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 From : Sergey Lentsov                       2:4615/71.10   29 Nov 2001  17:12:22
 To : All
 Subject : URL: http://www.lwn.net/2001/1129/letters.php3
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    November 29, 2001
    
    
 From:    Leandro Guimaraes Faria Corsetti Dutra <leandrod@mac.com>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: GNU-Darwin for the x86
 Date:    Wed, 21 Nov 2001 13:16:19 -0200
 
 "The battle to rename it GNU/Linux has not gone all that far, and
 resentment remains. The same spirit that causes FSF developers to push
 forward with HURD development also draws their attention to other,
 non-Linux alternatives."
 
         Attribution of motives and sentiments is never good journalism.
 
         The FSF and the GNU project supporters feels that calling GNU/Linux jus
 t
 Linux does a disservice to the philosophical struggle for free software,
 and it is hoped that the Hurd will be a superior kernel to the GNU system.
 
         But never in RMS writings or in anything published by the FSF or GNU
 project developers I've seen resentment towards whomever call GNU/Linux
 just Linux.  And the naming issue was never the reason behind the
 development of the Hurd; instead, it is believed that the microkernel
 with multiple servers architecture of the Hurd will make for a more
 flexible kernel for developers, testers and users, enabling the Hurd to
 progress more quickly and orderly than the Linux kernel after the Hurd
 reaches critical mass and a stable release.
 
         Please please please don't put words in other people's mouths.
 --
    _
   / \  Leandro Guimaraes Faria Corsetti Dutra    +55 (11) 5685 2219
   \ /  [15]http://homepage.mac.com./leandrod/        +55 (11) 9406 7191
    X   Orange Telecom                            +55 (43) 322 89 71
   / \  Fita ASCII contra correio eletronico HTML             BRASIL
 
    
 From:    Mark Bainter <mark-spamx@firinn.org>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: Editorials
 Date:    Mon, 26 Nov 2001 00:04:23 -0600
 
 I appreciated the editorial regarding sourceforge.  Particularly
 since it brings to voice concerns I've had privately of late.  Not
 only for sourceforge, but also for freshmeat.  Both of which are
 extremely valuable resources to the open source community.  Having
 not only one in a precarious position like that, but both worries
 me and smacks of poor design.  But as you said, it's not like there
 is a line of companies looking to relieve valinux of the burden
 they have so gladly (or so it seems to me) born for us.
 That said, I appreciate all VALinux has done, and is doing
 for us.  I hope I don't sound like an ingrate.  ;-)  Here's
 hoping another company steps up to help provide resources to
 keep sourceforge/freshmeat alive.  If we could make their
 survival independant of any one companies existance I know
 I'd feel a lot better.
 
 However, the Darwin editorial, while interesting and informative
 at first devolved rather quickly into another annoying whine about
 GNU/linux.  This is a topic that I (and I think many others, though
 I can only speak for me) am really sick of hearing about.  I don't
 see the people who make the tools used to build cars lining up to
 whine about their names not being on the cars built with them.  I
 don't see lumber companies complaining because the companies building
 houses don't include the name of the lumber mill in the name of the
 subdivision being built.
 
 Linux is it's own product.  The fact that GNU tools are used to
 build it, or were used to write it or (the more common argument)
 are used to build a complete OS generally called "Linux" is really
 not relevant.  I mean, if solaris suddenly started shipping gnu tools
 as part of Solaris instead of their own would everyone be clamoring
 to have Solaris renamed to GNU/Solaris?  I'm not a big BSD user,
 but don't at least some of the *BSD distros use gnu tools?  Is no-one
 going to complain that it should be renamed GNU/BSD?  Doubtfull.
 
 Come on.  Most everyone in the linux world knows who GNU is.  It's
 all over the place here, and I think most people do truly appreciate
 the contributions the GNU foundation has made, and is making.  Can't
 we move on?  Hasn't this horse endured enough abuse?
 
 It's dead Jim, stop beating it already.
 
    
 From:    Chris Lawrence <lawrencc@debian.org>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: bug reporting in noncommercial software
 Date:    Thu, 22 Nov 2001 01:52:12 -0600
 Cc:      Mark Bainter <mark@firinn.org>, Seth LaForge <sethml@ofb.net>,
          David.Kastrup@t-online.de
 
 As the author of Debian's reportbug, I'd like to thank Seth for his
 comments about reportbug in the 11/15 LWN.  I'd also like to respond
 to Mark's comments about bug reporting in general.
 
