The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-22 Thread Troy Mills
I am not sure if this is really the proper place for this or if it has
been discussed however this is something that I'm sure deserves as
much exposure as possible.

As some of you may or may not know the FreeBSD Foundation supports the
FreeBSD developers financially via funds mainly from donations from
the public. Anyway there is a IRS "1/3rd test" for "public support"
and the current foundation ratio that is a little out of whack due to
a few generous people donating large sums of money. I have no idea
what will happen if they cannot remain a public charity but I'm sure
the affects wont be positive as they clearly stated that it is in
there interest to remain a public charity.

I'm in no position to be shelling out lots of money right now but I'm
going to do my part and I would hope that some of you chip in as well.
from my understanding they need a larger number of people donating a
smaller amount to correct the ratio.

More information can be found on the freebsdfoundation.org website or
here is direct link to the newsletter:
http://www.freebsdfoundation.org/press/20041221-newsletter.shtml

p.s. I'm not affiliated with the foundation of FreeBSD in any shape or
form other then a very happy user of this fine product, just wanted to
help get the word out.
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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-22 Thread Tom Vilot
Thanks, Troy, for posting this.
With their PayPal link, it made it effortless to donate.
FreeBSD is worth a lot more to me than I donated ... but I'll just do it 
again and again and again ... :)
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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-22 Thread Jay Moore
On Wednesday 22 December 2004 11:02 am, Troy Mills wrote:
> 
> As some of you may or may not know the FreeBSD Foundation supports the
> FreeBSD developers financially via funds mainly from donations from
> the public. Anyway there is a IRS "1/3rd test" for "public support"
> and the current foundation ratio that is a little out of whack due to
> a few generous people donating large sums of money. I have no idea
> what will happen if they cannot remain a public charity but I'm sure
> the affects wont be positive as they clearly stated that it is in
> there interest to remain a public charity.
>
> I'm in no position to be shelling out lots of money right now but I'm
> going to do my part and I would hope that some of you chip in as well.
> from my understanding they need a larger number of people donating a
> smaller amount to correct the ratio.


QUESTION: Do sales of the FreeBSD CDs support the project? And if so, now?

I thought I _was_ supporting the project through my CD subscription... I was 
not aware of the FreeBSD Foundation (thanks for the enlightenment), but 
financial support for software developers of any kind seems a bit of a 
stretch for a "charity". Perhaps I'm just not in tune with the legal 
definition of a charity.

Jay 
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RE: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jay Moore
> Sent: Wednesday, December 22, 2004 10:47 PM
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org; Troy Mills
> Subject: Re: The FreeBSD Foundation
>
>
> On Wednesday 22 December 2004 11:02 am, Troy Mills wrote:
> >
> > As some of you may or may not know the FreeBSD Foundation supports the
> > FreeBSD developers financially via funds mainly from donations from
> > the public. Anyway there is a IRS "1/3rd test" for "public support"
> > and the current foundation ratio that is a little out of whack due to
> > a few generous people donating large sums of money. I have no idea
> > what will happen if they cannot remain a public charity but I'm sure
> > the affects wont be positive as they clearly stated that it is in
> > there interest to remain a public charity.
> >
> > I'm in no position to be shelling out lots of money right now but I'm
> > going to do my part and I would hope that some of you chip in as well.
> > from my understanding they need a larger number of people donating a
> > smaller amount to correct the ratio.
>
>
> QUESTION: Do sales of the FreeBSD CDs support the project? And if so, now?
>
> I thought I _was_ supporting the project through my CD
> subscription... I was
> not aware of the FreeBSD Foundation (thanks for the enlightenment), but
> financial support for software developers of any kind seems a bit of a
> stretch for a "charity". Perhaps I'm just not in tune with the legal
> definition of a charity.
>

Hi Jay,

  The short answer to your question is "it depends on who you buy
your CD's from"

  If you are buying them from http://www.freebsdmall.com then yes,
they have provided significant support in the past and still do - in
February 2004 they contributed $5K to The FreeBSD Foundation - and in
the past, years ago when they were Walnut Creek CDROM they contributed
far more support to the Project.

