I'm a Free Software fan, although Richard Stallman can be a nutjob sometimes.
5/15/2009 1:54:57 AM
open source ftw
5/15/2009 6:57:25 AM
free beer
5/15/2009 7:13:59 AM
whichever gets the job done with the least cost (in price or time) on my end
5/15/2009 8:06:06 AM
^
5/15/2009 9:12:14 AM
This is the voice of free software: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I25UeVXrEHQ#t=1m46s
5/15/2009 9:18:47 AM
I prefer broad, unspecific questions.
5/15/2009 9:46:16 AM
i like piracy
5/15/2009 10:11:49 AM
FOSS
5/15/2009 11:34:38 AM
5/15/2009 12:05:45 PM
5/15/2009 5:20:18 PM
open sores is populated mostly by people who cant get jobs in the commercial software world due to either their lack of skill or horrendous social skills (RMS). The poor social skills have the added bonus of causing divisions in the open soruce community that further contribute to the lack of vision and ultimately result in poor development processes.There are a few well meaning individuals and organizations that do contribute meaningful projects to the community, but they cant do enough to fix the overall problems of fragmentation and competing ideals. Where there are usable projects, open source software has its place, but the blind followers who user open source for the sake of open source usually do more harm to their cause then good.In the meantime most businesses are better served by the overall lower TCO of closed source applications. In fact many open source projects would be well served to run on top of windows and integrate with its management tools when possible. For example I love tomcat and eclipse which are both really good open source projects (even tho eclipse was developed originally internally to IBM). They both run really well on windows and tomcat on Windows Server grants you the benefits of portable code (since its java) and the stability and management ease of windows. For sure you can get the same management with linux, but it takes much much much more effort and puts the TCO over that of windows for all but the largest of organizations.
5/15/2009 6:41:31 PM
Our multi billion dollar software infrastructure which is partly open source and partly closed neither of which run on Windows. The closed source is Oracle/Solaris. As for just general development Mac and Linux beat Windows hands down. Having grep, sed, perl, ssh, find, and multiple desktops all readily accessible makes things a lot easier. Half of our dev team dropped Windows when they saw what you can do in Linux. Most of everything and more that Mac OS does is also in Linux via CompizFirefox, Eclipse, Webkit, Android, Linux, Compiz for Linux are all superior to any in house closed source project I've used. Google contributes handsomely to lots of different projects as well.Eclipse also runs much better in Linux. [Edited on May 16, 2009 at 11:32 AM. Reason : a]
5/16/2009 11:30:21 AM
5/16/2009 2:55:14 PM
I mean out of the box not a bunch of buggy powertools that ms isnt even secure enough with to release to the general public. My experience with the tools you mentioned was not pleasant and ive done more win development than linux.
5/16/2009 7:25:26 PM
FYI, noen is an MS shill and one of those "if the tool doesn't work for you, you are the problem" typeswhich is what most open source people are, too....I love it when someone is so much of a zealot, they refuse to use commercial software. "the movement" will always be limited by it's ideologues and lack of originality, taste, and benevolent dictators. True story: I know an open source weenie who refuses to log into a mac.open source software that is strongly influenced by a private company that pays the bills is the most successful kind of open source software[Edited on May 17, 2009 at 2:05 AM. Reason : .]
5/17/2009 1:36:15 AM
my opinion:to give away the source or not should not be something you think about until after you assess your goals of a project or product.are you writing it to prove to yourself you can do it? or do it better than it has been done before?are you writing it because you think it has the potential to make someone's life easier? and do you think they will pay you for it?are you writing it for the sake of exploring what new things you might discover whilst doing so?
5/17/2009 2:27:39 AM
5/17/2009 3:44:35 AM
^Tiberius, your post is chock full of ignorance and incorrect assumptions. You really are the epitomy of Shaggy's post. He is so dead on correct about the average OSS project, I forwarded his post to some colleagues.All your post told us is that you are poor, have absolutely no ethical integrity, and will rip off anything that you see fit to use. It is entirely apparent by your attitudes and opinions that you have never experienced working in a REAL, COMMERCIAL software development environment. And I'm not even talking about big business... even the day to day in a small dev shop would show your "views" to be entirely ridiculous.
5/17/2009 4:22:44 AM
5/17/2009 4:29:59 AM
5/17/2009 4:52:03 AM
5/17/2009 5:33:05 AM
^I'm not talking about the kernel, im talking about the development environment OS (in reference to Nael's post). I never made any mention of Linux outside that space. You are the one PROJECTING your own opinions onto me. I've never said linux wasn't an amazing embedded systems kernel or architecture. Google has done a pretty damn good job showing the versatility and commercial application of the linux kernel to a variety of products and services.I don't have anything for or against IIS, I've never had a reason to leave Apache. But I can show you as much data as you want to see that will backup IIS' capability to handle ridiculous scale. Different people have different needs. Apache has always met mine, but I can certainly think of many circumstances where it would make more financial sense to use IIS.I don't know nearly enough to comment on the HPC space, other than saying I don't doubt for a minute that Microsoft doesn't have much play there. HPC is probably the newest company initiative, at least in Server&Tools, and there's certainly serious investment going into that space.Also, you have to realize that, as an employee, there is a lot of information that I simply cannot talk about. It will have to suffice to say that I am not a shill, nor do I drink the company Koolaid. People who have worked with me professionally know that I tell it like I see it, good or bad.
5/17/2009 7:10:43 AM
If I want to sit down with minimal effort and write a shell script to start and stop servers on 100s of different boxes and email that output to a dev list while creating a playlist to listen to while it's running, I assume it's really easy to do that in one command on Windows. I will say C# is superior from a language standpoint and Visual Studio is clearly better than Eclipse. You should have attacked that, but instead you keep talking about all this functionality Windows has but noone ever uses. I meant multiple virtual desktops, which I had setup in windows but it sucked RAM awful bad and when I'm debugging a local JBoss and BEA server with Eclipse running, you can imagine how well that works.[Edited on May 17, 2009 at 11:06 AM. Reason : a]
5/17/2009 11:05:39 AM
5/17/2009 1:04:02 PM
While this thread is a tad off topic, I kinda like it.
5/17/2009 3:17:13 PM
5/17/2009 6:00:21 PM
5/17/2009 10:38:18 PM
5/18/2009 12:24:24 AM
5/18/2009 8:22:52 AM
5/18/2009 8:28:44 AM
5/18/2009 9:13:29 AM
5/18/2009 9:18:07 AM
ITT we use lots and lots and lots of buzz words.
5/18/2009 9:39:17 AM
Speaking of open source, are there any good spice simulators that are $freeware?
5/18/2009 9:51:57 AM
depends...or?
5/18/2009 10:11:59 AM
5/18/2009 4:04:29 PM
5/18/2009 8:51:08 PM
5/18/2009 9:35:23 PM
5/19/2009 12:23:01 AM
^most of the devs I know live on the commandline, linux or not. And if you are using Eclipse, it's ungodly faster in linux, but that's all thanks to Sun's stupid ass licensing of the JVM. You want to talk about stifling innovation, there's a great one. Sun shot the Java community in the foot when Microsoft discontinued their JVM.
5/19/2009 3:20:59 AM
5/19/2009 7:38:31 AM