On 3/14/07, Gordon JC Pearce <wsynth@email-addr-hidden> wrote:
> After a few days of careful consideration, I've decided that I no longer
> want to be involved in developing software for Linux. It's been a
> difficult decision to make, having used Linux as my main desktop OS for
> around 10 years now, but I feel that the community as a whole is going
> in a direction that is not compatible with my moral compass.
>
> To that end, I'm pulling everything I've written under the GPL or a
> GPL-compatible licence. If there are copies out there, great, feel
> free. Anything I'm interested in will be rewritten from the ground up
> under a BSD-style licence, which to be honest I've always preferred.
>
> Part of the reason for this is the increasing difficulty of using binary
> drivers with Linux. I know a lot of people don't like them, but I like
> to have things like accelerated video *and* custom kernels without all
> the buggering about involved in getting it working. In particular the
> Debian-based distributions seem to be intentionally hamstrung when comes
> to supporting binary-only drivers, which makes running the custom kernel
> required for low-latency work *and* the binary nVidia driver almost
> impossible.
>
> I don't want to be associated with this nonsense any more. It's not
> what Free Software is about.
>
What do binary-only drivers have to do with Free Software?
Besides, what you want is probably impossible. You can't have
pre-comiled, binary-only drivers *and* a custom kernel.
I hear Mac OS X is nice; maybe it would suit your needs better.
Received on Wed Mar 14 16:15:02 2007
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Wed Mar 14 2007 - 16:15:02 EET