===========================================
LINUXForYou * Dec 2003 (Vol 1 No 10)
In India Rs 50 (with CD)
http://www.linuxforu.com
Pages 102 * US$7.95 0 74470584957
===========================================
THIS ISSUE has probably reached your city. Saw it in Bangalore, and also got
a complimentary copy from the LFY team at LinuxBangalore2003. But when I
reached back to Goa on Dec 4, it wasn't in as yet. So it might take time to
reach 'small town' India... FN
REVIEWED: Mandrake 9.2 * PhProjekt * StarOffice 7.0
COMPUTERS AT TIS HAZARI, the session courts for the city of New Delhi, are
being shifted over to Linux, courtesy the National Informatics Centre. -
Rahul Chopra in this month's editorial.
LINUX LEARNING CENTRE at Bangalore is offering courses
in administration, security, development (internals and
programming essentials, programming with Qt, device
driver programming, MySQL & PHP), RHCE and Red Hat
rapid track certification. www.linuxlearningcentre.com
DotGNU RELEASES CD: It can now be used to implement application programs and
Web services in C# and C applications under multiple operating systems,
including GNU/Linux, FreeBSC, MacOS, MS Windows. The 219 MB release 0.1 CD
is available as a free download at
http://download.freedom.biz/dotgnu/dotgnu-0.1-cdrom.iso.gz.torrent
e-Bridge calls itself "the new state-of-art training
facility from eSpark Infotech is now open in the
heart of Bangalore". It's offering embedded Linux courses
(Linux fundamentals, programming Linux, embedded C & Linux,
realtime C & Linux, Linux internals, device drivers,
networking) and DSP courses (DSP fundamentals, TI/analog
dev programming, audio/video, image processing,
bio-medical systems). www.ebridgesolutions.netLinux.net provides a free e-mail service to those who want an e-mail address
that ends in '@linux.net'
MAJOR UPDATES and releases: OpenNA Linux 1.0, Gibraltar
Firewall 1.0, Xandros Desktop 2.0, Onebase Linux 2.0,
CUPS 1.120rc6.
CAN YOU MAKE money with open source? Registration entails a "nominal fee" of
Rs 5000 for a three-day conference. http://www.linuxasia2004.com/attendees/
February 11-13, 2004, New Delhi.
SEND IN YOUR favourite slogans for a tee-shirt, and win
five free copies of the shirt... LFYedit at efyindia.com
MONEY CAN't buy respect, says Robert Adkins. Some of us might have met this
guy at LB2003 in Bangalore. He's the CTO of Technetra Corp, and an advocate
and implementer of FLOSS solutions for government. He can be contacted at
radkins at technetra.com
CAREERS WITH FLOSS: The number of students opting for
courses in Open Source is growing steadily, even as industry
experts predict a growing need for trained professionals
in this expanding field.
EXIT RED HAT, ENTER FEDORA: It's official now; the free (of cost) version of
Red Hat Linux will not be available anymore. This has created a lot of FUD
in an already unstable environment, thanks to the SCO episode. But is Red
Hat closed for good?
WEB-BASED COLLABORATION SOFTWARE: PHProjekt is an easy-to-install
collaboration suite, which runs on the open source platform and
databases. As the design of the system is developer-friendly,
adding new features and components is a piece of cake.
STAROFFICE: The latest version of Sun's office suite, StarOffice 7, may just
be the right solution for the cost-conscious user. It loads faster than the
earlier version, and sports some noticeable improvements.
IN THE LFY CD THIS MONTH: Slackware (the "oldest Linux distro")
and a range of GNU software for Windows users.
FALLING BACK on backup systems.
MAKING ADOPTION OF Linux in the enterprise easy. www.linux4e.com
Business partners required: http://wwww.linux4e.com/partners
ooWRITER HELPS YOU create your own templates and styles so that you can work
with documents easily.
