05 10:44 PM, in article , "Liam Slider" wrote: Yeah, works that way on Linux too really. *Any* app *can* do pdfs that way on Linux, but with OO it's just built right into the menu to export as PDF. OK kiddies, I'll assume that you're as conversant with email posting to newsgroups as Linux and so you DO know how not only to kill the crosspost headers but CHANGE the subject header for discussion of LINUX stuff that really doesn't need to be floated over in other non-linux NGs. It's quick! It's easy! do it Now! Thanks! multiple copies of same stupid post. By far worse than any purported topic violation. *plonk* |
#33
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In article ,
Dana wrote: So what does it do? All I could see was an attachment, which I assumed was a virus so I didn't download it. There was no attachment. When Outlook Express sees a line that looks like this (except I'll change spaces to underscores so as to not trigger this for you): begin__something_more_stuff it *guesses* that it is the start of a uuencoded attachment of a file named "something", and tries to interpret the rest of the file, down to whatever the marker is that marks the end of uuencoded attachments (I forget what that is), as the attachment. So, basically, if an email message or usenet post contains a line that starts with the word "begin" followed by two spaces, OE will tell you there is an attachment. Microsoft knows about this, and they even have a Knowledgebase article discussing it, which offers the wonderful advice that you should ask people not to start lines with "begin ". It took them longer to write that article than it would have taken any programmer who has advanced past the beginner stage to make the uuencode detection more robust and fix this problem. They should just fix this stupid bug. -- --Tim Smith |
#34
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Dana wrote:
On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 23:23:51 +0000, Peter Jensen wrote: IMHO, not fixing such a trivial bug for so extremely long is nothing short of showing contempt for their customers. This bug, in connection with another bug that has since been fixed, actually allowed any properly formatted Usenet message to crash OE when you clicked on it. It's therefore not as harmless as it might seem at first glance. Ok, ic, but still what is the purpose of exploiting some bug in software on purpose? What useful purpose does it serve? These are discussion groups and I was under the impression the basic concept was to discuss things, not screw up other persons news programs? I have never seen this type of thing before so I am ignorant. Is this a Linux thing, IOW some way for Linux users to exploit Windows software? The entire thing seems very silly to me. There is nothing wrong with what they are doing. The format should not cause any problems what so ever with ANYONE. We have a number of wintrolls in this group claiming how great windows is. But how can they claim that windows is so great when such a simple, silly, stupid bug goes unfixed for YEARS? It is just an easy way of reminding the wintrolls what crappy bug fix support they get from MS. |
#35
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Dana wrote:
On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 23:23:51 +0000, Peter Jensen wrote: IMHO, not fixing such a trivial bug for so extremely long is nothing short of showing contempt for their customers. This bug, in connection with another bug that has since been fixed, actually allowed any properly formatted Usenet message to crash OE when you clicked on it. It's therefore not as harmless as it might seem at first glance. Ok, ic, but still what is the purpose of exploiting some bug in software on purpose? What useful purpose does it serve? This post is without the "begin" bug I will tell what useful purpose the inclusion of that bug-trigger has. It keeps OE users from viewing my posts. I think that OE users are actually all way too stupid to correctly use a computer, and therefor have nothing to say which could interest me in any way So there. Live with it. snip -- Microsoft's Guide To System Design: If it starts working, we'll fix it. Pronto. |
#36
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Peter Köhlmann wrote:
This post is without the "begin" bug I will tell what useful purpose the inclusion of that bug-trigger has. It keeps OE users from viewing my posts. I think that OE users are actually all way too stupid to correctly use a computer, and therefor have nothing to say which could interest me in any way That! is pretty stupid. |
#37
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Dana schrieb:
