At Novell, Polluting GNU/Linux with Microsoft Technologies is “Taking Over the World”
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2009-03-11 14:30:08 UTC
- Modified: 2009-03-11 14:32:41 UTC
A Novell employee and Moonlight developer, Jeffrey Stedfast1, has just posted this mind-boggling rave about Moonlight spreading and getting inside other hosts (distributions). After the TomTom lawsuit we understand very well why this is trouble [1, 2].
Fedora has already
forbidden Moonlight. We also happen to know that some unnamed Red Hat seniors are unhappy with Mono. BLAG, a derivative of Fedora is already in the process of removing Mono indefinitely.
⬆
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1 Previously mentioned in [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5].
Comments
honda
2009-03-11 16:04:30
That pretty much all the majors; and Ubuntu alone probably means 90% of all Linux installations use Moonlight.
I think you should give up your attempts to make it look like Moonlight was on the decline, it starts looking ridiculous.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-03-11 16:08:34
David Gerard
2009-03-11 16:12:31
Michael Tiemann
2009-03-11 16:35:05
You are missing the point. The argument is not about deprecating something because it's not popular. It's about deprecating something because it is *dangerous*. It's about deprecating something because *their gain is our loss*.
Novell are in a compromised position because they agreed to take the anti-FOSS side of the bet. Being anti-FOSS may be popular in some demographic circles, but it's a damn lousy way to justify what FOSS behavior *should* be. Software freedom and open source mean *nothing* when the code gets polluted or diluted or merely convoluted with hostile patent claims.
M
JohnD
2009-03-11 17:05:50
David Gerard
2009-03-11 17:10:37
Roy Schestowitz
2009-03-11 17:30:43
Distributions share code, thus dependency gets inherited (e.g. dependence on Microsoft). Even Microsoft influence in the Linux Foundation (LF) rears its ugly head again with a coming public debate. I wrote quite a lot about how Novell in the LF is trouble [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. Microsoft uses Novell as its ticket.
JohnD
2009-03-11 17:50:38
JohnD
2009-03-11 18:29:37
Hemfburger
2009-03-11 18:39:45
David Gerard
2009-03-11 18:40:08
You appear to be expounding aggressively and at length on matters you've just admitted you don't actually understand.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-03-11 19:08:40
JohnD
2009-03-11 19:16:43
Jose_X
2009-03-11 19:33:38
Then when we see cases of The Fox eating up a chicken or two, you want us to be patient and see if The Fox will in fact finish up its meal or will abort midway or if the chicken will manage to fight it's way out and survive.
Have patience with The Fox, you say.
Further, "your side" works hard to get the hen to adopt the tools and environment of The Fox. "Let's share alongside the patents and proprietary bits that exist alongside Fox technology. It won't hurt anyone. It will be better."
The problem is that Microsoft is not special and worthy of the umpteenth new opportunity and resetting of the slate. No amount of Novell helping them to embrace and extend FOSS is going to change minds like mine. Microsoft is not an ordinary proprietary vendor nor ordinary creator/dealer in software patents.
Frankly, I see no way to reconcile Monopolysoft's existing position and track record with a future embrace that would be beneficial to Linux+FOSS.
The longer Novell remains on this path, the more Novell's ranks will attract people that would very easily work with and adopt Microsoft's many approaches without a blink. By then (and maybe this is where we are today), there will be few tears shed with any negative consequence that may befall Novell.
David Gerard
2009-03-11 19:42:32
John, I notice you didn't answer that question of mine above: "do you understand Canonical’s rationale for not allowing MP3 codecs into Ubuntu main?"
(Of course, you may be smarter than Mark Shuttleworth, as I'm sure your respective track records will demonstrate if examined.)
Roy Schestowitz
2009-03-11 19:48:12
David Gerard
2009-03-11 19:52:50
So far the codec talk has gone nowhere. And VLC, ffmpeg and mplayer are in Universe.
JohnD
2009-03-11 19:56:49
JohnD
2009-03-11 20:06:18
JohnD
2009-03-11 20:16:29
David Gerard
2009-03-11 20:18:04
Jose_X
2009-03-11 20:27:36
With Monopolysoft, it's a different story. They have deployed, they even continue to deploy, and they are most certainly capable of deploying as necessary many levers of various types that are quite sizable and have tremendous potential to snuff or to marginalize Linux+FOSS. [I am most concerned with the platforms that directly touch the largest number of people, eg, the "destktop market".]
We are OK, defending against Monopolysoft, but we must in fact defend against them, not get into bed with them. We must challenge their business approach and many forms of lock-in. We'd go after their monopoly marketshare directly until the levers break and they can once again become an ordinary competitor. [Assumption is that no group of competitors would collude to control the market.. at least not without getting discovered and called on it.]