Open Source is key to IBM's vision of computing. User
empowerment is key to Microsoft's, writes Alolita Sharma
USING DATABASE functions in Calc, a tutorial. (Wish there were more how-tos
for the user in this mag! --FN)
HALDIA DOCKS: it has a uniquely designed Linux installation
with an active-active cluster set up, which is considered
the best of its kind. This has ensured efficiency and
cost-effectiveness.
BASIC UNIX commands and concepts: an extract from *Running Linux* (Shroff
Publishers, Pp 674 only Rs 425 in India).
VxWorks and LynxOS are definitely the biggest embedded
operating systems in use today. But slowly they are
acknowledging the power of GNU/Linux and how it can
help them maximise deployments.
HELP LINUX GO INDIAN: By using various translation tools, you can join
Language translation groups working across India to help translate GNU/Linux
into your language.
EXPERT INTRODUCTION: Multi-threaded programming under Linux.
KICKSTART YOUR Linux installation (Part I): Installing Red Hat Linux on
multiple machines one after another can be quite tedious. To avoid answering
the same question over and over again, try the KickStart method, as it does
not need any user intervention.
WRITE CHEQUES. NOT JUST BOOKS: Niyam Bhushan on how
anybody can turn thoughts into words, and words into wealth.
NFS CLIENTS for Windows.
OpenSSL PACKAGE offers a vast crypto library of algorithms
WAIT QUEUES in Linux device drivers
UNDERSTANDING recursive sub-routines
INDIA-RELATED NEWS:
HP launches GNU/Linux laptop
Mandrake's latest distribution
Oracle announces 10g for GNU/Linux
Delixus offers India Linux
CxProtect anti-virus mailing solution for mail-servers
Trade management system from Network Programs
Netweb Technologies unveils Tyrone
MRO-Tek rolls out Network Management Systems
Review of FLOSS at BangaloreIT.com
===========================================
DISCLOSURE: This journalist (FN) writes a monthly column for LFY and gets
paid for it. Promoting awareness about the content of LFY however is not
part of the job, and is carried on with the intention spreading awareness
about FLOSS among different GNU/Linux user groups in India.
--
Frederick Noronha : http://www.fredericknoronha.net : When we speak of free
Freelance Journalist : http://www.bytesforall.org : software we refer to
Ph 0091.832.2409490 : Cell 0 9822 122436 : freedom, not price.
Original Message -----
From: "IT@School" <itschool(a)asianetindia.com>
To: <manjushmenon(a)hotmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 05, 2002 5:08 PM
Subject: Reply
> Mr.Manjush G. Menon
> We are not giving to depend totally on Ms. Products. Rather MS
> Office is taught along with open office and Windows along with Linux
> from this year. Arranging the resource persons for training an open
> software, making available the software, the maintenance of a help desk
> etc. are logistical issues which could not be immediately undertaken.
> We plan switch out to open software within three years.
> Executive Director
>
---- Original Message -----
From: Manjush G. Menon
To: itschool(a)asianetindia.com
Sent: Friday, October 04, 2002 5:46 PM
Subject: Respected sir,
From
Manjush G. Menon,
Sr.Programmer,
Sofker Solutions Pvt Ltd,
Kochi-18.
To
The Executive Director,
'IT @ SCHOOL' Project,
SCERT Buildings,
Poojapura,
Thiruvananthapuram-12.
Respected sir,
SUB: In protest against the inclusion of products from multinational companies
in the syllabus of 'IT @ SCHOOL'
It's a very dissappointing fact that when the whole world is moving towards
Free software, we at kerala are going behind a major MNC - Microsoft. I hereby register
my protest in such an act from 'IT @ SCHOOL' Project team.
Breaking of prototypes will definetly help us in finding economical and high quality
products for our future generation.