  If your buying from someone else that presses their own CD's then
the answer is "maybe".  You would have to ask them.  Keep in mind
though that support comes in many forms other than just kicking
money into a pot.  Far more valuable is time spent answering
questions.

  You might consider this for example - If you ever purchased
my book you supported me, I in turn have answered numerous questions
people have posted on the mailing lists, and have e-mailed me.
For the people I've helped my assistance has been far more valuable
to them than any money that anyone has contributed to the project.

  Now, as for the Foundation's status as a charity:

I'll start with asking you a simple question:  Setting aside the
legal definitions, what in your mind IS a charity, exactly?

Well, to a lot of people, a charity is simply a kind of accepted
Robin Hood - it takes from the (willing) rich and gives to the
poor and needy.

But, this narrow definition isn't the dictionary definition of
a charity, and it really isn't the general definition of a charity
either.  For example, take the Catholic Church.  This is legally
and in many people's eyes morally, a charity.  Yet, while Catholic
churches run ministries that help the poor, the Catholic Church
is by no means giving everything it has to the poor - it's accounted
the wealthiest organization on the face of the Earth, for starters,
and there are many thousands of projects that Catholics do that
aren't ministering to the poor and needy, but rather projects
that are for the public good that benefit the general public.

My definition of a charity, and the dictionary definition of a
charity, is that a charity is an organization that administers a
pot of money and talent that they dole out to not just needy people, but
to people and groups that do what you call Good Works - that is,
benevolent projects that have as sole purpose the benefit of
the general public - ie: us.

So on to your question about why are we paying software developers?

Well it's like this.  There are things that are part of FreeBSD that
need to be done and have as a benefit, the entire FreeBSD project,
and in fact, anyone who uses FreeBSD.  And, as FreeBSD moves more
and more away from a pure "hobbiest" operating system and becomes
a player in the commercial sector, increasingly these things are
issues with commercial software.

For example, every time that one of the Ziff-Davis ragazines does
yet another tired 'bake-off' contest between Windows and FreeBSD,
somebody from the FreeBSD camp must spend a lot of time hand-holding
the moron writers that write the bake-off articles.  Who is that
person going to be?  Will it be some young, but inexperienced
FreeBSD advocate who is very eager to do it and will do it for f

Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Troy Mills
Ted Mittelstaedt explained it far better then I could have and I thank
him for that.

FreeBSD is an awesome thing indeed and one of the wonderful things is
thatit is indeed free to the end user but really nothing is totally
free, peoples time is worth something and the hardware they need to
continue to develop is also not free. It is very easy to take things
for granted.

I know FreeBSD is _no where near_ going the way of the dodo but.. it
can only make things so much better for everyone if everyone chipped
in 5$ or whatever at least one time. Those who use this platform for
there own financial gain. i.e. corporate webservers etc..  should
really consider it as well. Buying CD's etc.. from freebsdmall.com
really helps as well, every little thing counts!.

Plus it is that time of the year! :)

p.s. I'm aware that gmail destroys the 'flow' of email sometimes so I
apologize in advance, nothing I can do about it.