 Mark says that each package should include its own bug reporting
 frontend.  While laudable in theory, this introduces a number of
 problems:
 
 1. Lots of additional bug reporting tools.  On my Debian box, I have
 bug reporting tools for mutt, libc, KDE, GNOME, and a few other
 programs.  If everyone did it, we'd have a veritable raft of bug
 reporting tools.
 
 2. Lots of version skew.  In the case of mutt, its bug reporting tool
 is a fork of Debian's "bug" command (reportbug's older, sh-script
 sibling).  If we find bugs in "bug", their fixes have to be propogated
 over to mutt's tool.
 
 3. No real prescreening of bug reports.  Most people get their
 software through distributions.  Probably 1/3 to 1/2 of problems
 people have with software are distribution-specific issues (why didn't
 X pull in library Y when I installed it, etc.).  If the libc people
 say "report all libc bugs using glibcbug", they'll get a large number
 of reports that are Debian's or Red Hat's or SuSE's fault.
 
 Mark does raise a valid issue about what sort of information should be
 included in bug reports.  A standard reportbug report includes:
 
 - The package and version
 - The specific file mentioned by the submitter (if specified)
 - A severity tag used by the BTS and maintainers for triage
 - The body text written by the user
 - The output of uname -a and a few locale settings (LANG, LC_CTYPE)
 - The first-level dependencies of the package, with versions
 - Any modified configuration files (optional)
 
 However, reportbug (and bug) include hooks for allowing them to report
 additional information about the package.  Not many packages take
 advantage of this, however (perhaps because it's poorly-publicized).
 This allows what Mark wants: package-specific data collection, or even
 an interactive troubleshooter.  For example, a picture viewer might
 include a bug script requesting that the user try different X or
 framebuffer settings, or identify whether the problem only affects
 certain image formats.
 
 reportbug also includes hooks supporting submission to different types
 of bug tracking system; GNATS support was added for the now-no-longer
 Progeny distribution, for example.
 
 I'll be the first to admit reportbug isn't perfect... it really is
 newbie unfriendly in places, for example, something I'd like to work
 on.  But it definitely is something a "universal" free reporting tool
 could be based on, and I'd be happy to add code to separate it from
 its Debian-centricity (easy enough to do, really... just figure out
 what distro it's running on and behave accordingly).
 Chris
 --
 Chris Lawrence <lawrencc@debian.org> - [16]http://www.lordsutch.com/chris/
 
    
 From:    Richard Kay <rich@copsewood.net>
 To:      dave@userland.com
 Subject: RMS
 Date:    Sun, 25 Nov 2001 21:08:44 -0500
 Cc:      rms@gnu.org, letters@lwn.net
 
 In [17]http://scriptingnews.userland.com/backissues/2001/11/21
    dave@userland.com  wrote:
 
 > Do you work really hard to make good software? I do it every day. Does
 > Stallman push the envelope? I haven't seen any evidence of that. Imho,
 > the economy is still rewarding the wrong people. At one time if you
 > pushed for excellence in software, you could build a nice business. I
 > still believe that. But it's disheartening to see so much money go to
 > support Stallman's theories. I believe this works against software
 > breakthroughs, even software progress.
 
 Richard Stallman (RMS) has probably done more than anyone to promote
 software reuse. In this respect his GPL represents one of the most
 effective works of software engineering ever written. Being able to
 modify a world-beating functional system (GNU/Linux) to suit my own
 needs such that I only have to focus on the coding which
 modifies it to make it suit my own requirements ( e.g. see
 [18]http://copsewood.net/shared-mailbox/shared-mbox.html ) has
 largely been made possible by RMS's ground-breaking work. The
 technical achievements of those working on the Linux kernel
 and compatible free-software application infrastructure has
 also been made possible, in no small part, due to RMS's direct work
 earlier on the GNU C compiler and Emacs editor. There have
 also been much greater indirect benefits through the
 improvements for free sofware brought about by the difference
 between BSD style licenses, which allow for the tragedy of
 commons arising from the theft and distortion of free software
 by commercial interests who are obliged to give nothing back,
 and the GPL which encourages a more open and community-oriented
 style of software development.
 