For students and programmers, the GNU Linux contains 'GNU Compiler Collections'
which includes C, C++, FORTRAN, PERL, TCL etc. Also, for DTP and other publishing purposes,
it includes GNU Office utilities like Abi-Word, gedit, and other worksheet utilities,
all these with a nominal cost of Rs 700-800/-. The software as it is, is free and
the cost is accounted towards the media (CD + Documentation) included.
By this letter, I urge you to take this matter seriously and suggest necessary modifications
in the action plan of 'IT @ SCHOOL' project.
Wishing you all the best and wishing all 'Students @ SCHOOL' a bright future,
Thanking you,
Yours faithfully
Manjush G. Menon.
______________________________________________________
Check out all the latest outrageous email attachments on the Outrageous Email Chart! - http://viral.lycos.co.uk
Please sign this petition if you agree with it... it's an attempt to convince a
prominent technological university in Bangalore (VTU) to be opened to the use
of Free Software too.
http://bangalore.gnu.org.in/?VTU-FLOSS_Campaign
Krishna Pagadala, San Jose, USA. I have benefitted highly from the Free
Software movement and the Freedoms it has provided. Specifically the Freedom to
learn from the source code has helped me in getting a high-technology job in
the US. I wish that all students enjoy the all the Software Freedoms.
Pramode C.E, IC Software: I would like to add that there are efforts under way
to develop innovative hardware experimentation platforms using GNU/Linux to
improve the quality of Physics (as well as Engineering) education; and the best
part is that it's being done in India. Please visit
http://www.nsc.res.in/~elab/phoenix/ to know more about the `Phoenix Project'
being developed by Ajith Kumar at the Nuclear Science Centre, India. The wealth
of high quality tools and the open nature of the platform is of immense value
to young engineers and scientists raring to unleash their creativity; the
lessons in freedom and sharing that students learn by using GNU/Linux will also
go a long way in shaping their character as caring and responsible human
beings.
ashidhar b desai ,6th sem E&C, B.V.Bhoomaraddi College of Engineering &
Technology Hubli,Karnataka,India ,FLOSS is an excellent alternative for the
existing commercial softwares..Academics(colleges and univ) is the best way to
promote and support "Free Software".It will be a great initiative if the univ
adopts it(it will become an example for other univ & institutes). News about
open source and gnu/linux stuff---Indian Inside . Lets get Liberated.LONG LIVE
OPEN SOURCE.
Praveen Arimbrathodiyil (National Instititute of Technology, Calicut) Fri Mar
11 17:34:50 IST 2005 We use GNU/Linux in our main Computer center. It saves a
lot of money of the college as there is no licence fee to be paid for each
users. Since the source code of the softwares are available many computer
science students do projects based on Linux kernel and other such projects. The
possibility of use of thin-clients (which our computer center use) reduces the
cost of hardware dramatically. It has proved to be beneficial to our college
and I urge you to chose Free Software for giving a better alternative for
students.
Debapriyo Sarkar. Final year student of BCA, Goa. As a student, I plead to
every university, to adopt, encourage and spread the use of Free/Libre Open
Source Software (FLOSS). The benefits are clearly far-more significant than
cost savings (which of course is a huge motivating factor). The quality of
software reviewed and worked on by virtually the entire developer community of
the world is definitely at least world-class if nothing else. It is possible to
save on costs with $0 priced closed source software often termed as freeware,
but the limited resources of the single developer or the couple of developers
behind the software makes future of such software bleak. Compared to that,
software released under an open source license, helps user as well as developer
involvement to happen as deeply and transparent as no other licensing model can
support. As the letter includes the following (stripped) statement "...Octave,
which is simulation software written by University professors. This usually
comes with the GNU/Linux Operating System." which clearly shows that professors
of universities elsewhere have contributed to the solution of making quality
software available to the students and colleges alike under a license that
welcomes further contributions to improve the project virtually endlessly. As a
personal experience, I often have used open source alternatives whenever
acquiring the proprietary packages meant depending on the lab assistant to
provide the CD for illegal copying or genuinely going out and shelling out all
those huge wads of cash for functionality that was already at my disposal with
added advantage of continuing development and a long-life (of the software). As
universities use and recommend use of open source software,rate of development
is bound to grow with more and more students using the same version of software
both at college and home (no limited cheap "student" edition which are "cheap"
imitations with myriad "limitations"). Also professors' contributions in the
form of bug reports, bug fixes, new functionality patches and their work in
increasing awareness about the benefits of using open source software would
help improve quality of free software to an enormous extent.