On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 02:34:37 -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> 
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jay Moore
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 22, 2004 10:47 PM
> > To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org; Troy Mills
> > Subject: Re: The FreeBSD Foundation
> >
> >
> > On Wednesday 22 December 2004 11:02 am, Troy Mills wrote:
> > >
> > > As some of you may or may not know the FreeBSD Foundation supports the
> > > FreeBSD developers financially via funds mainly from donations from
> > > the public. Anyway there is a IRS "1/3rd test" for "public support"
> > > and the current foundation ratio that is a little out of whack due to
> > > a few generous people donating large sums of money. I have no idea
> > > what will happen if they cannot remain a public charity but I'm sure
> > > the affects wont be positive as they clearly stated that it is in
> > > there interest to remain a public charity.
> > >
> > > I'm in no position to be shelling out lots of money right now but I'm
> > > going to do my part and I would hope that some of you chip in as well.
> > > from my understanding they need a larger number of people donating a
> > > smaller amount to correct the ratio.
> >
> >
> > QUESTION: Do sales of the FreeBSD CDs support the project? And if so, now?
> >
> > I thought I _was_ supporting the project through my CD
> > subscription... I was
> > not aware of the FreeBSD Foundation (thanks for the enlightenment), but
> > financial support for software developers of any kind seems a bit of a
> > stretch for a "charity". Perhaps I'm just not in tune with the legal
> > definition of a charity.
> >
> 
> Hi Jay,
> 
>  The short answer to your question is "it depends on who you buy
> your CD's from"
> 
>  If you are buying them from http://www.freebsdmall.com then yes,
> they have provided significant support in the past and still do - in
> February 2004 they contributed $5K to The FreeBSD Foundation - and in
> the past, years ago when they were Walnut Creek CDROM they contributed
> far more support to the Project.
> 
>  If your buying from someone else that presses their own CD's then
> the answer is "maybe".  You would have to ask them.  Keep in mind
> though that support comes in many forms other than just kicking
> money into a pot.  Far more valuable is time spent answering
> questions.
> 
>  You might consider this for example - If you ever purchased
> my book you supported me, I in turn have answered numerous questions
> people have posted on the mailing lists, and have e-mailed me.
> For the people I've helped my assistance has been far more valuable
> to them than any money that anyone has contributed to the project.
> 
>  Now, as for the Foundation's status as a charity:
> 
> I'll start with asking you a simple question:  Setting aside the
> legal definitions, what in your mind IS a charity, exactly?
> 
> Well, to a lot of people, a charity is simply a kind of accepted
> Robin Hood - it takes from the (willing) rich and gives to the
> poor and needy.
> 
> But, this narrow definition isn't the dictionary definition of
> a charity, and it really isn't the general definition of a charity
> either.  For example, take the Catholic Church.  This is legally
> and in many people's eyes morally, a charity.  Yet, while Catholic
> churches run ministries that help the poor, the Catholic Church
> is by no means giving everything it has to the poor - it's accounted
> the wealthiest organization on the face of the Earth, for starter

Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Gary Kline
On Thu, Dec 23, 2004 at 10:11:14AM -0500, Troy Mills wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt explained it far better then I could have and I thank
> him for that.
> 
> FreeBSD is an awesome thing indeed and one of the wonderful things is
> thatit is indeed free to the end user but really nothing is totally
> free, peoples time is worth something and the hardware they need to
> continue to develop is also not free. It is very easy to take things
> for granted.
> 
> I know FreeBSD is _no where near_ going the way of the dodo but.. it
> can only make things so much better for everyone if everyone chipped
> in 5$ or whatever at least one time. Those who use this platform for
> there own financial gain. i.e. corporate webservers etc..  should
> really consider it as well. Buying CD's etc.. from freebsdmall.com
> really helps as well, every little thing counts!.
> 

if the freebsdfoundation set up a paypal button and asked 
$5, i'd chip in my niickle.  i bet at least thousands of others
would too.

"season's greeting:)", everbody,

gary


-- 
   Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED]   www.thought.org Public service Unix

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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Jay O'Brien
Gary Kline wrote:

>if the freebsdfoundation set up a paypal button and asked 
>$5, i'd chip in my niickle.  i bet at least thousands of others
>would too.

Go to:
http://www.freebsdfoundation.org/donating.shtml
and click on donate. I did, using PayPal.

Jay O'Brien
Rio Linda, California, USA


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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Gary Kline
On Thu, Dec 23, 2004 at 12:07:56PM -0800, Jay O'Brien wrote:
> Gary Kline wrote:
> 
> >if the freebsdfoundation set up a paypal button and asked 
> >$5, i'd chip in my niickle.  i bet at least thousands of others
> >would too.
> 
> Go to:
> http://www.freebsdfoundation.org/donating.shtml
> and click on donate. I did, using PayPal.
> 

Done; I've added my few cents to tthe foundation, thanks
for the pointer.  Um, to any othrs who may do this tidbit, you
click on he credit-card *icon*.   (*mumble*:)

gary



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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Jay Moore
On Thursday 23 December 2004 04:34 am, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:

