home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ogicse!reed!henson!news.u.washington.edu!carson.u.washington.edu!tzs
- From: tzs@carson.u.washington.edu (Tim Smith)
- Newsgroups: gnu.misc.discuss
- Subject: Re: harmful effects of gnu software
- Message-ID: <1iqervINNcp5@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- Date: 11 Jan 93 00:26:39 GMT
- Article-I.D.: shelley.1iqervINNcp5
- References: <1993Jan10.062319.17213@news2.cis.umn.edu> <1iq63j$5m7@agate.berkeley.edu>
- Organization: University of Washington School of Law, Class of '95
- Lines: 26
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
-
- jbuck@forney.berkeley.edu (Joe Buck) writes:
- >This is the free market in action. Joe Schmoe has been out-competed. If
- >he can write a word processor that is worth $129.95 more to the end user
- >than Gnu Emacs is, he can sell it. The effect of FSF at this point is
- >to place a floor under the level of crap that the software industry can
- >unload on users; you can't sell a compiler that is vastly worse than gcc
- >for very long anymore. This is good for the end user. It may be bad news
- >for the budding young software capitalist, but the world doesn't owe you
- >a living.
-
- It's not clear that things would work well at the logical end of this,
- when programmers all make their living selling support for GPL'ed software,
- rather than writing proprietary software.
-
- What is my incentive to write new GPL'ed software? Sure, I can sell support
- for it, but so can other programmers. Their cost in reading and understanding
- my source sufficiently to support it is, I would guess, less than my
- development costs. I am better off *NOT* writing the new code, and instead
- concentrating on learning to support other programmers' new code.
-
- OK, so some user will come along and pay me to write new software?
- But to them, software is just a tool that they use in their business.
- Isn't it going to be in their interest to ask me to develop for them
- a proprietary version?
-
- --Tim Smith
-