Vijay Kumar, Chennai, India. http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/schools.html
.P.Sujeevan,Project leader, S2S2, Kerala .Here at kerala at school level more
than 50 of schools are still using GNU/Linux.Also SSLC IT practical examination
has successfully done under the linux operating system.Some schools are still
using the Linux terminal server systems.Next year aggressive work is planning
to implement complete linux environment in schools.http://s2s2net.netfirms.com
_____
_/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa
\ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436
| | | | \ http://fn.swiki.nethttp://goabooks.swiki.net
|__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.nethttp://www.bytesforall.org
\/ -----------------------------------------------------
Writing with a difference, on issues that really make the difference.
MADRAS HC(MADURAI) :INCLUSION OF `VIDEO PIRATES' UNDER GOONDAS ACT VALID
Source: The Hindu
The Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court on Friday held as valid the
inclusion of "video pirates" under the Tamil Nadu Prevention of Dangerous
Activities Act, popularly known as the Goondas Act, by way of an amendment
last year.
Dismissing a habeas corpus petition moved by the father of a person from
Tiruchi, branded as a "video pirate" and detained under the Act, a
Division Bench, comprising Justice P.K. Misra and Justice A.R. Ramalingam,
said the amendment in pith and substance related to preventive detention;
and hence it was valid.
The contention of the petitioner was that the State legislature was not
competent to enact a law concerning copyright, since it was a Central
subject. Pointing out that the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution
distinguished between the subject matter of laws that could be enacted by
Parliament and State legislatures by drawing reference to three different
lists ? the Union list, the State list and the Concurrent list, the
petitioner said copyright fell under entry 49 of the Union list; and
hence, only Parliament could enact a law on the subject.
http://www.nalsartech.org/tikiwiki/tiki-read_article.php?articleId=4032
_____
_/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha (FN) * Freelance Journalist
\ __\/ \ Goa India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436
| | | | \ http://fn.swiki.nethttp://goabooks.swiki.net
|__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.nethttp://www.goanet.org
\/
The FOSS revolution started in North America, and then it reached Europe
where it blossomed with Linux. Next one probably may happen in India. Why do
I think so?
(1) *IP issues:* It happened with the drugs/medicine. When
IP/Copyright/Patent became very stringent in USA/Europe it started a
drug/bio industry in India. This stared producing much cheaper drugs
compared to western countries. Most of the third world countries are
dependent on India for medicine.
This can happen in FOSS world too. With more liberal copyright/patent laws
in India; programmers in India can code without thinking about what patents
they will be infringing. This may force many FOSS startups/hosts in India.
This is a major support for FOSS based industries in India.
(2) *Outsourcing:* With the outsourcing along with the employment knowledge
is also flowing into India. India has more software engineers than any other
country now. (I remember reading Bangalore (India) surpassing Silicon City
(USA) in numbers.). This knowledge flow may help in FOSS development. (I
remember reading most of the open source developers have regular 9-5 job).
(3) *Economy:* The growing economy of India may force people to experiment
in various fields for example FOSS. With service based business model
companies can earn on FOSS.
