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Linux Software

The Benefits Of Radiation On Linux 84

roblimo pointed out this article in Business 2.0 by one Clay Shirky, a professor of New Media at Hunter College. Shirky goes into the idea of "adaptive radiation," and makes some pointed observations about its effect on software, Linux specifically. An excerpt: "This will keep Linux out of the best of breed competition because it is never perfectly tailored to any particular environment, but it also means that Linux avoids the best of breed trap. For any given purpose, best of breed products are either ideal or useless." Shirky is an insightful commentator as well; he also set up a "Web Pay Phone" outside his office at Hunter a few years back. Now go mutate!
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The Benefits Of Radiation On Linux

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  • I didn't read this article as anti-Linux in any way. What's anti-Linux, or anti-Free software, about it?

    More the opposite -- yes, he makes the claim (I disagree) that Linux "isn't ready for the desktop," but it appears to be because he is expecting some pretty great things out of Linux, not because he dislikes it in any way -- but on the whole, he makes the argument that Free software is often / usually the best thing *overall* even if there's some place for non-Free.

    Windows doesn't have the same sort of freedom to radiate.

    I guess we read this totally different ways.

    timothy

  • I think this sort of capability is best provided by the GNU Hurd.
  • 2) How does one become a "professor of New Media"?

    He was just BSing his way thru a performance review. I would guess that it went something like this:

    Reviewer#1: Looks like this Clay Shirky guy spends all day chatting on AIM, downloading MP3s on Napster, and surfing porn sites. We will have to fire him.
    Reviewer#2: Mr. Shirky, can you give us a good reason for your behavior?
    Shirky: Ummmm....It's is because....I want to...be...a professor of New Media? Yeah, that's it.
    Reviewer#2: Is that a position we have?
    Reviewer#1: Well, if he lets us help surf the porn sites, we could make one.
    Shirky: Deal!

  • "Best" and "Best of Breed" are two different ideas. "Best of breed" generally means it's the best of the few things some editor somewhere tested. Yes, we know that Linux is arguably a better desktop than Windows (Smoother, faster, more stable, more powerful), but Windows still dominates the market, and Microsoft has been adding some more glitz to it in the last few $100 revisions. Windows is designed to do one thing, while Linux is designed such that extending it to do something new is fairly clean and easy (As evidenced by Linux's advancement far beyond Linus' goals).
  • This theory is known as Punctuated Equilibruum, and is currently accepted in the world of biology.

    Not nearly as universally as that statement implies; the PE-gradualism debate still continues. Just because Gould has a tall soapbox doesn't mean he's necesssarily right.
  • > there ran an entire article about what Tim refers to as scare quotes.

    Shouldn't that be "scare" quotes?
  • The real import of the Linux wristwatch is ecological, though, rather than practical, because it illustrates Linux's unparalleled ability to take advantage of something called adaptive radiation

    I'd like to put forward another Linux analogy - its like English (or Lingua Franca, or whatever your language of choice). That's why Linux users take it personally. How would you like it if some corporation (say M$) owned your language (OS), and you couldn't coin your own words or expressions (apps) but rather you'd have to use only what the corporation provides? You could say that OS'es like Windows restrict our expression like "newspeak" did in Huxley's Brave New World. "Newspeak" was a limited language designed by the government to restrict thought and expression.

    <ramble on>
    I've always had the impression that Windows was designed to suit Microsoft first, second and third. It was designed to overwhelm programmers with an overly complex interface. After the programmer has mastered all the books, journals and training, the constant stream of new Microsoft APIs and initiatives he would have no spare time to learn a competing platform. The programmer would not even have time to learn about the app he's supposed to program. Windows, which should have made the programmer's job easier, has instead become his job.

    Thus only large organizations could gather the number of specialized programmers necessary build any significant application. I find it very encouraging that relatively small informal teams can produce GNU/Linux software approaching the complexity formerly only attempted by commercial ventures. I think that fact speaks to the superiority of GNU/Linux to Windows for app development.

