Re: [linux-audio-user] linux audio wiki

From: Pete Bessman <ninjadroid@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Fri Aug 26 2005 - 19:19:52 EEST

On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 23:58:24 +1000, "Shayne O'Connor"
<forums@email-addr-hidden> said:
> your long ass email assumed that i was saying everyone should refer to
> linux as "GNU/Linux" 100% of the time,

I assumed nothing about your position. My email was about why
GNU-approved terminology is a stumbling
block to adoption, and why I think we should not use it ever. This
isn't even affected
but how often you think we should say "GNU/Linux." I don't care about
that, anyway. If it's greater
than 0%, I think it's too much.

> and that whenever you refer to it
> - however briefly - one should then launch into a spiel on the concept
> of Open Source, its history and so on ... while this was convenient for
> you to get your opinion across, it sort of melodramatizes what i'm
> saying, i think, if not downright misrepresents me.

I don't understand this passage.

> i should let Stallman explain things himself, cos in the biggest
> coincidence today, my mate sent me this article from today's Sydney
> Morning Herald ... what timing:

This is a rehearsal of the standard GNU position. As my previous email
addressed, the issue
of software freedom is a complete non-starter outside of our circle.
Ergo,
the pragmatically oriented open-source-and-Linux movement is better at
growing the userbase. This is, I think, easy to verify empirically.

> this is pretty much what i'm talking about - it's not complicated, and
> it's hardly asking too much ... but as you know (voting for bush and
> all, heh heh) it's your right to do anything you want.

I have attempted to demonstrate that the "GNU way" retards adoption, to
a degree that makes
naming an important domain in a "GNU approved" manner "asking too much."

> "What is open source software?"
>
> "It is software whose code is freely available for anyone to modify,
> copy or distribute. As opposed to proprietary software, the use of which
> is highly regulated by patents and copyright law."
>
> i'm sure there's better, briefer answers out there.

I don't understand what this is supposed to prove vis-a-vis "free
software."

> > You think that, to some fuzzily defined extent, we should say
> > "GNU/Linux" because that's The Right Thing. This is ideological.
> >
>
> No - because that's what it *is*.

Then, you think that, to some fuzzily defined extent, we should
say "GNU/Linux" because that's what it *is*.

> > I think that, to an absolute extent, we should say "Linux" because
> > that's what the rest of the world says. This is realistic.
> >
>
> apart from the "absolute extent", you are right. you just don't seem to
> have read what i wrote properly.

I should hope that I'm right about determing what I'm thinking.

As it pertains to growing the userbase, I still think that my position
is realistic,
and yours ideological.

> > These days, I say "I use an open source program called Specimen that I
> > wrote for Linux," and everybody understands me fine.
>
> meh - same diff ...

Not.

-Pete
Received on Fri Aug 26 20:15:14 2005

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