*What do you guys think? Will the next FOSS revolution happen in India?*
*Please leave your comments here...it will help my studies....**
http://www.techmag.biz/?q=node/85* <http://www.techmag.biz/?q=node/85>
Thank you,
Thej
*You dont have to login for leaving comments.*
http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=89284
Open Source goes beyond software
Free digital archives being extended from health to all biological sciences
S SADAGOPAN Posted online: Friday, April 29, 2005 at 0000 hours IST
Send Feedback E-mail this story Print this story
S Sadagopan
What began as the 'free software' movement, thanks to Richard Stallings, has
matured over the years. It is not just a posturing alternative to the
commercial 'closed' software. Software and services are a dominant sector of
economic activity. Major industry segments -- automobiles, banking & finance,
healthcare, oil & gas, retail and transportation -- depend heavily on software.
And so, interest in the open source movement has heightened. The combination of
the Linux operating system (widely used at the server level and with increasing
adoption at the desktop), Apache (powering half the world's web servers), mySQL
(the database that has come of age) and Perl (the widely used scripting
language) --- together generally referred to as Lamp -- has an eco-system of
pundits, developers, evangelists and adopters that cut across geographies,
industries, languages and cultures. Somewhere, it has struck an interesting
chord in the minds of millions of people.
What is interesting is that the open source philosophy has deeply influenced
many other segments of human endeavour. I will touch upon scientific publishing
as one such segment in this column. For long, scientific publishing was
controlled by the scientific societies. With technology starting to dominate
industry and 'licensing' contributing a significant part of the revenue of
technology companies, scientific publishing went into the hands of commercial
companies. Authors had to 'pay' a fee to get their papers published; the
journals' subscription rates started rocketing.
The nexus between libraries and publishing houses could partly alleviate the
problem; individuals were given 'subsidised' subscription. There are some
bright spots. Societies such as IEEE in the US and IEE in Britain do have
clout: they are still in the hands of professionals. But such success is not
widely prevalent. Responding to this, an Open Source publishing movement
started some time ago. In the early Internet days, there was even talk of 'self
publishing,' where you create a website and keep all the written stuff, for
access to any intended reader. With the growth of 'web spiders' and search
engines, such as Google, there was even a feeling that publishers would be
"driven away." Luckily, no such thing happened.
. After free digital archives have come individual internet weblogs
. The Open Source philosophy is invading one territory after another
One clear example of an alternative to 'commercial publishing' is the PubMed
Central (http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/index.html) project of the US National
Institute of Health (NIH). It is a free digital archive of citations and
scholarly journals. It is not a replacement for publishing, but provides an
alternative open and free resource for all humanity. The same group also
provided GenBank, the highly successful genetic data sequence repository, that
allowed researchers anywhere in the world to tap into the huge database of
human genomic sequences. Even more interesting is the arrival of the blog
(internet weblog), that is permitting thousands of individuals to
'self-publish.' Blog became the most used word in the year 2004, as per
Webster's online dictionary (see my FE column of Feb 4).
Google, MSN, Sify and Rediff provide space and tools for bloggers today. But
what really excites me is the Cambia (Italian word for change) Project, that is
building an alternative, BIOS (Biological Innovation for Open Society). Bios is
extending the Open Source software movement to biological sciences (including
agriculture and pharmaceuticals). Their Bio-forge (www.bioforge.net), on the
lines of the highly successful repository, Source-forge
(http://sourceforge.net/), of Open Source projects (code, code samples, white
papers, FAQ, tutorials and guides, with 99,483 live projects and 1,062,251
registered users as on April 28) is another idea whose time has come. Bio-forge
also has an excellent free, full-text access to some key parts of patents'
information. I find them to be the best among all online patent tutorials,
database, white papers, etc). It will be interesting to watch this Open Source
movement over the next decade, as it invades many other territories of human
endeavor.
The writer is director, IIIT, Bangalore. These are his personal views
END OF FORWARD
_____
_/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha (FN) * Freelance Journalist
\ __\/ \ Goa India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436
| | | | \ http://fn.swiki.nethttp://goabooks.swiki.net
|__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.nethttp://www.goanet.org
\/
This is a personal site of "M K Saravanan, currently working at
STMicroelectronics Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd., Singapore, as DSP Systems Design
Engineer. I am also doing part time Masters (CS, by research), at National
University of Singapore."
