Don't be afraid: Linux is good for you (Globe and Mail)
Posted Jul 31, 2003 16:57 UTC (Thu) by
dooglio (guest, #2604)
Parent article:
Don't be afraid: Linux is good for you (Globe and Mail)
Good article. I will have to use these points the next time I'm talking to someone about
Linux.
***
I have to say one thing--I think assigning the word "free" to Linux does do harm some
times, particularly when talking to lay people.
I was at the Government Technical Conference in Sacramento, California this year,
and woman from the Hummingbird booth (of Exceed fame) came by our booth (the
Linux Users Group of Davis) to offer us demo discs of their software. She asked what
we were all about, and I told her about GNU/Linux, and that it is a "totally free"
operating system. Boy did she react negatively, stopping short of calling me a
communist. "You guys are against anyone making money with software." Ugh. I tried
to explain that you can make plenty of money with Linux. I pointed out that companies
like Cynus Software, Red Hat and IBM have been using Linux to further their profits.
But she still seemed unimpressed. I think she was laboring under a false notion that
everyone involved with Linux and open source in general must somehow be
anti-captialist.
The point is not that GNU/Linux is free as in it doesn't cost money. Actually, it does
cost in terms of expertise and time--nothing is really free, afterall. The point is that you
are "totally free" to use the GNU/Linux operation system in any way you wish, to install
it on a myriad of machines, get into the source code and customize the heck out of it.
There are no licence agreements or legalities involved (other than the
very-easy-to-understand GPL) to restrict your use. You can use LGPLed software in
your own proprietary libraries, in fact.
Of course, I only thought of this response days later. I consider it a learning
experience, for sure. :-) I'm not sure what a good replacement for the word "free" might
be for the lay person, but we need to spell out that the OS is really "restriction free,"
and try to dispell the myth that we open source advocates are communists and
somehow un-american... :-)
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