    Yada yada ..
    </ramble off>

  • i tend to think that linux is a candidate for the "best breed" operating system because it's so flexible.
    The real import of the Linux wristwatch is ecological, though, rather than practical, because it illustrates Linux's unparalleled ability to take advantage of something called "adaptive radiation."
    to me, this shows the practicality of linux. he shows no faith in linux becoming a desktop os... however, he then goes on to write:
    There will always be a place for "Best of Breed" software, and Linux's use of open protocols means its advantage is always in ease of use, never in locking out the competition.

    ease of use and desktop environment are usually things that go together well. the section titled "where 'good' beats 'best'" doesn't make much sense either. if 'good' beats 'best', then 'best' is no longer 'best'... 'good' is now 'best'.

    maybe i'm just confused from too much nethack, and too little sleep.

  • Ontology doesn't actually recapitulate phylogeny. The truth is more complex than that [dannyreviews.com].

    For background reading on "punk eek", I recommend The Dynamics of Evolution [dannyreviews.com].

    Danny.

  • There are some logical problems with "best".
    It is possible from the same consistent basis to conclude that: A is better than B, B is better than C, and C is better than A.
    Something like scissors, rock, paper?
  • I can't speak to #1, but as for #2, you work on the net for several years, found and sell a business, and then teach Web design and internet theory in a college that uses slightly outmoded jargon.

    In any case, I am on leave from Hunter, but the New Media program goes on apace.

    -clay
  • Slashdot is essentially a committee of 250,000 usernicks, and by its very nature as a committee, it will generate results inconsistent with past statements and declarations. Slashdot is enormous compared to its size one year ago, much less two or three years ago, and the influx of new users alone would account for the change in pary line (or at least commanding philosophy).

    With that said, I have to pick your point about "One License, one GUI, one Platform". To be sure, "One GUI" and "One Platform" are counterproductive, but "One Liscense" has its benefits. Some of the biggest problems and fights in the open-source movement have come from the selection of different and incompatible liscenses -- a defacto standard (like the GPL or LGPL) would ensure that if your efforts on your neat project and my efforts on my neat project don't have to be mutually exclusive or incompatible.

    I'll even go so far as to say we should stop arguing about forks and mutations altogether. As long as the source (and therefore the structure) is disclosed, any incompatibility can be overcome within a single generation. It's just not a problem.
  • Yes, I have to say that it's quite amusing that this is so clearly off topic (having been posted in the wrong forum by mistake) yet somehow, subtly it is exactly and precisely ON topic.

    *shrug* what can you do?

    -- Michael Chermside

  • usually excessive amount are fired at cancerous cells. An old technique, but limited in effectiveness

    Try, an old technique and still the most effective on it's own. Radio therapy is still more effective than chemo! Combined they are even better. Radio therapy may not work for all cancers, but where it's appropriate it's your best chance. Look up Mecical Physics some time.

  • I guess I would argue that the Linux distribution exhibits "punctuated equilibrium" as opposed to "adaptive radiation", especially considering the relatively recent advent of it's global distribution and acceptance. Ontology recapitulates phylogeny.
  • by timothy ( 36799 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @01:02PM (#682034) Journal
    I know all analogies have breaking points, and I'm about to step over this one's ;)

    Which would you rather have as a pet?

    Mutts tend to be better behaved, healthier and smarter than the blue-bloods, at least when it comes to dogs.

    Yeah, he's got a barb about Linux / Free software being unable to be "best of breed" ok, but it depends on what your context is to determine what "best" means. If your requirements include future flexibility and lack of royalties etc, then it could easily be the best.

    timothy

  • The author makes two points in the original article: that Linux is improving due to being ported to every device under the sun, and that this means it will never be a serious competitor to, say, Windows on the desktop, or Solaris on Sun machines.

    His second point is obviously incorrect: if Linux on x86-based PCs attracts more coder-hours of work than Microsoft can hire for Windows, Windows will eventually be enough worse than Linux that buying Windows will be an obvious bad idea, not just the bad-idea-you-can-gloss-over it is now. At that point, Windows' market share will start dropping.

    His first point MAY be incorrect, and he presents no evidence that it is not. Just because billions of Linux variants are being created for new platforms doesn't mean that the core portions of Linux itself, the ones that don't change from one platform to another, are being improved. For example, I suspect that the majority of these ports are doing absolutely nothing for the window managers. Also, there is the question of whether any changes at all are leaking back from these efforts into the larger community; if the people doing a port don't bother to tell anybody about the changes they've made in a useful way, none of their work benefits Linux itself.