 > Something to think about. Would the $830K have been better used to
 > support SourceForge?
 
 Probably not. While SourceForge has given practical help to very
 many projects, there are many willing to host such projects and
 it is probably undesirable to have too many free-software
 projects hosted un-mirrored on a single centralised server, subject
 to whatever legislation a single nation's government and lobbyists
 might dream up. The potential benefits of promoting free-software
 are very likely to outweigh supporting what should become a
 profitable and self-supporting Internet business.
 
 It is possible that the same argument could be used to say
 that supporting free software, if it is as useful as I suggest,
 could also be carried out on a commercial footing. I have to
 disagree with this counter-argument, as the moral benefits of
 free software probably far outweigh the practical and commercial
 ones, in the sense that free software can act as a potentially
 liberating and democratising influence in areas other than just
 ICT, e.g. in areas as diverse as privacy, integrity of electronic voting
 systems and the ability of musicians, writers and artists to
 bypass corporate distributors who have traditionally controlled most
 intellectual property rights. These benefits should not be
 lost and distorted through legislation sponsored by commercial
 interests such as the DMCA and SSSCA.
 
 The papers which I have written and published on [19]http://copsewood.net/
 which are concerned with the potential for a more democratic,
 sustainable and decentralised society are unlikely to have become
 possible without the influence which has derived directly from
 RMS's work.
 
 Richard Kay
 Senior Lecturer/Technologist
 Technology Innovation Centre,
 University of Central England,
 Birmingham, UK.
 
    
 From:    Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
 To:      rich@copsewood.net
 Subject: Re: RMS
 Date:    Mon, 26 Nov 2001 04:48:45 -0700 (MST)
 Cc:      dave@userland.com, letters@lwn.net
 
 Thank you very much for speaking up in my defense.  I would like
 to correct one factual point about the prize itself.
 
 $830k (actually a little less with current exchange rates) is the
 total sum.  Since it is being shared by three people, I will get 1/3
 of that--after taxes, perhaps $170k.  It's a nice sum of Hanukkah
 gelt, and will make a difference for me, but it wouldn't support an
 organization like Sourceforge for long.
 
    
 From:    "Jay R. Ashworth" <jra@baylink.com>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: Dave Winer and RMS
 Date:    Sat, 24 Nov 2001 14:03:44 -0500
 
 Well, here we go again...
 
 You know, it's funny.  Dave Winer used to be one of my favorite people.
 
 I was lost in the world of Macintosh, back in 1992 -- I was helping
 start a cool TV network called MOR Music TV, now, sadly, defunct --
 when Frontier was in about release 3.something, and I fell in love with
 it.  Given the lack of a command line on a Mac, Frontier was about the
 closest you could get, and I liked the outliner-based approach to the
 whole thing.  A lot.  Same reason I like Zope -- or I think I would, if
 it would stop moving long enough for me to figure it out.  (Friendly
 big Zope site administrators cheerfully solicited...)
 
 Even though it's one of the best examples of "when all you have is a
 hammer, everything looks like a nail", it worked, and it worked pretty
 well.
 
 And then I actually tried *interacting* with Dave.  I wrote to him, having
 become a regular reader of his Scripting News weblog -- it was even my
 browser homepage for some time -- and suggested that he might want to
 look into Linux, and even maybe doing a port of Frontier to Linux.
 
 He called me every kind of a mother-fscker, and several I think he made
 up on the spot.  And then, less than a year later... he fell in love
 with Linux.
 
 So it shouldn't be any surprise that I take most of what Dave says with
 a grain of salt (even though Doc Searls, whose opinions I respect
 highly, doesn't).  But I think that his comments on RMS, quoted in this
 week's LWN are particularly off base, and I'll tell you why.
 
 "It's disheartening," Winer says, "to see so much money go to support
 Stallman's theories."
 
 I disagree -- although you probably had already figured that out by
 now.  I've watched "open source" software for a very long time; I go
 back to at least 1982 on Usenet, and a bit before that in working with
 Unix, Xenix, and their ilk.  I am right here to tell you that the
 driving force behind the creation and expansion of large,
 multi-programmer projects in that arena has been Stallman's General
 Public License.
 