> > On Wednesday 22 December 2004 11:02 am, Troy Mills wrote:
> > > As some of you may or may not know the FreeBSD Foundation supports the
> > > FreeBSD developers financially via funds mainly from donations from
> > > the public. Anyway there is a IRS "1/3rd test" for "public support"
> > > and the current foundation ratio that is a little out of whack due to
> > > a few generous people donating large sums of money. I have no idea
> > > what will happen if they cannot remain a public charity but I'm sure
> > > the affects wont be positive as they clearly stated that it is in
> > > there interest to remain a public charity.

> > QUESTION: Do sales of the FreeBSD CDs support the project? And if so,
> > now?
> >
> > I thought I _was_ supporting the project through my CD
> > subscription... I was
> > not aware of the FreeBSD Foundation (thanks for the enlightenment), but
> > financial support for software developers of any kind seems a bit of a
> > stretch for a "charity". Perhaps I'm just not in tune with the legal
> > definition of a charity.
>
> Hi Jay,
>
>   The short answer to your question is "it depends on who you buy
> your CD's from"
>
>   If you are buying them from http://www.freebsdmall.com then yes,
> they have provided significant support in the past and still do - in
> February 2004 they contributed $5K to The FreeBSD Foundation - and in
> the past, years ago when they were Walnut Creek CDROM they contributed
> far more support to the Project. 

Yes - I buy from FreeBSD mall which I thought was run by Walnut Creek. I've 
had this subscription since 3.0 or 3.1... the cd's keep coming. I'd say if 
the new owners aren't giving the project the same cut as the previous owners, 
then maybe consider doing something else???

>   Now, as for the Foundation's status as a charity:
>
> I'll start with asking you a simple question:  Setting aside the
> legal definitions, what in your mind IS a charity, exactly? 

Hey look - I don't need a lecture about charity, and I'm not disputing that 
the foundation is "legally" classified as a charity. In my mind, I would 
consider it more like a not-for-profit organization; charities are 
organizations that help the needy - people who can't help themselves. 

And by the way - that IS the dictionary definition of a charity. I'm not sure 
what dictionary you're reading from.

> Well, to a lot of people, a charity is simply a kind of accepted
> Robin Hood - it takes from the (willing) rich and gives to the
> poor and needy.
>
> But, this narrow definition isn't the dictionary definition of
> a charity, and it really isn't the general definition of a charity
> either.  For example, take the Catholic Church.  This is legally
> and in many people's eyes morally, a charity.  Yet, while Catholic
> churches run ministries that help the poor, the Catholic Church
> is by no means giving everything it has to the poor - it's accounted
> the wealthiest organization on the face of the Earth, for starters,
> and there are many thousands of projects that Catholics do that
> aren't ministering to the poor and needy, but rather projects
> that are for the public good that benefit the general public. 

Oh my goodness - now that's an interesting comparison: FreeBSD Foundation and 
the Catholic church. My Dad was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland - so this 
analogy has convinced me to give  :)

> My definition of a charity, and the dictionary definition of a
> charity, is that a charity is an organization that administers a
> pot of money and talent that they dole out to not just needy people, but
> to people and groups that do what you call Good Works - that is,
> benevolent projects that have as sole purpose the benefit of
> the general public - ie: us.
>
> So on to your question about why are we paying software developers?
>
> Well it's like this.  There are things that are part of FreeBSD that
> need to be done and have as a benefit, the entire FreeBSD project,
> and in fact, anyone who uses FreeBSD.  And, as FreeBSD moves more
> and more away from a pure "hobbiest" operating system and becomes
> a player in the commercial sector, increasingly these things are
> issues with commercial software.
>
> For example, every time that one of the Ziff-Davis ragazines does
> yet another tired 'bake-off' contest between Windows and FreeBSD,
> somebody from the FreeBSD camp must spend a lot of time hand-holding
> the moron writers that write the bake-off articles.  Who is that
> p

RE: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-23 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


