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The Register » Software » Comments on ‘Microsoft targets developers with 'open' license’.NOT open sourcePublished Thursday 4th October 2007 00:01 GMT
Not "hesitant slide"By yeah, right.
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 00:22 GMT
It's not a bloody "hesitant slide towards open source"! It's an and out obvious attempt to "embrace, extend and extinguish" the very concept of "open". By releasing this code, they can later claim that REAL open source developers copied it, and then sue the living daylights out of them. It's the one piece that was missing from the SCO lawsuit: evidence. Now Microsoft have primed the pump for another go. This article has what I consider to be the right take on the issue: http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2191754,00.asp (which was referenced by Groklaw). Take MI2UrLeaders? The UltiMate ARGonauts Quest.By amanfromMars
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 05:57 GMT
IT is the Keys to the Windows in AIMagical KingDom in a Matrix. MSBetaSight .... A Priceless Privilege Selflessly Provided for Semantic Input 42 Create VirtualVistaOS.? AI Quantum Collosus, Bill? AI Big Blue Apache ? Hhmmmm..... Now that is definitely Turing AINewSpeak. Lets See who's Out there.. and whether they know what is Really happening and what they are doing about IT. Let's take a Trip on AIMagic Ship. :-) Hello Wwworlds, What about Yes? And now we wait ... to Hear MSWindows Respond to NEUKlearer Treatment. Rise to the Tasks Ahead........ for Real Money Shots. And whenever that is but a Tangent in the Program, can you Imagine the Size and Colours in ITs dDepth and what can be done with IT's Digital Spread/BroadBand Spectrum? Open Source InitiativeBy Damien Jorgensen
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 07:15 GMT
They have no mandate anyway, so who cares if they havent approved it, the OSI just like to think its the kiddy of open source when infact its just part of the open source gravy train. Opening the source to enable us developers to see how things are implemented is a great move by Microsoft. Ok we cant fix it when it breaks but at least we know identify what actually is broken. Excellent news! Not newBy Rich Bryant
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 07:25 GMT
All that stuff is already viewable with Lutz Roeder's Reflector anyway. What of ITs HyperRadioProActivityBy amanfromMars
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 07:46 GMT
"All that stuff is already viewable with Lutz Roeder's Reflector anyway." But what of ITs Special Applications Programming, Rich Bryant. A Daniel in the Lion's Den. @Not NewBy Mark Fenton
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 08:18 GMT
Yeah I know - and you can also see the excellent quality and efficiancy of the MS code too when you use it*. *May be slight exageration. Venus flytrap targets flies with open jawsBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 08:47 GMT
.. but I agree with Damien but from the opposing side. OSI is just some self appointed body of no importance, the real test for me is GPL compliance, how GPL is it? It is a full 3 , a not so good 2 or a poor 1 compliant. Following Borland's lead?By Neil
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 08:54 GMT
Didn't Borland do this with all of their releases of Delphi? I don't recall howls of dissent claiming they were trying to take ownership of every program written from then on. It was damned useful to be able to see how the VCL handled itself and to be able to find reasons for apparently odd behaviour, and, yes, even to find and report bugs. A good move, I say. OSI doesn't decide what is and isn't "Open Source"...By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 09:01 GMT
...as the term was used decades before the OSI's formation. Original site (currently having problems): http://www.hyperlogos.org/story/who_invented_the_term_open_source Google cached version: http://216.239.59.104/search?q=cache:tCWm4muLwVQJ:www.hyperlogos.org/story/who_invented_the_term_open_source OSI? Boost?By JamesH
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 09:38 GMT
Since the OSI have failed to accept the Boost open licence (one of the most broad licences IMO), and with Boost being one of the largest and best open source C++ projects, one has to wonder whether having OSI approval is of any use whatsoever. And am I the only person who wishes amanfrommars would just stop posting and wasting my time? It's not big and its not clever.In fact, it's nonsense. Look but Don't TouchBy A J Stiles
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 10:11 GMT
Actually, I think Microsoft would have trouble enforcing the "..... but don't touch" bit. There are circumstances under which it's quite legal (as Fair Dealing) to create derived works from copyright material without permission from the copyright holder; and this, being a statutory right, can't be signed away. Expect a test case the moment some third party publishes a patch intended to correct a serious security flaw in a Microsoft reference licenced product, with the usual "this may void your warranty [as if there was one], use at your own risk" warning. There is an interesting clause there:By Richard
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 10:18 GMT
(B) If you begin patent litigation against the Licensor over patents that you think may apply to the software (including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit), your license to the software ends automatically. That doesn't half sound like "If you find we've stolen your stuff, NYAH!!" @yeah, rightBy Richard