 I can't see anything else that could have made possible projects like
 perl5 and 6, PostGreSQL 7, and, indeed, the Linux kernel itself --
 RMS's insecure grumbling about why it's not referred to as "GNU Linux"
 notwithstanding...
 I also spend a fair amount of time working with the HylaFAX
 ([20]http://www.hylafax.org) fax server software package.  Originally written
 by SGI's Sam Leffler, and mostly maintained by him up til about it's 4.0
 release, the package got sort of stagnant for some time.  It now has 5 or 6
 pretty sharp people working on it, and it's moving along again
 nicely... but I can't help but wonder: is the reason that it has trouble
 attracting even more people motivated enough to work on it that it is *not*
 licensed under the GPL, but rather, under a license roughly equivalent to
 the BSD license (which doesn't protect potential contributors from
 commercial entities making off with their hard work without any recompense,
 credit- or otherwise)?
 General George C. Marshall, US Army Chief of Staff during WWII, and
 author of the "Marshall Plan" -- which helped rebuild Europe after the
 war and gained him a Nobel Peace Prize -- is most generally credited
 for the observation that "there's no limit to what a man can achieve if
 he isn't concerned whether or not he gets the credit for it".
 
 The GPL is my favorite example of this, with the delightful twist of
 irony that it works almost precisely by preserving the credit due to
 those people who write the code released under it -- which is all it
 preserves.  The only person whose credit isn't really that well
 preserved is RMS's.
 So, for putting up with 20 or 25 years of the lifestyle engendered by
 the beliefs that gave us the GPL and, hence, the OS running on the
 laptop I'm writing this letter on, hell yeah, I think RMS is entitled
 to the prize he's been awarded.
 
 There's nothing wrong with asceticism... except for that class of
 problems that money is all it takes to fix.
 
 - ---
 
 On a final note, I find it amusing that Winer snipes at Danny O'Brien,
 of NTK.  O'Brien is sitting there, in front of Linus and everybody,
 asserting that Winer's also done something worth rewarding, and Dave
 gets pissy over it.
 
 Some people just think too much, I think.
 
 But who knows; maybe it's just me.
 
 [21]So many things are just me.
 
 Cheers,
 -- jra
 --
 Jay R. Ashworth                                                jra@baylink.com
 Member of the Technical Staff     Baylink                             RFC 2100
 The Suncoast Freenet         The Things I Think
 Tampa Bay, Florida        [22]http://baylink.pitas.com             +1 727 804 5
 015
 
    "If you don't have a dream; how're you gonna have a dream come true?"
      -- Captain Sensible, The Damned (from South Pacific's "Happy Talk")
 
    
 From:    Micah Yoder <micah@yoderdev.com>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: Future of SourceForge
 Date:    Wed, 28 Nov 2001 00:58:14 -0500
 
 Hi,
 
 There seems to be a sentiment out there that SourceForge is in danger of
 being shut down by VA Linux.  As you said in your 11/22/01 front page,
 
 > SourceForge is an expensive gift from VA Linux to the free software
 > community; if VA continues to bleed cash and continues to move toward
 > proprietary software, the company will eventually be forced to look at
 > ending that gift.
 
 Frankly, I don't think we have anything to worry about, at least for a couple
 years.  SourceForge (the now proprietary software) is the cornerstone of the
 new VA Linux business model.  They are focusing on selling this software for
 use in Global 2000 companies.  But how are they going to inspire confidence
 in those companies and sell their software as a solution?  How are they going
 to prove that their main product is useful and scalable?
 
 Right!  SourceForge.net!
 
 In addition to being proof that their primary product works and
 enterprise-ready, SF.net also ensures that there are thousands (nearly
 300,000 actually) of users who are familiar with their product, based on
 their Open Source work hosted at SF.net.  Many of these users will then,
 supposedly, recommend SourceForge Enterprise to their employers.
 
 The bottom line is that VA Linux cannot possibly afford to take SF.net down.
 It would be suicide!  I am therefore convinced that it will be around as long
 as VA is in business.  (Unless they change their business model again, but we
 won't get into that!)
 
