> 
> Bottom line is we're not sure what to do now.  Opinions from the 
> floor, anyone?
> 

>From the lowly end of the floor... for what I am concerned, I'm not 
worried about the involvment of the core team. Instead, I'm happy 
that companies like GB and Postgres Inc have been founded.

I'm not an active member of open source community (if not for 
advocating it), but just for the lack of skill. I know RS's and ESR's 
works, I think I got the ideas, but I think that "commercial support" 
is useful for the quality of the projects, and not detrimental.

I really think that there is no possibility that a commercial company 
based on a open source project could steer away from the good of 
the project. The equation is simple: the more the "product" is good, 
the more the company would penetrate the market.

We all know that marketing and FUD approaches are incompatable 
with open source projects, just the quality of the product can give 
people the reason to adopt it. 

What should we fear? That GB will purpusedly put some limitations 
or bugs in tha code, so they could gain more on supporting it
(ya 'now, somebody says that some guy have earned billions 
following this strategy ;-))?
But this is simply not feasible. They don't sell the product, so they 
could not gain on "new realeses" and "service packs". And who 
could hide bugs in an open source project and call them "features"?

At the most, as Tom said, they will be more focused to hunt bugs 
and add features basing on requests made by paying customers. 
Well, those are nonetheless bugs that will be corrected and new 
features that will be added, and we all will benefit for them. There's 
good chance that they are the same bugs and same features that 
some of OUR customers (I'm meaning "we" as in "independent 
consultants and developers that use open source projects as 
tools") will ask for. 
And this way the people that are working on that will be also well 
payed (er, I don't know the payrolls, I'm just hoping that they are 
good...), and I can't see anything bad in that!

No, as I said, commercial companies investing in open source 
development can only do good. 

just my 0.02 Euro ;-)

and good luck to all core members for their new jobs!


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Fabrizio Ermini               Alternate E-mail:
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loc. Meleto Valdarno          Mail on GSM: (keep it short!)
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