It however also contains a number of useful links:
* MIT (Madras Institute of Technology)
* MIT Alumni Association - Singapore
* MIT Alumni Association - Bangalore
* AU-KBC Research Centre
* Centre for Internet Research, NUS
Many links to Tamil fonts for GNU/Linux. Also, tutorials on GNU/Linux
(preliminary tutorial with five exercises, networking tutorial, the MKS Linux
Kernel HOWTO, premilinary tutorial in the Tamil language).
Internet-related links take you to:
* Internet Society Home Page Learn about history of Internet
* Internet Engineering Task Force Here you can find the people who are
giving shape to Internet Standards
* Request For Comments - RFC Archive
* World Wide Web Consortium
* History of the Internet and WWW: Road 1 -- USA to Europe
* Internet & World Wide Web History
Then, there are interesting links to computer gurus, and other GNU/Linux links,
which end up at:
* www.linux.org
* GNU/Linux Documentation Home Page
* Red Hat GNU/Linux
* Indian Linux User Groups
* Chennai Linux User Group - ILUGC
* www.linux.com
* Linux Journal
* Linux Today
* freshmeat - All GNU/Linux related new arrival
* Slashdot
* GNU/Linux Telephony
* Diskless Workstations - Most Economic Solution
* GNU/Linux Terminal Server Project
* GNU/Linux IP Masquerade Resource
* Akaram TeX Editor for Tamil & Localisation of KDE
* xterminal to view Devanagari Script
This guy has tonnes of other links, including:
* Links related to Software Development in Tamil & other Indian Languages
* Government of India Sites
* Optical character recognition
* Unix and Networking related links
* Search engine technologies
* Online books and magazines (including Project Madurai, a collection
of Tamil literary books http://www.projectmadurai.org )
* Tips on his educational institution ( I am getting lot of emails from
various students enquiring about the possibility of doing
Undergrad/Master/Ph.D. programmes at NUS. I can't guarantee that I
will answer all of them. So please read this NUS-FAQ first. All
possible details you may need are already there on the NUS websites.
You have to spend enough time on Internet to gather all the details.
You can use google search engine also.)
Very interesting Saravanan. Thanks for getting in touch with that tiny URL
peeping out below your signature file! FN
_____
_/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa
\ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436
| | | | \ http://fn.swiki.nethttp://goabooks.swiki.net
|__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.nethttp://www.bytesforall.org
\/ -----------------------------------------------------
If you are related to the field of IT (or even if not) please visit
http://www.bytesforall.org, a network on how computers can help the
commonman, and http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bytesforall_readers
REPORT PIRACY, EARN REWARD
Source: The Financial Express
Eavesdropping on pirated software users and reporting the crime can now
fetch you up to a cool Rs 5 lakh. All you need to do is call the
anti-piracy toll-free number. Any individual can report under-licensing
and/or use of illegal software at a workplace and qualify for a reward.
Launching an anti-piracy hotline toll-free number (1600-11-0033) on the
occasion of World Intellectual Property Rights day, science and technology
minister Kapil Sibal said, "In the last 20-30 years, there has been a
movement in favour of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR). Protection of
IPRs is needed to bring back the returns for those who make investments
for generation of intellectual property," Mr Sibal said.
However, enforcement of laws towards protection of IPR related to all
areas, including software and drugs, becomes difficult if needs of
different communities are not taken care of, Mr Sibal said. "While on one
hand, we say computerisation must reach every village, prices of software
are high," he said adding, this leads to piracy.
http://www.nalsartech.org/tikiwiki/tiki-read_article.php?articleId=3952
_____
_/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa
\ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436
| | | | \ http://fn.swiki.nethttp://goabooks.swiki.net
|__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.nethttp://www.bytesforall.org
\/ -----------------------------------------------------
If you are related to the field of IT (or even if not) please visit
http://www.bytesforall.org, a network on how computers can help the
commonman, and http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bytesforall_readers
RMS: BitKeeper bon-voyage is a happy ending
Monday April 25, 2005 (01:00 PM GMT)
By: Richard M. Stallman
http://software.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=05/04/25/130207
For the first time in my life, I want to thank Larry McVoy. He recently
eliminated a major weakness of the free software community, by
announcing the end of his campaign to entice free software projects to
use and promote his non-free software. Soon, Linux development will no
longer use this program, and no longer spread the message that non-free
software is a good thing if it's convenient.