 That brings up another question:  How long will VA be in business?  According
 to their recent annual report, they had $60 million in cash as of July 28.
 Granted, they had $123 million a year prior, but 1) they now have fewer
 employees and 2) last year involved some enormous expenses involving their
 changed business model.  They should be able to last AT LEAST another year
 without making a dime.  But they already have some enterprise customers, and
 hopefully they will get more this year.
 
 So don't worry about SourceForge.net.  It won't be disappearing anytime soon.
 
 Micah
 
 --
 Like to travel?                        [23]http://TravTalk.org
 Micah Yoder Internet Development       [24]http://yoderdev.com
 
    
 From:    "Jonathan Day" <jd9812@my-deja.com>
 To:      letters@lwn.net
 Subject: The folly of slowing down
 Date:    Wed, 28 Nov 2001 07:59:07 -0800
 
 Dear editors,
 
   I have to disagree with Linus Torvalds (gasp!) when he argues that there
 need to be fewer fundamental changes. The problem is that "stable" code is
 also stagnant code, which means that as the dependencies age, it becomes
 "unstable, but intractible" code.
 
   This is one of the genuine problems that is half-jokingly referred to as
 "bit-rot". Of course, the bits don't actually decay with time, but the
 assumptions on which they are built -do-. And that can kill an OS.
 
   What we need are far MORE fundamental changes between stable
 releases. Keep EVERY element of the kernel alive. If there is a single line
 of actual code older than a year in the kernel, then someone is being
 slack. Either the maintainer isn't refining their skill set (and thereby
 rotting, in themselves), or the code isn't being scrutinised nearly often
 enough for potential bugs, security holes, etc.
 
   Replacing the virtual memory system took over 170 patches, if I
 understand correctly. Far too many. A sign that the code isn't being
 actively worked on, nearly enough. Why? Because no sane coder would develop
 code that hard to maintain, if they were actively thinking about it. You
 just can't keep track of 170 fragments of code as easily as you can one
 self-contained unit.
 
   IMHO, 2.5.x needs one gigantic, fundamental change, if it is to survive
 another 10 years.  It must be ripped apart, and sewn together, as many
 times as it takes to seperate out entangled code. (The IPv4/IPv6/IGMP
 entanglement is positively horrible! IPv6 development is now -years- behind
 other Linux IPv6 stacks, we STILL don't have IGMPv3, it's not possible to
 have an IPv6-only box, IPv6 netfilter can't do a quarter of the things
 IPv4's can, and those are just the problems I've noticed.)
 
    The day Linux is allowed to stagnate is the day Linux will die. I know
 this is personifying it slightly, but oh well. Linux lives to grow, and
 grows to live. It is, in a sense, a living thing. You feed it and nurture
 it, it'll thrive. Cut it down, to "preserve" it, and all you have is a dead
 thing.  Is that what we want?  Really?
 
 Jonathan Day
 ------------------------------------------------------------
 --== Sent via Deja.com ==--
 [25]http://www.deja.com/
 
    
    
                                                                          
    
    [26]Eklektix, Inc. Linux powered! Copyright Л 2001 [27]Eklektix, Inc.,
    all rights reserved
    Linux (R) is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds
 
 References
 
    1. http://lwn.net/
    2. http://ads.tucows.com/click.ng/pageid=pageid=132-000-001-001
    3. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/
    4. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/security.php3
    5. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/kernel.php3
    6. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/dists.php3
    7. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/devel.php3
    8. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/commerce.php3
    9. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/press.php3
   10. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/announce.php3
   11. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/history.php3
   12. http://lwn.net/2001/1129/bigpage.php3
   13. http://lwn.net/2001/1122/letters.php3
   14. mailto:letters@lwn.net
   15. http://homepage.mac.com/leandrod/
   16. http://www.lordsutch.com/chris/
   17. http://scriptingnews.userland.com/backissues/2001/11/21
   18. http://copsewood.net/shared-mailbox/shared-mbox.html
   19. http://copsewood.net/
   20. http://www.hylafax.org/
   21. http://baylink.pitas.com/
   22. http://baylink.pitas.com/
   23. http://TravTalk.org/
   24. http://yoderdev.com/
   25. http://www.deja.com/
   26. http://www.eklektix.com/
   27. http://www.eklektix.com/
 
 --- ifmail v.2.14.os7-aks1
  * Origin: Unknown (2:4615/71.10@fidonet)
 
 

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