On Mit, 2015-04-01 at 13:07 +0200, Reindl Harald wrote: > Am 01.04.2015 um 13:04 schrieb Bernd Petrovitsch: > > IMHO the larger the corporation is, the less are the chances for > > *long-term* benefits of the OSS/free software (mainly because: usually > > commercial success is driven and defined from marketing to sales[1] sown > > to the techies which are forced into "features" and "delivery dates" to > > achieve some "company defined goal" - and that is usually not "bug > > free", "safe", or the like. Free software/OSS just happens that *at > > least* half of it should come from the "working level" and that is - at > > least - much more - ahemm - "inconvenient" for sales people)
FWIW the context were large "old-school" corps (like Novell or Oracle) taking over free software companies. > that is simple not true - if it would be true linux distributions would Define "true Linux distribution". > not include half baken and aplha quality sofwtare again and again in > stable releases because "the market out there" That's everywhere in the commercial world the problem with "delivery vs quality/known problems" and someone's decision to ship or not to ship - based in whatever feels appropriate. BTW typical Linux distributions package some else's software and (almost) everyone knows that (and do not blame the distro for shipping buggy software - is there actually any bug-free software?;-). And it depends on - the package (core package like kernel, gcc, perl, apache-http, ...) vs some exotic application (the n+1.th text editor, MUA, ...). - the bug in question - is that stuff unusable or happens the bug only if you do crazy creative stuff on files with 6+GB size or 1000k lines? And usually distros run bug tracking and (try to) get bugs fixed - in house or upstream. > the *possible* long-term benefits are more time to invest because a > fixed income If the free software is the core business, it is not a problem (and these are not the companies in the discussion). Kind regards, BErnd -- "I dislike type abstraction if it has no real reason. And saving on typing is not a good reason - if your typing speed is the main issue when you're coding, you're doing something seriously wrong." - Linus Torvalds