05.06.09
New Version of Gnote Released, Already Earns New Users Who Boast Mono Relief
“Microsoft is unique among proprietary software companies: they are the only ones who have actively tried to kill Open Source and Free Software. It’s not often someone wants to be your friend after trying to kill you for ten years, but such change is cause for suspicion.”
–Bradley M. Kuhn (SFLC)
Summary: More steps are taken to leave Mono behind and move just GNOME/GTK forward
Hubert has just announced the release of Gnote 0.3.1, which is available for download. There are already some excited new users like this guy, who writes:
Since a few weeks when Rahul started packaging Gnote for both Rawhide and F10, I became a huge fan of the application, it does everything I needed from Tomboy and its author has frequent releases, with lot of features added and bugs fixed (the 0.3.1 release crossed the threshold for me). On top of that, I was able to remove the Mono stack from my computer (has using it exclusively for Tomboy), I am more Free now.
Given the SFLC’s interpretation of the Moonlight situation, more people begin to question Mono as well.
So, why are we including this in Ubuntu and in light of this, shouldn’t we re-examine the mono case too? The moonlight FAQ claims that you can redstribute it even though the convenant specificly says you can’t.
I get a very distinct trojan horse feeling on both these technologies.
Microsoft’s FAT action ought to have woken people up. █
Mono turns gnomes to gargoyles
“It’s a good moment for people to take a step back and re-think how friendly Microsoft is to open source.”
–Bradley M. Kuhn (SFLC) in response to the TomTom lawsuit
Yfrwlf said,
May 6, 2009 at 4:19 pm
Now if only it was easily installable using real standardized Linux package formats which were adopted by the major package managers, then that *Freedom* would be *freely* available to even those not knowing how to use the command line. :3
/rant
Roy Schestowitz Reply:
May 6th, 2009 at 4:25 pm
For a large number of users (especially non-techies) the repositories contain everything they ever require.