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Bitkeeper after the storm - Part 1 (NewsForge)

Bitkeeper after the storm - Part 1 (NewsForge)

Posted May 11, 2004 23:57 UTC (Tue) by spot (subscriber, #15640)
In reply to: Bitkeeper after the storm - Part 1 (NewsForge) by havoc
Parent article: Bitkeeper after the storm - Part 1 (NewsForge)

I don't consider myself a zealot (advocate, yes), but realize that if every software developer took the Bitkeeper stance (use free software to make closed software), there wouldn't be any free software.

I believe that good software stands on its own merits, and that it doesn't need to be closed to have a revenue model. I'm not disagreeing that Bitkeeper one of the best revisioning systems out there, I just think that it seems somewhat hypocritical to talk about how much benefit you gain from free software in developing closed software.

Then again, I'm probably also an idealist. :)


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Bitkeeper after the storm - Part 1 (NewsForge)

Posted May 12, 2004 1:30 UTC (Wed) by iabervon (subscriber, #722) [Link]

But he's also taking the opposite stance: he's providing closed software
for people to use to make free software. The fact that Linus is happy and
productive (and I well remember when he was failing to scale) is a bigger
benefit to free software than many free software projects provide.
Instead of writing free software and selling services, he writes closed
software and provides free services to free software.

I personally think that he is wrong to prohibit developers of other
version control systems from using the gratis version of bitkeeper,
however. He's said that he couldn't have gotten bitkeeper right as an
open source project, because it took a lot of concerted effort before it
was sufficiently useful that it would have attracted a team. But if the
problem is that hard, he shouldn't worry about competition, and if it's
not, he's doomed anyway. Limiting who can use the gratis version just
makes it less appealing to project leaders and less convenient for them,
which in turn reduces the number of developers exposed to it, and reduces
the market for the commercial version.

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