The powerful appeal of something for nothing (Financial Times)
Posted Mar 29, 2006 19:25 UTC (Wed) by
quintesse (subscriber, #14569)
Parent article:
The powerful appeal of something for nothing (Financial Times)
"so spending time debugging open source code for no payment will be
especially hard to justify"
It is? I would say that getting something for free and then being able to
adjust it to suit your purposes would be a powerful incentive to consider
working on OSS.
Remember that living in a developing country normally means you have a
lack of means (money in this case to buy software) not a lack of time.
Of course for a lot of these people cost is not an issue because they will
use illegal version of commercial software (seen enough shopping centers
in South America where the shops openly sell nothing but illegally copied
software) but I think this will change when companies like Microsoft make
it more and more difficult to use pirated versions of their software. Of
course it will never be 100% safe but there will come a time I think where
it will become easier to just tell people to use Linux than getting around
all the copy-protection stuff, especially when more and more features will
require being on-line. Windows Update works now if you have a pirated
copy, but how much longer?
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