[General] Open Source maturity

Burhan Khalid burhan.khalid at gmail.com
Sun Jun 28 07:27:54 +03 2009


No, why? Microsoft isn't inviting opensource contributors. Microsoft
is filling a void where there was no online community specifically
tailored to developers creating open source software using .NET.

For all the "openness" claimed by the open source community, dont you
think it's odd that they would shun developers writing code for the
largest platform in the world?

On Saturday, June 27, 2009, bashar abdullah <bashar.abdullah at gmail.com> wrote:
> Burhan: Isn't it awkward from Microsoft to invite open source contributors to a .Net proprietary platform? :)
>
> On Sat, Jun 27, 2009 at 4:27 PM, bashar abdullah <bashar.abdullah at gmail.com> wrote:
> Yeah, read this book last year I think. Pretty funny and enjoyable :P. This guy is the luckiest bastard alive I guess!
>
> On Sat, Jun 27, 2009 at 9:58 AM, Majed B. <majedb at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello Talal!
>
> I have just finished reading the book: Just for Fun: The Story of an
> Accidental Revolutionary
> Link: http://www.amazon.com/Just-Fun-Story-Accidental-Revolutionary/dp/0066620732/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1246085493&sr=8-1
>
> The book is by Linus Torvalds and David Diamond and it tells you how
> Linux started, how Open Source started, its meaning, goals and some
> points of Open Source vs. Copyright/Closed Source approaches.
>
> The book is FUN, as it says, and funny at times. I finished it in less
> than a week with a few hours of reading a day. It's not like you can
> drop the book once starting, but sometimes you're compelled :p
>
> Microsoft has been doing open source projects (on a very light side)
> for quite some time, but their projects are negligible, they use their
> own license, and their own portal, instead of using an existing Open
> Source license and SourceForge.net. (Reminds you of OOXML, no? ;p)
>
> As long as Microsoft's management is the same old blood, nothing will
> change. Will keep releasing alpha binaries as initial releases,
> release new OS versions where they should be service packs, frustrate
> users with ever changing User Interface (UI) and Steve Ballmer will
> keep throwing chairs...
>
> On Sat, Jun 27, 2009 at 2:08 AM, Talal Al Awadhi<talal at alawadhi.com> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have been thinking in the past 2 days, 4 hours in a day minimum, about
>> Open Source as a term.
>>
>> So, I decided to google Open Source 30 minutes back, I wanted to read more
>> about how it started. And how this "Concept" has grown lately solidly &
>> successfully, but slowly, which also made the growth solid on a concrete
>> foundation.
>>
>> Some has started commercializing the Open Source driven products in
>> different techniques (Red Hat, MySQL, Scalix, vBulletin, SugarCRM), and some
>> started converting closed source projects to Open Source (Symbian by NOKIA).
>>
>> Figures, either by adoption, or financial results proves the success that
>> Open Source is giving looks amazing. Looking at the android pre-release
>> acceptance for this mobile OS, driven by the Open Source Phenomena, proves
>> that the wave of Open Source is coming no matter what happens or other huge
>> players act or improve in their closed source projects and softwares.
>>
>> I expect personally, that Microsoft gets into the wave very soon (Forced for
>> sure to keep its leading position in the software market) either wise it
>> will lose its leading position to other software vendors who can understand
>> & develop an innovative way of producing a competing money making softwares
>> for public under the Open Source umbrella.
>>
>> Coming back to the beginning, I believe that till today, you can't relay on
>> a book to get accurate information or a right understanding on what Open
>> Source is, how it started, and how to commercialize Open Source in an
>> ethical way, or lets say "The right way of doing it", or the right way to
>> explain it to people who doesn't understand Open Source. Below some examples
>> on books on Open Source:
>> Producing Open Source Software by Karl Fogel
>> The Success of Open Source by Steven Weber
>> The Open Source Alternative by Heather J. Meeker
>> Open Sources 2.0 by Chris DiBona, Mark Stone, and Danese Cooper
>>
>> I highly believe that many conflicting information are there in these books,
>> even though they share and support Open Source. But I was not able to get a
>> concrete information about it. And thats healthy and normal, its just a new
>> thing growing world
>




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