  • by Deathlizard ( 115856 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @01:04PM (#682036) Homepage Journal
    Hmm, Wouldn't Radiation and Linux produce those "Mutants" That Microsoft was talking about in their anti-Linux Ad :)

    --
  • While this may be true for the Linux kernel, anyone that wants can modify the kernel to their exact specifications, thus making it perfect for their particular task. Just more anti-Linux FUD, move along.
  • by rjh ( 40933 ) <rjh@sixdemonbag.org> on Monday October 23, 2000 @01:16PM (#682038)
    Restated:

    "It means humans, while versatile, will never be the best at anything because of the way we are built and designed. By extension, this also applies to ANY organism which can survive outside of specialized niches: primates makes likeable apes instead of Bengal tigers."

    I may be nuts, but I think it's very possible for a "likeable mutt" to wind up being the best overall, far and away, because these "likeable mutts" have no real Achilles' heels. The Bengal tiger is nearly extinct; human beings are still undergoing population explosion.
  • by fosh ( 106184 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @01:16PM (#682039) Journal

    As we have seen in many biological environments, evolution does NOT happen at a continous rate. Instead, species tend to evolve very significantly in a very short amount of time, and then stay pretty much the same untill this happens again. This theory is known as Punctuated Equilibruum, and is currently accepted in the world of biology. WHen mapped to software, each brief occurance of rapid evolution can be thought of as a software release.

    Throughout History, these punctures usually result in an extremely rapid power shift. (Think of the chimps when Homo Erectus first showed up.) In the end, that species that wins is the most able to adapt. In other words, if this evolutionary model works (which it sure does seem to!) than the new release of a distro might cause the dominant OS to change extremely rapidly. Further, given the change in useability between Linux PPC 2.5 years ago, and Linux PPC right now, I think we are certainly on the right track.

    Although the author of this article would surely disagree, Linux has the potential and will, become the dominant desktop (as well as server, and every other market) in the extremely near future. So don't give up!


    Ok, I'll stop rambling now,

    --Alex the Gnome Fish

  • But we tend to forget that the atom-blaster points both ways.
  • by Ektanoor ( 9949 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @01:20PM (#682041) Journal
    Well, if I am still living in the same dimension I was 5 minutes ago then there is something real wrong 'round here. /. was mostly a pro-standartisation... If my head is still in its place I still remember posts talking about how good was RedHat and how bad were the kernel mutators... Well time seems in place. I don't see nothing strange 'round here. Is this and aftershock of /. getting hot about his journalistic quest? Maybe... A 180 degree move and not quite for the right place... Too much 180 degree.

    Well frankly I am a mutator partisan. Paraphrasing Zhirinovskii, the reactionary political radical schizo here: "Mutate linux. Mutate the progs, the scripts, the source. Mutate the kernel! Everything should mutate, even the Tux the penguin and Torvalds." Maybe this is tooo radical. But still sounds good. As what makes linux is its capabilty to mutate. Think about what would happen if we sticked to "One License, one GUI, one Platform". That is exactly what M$ does. And that is what most companies do willingly or unwillingly.

    If Linux had stucked into a strict environement then it would be never what it is now. Linux is the most multiplatform of all systems, from 86 to S/390. Meanwhile it is the systems that carries most of the Old and New World. In fact it is not only a continuation of UNIX but also of DOS and old Windows platforms. It even carries enough power to carry/emulate software from platforms that are long forgotten, such as ZX Spectrum or Commodore. Or to hold up emulation of weird platforms like Nintendo or Palm. It is a system capable of being a server or a desktop system. In this last point I should note that the author of the article is deeply wrong. linux is already ready for many desktops. I have seen/participated on the implementation of desktop systems for Internet & Office appliances. 68% of people don't want Windows back. And only a few stubbornly decry Linux as an Office system.