> -Original Message-
> From: Jay Moore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, December 23, 2004 3:32 PM
> To: Ted Mittelstaedt
> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: The FreeBSD Foundation
>
>
>
> Yes - I buy from FreeBSD mall which I thought was run by Walnut
> Creek. I've
> had this subscription since 3.0 or 3.1... the cd's keep coming.
> I'd say if
> the new owners aren't giving the project the same cut as the
> previous owners,
> then maybe consider doing something else???
>

The story here actually begins back in 1978 when 1BSD was created by
UCB's CSRG as a fork of UNIX6.  The BSD project continued at UCB for
another 10 years.  Towards the end of the project the maintainers saw
the need to detoxify the open BSD code from AT&T's copyrighted
UNIX source, and began an effort to do this.  This effort completed with
several things as a result - the release of the Net/2 tape, and
the collapse of the CSRG.  The primary movers and shakers at CSRG
went on to become employees at a new startup company named BSDI
which began marketing the Net/2 tape - except for one person, William
Jolitz, who was opposed to this.  William then commenced a project
to port Net/2 to the Intel 80386 which resulted in the creation of
386BSD.  By 1992 we had 2 parallel releases of BSD, one - the commercial
one - by BSDI, the other, the free one 386BSD - by Jolitz.

Unfortunately Jolitz had a different vision of the future of the
free BSD release 386BSD.  He broke with the community and the 386BSD
release became impossible to work with.  This resulted in the fork
of 386BSD into 2 children - NetBSD and FreeBSD in 1993.  NetBSD's charter
was all BSD on all non-Intel platforms, FreeBSD's charter was only
Intel platforms.

This is when Walnut Creek CDROM came into the picture.  W.C. had
been founded by Bob Bruce who grew it through the 1990s.  WC
bought completely into FreeBSD, providing the build and hosting
servers, and financial assistance to several developers.  FreeBSD
became Walnut Creek's flagship product and they eventually ran all
their own servers on it.  In it's heyday, ftp.cdrom.com became
the single busiest and most powerful uniprocessor server on the Internet.

While all this was going on, Keith Peterson created the Simtel archive on
the Army's computers and later moved it to simtel.net which he retained
rights to.  Keith entered into a deal with Coast to Coast Telecommunications
to host the Simtel.net archive.

In December 1995, Keith had a falling out with CCT and was basically
locked out of his server and collection by CCT.  Keith then moved
simtel.net and the original 1993 Simtel collection from the old
Army computers (which he had archived) to Walnut Creek, later Walnut
Creek obtained rights to the SimTel trademark from Keith.  Over time
they rebuilt the Simtel archive and ended up surpassing the CCT
simtel collection.  Eventually CCT's rights to use the Simtel trademark
expired and they went away.  The interesting details of this fight
are here:

http://www.softouch.on.ca/rc/simtel1.htm

In the late 90's Bob Bruce saw that as DSL and larger hard disks came
into vogue that the revenue from Walnut Creek/Simtel would diminish.
By then the Simtel archive was eclipsing the FreeBSD distribution in
commercial value.  Bob began to take steps to separate the FreeBSD revenue
stream from Simtel by creating freebsdmall.com

In October 1999 Bob sold the entire Simtel archive and rights to Digital
River for 4 million dollars in cash and stocks.  Digital River then
proceeded to build simtel.net into what it is today.  In 2000, BSDI
came back into the picture and purchased freebsdmall.com and the FreeBSD
distribution CD business from Bob and cashed him out.  In 2001, Wind River
acquired BSDI from it's founders - ie: Marshall Kirk McKusick
and cashed them out.  It is interesting to note that Wind River is a
major military supplier - and DARPA was the principle funder and
motivator of the BSD project at UCB in the 80's.  There have been
many closed circles in BSD. ;-)

In 2002 Wind River decided to stop selling the commercial BSDI
distribution and they spun off everything having to do with FreeBSD
including freebsdmall.com.  Bob Bruce came back into the picture
again and picked up freebsdmall.com which he currently owns and
operates today.  Wind River still has the BSDI copyright and presumably
is using the commercial code in some product or other of theirs.
In any case the BSDI fork of the Net/2 tape has pretty much died,
as all the principle BSD developers have quit or been fired from Wind
River, and from what I understand, many have gone to Apple Computer
and are running the Darwin project, which is based on FreeBSD 3.2
(and NeXT)  Darwin as everyone knows, is used as the base for MacOS X.

