Microsoft Jack: “Tilt Lotus Into the Death Spiral” Was Humour (Updated)
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-06-22 18:26:44 UTC
- Modified: 2008-06-22 21:29:27 UTC
Got to perfume those bad deeds...
The horde of Microsoft apologists is quite a scary force. Among those who
attempt to rewrite history we also have Microsoft Jack, whose comments about the inaccurate BBC article are rather telling. How about
this one?
⬆
"I’d be glad to help tilt lotus into into the death spiral. I could do it Friday afternoon but not Saturday. I could do it pretty much any time the following week."
--Brad Silverberg, Microsoft
Update: To say more on that
placement 'article' from the BBC, be sure to see
this new critique.
I don’t think the producers of the show realised the significance of this admission, since they quickly cut to another segment. Reading between the lines, Gates is essentially confessing that he would not have progressed had he and Paul Allen not found the source code. Without this knowledge, and without this opportunity to understand and experiment with how the internals of a computer worked, Gates and Allen would have been severely constrained in their ability to found a software company and develop products
I would go so far as to say that Microsoft owes its very existence to this access to source code.
To anyone with a passing familiarity to how things worked back then, this comes as no surprise. Source code was expected to be free, and this in turn nurtured a generation of computer hackers. But whereas Richard Stallman saw the amazing potential of this freedom and wanted to preserve it for all, Bill Gates appears to have perceived it as an advantage for himself that he must deny to others.
"Thanks to Mr. Gates, we now know that an open Internet with protocols anyone can implement is communism; it was set up by that famous communist agent, the US Department of Defense."
--Richard Stallman
"There are fewer communists in the world today than there were. There are some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don't think that those incentives should exist."
--Bill Gates
"There’s no company called Linux, there’s barely a Linux road map. Yet Linux sort of springs organically from the earth. And it had, you know, the characteristics of communism that people love so very, very much about it. That is, it’s free."
--Steve Ballmer
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Comments
Doug
2008-06-22 18:37:49
Roy Schestowitz
2008-06-22 18:41:36