I don't know, I think that it's a Xandros derivative rather than Xandros
itself matters. A large component of open source is that the code, time, and
effort is never invested all in one single leader. I know that Eric Raymond
has said genuinely despicable things over the course of his career, but I
imagine I probably use quite a bit of his code through regular daily use of
my computer. So, I don't think we should assume that Xandros's unfortunate
failure to stand up to Microsoft's bogus patent racket means that downstream
code is somehow tainted.
I agree with what you say, though, totally... we must ensure Ubuntu gets on
desktops so that people can see what it's made of, and Asus'
half-heartedness is a little dissappointing. (It's funny that the Windows
laptop has less HD space; I wonder how much of that space is even left after
Windows is installed!)
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 2:25 AM, Conrad Knauer wrote:
> Asus has had very good sales of their EeePC; they're cute little limulus. wordpress. com/2007/ 06/05/xandros- sells-out- to-microsoft-<http:// limulus. wordpress. com/2007/ 06/05/xandros- sells-out- to-microsoft- over-patents/> limulus. wordpress. com/2007/ 06/05/xandros- sells-out- to-microsoft- over-patents/>
> devices, but while they run Linux, their distro is a Xandros derivative
> and I won't support that (here's why:
> http://
> over-patents/<http://
> )
>
I don't know, I think that it's a Xandros derivative rather than Xandros
itself matters. A large component of open source is that the code, time, and
effort is never invested all in one single leader. I know that Eric Raymond
has said genuinely despicable things over the course of his career, but I
imagine I probably use quite a bit of his code through regular daily use of
my computer. So, I don't think we should assume that Xandros's unfortunate
failure to stand up to Microsoft's bogus patent racket means that downstream
code is somehow tainted.
I agree with what you say, though, totally... we must ensure Ubuntu gets on
desktops so that people can see what it's made of, and Asus'
half-heartedness is a little dissappointing. (It's funny that the Windows
laptop has less HD space; I wonder how much of that space is even left after
Windows is installed!)