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 Delivered-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Date:         Thu, 19 Nov 1998 15:03:26 -0500
 Reply-To:     zimmerer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Sender:       The Other Economic Summit USA 1997 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 From:         zimmerer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Subject:      Microsoft, COMDEX & LINUX
 To:           [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 While lawyers play word games in the Microsoft Monopoly Trial, activity
 in the Software Commons has produced a computer operating system called
 LINUX, a public alternative to privately owned UNIX and Microsoft Windows
 NT
 in which the source code is freely available to everyone and its use
 and development is ongoing and supported by programmers worldwide.
 With a literally free computer operating system entrepreneurs are
 encouraged to design and develop applications for existing markets and
 to create new markets.  While this new creative rush is taking place in
 industrial applications, my visit to COMDEX 98 reassures me that
 consumer applications will follow soon bringing fresh ideas to the PC
 market.

               COMDEX 98 report

 On Monday 16 November I joined the 120,000 or so people swarming into
 COMDEX, Las Vegas on opening day. My principle interest was LINUX, the
 fast growing alternative industrial computer operating system to UNIX
 and recently recognized by Microsoft as a possible threat to its
 "unregulated" monopoly.  Last year I found only one LINUX distributor,
 this year COMDEX sported a LINUX "pavilion" (Mall) with five LINUX
 distributors and several software vendors.  A leaked memo from
 Microsoft, the "Halloween Memo," and its rebuttal by MS was a topic of
 humor. The distributors were quite busy demonstrating LINUX capability.
 I talked at length with a German engineer demonstrating the S.u.S.E.
 LINUX package, very popular in Germany. While management remains
 skeptical of Open Source Software like LINUX because it can't sue a
 vendor over problems, it is widely accepted by the computer engineers
 who keep management's systems functioning.

 The enthusiasm of these young engineers and software gurus for LINUX
 and the informal support structure they have across the world is
 wonderful to behold.  It reminds me of the early days - before
 Microsoft - when the microprocessor attracted talented people to pool
 their creativity to invent word processors and spread sheets and modem
 protocols, freely exchanging ideas and code as they explored this new
 technology and founded companies.

 I expect next year at COMDEX there will be consumer LINUX packages
 available to put on PCs available from independent young programers.
 Eric Raymond (The Cathedral and the Bazaar author) is surprised how
 much LINUX acceptance has grown in just six months.

 In other areas technology races onward with hardware getting faster,
 smaller, and cheaper. Vance Packard (The Waste Makers author) would
 smile at the sales pressure to buy the newest technology and discard
 the perfectly useful and adequate last year's model.  Our economic
 system must be dysfunctional to require such unnecessary consumption of
 resources.

 Robert W. Zimmerer          Sun City, AZ

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