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Money Talks --Open Source Walks
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- Subject: Money Talks --Open Source Walks
- From: "T. V. Raman" <raman@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 08:20:53 -0800 (PST)
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- Resent-Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 12:50:11 -0500 (EST)
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http://www.salonmagazine.com/21st/feature/1999/04/01feature.html
P.S. The article omits to mention that the new venture has
purchased Emacspeak for an undisclosed amount
to man their switchboards and provide 24X7 spoken customer support.
Money talks -- Open source walks
Plans for new LinuxSoft venture map
new business model for "free" software. SALON
STAFF REPORT | In a move sure to send shock
waves through the free software/open-source
community, Linus Torvalds, creator of the
Linux operating system, announced today that
he is founding LinuxSoft, a new company that
will specialize in selling "enhanced"
proprietary versions of Linux. LinuxSoft will
be a joint venture between leading Linux
vendors Red Hat, VA Research and
LinuxCare. Torvalds announced it has already
obtained venture capital funding from Silicon
Valley's premier VC firm, Kleiner Perkins
Caufield & Byers. "The free software model has
served its purpose," said the Finnish coder,
considered by many geeks to be the greatest
programmer in the world, "but now I've got to
think about putting my daughters through
college." LinuxSoft, according to Torvalds,
will experiment with a variety of business
models -- including an innovative
advertiser-supported approach, in which
sponsors will pay to insert their messages
directly into the program code. "We know that
that's where they'll get the maximum eyeballs
and best bang for their buck," he
said. LinuxSoft expects to file for an IPO
within 36 hours, Torvalds added. Torvalds'
announcement was followed by a rash of similar
breakthrough developments in the open-source
world, prompting one longtime observer to say
via e-mail "the dam has broken -- the open
sourcers have finally realized that TANSTAAFL:
There ain't no such thing as a free lunch."
Eric Raymond, the oft-quoted hacker advocate
and open-source propagandist, released a paper
on his personal Web site titled "The
Cathedral, the Bazaar and the Bottom Line."
Raymond said that he was launching a new
venture called "Open Bourse" -- an online
marketplace in which free-software programmers
could auction off their code to the highest
bidder. "Open Bourse" is a joint venture with
eBay. Slashdot, the popular "news for nerds"
Web site that has served as a focal point for
open-source devotees, unveiled a redesigned
and renamed site, Slashdot Investor. Beginning
immediately, Slashdot Investor will only be
available to site visitors who have purchased
subscriptions. Premium content will include a
"Stock Tip of the Day" from journalist Jon
Katz -- a 6,500-word essay on a particular
company's cultural context, along with a
buy/sell recommendation. Brian Behlendorf of
the Apache Project issued a press release
detailing a new plan to levy a micropayment
tax on every Web page delivered by the widely
deployed Apache Web server. "This great
software has been doing its job on millions of
computers without ever asking for anything in
return," Behlendorf said. "The free ride is
over -- it's time to pay the piper." In
Redmond, Microsoft announced that Free
Software Foundation founder Richard Stallman
had accepted the new position of Senior Vice
President for Ideology. Initial reaction to
the news was mild, to the dismay of trolling
journalists. A brief flame war broke out on
comp.os.linux.advocacy, where a few die-hard
open-source devotees tangled with the
movement's leaders. But complaints like "Have
our whole community's ideals gone to
/dev/null?" were quickly met with responses
like "Get real, pal." Some posters on Usenet
suggested that the news was an instance of
"Microsoft FUD": "There has not been such a
massive disinformation campaign since the days
of Cointelpro." A few even claimed that the
moves were an obvious April Fools' prank, but
Torvalds himself posted a strong denial: "We
are still intent on world domination. But now
we plan to rake in some dough, too."
SALON | April 1, 1999
--
Best Regards,
--raman
Adobe Systems Tel: 1 408 536 3945 (W14-128)
Advanced Technology Group Fax: 1 408 537 4042
W14-128 345 Park Avenue Email: raman@xxxxxxxxxxx
San Jose , CA 95110 -2704 Email: raman@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://labrador.corp.adobe.com/~raman/ (Adobe Intranet)
http://cs.cornell.edu/home/raman/ (Cornell)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed are my own and in no way should be taken
as representative of my employer, Adobe Systems Inc.
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