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Bruce Byfield

In Defense and Praise of Debian

In Defense and Praise of Debian

Open Source
February 7, 2008

Every now and then, someone suggests that Debian GNU/Linux should be more commercial. To further this goal, some create derivative distros like Linspire, Ubuntu, or Xandros, or organizations like the stillborn DCC Alliance. Others act as pundits, whispering advice from off-stage, like Debian founder Ian Murdock, or, more recently, columnist Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols. However, as […]

Developing a FOSS-based Business: Five Questions to Ask

Developing a FOSS-based Business: Five Questions to Ask

Trends
January 31, 2008

Contrary to what you may have heard, free and open source software (FOSS) is not anti-business. But neither is it pro-business. More accurately, FOSS is focused on concerns outside of traditional business, such as user freedom and code quality. For this reason, making the two work together successfully requires special efforts and resources, as well […]

A Field Guide to Free Software Supporters

A Field Guide to Free Software Supporters

Open Source
January 23, 2008

Hearing the terms “free software” or “open source,” you might imagine that they referred to a single school of thought. Even “free and open source software” (FOSS) suggests only two different outlooks: Free software, which values political and philosophical freedom, and open source, whose main interest is enhanced software quality. Yet all these impressions would […]

The Making of KDE 4.0

The Making of KDE 4.0

Open Source
January 15, 2008

How do you produce a major update of a popular desktop for GNU/Linux? Following the release of KDE 4.0 last week, I talked with Wade Olson, the press contact for KDE in North America, and a member of KDE e.V., the German non-profit organization that is the financial and legal arm of the project. Olson […]

9 Characteristics of Free Software Users

9 Characteristics of Free Software Users

Open Source
January 9, 2008

Operating systems come with cultures as much as codebases. I was forcibly reminded of this fact over the holidays when several family members and neighbors press-ganged me into troubleshooting their Windows computers. Although none of us had any formal computer training, and I know almost nothing about Windows, I was able to solve problems that […]

11 Predictions for Free Software in 2008

11 Predictions for Free Software in 2008

Open Source
December 26, 2007

“You must be mad,” Gary Trudeau says in a self-interview in one of his Doonesbury collections, when he raises the subject of political predictions. “I only do post-mortems.” As a journalist, if a very different kind from Trudeau, I appreciate the sentiment. Looking back at 2007, who could have predicted that, after all the posturing […]

GNOME, OOXML, and Half-Truths Colliding in the Night

GNOME, OOXML, and Half-Truths Colliding in the Night

Open Source
December 18, 2007

The average user probably hasn’t even heard of Open Document Format (ODF) or Microsoft Office Open XML (OOXML). But to factions in the free software community, these formats for common office files such as text documents and spreadsheets are the poles on which a violent controversy centers. With both formats candidates for being the ISO […]

The Free Software Foundation’s “High Priority” List: A Key Guidepost

The Free Software Foundation’s “High Priority” List: A Key Guidepost

Open Source
December 11, 2007

Every couple of years, someone compiles a list of programs that GNU/Linux needs to compete on the desktop. For example, in early 2006, Novell conducted a survey of the applications that people most wanted ported to the platform. However, if you really want to track the most pressing needs for a free desktop, the most […]

Staking the Myth that Free Software Can’t Innovate

Staking the Myth that Free Software Can’t Innovate

Open Source
December 5, 2007

Like Dracula, the old myth that free software can’t innovate keeps returning. Its latest incarnation is in the form of a column by Jaron Lanier in the December issue of Discover Magazine. (The column isn’t online yet, but Lanier has disparaged community-based creativity many times, in particular when talking about Wikipedia). But this accusation is […]

Richard Stallman and the Connotations of Language

Richard Stallman and the Connotations of Language

Open Source
November 27, 2007

Anyone looking for a summary of the free software movement’s concerns needs only to look at Richard M. Stallman’s essay “Some Confusing or Loaded Words and Phrases that are Worth Avoiding.” Behind the modest title, the essay lists all the classic free software concerns, ranging from insisting on the term “GNU/Linux” for the operating system […]

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