[LINK] what to study about foss

Kim Holburn kim at holburn.net
Mon Sep 25 15:55:37 AEST 2006


As some of the comments said, these are of the "have you stopped  
beating your wife" kind of questions.  Similar to : "How much do you  
get paid to write disparaging comments about Open Source?"

On 2006 Sep 25, at 3:14 PM, The CATO Institute Spokesmidget spruked:
> http://weblog.ipcentral.info/archives/2006/09/what_to_study_a_1.html
>
> "The NSF gives a UC Davis team funding to study how various FOSS  
> projects
> emerged.
>
> I skeptically accept FOSS as a contributor to the technological
> community. On the one hand, FOSS enables many talented developers to
> contribute and refine their skills. Plus, a few FOSS technologies have
> gained industry wide acceptance and adoption. On the other hand, when
> someone is going to study how successful FOSS projects work, I hope  
> they
> can answer these questions begged by the revolutionary hype- hoopla of
> some FOSS supporters.
>
> 	1) what explains the inability of FOSS to respond to consumer and  
> market
> 	driven demand, as in the case where FOSS failed to develop  
> accessibility
> 	features for its desktop applications in Massachusetts.
> 	2) given the years FOSS has been around, the "man hours" dedicated to
> 	its projects, and the myriads of eyeballs peering into its code,  
> why has
> 	FOSS generated only a few commercial successes?
> 	3) most admit the limitations of FOSS in segments of systems and
> 	architectures. Given this, shouldn't FOSS adopt licenses to ensure  
> its
> 	"mixture" with mass-market proprietary technologies, as that seems  
> the
> 	only route for long term adoption and viability?
> 	4) do companies such as IBM and Red Hat rely on innovation in FOSS
> 	technologies for their service businesses? What does this say  
> about the
> 	"innovativeness" vs business aspects of FOSS when firms can still  
> make
> 	money even if FOSS technologies improve incrementally or not at  
> all? .
> 	5) how do FOSS companies compete for developers. After years and
> 	hundreds if not thousands of FOSS projects, are there "all-star"
> 	developers courted by project leaders or companies?
> 	6) how much say do FOSS volunteers have in proposing ideas or
> 	directional changes in development efforts? Is this anyway to treat
> 	folks who lend their work to giants like IBM and Red Hat, who then  
> turn
> 	around and make money off that.
> 	7) finally, is there any plan to oust Moglen-Stallman and replace  
> them
> 	with reasonable representatives such as Oreilly-Torvalds?"

--
Kim Holburn
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