| By Linux News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| June 17, 2007 04:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
17,976 |
Linux creator Linux Torvalds was fairly harsh in his criticism of Sun Microsystems in a recent response to a question about GPL2 and 3 at LKML.org.Part of what he had to say:
"(Don't make) the fundamental mistake of thinking that Sun is in this to actually further some open-source agenda. Here's a cynical prediction (but backed up by past behaviour of Sun):
- first off: they may be talking a lot more than they are or ever will be doing. How many announcements about Sun and Linux have you seen over the years? And how much of that has actually happened?
- They may like open source, but Linux has hurt them in the marketplace. A lot."
Torvalds (pictured left) also observed that, "(Sun) not only drools after our drivers, they drool after all the _people_ who write drivers. They'd love to get kernel developers from Linux, they see that we have a huge amount of really talented people. So they want to talk things up, and the more "open source" they can position themselves, the better.Schwartz responded in his blog with an open letter to Linus, noting that "I'm glad you give credit to Sun for the contributions we've made to the open source world, and Linux specifically - we take the commitment seriously. It's why we freed OpenOffice, elements of Gnome, Mozilla, delivered Java, and a long list of other contributions that show up in almost every distro. Individuals will always define communities, but Sun as a company has done its part to grow the market - for others as much as ourselves."
Schwartz (pictured left) said he draws a sharp distinction between the Linux community and companies that leverage Linux in the marketplace, with the succinct observation that "companies compete, communities simply fracture."He then had some comments regarding the issues that Linus raises, to wit:
"Now despite what you suggest, we love where the FSF's GPL3 is headed. For a variety of mechanical reasons, GPL2 is harder for us with OpenSolaris - but not impossible, or even out of the question. This has nothing to do with being afraid of the community (if it was, we wouldn't be so interested in seeing ZFS everywhere, including Linux, with full patent indemnity). Why does open sourcing take so long? Because we're starting from products that exist, in which a diversity of contributors and licensors/licensees have rights we have to negotiate. Indulge me when I say It's different than starting from scratch. I would love to go faster, and we are all doing everything under our control to accelerate progress. (Remember, we can't even pick GPL3 yet - it doesn't officially exist.) It's also a delicate dance to manage this transition while growing a corporation."
Schwartz concludes by inviting Linus for a "mashup" or sorts, ie, dinner at Jonathan's house: "I'll cook, you bring the wine." A nice Oregon Pinot Noir, perhaps?
Published June 17, 2007 Reads 17,976
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Mr. Smith 06/19/07 11:58:53 AM EDT | |||
Collaboration (IBM+Sun+Google+Linux+Java) > Microsoft |
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Linux News Desk 06/13/07 03:04:19 PM EDT | |||
From Jonathan Schwartz's recent blog entry: 'Linus, First, I'm glad you give credit to Sun for the contributions we've made to the open source world, and Linux specifically - we take the commitment seriously. It's why we freed OpenOffice, elements of Gnome, Mozilla, delivered Java, and a long list of other contributions that show up in almost every distro. Individuals will always define communities, but Sun as a company has done its part to grow the market - for others as much as ourselves.' |
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