With respect to patents being avoidable: http://boycottnovell.com/2009/02/04/the-api-trap-part-1/
Jose_X
2009-03-11 20:55:22
JohnD, you describe a sad story that unfortunately affects many people. What I might recommend to you to pass along to customers is for them to continue using and maintaining their existing investments, but invest in platforms like Qt, Java, and web applications that don't use any dependencies on Monopolyware. There is currently sufficient support to allow a fair amount of interoperability and to help migration costs. The key is to stop adding new Monopolyware unless the customers want to continue singing the same sad song into the future.
Red Hat's deal with Microsoft on VM support, something I don't particularly like (but I don't know the details), is almost nothing like the work Novell is generally performing for Microsoft. http://boycottnovell.com/2009/02/21/mono-moonlight-novl-strategy/#comment-60421
No company besides Microsoft could offer fair support for Microsoft technology. How many compromises does the customer want? If they want to stay with MSware, there is a price that comes with that because that is closed source.
If I were presenting an open solution to a customer, I would not look at "dotnet". If the customer could not accept that, we would probably each save ourselves some headaches by cutting back our relationship. I'm not a physician, nor a lawyer.. I'm not a Monopolysoft technician or "solution" provider, either. Like I said, there are ways to deal with existing Monopolysoft investments in a way that is fairly independent of Monopolysoft.
That Novell might be offering something they aren't or can't really deliver with any sort of consistency is something customers will eventually realize. We can't force Monopolysoft to spill open the guts to their software. [And I wouldn't trust they had done so, without the "substitute test", conducted after building the software with open tools I would trust.]
Michael Tiemann
2009-03-11 20:55:52
Like this?
Or like this?
Are you volunteering to take the first bullet? If not, I reject the notion that we should not prepare ourselves for the consequence that when the gun is smoking, somebody, somewhere, is bleeding to death on the streets.
Michael Tiemann
2009-03-11 20:57:05
Like this?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Kent_State_massacre.jpg
Or like this?
http://www.lyfe.freeserve.co.uk/art/photoadams.jpg
Are you volunteering to take the first bullet? If not, I reject the notion that we should not prepare ourselves for the consequence that when the gun is smoking, somebody, somewhere, is bleeding to death on the streets.
Jose_X
2009-03-11 21:18:27
There are many problems. Intermediaries are not needed. Microsoft can come directly to the people and present their case.
Do you understand the threat that Linux+FOSS presents to Microsoft's current business? Do you understand the weapon Microsoft currently wields because of their market status, closed source software, and various other levers?
At some point, Monopolysoft will be neutered, I hope, but that day was not a few years ago, it isn't today, and I will wait until it's clearly happened before considering doing business with that company (Microsoft or anyone working on their behalf).
Novell is fine with us meeting Microsoft "halfway". That's how they make their money.
Open source benefits customers. Meeting Monopolysoft "halfway" is actually short-changing ourselves and the customers/users everywhere. There is no need for this. Linux' value will be more clear to more people as time goes by.. if we continue working to better Linux and according to our principles and defensively. We can't contribute, criticize, leverage any MSware. When we say "Linux" we are talking about something that is accessible to everyone. Many users of all types contribute to it. It's hard to argue against that. It's also hard to argue that there can be any "halfway" that preserves the *monopolies and various levers* of Monopolysoft. Novell accepts Monopolysoft and their levers. What does that say about their ability to be an open source (Linux) service provider? Is Novell working for the customer or for Microsoft?
JohnD
2009-03-12 03:18:41
Jose_X
2009-03-12 04:13:56
On the support front.. The gov might move more into FOSS and solve some of your problems on your behalf (to make up perhaps for having helped create it in the first place). I'm not against people choosing what they want to use. I'm saying I would not support the business setting you described, and I do think Linux will have greater chance of uptake down the line, the better it gets, not the closer it gets to Microsoft (that would be a subversive distraction). If you feel a need to support MSware for your livelihood, go ahead. You can still keep up with Linux and even contribute.
The interop failure is controlled by Microsoft by design (we show *all* our code). That has been a strategic part or their business for ages. For numerous reasons I don't do business with Microsoft.
If you felt attacked here, understand that some people feel attacked by the content of this website and have themselves helped make the atmosphere here less than sunny at times. Such is the nature of the beast. You won't catch anyone here throwing rocks at anyone else without having an "I'm only defending myself" excuse. Jobs and more are at stake for lots of people. Hopefully, your skin is thick enough to manage the rougher moments.
Finally, Linux customizability and openness offers tremendous business opportunities if only as a marketing tool you can help design for your clients or for yourself. It pays in many ways to steer clear of Monopolysoft lock-in traps. The sooner the better, but it's never too late to seize control and help your customers seize control themselves. Hey, it's free to sample and trial! It's free forever. And you don't need to pay or get permission to modify to suit your needs nor to share or sell it.
Jose_X
2009-03-12 04:20:17
It's sleep time for me.