On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 23:23:51 +0000, Peter Jensen wrote: IMHO, not fixing such a trivial bug for so extremely long is nothing short of showing contempt for their customers. This bug, in connection with another bug that has since been fixed, actually allowed any properly formatted Usenet message to crash OE when you clicked on it. It's therefore not as harmless as it might seem at first glance. Ok, ic, but still what is the purpose of exploiting some bug in software on purpose? What useful purpose does it serve? It shows the user, what piece of crap he's using. These are discussion groups and I was under the impression the basic concept was to discuss things, not screw up other persons news programs? Yep. Peter didn't "screw up" your program. Peter wrote perfectly normal text that your program has chosen to interpret, although it's quite clear, that the interpretation is wrong. The entire thing seems very silly to me. Yep. Alexander Skwar -- All Finagle Laws may be bypassed by learning the simple art of doing without thinking. |
#38
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 18:50:44 -0400, Dana wrote: On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 22:48:45 +0000, Unruh wrote: Dana writes: On Sun, 05 Jun 2005 00:30:49 +0200, Peter Köhlmann wrote: begin virus.txt.scr Dana wrote: Is there some reason why you are attempting to post a virus to newsgroups? He is not. That text triggers a bug in the Windows email software. Ok. But why would anyone want to do that? Seems silly to me. why would someone write a newsreader so poor, it can't handle a couple of spaces? dunno, ask Microsoft. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.5 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFCorHyd90bcYOAWPYRAqmwAKDYTRVuOP9J0If25/VSf9g3fq77/ACg8ZmV w2NRjyBPlPpClkz60k2yoHo= =FdUt -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock I won't insult your intelligence by suggesting that you really believe what you just said. --William F. Buckley, Jr. |
#39
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wrote:
I've been following these Linux threads with some interest because I personally feel that Linux is going to, at some point, overtake Microsoft and I also believe that it will be a Linux/Apple world with Microsoft a way distant 3rd. What I fail to understand however, is why Linux users seem to be so nasty, obscene and self righteous. Because you're reading an *.advocacy newsgroup. It's deliberately designed to shunt unwanted traffic away from better forums. People who think they are promoting Linux by posting in *.advocacy groups are rank amateurs at marketing. Real marketers do not waste their time in cesspools like this. They construct disciplined marketing campaigns, use real artists, and talk to real suits with real businesses and real money on the line. None of these people do it here. If you want to move and shake for Linux, in any kind of serious way, get off of Usenet and go get a proper job to do that sort of thing. Microsoft has *many* Technology Evangelists, it's a known and widely recognized job title. I don't know what the equivalent in the Linux world is, or what the funding model is. That's left as an exercise to the serious reader. I would take Linux marketing discussions seriously if a moderated comp.os.linux.marketing newsgroup existed. But that won't happen. Only a smaller number of people can get real work of that sort done. It's more of a mailing list sort of thing. I've gone through a rough ride in the Python universe, trying to do that sort of thing. I'm sure you'll find people who will say I wasn't useful in the slightest; well, neither was Guido or the PSF, and I was hardly alone in that point of view. Tried again with OCaml; it wasn't so rough, but nothing got done. After that, I figured out the only thing I can market is myself. All I can do is ship a game and make lotsa money at it. The only thing industries respect is money. If you make the money, and then articulate what you did, people will pay attention. In case you're wondering, I'm here to "slum it" and waste my time. Some people space out in front of the TV; I crank up c.o.l.a. Or play Freeciv. -- Cheers, www.indiegamedesign.com Brandon Van Every Seattle, WA T-shirt that landed someone a job: "I'm not an asshole, I'm a Shaper!" http://www.teams.org.uk/shaper.htm |
#40
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On 2005-06-05, Noah Roberts wrote:
having source code means you're kept safe! Not unless you are actively looking at all the code you install and are a secure programming expert. I don't, and I am not. But the trick is that you can. Sure, right now it doesn't matter (from your perspective). But, what happens when a project is canceled (take i.e. Win95 which would be ideal for some lousy embedded touch screen device)? Nobody's developing it and there are no bug patches anymore and you need/like this piece of software. What do you do? Get the source and hack it. Soon you find people that thinks like you and need/like the sw. And the life goes on... No hair pulling, swearing, cursing... -- Uspjesne regije, tvrtke, muskarci i zene znaju da je uvijek bolje biti prvorazredna verzija sebe nego drugorazredna verzija nekog drugog. |
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