My gratitude is limited, since it was McVoy that created the problem in
the first place. But I still appreciate his decision to clear it up.
There are thousands of non-free programs, and most merit no special
attention, other than developing a free replacement. What made this
program, BitKeeper, infamous and dangerous was its marketing approach:
inviting high-profile free software projects to use it, so as to attract
other paying users.
McVoy made the program available gratis to free software developers.
This did not mean it was free software for them: they were privileged
not to part with their money, but they still had to part with their
freedom. They gave up the fundamental freedoms that define free
software: freedom to run the program as you wish for any purpose,
freedom to study and change the source code as you wish, freedom to make
and redistribute copies, and freedom to publish modified versions.
The Free Software Movement has said "Think of free speech, not free
beer" for 15 years. McVoy said the opposite; he invited developers to
focus on the lack of monetary price, instead of on freedom. A free
software activist would dismiss this suggestion, but those in our
community who value technical advantage above freedom and community were
susceptible to it.
McVoy's great triumph was the adoption of this program for Linux
development. No free software project is more visible than Linux. It is
the kernel of the GNU/Linux operating system, an essential component,
and users often mistake it for the entire system. As McVoy surely
planned, the use of his program in Linux development was powerful
publicity for it.
It was also, whether intentionally or not, a powerful political PR
campaign, telling the free software community that freedom-denying
software is acceptable as long as it's convenient. If we had taken that
attitude towards Unix in 1984, where would we be today? Nowhere. If we
had accepted using Unix, instead of setting out to replace it, nothing
like the GNU/Linux system would exist.
Of course, the Linux developers had practical reasons for what they did.
I won't argue with those reasons; they surely know what's convenient for
them. But they did not count, or did not value, how this would affect
their freedom -- or the rest of the community's efforts.
A free kernel, even a whole free operating system, is not sufficient to
use your computer in freedom; we need free software for everything else,
too. Free applications, free drivers, free BIOS: some of those projects
face large obstacles -- the need to reverse engineer formats or
protocols or pressure companies to document them, or to work around or
face down patent threats, or to compete with a network effect. Success
will require firmness and determination. A better kernel is desirable,
to be sure, but not at the expense of weakening the impetus to liberate
the rest of the software world.
When the use of his program became controversial, McVoy responded with
distraction. For instance, he promised to release it as free software if
the company went out of business. Alas, that does no good as long as the
company remains in business. Linux developers responded by saying,
"We'll switch to a free program when you develop a better one." This was
an indirect way of saying, "We made the mess, but we won't clean it up."
Fortunately, not everyone in Linux development considered a non-free
program acceptable, and there was continuing pressure for a free
alternative. Finally Andrew Tridgell developed an interoperating free
program, so Linux developers would no longer need to use a non-free program.
McVoy first blustered and threatened, but ultimately chose to go home
and take his ball with him: he withdrew permission for gratis use by
free software projects, and Linux developers will move to other
software. The program they no longer use will remain unethical as long
as it is non-free, but they will no longer promote it, nor by using it
teach others to give freedom low priority. We can begin to forget about
that program.
We should not forget the lesson we have learned from it: Non-free
programs are dangerous to you and to your community. Don't let them get
a place in your life.
Copyright 2005 Richard Stallman. Verbatim copying and distribution of
this entire article are permitted worldwide without royalty in any
medium provided this notice is preserved.