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Old September 19th 03, 04:18 PM
phil hunt
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On Fri, 19 Sep 2003 10:06:30 +0100, Keith Willshaw wrote:

"phil hunt" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 18 Sep 2003 20:15:39 +0100, Keith Willshaw

wrote:
[regarding compiling open source software]


Piracy is irrelevant consideration to open source software. It is
relevant to proprietary software, where it can reduce revenues,
which is likely to cause open source to predominate over time.


Its highly relevant when software costs a shedload of money
to develop. Developing software that does complex tasks
like process simulation costs a LOT of money and contrary to
popular belief many software companies walk a line awfully
close to bankruptcy. Finding that your software can be bought for
$2 a time in Beijing is mighty disheartening


Then perhaps the proprietary software model is outdated, at least
for some application areas. Had a typical Linux distribution been
made by traditional proprietary techniques, it would cost $ 2
billion to develop. Yet it was developed anyway, without being able
to recoup revenue by sale of copies.

I don't know how many people use process simulation software, so it
may not be a good example. But I'll use it anyway -- you can
imagine I'm talking about a different application area if you like.

Someone writes a simple program to to process simulation. it isn't
very sophisticated, but it does the job for the needs of that one
user. He releases it as open source. Someone else finds it *almost*
fulfills their needs, and extends it, giving their changes back to
the first person. A third person works for a largish company and
realises that with a bit of effort this package could be useful to
them -- so they add to the code and can use it. Eventually, the
package gets more and more features applied to it, and can do
everything the proprietary packages can do.

As I said, I don't know much about process simulation, but there are
open source packages that have been extended in just that way.

For operating systems and office suites, they are. In the UK, the
main customer for these sorts of software is the state. The same in
most other countries.


Cite please.

I seriously doubt the UK Government owns the majority
of PC's in this country


I never said it, did, only that it owns more than anyone else.

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