[Am-info] Fw: Thank you, Microsoft, but no thanks!

Joe Barr warthawg@austin.rr.com
Fri, 9 Nov 2001 15:33:21 -0600


Begin forwarded message:

Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2001 16:55:05 -0500
From: "Eric S. Raymond" <esr@thyrsus.com>
To: wire-service@thyrsus.com
Subject: Thank you, Microsoft, but no thanks!


In remarks at a Microsoft stockholders' meeting, Bill Gates recently
claimed that Microsoft was responsible for the success of open source.

"Really," he said "the reason you see open source there at all is
because we came in and said there should be a platform that's
identical with millions and millions of machines."

As an exercise in retroactive imperialism, this is little short of
breathtaking.  It ignores the fact that though the open-source culture
wouldn't get public visibility until after 1993, or a name for itself
until 1998, it already existed well before the foundation of Microsoft
in 1975.  Many of today's most active hackers can readily remember a
time when the typical response to the word "Microsoft" was "Who are
they?" -- and some of our most important work (such as the Berkeley
TCP/IP stack that Microsoft itself copied and used) was written years
before the computing landscape flattened into PCs as far as the eye
can see.

But there is one smidgen of truth in this; yes, Mr. Gates, recently you
have
helped open source succeed -- in much the same way Osama bin Laden has
helped beef up airport security lately.

Microsoft's monopolistic, price-gouging, bullying behavior is making
open source more attractive every day.  We'd thank you, except that
you're only accelerating a process that would have happened anyway.
You're a serviceable villain, but not a necessary one; the dedication
to excellence and the sense of worldwide community that are behind the
open-source movement were here long before Microsoft, and will still be
here
long after Microsoft is gone.
-- 
		<a href="http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a>

I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the
Constitution which grant[s] a right to Congress of expending, on
objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents.
	-- James Madison, 1794




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