Today, 'Walnut Creek' as far as I can tell remains a trademark of
Digital

Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-24 Thread Jay Moore
On Friday 24 December 2004 01:07 am, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:

> > >   Now, as for the Foundation's status as a charity:
> > >
> > > I'll start with asking you a simple question:  Setting aside the
> > > legal definitions, what in your mind IS a charity, exactly?
> >
> > Hey look - I don't need a lecture about charity, and I'm not
> > disputing that
> > the foundation is "legally" classified as a charity.
>
> I never said that you were disputing the legal definition.  But
> clearly you are disputing the idea that it is a charity. 

Yes, I am disputing that. It is not a charity except in the tax avoidance 
sense of the word. You are attempting to twist the words and their meaning to 
support your agenda. Under your selective interpretation of the definition, 
one could claim virtually anything as "a gift for public benevolent 
purposes". It's bullshit, Ted, and you may deny it here in this forum, but 
you know it is. 

> > In my mind, I would
> > consider it more like a not-for-profit organization; charities are
> > organizations that help the needy - people who can't help themselves.
>
> Well, that is why I made the Robin Hood remark.  I will point out
> that the FreeBSD Foundation in fact uses the actual term "public charity"
> on their website.  And certainly the
> Foundation doesen't attempt to pass itself off as using the money
> to help the poor.  I am aware that many people don't view a
> charity as anything more than a needy-person-helping apparatus.
> However I urge you to examine your view of the idea of 'need'  There
> are many people out there also who feel that much of the 'need'
> served by charities isn't really need it is choice.  Many people
> are incensed that some charities feed alcoholic bums that spend
> their nights sleeping in the streets.  Many would weigh the 'need'
> of FreeBSD to have a good Java implementation against the 'need'
> of an alcoholic to continue to be fed day after day without quitting
> drinking, and feel that the FreeBSD need was greater.

alcoholic bums?!  Is this another example of your interpretation of charity?  
Are you really asking anyone to accept you as an authority on what charity 
means when you refer to alcoholics as bums? 

In case you forgot to read the _entire_ definition of charity, Ted, try # 4:
"4 : lenient judgment of others". Frankly, I find your arrogance annoying.

I'll say it again: I support FreeBSD through CD purchases, and would consider 
an outright cash donation. I think the project is a "good thing", and I also 
think it serves the public good. But it's not a charity, and neither is the 
Foundation that supports the project. I don't think you're a good spokesman 
for the project or the Foundation, and I wish you'd drop this thread now.

Jay

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Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-24 Thread Ian Moore
On Fri, 24 Dec 2004 17:37, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Jay Moore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Thursday, December 23, 2004 3:32 PM
> > To: Ted Mittelstaedt
> > Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> > Subject: Re: The FreeBSD Foundation
> >
> >
> >
> > Yes - I buy from FreeBSD mall which I thought was run by Walnut
> > Creek. I've
> > had this subscription since 3.0 or 3.1... the cd's keep coming.
> > I'd say if
> > the new owners aren't giving the project the same cut as the
> > previous owners,
> > then maybe consider doing something else???
>
> The story here actually begins back in 1978 when 1BSD was created by
> UCB's CSRG as a fork of UNIX6.  The BSD project continued at UCB for


Wow, that was a great bit of history, Ted. I love reading about the history of 
FreeBSD & unix, almost as much as I love using FreeBSD!