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 10:19 GMT
Wasn't one of the reasons SCO didn't want to produce evidence (although quite how one brings a case without it I don't know) that the Open Source community would be able to code out the infringing bits? Also, doesn't it provide the possibility of a smoking gun in the other direction as well? Let's say a Mono control works markedly faster than an MS one and the MS one suddenly speeds up due to new code looking markedly similar to the Mono source then surely we have a GPL violation there. Seed FundingBy amanfromMars
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 11:16 GMT
Does it need an Einstein to point out that Developers work the Best Beta when Paid? Does MS Splash the Cash to Developers...for Developers to Further Develop for Cash? Was that a resounding No? I thought Bill and Warren were supposed to disposing of their Controls.... although when your Word is the Bond, it doesn't really matter. RubbishBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 11:27 GMT
Isn't that a worst of both worlds licence? Kind of a 'You-can-spot-the-vulnerabilities-but-you-can't-fix-them' thing. Microsoft always liked security by obscurity, but rather than actually release anything to open source, they've come up with this abortion. It'll all end in tears... Ref @Not NewBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 11:36 GMT
The code you view in Lutz Roeder's Reflector (Would not use dotnet without it) is not always the same code MS wrote, since the compiler does allot of optimizing. For example you can bet all the goto statements you see are compiler optimizations to make the code inline. Functionaly it's the same though. A good move, but...By Robert Harrison
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 12:31 GMT
This is something we've always had available when developing with the Java SDK or Microsoft Foundation Classes. I always found when I first looked at .Net that it seemed somewhat of a step backwards that the actual library source was suddenly not available (I was always used to the C-runtime and MFC source being on hand). So, good move Microsoft but it smacks of being a desperate maneouvre done late in the day (how long has .Net been out now?). Note that I'm not bashing Microsoft for the sake of it just wondering why it took so long. Tinker, Tailor, Poacher....GameKeeperBy amanfromMars
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 14:33 GMT
"That doesn't half sound like "If you find we've stolen your stuff, NYAH!!"" Richard, Controls in the stuff stolen still remain with ITs Source though. IT is AI Trojan Warrior dDeep within Core Control and Power . AIMentor 42 Please. That presents an interesting Choice to the Closed Shop Microsoft Model. NumbnutsBy Angus McIonnach
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 15:25 GMT
"All that stuff is already viewable with Lutz Roeder's Reflector anyway." Cool. Reflector can somehow retrieve the original code comments from compiled assemblies. I must get this new, magical version of Reflector forthwith. foolsBy Fran Taylor
Posted Thursday 4th October 2007 18:51 GMT
Who needs to look at source code? If the documentation is proper, there is literally no need. Of course, Microsoft cannot write proper documentation. Microsoft is not doing anything new here. The MFC source code has been available for years and years under similar conditions. My definition of open source is that I can take the source, mess with it, share it with others, and they can do the same. Please explain what is unreasonable about this definition. Yeah, just try to do something interesting with their source. You will get smacked down so hard you won't even know what hit you. If you even look at it, you are poison and you can't work on Free Software any more. Microsoft will do like SCO and sue your ass for stealing their ideas. Except you aren't IBM and you can't hire the nazgul. TitleBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 5th October 2007 09:20 GMT
When you use their code, watch out. It wasn't that long ago when El Reg had the story about some fella who'd won an MS award for being a great programmer was then facing charges for using the code examples shown to do something MS didn't want done. So even if it is open, you may not be allowed to use it. And this is probably why the OSI doesn't accept this license. If the cap fits here....wear it?By amanfromMars
Posted Saturday 6th October 2007 13:27 GMT
"their code" ? Now that is an arrogant presumption and cosy arrangement for exclusive profit rather than general benefit. QuITe why it is tolerated says more about weak men masquerading as powerful, than they know. It is not the computer or the software installed on the computer which is important....for that is just so much inanimate plant .... it is what you make IT do for you, as ITs Controller/Messenger. And for those working in Sensitive Fields where FeedBack will Instantly Create a Paradigm Change to the Status Quo, [and therefore dialogue is studiously avoided], it only requires the Sensitive Field Subject and Sent Mails to be succinctly presented Open Source for Beta Progress, just in case the System is programmed to channel Innovation through Closed Channels. Or IT is sold to A.N.Other Status Quo System which can Beta Utilise IT. And that is an Embarrassment of Riches if Home Forces/Sources are not Fit for Purpose/on another Agenda. It is, after all, their choice? The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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