TECHRIGHTS is the recipient of various smears that claim the site or its authors to be something that they are not (misrepresentation). We wrote many articles about it about 5 years ago, having seen smears as bad as "Taliban". A very common pattern of smears is to call your rival/opponent in a debate "religious" about an opinion, as in dogmatic and detached from logic (there are other similar labels like "tinfoil hat" or "conspiracy theory", as noted years ago). The FSF, despite being mostly atheistic, is a regular recipient of the "religion" smear (Stallman's parodies of religion may contribute to this). Microsoft sometimes smears Free software by characterising it as a religion and we, as vocal Novell critics, received similar smears from Novell apologists/staff (Microsoft Linux is still alive by the way and it is spreading to Google). Calling/labeling "religious" those who are non-religious makes no sense. It's a cheap shot and those who use such cheap shots are often the ones who are irrational and detached from an alternative (opposing) point of view. When logic doesn't work in an argument, then cheap shots get used, or ad hominem attacks.
Internal Apple documents show that the company’s sales department is anxious about growing competition from Android-powered devices amidst declining iPhone sales, Re/code said in a report.
I've written about and reviewed mobile phones for almost a decade and a half. Everything from flip phones, to BlackBerrys, to today's hottest Android models, and yes, Apple iPhones, have passed through my hands. That experience is why, more than anything, I've ultimately settled on Google Android as my smartphone platform of choice.
For long we have been hearing strories that Android is unsafe, unstable, while iOS is reliable. But new data that has emerged will totally change the picture. A study conducted by Crittercism, a performance monitoring company has revealed that while iOS 7.1 is the most stable version of iOS to date, its Android counterpart is far more stable.
Comments
Michael
2014-04-07 20:09:09
As you say:
And that is exactly what you are doing here.
Now compare that to those who follow Stallman's cult-like teachings where he bastardizes the language and claims that to be "Free" one must succumb to his limitations. Just utter nonsense. Nothing wrong with the GPL - it is truly a masterful piece of work and a fine choice for protecting your IP - but it is not more "free" than, say, licenses which allow for more freedoms, such as the BSD license (also a fine choice). And Stallman has pushed his cult-like notion that all software developers, ideally in his view, would be forced to follow his ideas. His cult-like ideas.
Even Linus Torvalds speaks of this:
If you cannot figure out he is speaking of Stallman and his extremist cult-like followers you do not understand the open source world.