Cheers,
-- 
Ian

GPG Key: http://homepages.picknowl.com.au/imoore/imoore.asc


pgpeYlMdGZBMk.pgp
Description: PGP signature


RE: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-25 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


> -Original Message-
> From: Jay Moore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, December 24, 2004 12:03 AM
> To: Ted Mittelstaedt
> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: The FreeBSD Foundation
>
>
> On Friday 24 December 2004 01:07 am, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
>
> > > >   Now, as for the Foundation's status as a charity:
> > > >
> > > > I'll start with asking you a simple question:  Setting aside the
> > > > legal definitions, what in your mind IS a charity, exactly?
> > >
> > > Hey look - I don't need a lecture about charity, and I'm not
> > > disputing that
> > > the foundation is "legally" classified as a charity.
> >
> > I never said that you were disputing the legal definition.  But
> > clearly you are disputing the idea that it is a charity.
>
> Yes, I am disputing that. It is not a charity except in the tax avoidance
> sense of the word.

Hmm  'tax avoidance' another loaded phrase.  Most conservatives would say
that the government doesen't have the moral right to tax contributions
to non-profits, so it's impossible to 'avoid' a tax that shouldn't
exist in the first place.  "tax avoidance" carries obvious criminal
implications.

 You are attempting to twist the words and
> their meaning to
> support your agenda.

Don't accuse me of what you are doing.  I said that you could make
a case against The FreeBSD Foundation if you wished to do so on a
logical basis and I would respect that.  You have chosen not to do
that.  Instead you are attempting to make an emotional case against
The FreeBSD Foundation based on the alleged misuse of the word
'charity', a misuse that doesen't exist as I showed you.

Go ahead and make a reasoned argument against The FreeBSD Foundation,
the audience here is waiting for it.  By playing the semantics game you
aren't making any kind of case against anything.

> Under your selective interpretation of the
> definition,
> one could claim virtually anything as "a gift for public benevolent
> purposes". It's bullshit, Ted, and you may deny it here in this
> forum, but
> you know it is.
>

Naturally someone could misuse my selective interpretation of
the word charity to claim anything.  That isn't relevant to
whether or not The FreeBSD Foundation is a charity.  You seem to
think it isn't and the only argument you have put forth is that
a charity is only supposed to help the needy - but the term needy
applies to what the Foundation happens to be doing with FreeBSD.

> >
> > Well, that is why I made the Robin Hood remark.  I will point out
> > that the FreeBSD Foundation in fact uses the actual term
> "public charity"
> > on their website.  And certainly the
> > Foundation doesen't attempt to pass itself off as using the money
> > to help the poor.  I am aware that many people don't view a
> > charity as anything more than a needy-person-helping apparatus.
> > However I urge you to examine your view of the idea of 'need'  There
> > are many people out there also who feel that much of the 'need'
> > served by charities isn't really need it is choice.  Many people
> > are incensed that some charities feed alcoholic bums that spend
> > their nights sleeping in the streets.  Many would weigh the 'need'
> > of FreeBSD to have a good Java implementation against the 'need'
> > of an alcoholic to continue to be fed day after day without quitting
> > drinking, and feel that the FreeBSD need was greater.
>
> alcoholic bums?!  Is this another example of your interpretation
> of charity?
> Are you really asking anyone to accept you as an authority on
> what charity
> means when you refer to alcoholics as bums?

There are alcoholics and there are alcoholic bums, they
are different types of alcoholics.  That is why I used the term
'alcoholic bums' instead of just using the term 'alcoholics'

Many charities help alcoholics who want to stop being alcoholics
and only a Scrooge would take issue with this, IMHO.  But some
help alcoholics who don't want to get better.  These alcoholics are
bums.  Sorry you don't like the term - do you have a better one for
alcoholics that refuse treatment?  I don't.

And in any case why are you focusing on this in the first place and
ignoring the definition of needy, which clearly is what that
paragraph is about.

>
> In case you forgot to read the _entire_ definition of charity,
> Ted, try # 4:
> "4 : lenient judgment of others". Frankly, I find your arrogance annoying.
>

Sorry to hear that.  I have compassion for street people 

Re: The FreeBSD Foundation

2004-12-27 Thread Jay Moore
On Saturday 25 December 2004 06:26 pm, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:

If I say you are right and wonderful will you drop this?

Then consider it done, Ted. I'm sure you've impressed us all.

Jay
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