Not 100% sure
Posted Dec 19, 2007 23:07 UTC (Wed) by
mingo (subscriber, #31122)
In reply to:
Not 100% sure by khim
Parent article:
Insufficiently free?
Do you really think it was possible to keep these people around ? Usually it goes like this: former Linux developer falls in love with MacOS and switches to it. Are you sure this same developer kept with Linux if MacOS X used Unix versions of C++ compiler and shell instead of GNU ones ? I somehow doubt it...
Plus it's two-way street: we often are gaining Linux developers who were MacOS X and/or Solaris before too. Which effect is prevalent is not clear.
The point i was trying to make is that the political pressure that Richard is using to keep Linux "pure" is strengthening the force that drives developers to other, non-free platforms.
Furthermore, the easy availability of GNU tools on those platforms is giving them the momentary productivity of free platforms, but cuts off the network effects that would strengthen free software, if they were using free platforms.
On the other hand, having a few "non-free" convenience tools in a Linux environment generally keeps people _on_ Linux, and lets them produce great free code. My personal 15 years experience is exactly that: i was forced to use gradually less and less un-free software. Had anyone imposed a "0% non-free software" policy on me 15 years ago i'd likely not be a free software developer today. It's really that simple.
I think it's plain and obvious that the more free software someone uses, the better it is for free software in general. How Richard can claim that using 99% un-free software plus 1% free software is better than using 99% free software plus 1% un-free software is beyond my abilities to comprehend.
In other words: reality is the exact opposite of what Richard claims. At which point his arguments are not even "misguided but self-consistent", they are plain "factually wrong".
The real issue i believe is that i suspect Richard is well aware of these contradictions. His goal is not to have more free software, but to have more people believe in free software. Even if that results in less free software and more "social injustice". But if he were aware of that, could he admit to that? I dont think so.
The fallacy in that logic is that people can easily produce great new free software even if they do not "believe" in free software as such, as defined by Richard. Simply because nature does not make the ability to produce great free software conditional on some internal mental belief condition. There's no forced 1:1 relationship between "produce great free software" and "believe in free software".
The other fallacy is that if there are more people who "believe" in free software that does not necessarily result in more great free software either. (if on the other hand more people start opposing free software as a counter-culture, offseting the positive effects and marginalising free software in the end.)
In other words: having more crusaders might easily result in an equally strong (or even stronger) opposing army and in a burned landscape, not in prosperity and justice.
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