Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | Bling | About BLU |
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 01:40:30PM -0400, Rich Braun wrote: > The news broke yesterday: Oracle to buy Sun. > > Sun bought MySQL last year, leading to departure of several key developers and > a fairly disastrous downturn in quality of support and QA. And spurring several forks, at least one of which is backed by a (new) company, and another one of which is dedicated to a smaller, lighter MySQL system. > That leaves European regulators, perhaps, or an open-source community > initiative to take MySQL back. The communities have been doing that since Sun bought MySQL AB. > There's always PostreSQL. But the big picture seems to be this: large > software companies have found a way to co-opt the most popular open-source > applications in a now-routine 3-step process: (1) put up some money to help > development, (2) hire a team and adopt the core technology, then (3) put the > whole thing up for sale on Wall Street. Highest bidder is invariably the > largest/most-expensive rival. > > Is that what's going to happen to the rest of the open-source world? No, only the ones which don't have real communities and aren't backed by real open-source licenses. -- http://tao.merseine.nu/~dsr/eula.html is hereby incorporated by reference. You can't defend freedom by getting rid of it.
BLU is a member of BostonUserGroups | |
We also thank MIT for the use of their facilities. |