    In one point I would still declare Linux a drawback. On vector design systems. Here Linux is still a way to go, even if Corel 9 is already out. On the rest Linux is already conquering. Yes, it is HARD to install it. To professionaly and carefully install it. But it is a system that works on the base "fire & forget". Once fired, technical support becomes miserable. So technicians are kicked to R&D, making its progress even faster and smoother.

    It is mutation that makes this. And this is what M$ should be afraid of. Because this system is capable of inveding every computer and make it much more faster and reliable for a wide range of tasks.

    However this should be taken with a few grains of pepper. Mutations are good if we can control them. If we change things too much then we may face future incompatibilities. But this does not mean keeping the kernel in one piece or flaming someone for choosing BlackBox against Gnome or KDE. The problem are not the changes but the rules of conduct to implement them. some sort of comitemments that would allow every program/mutation/patch/fix/implementation to live peacefully side by side. and to be used when they are needed, where they are needed. This is much better than having an abstract "Unity" on Linux.
  • Yeah, a moment of clarification is in order here:

    A decent definition of adaptive radiation:

    http://fig.cox.miami.edu/Faculty/Tom/bil160/06_a daptive.html

    And yes! the article was all positive treacle about Linux. He is saying that MS is not the competition for Linux; more specifically Linux is not competition for the desktop, MS may be (is) "Best of Breed" when it comes to the desktop...

    ...God, what kind of breed is that anyway... 'don't get too close to that breed, honey, it eats the other dogs...'

    Anyway, Windows certainly cannot adapt as fast as Linux could. The question then becomes one of how fast is the hardware industry growing? Where are all those Internet appliances I have been hearing about? Am I gonna have to buy MS House someday? Will my house crash? Will I get the blue screen door of death? What if I can't find a device driver for my Amana Range?

    Linux should be poised for the forseeable future, not the known past; the first 'appliance' other than a desktop and the various PDAs is gonna be the Sony PlayStation 2 (I am talking only about massively-accepted as criteria for home appliance, sure there are things out there, but they aren't ubiquitous), and that ain't gonna run off Linux. But other stuff should.
  • While stray EM radiation seems to crash my Windows machine often, my Linux machine seems to put up with EM radiation. I can't say I've ever noticed a benefit of EM radiation on Linux....
  • I definitely agree with this statement, as far as Linux is concerned. It seems to get the job done for everything- but it doesn't do SMP as well as the big server OSes, it isn't nearly as small as OSes designed for embedded systems, and it doesn't do multimedia as well as an OS designed for multimedia. For the purposes of putting as many developers as possible to work, though, I think it suceeds. That's why Linux always seems to have more driver and application support than other Free/OSS kernels.

    As far as generalizing this to all Open Source project, though, I'd have to disagree. It really depends on how focused the project leader is and how much 'me too' syndrome there is hovering around it.

    If the project is fairly low-key, or the developers are strict, the project will get the features it needs and people itching to implement something unnecessary will either not know about the project in the first place or go find something else to do. (or maybe even make a fork)

    With more lenient project leaders, it's much more succeptible to "feeping creaturism" [everything2.com]. Instead of becoming specialized for one area, it gets the kitchen sink.

    I'm not saying either method is bad, just that it is possible for open source to produce the "blue bloods". I'm a code optimization / embedded systems junkie, so I like to use code size as an example. IIRC, Linux was first coded on a 386, then as the hardware got faster and the features creeped in, Linux grew. It still works on the older machines, but probably not as well as it used to. XFree86 is another of those quite spread-out projects. It works on diskless terminals, big SMP machines, and it can even be crammed into an embedded system like the iPaq. But, a GUI specially designed for small systems will always be better at running on small systems and there's no reason it can't be open source too.

    Ack! I've been rambling!

  • While stray EM radiation seems to crash my Windows machine often, my Linux machine seems to put up with EM radiation. I can't say I've ever noticed a benefit of EM radiation on Linux....

    So you're saying windows runs better in the dark... And it's usually dark in server closets! Heresy!
    ;-)

  • "Mr. Gates...don't make me angry. You wouldn't
    like me when I'm angry."

    Chris Mattern
  • Good beats Best.

    The basic thought here is that Linux might not be the "best" OS for any specific task; desktop, mainframe, server, palmtop, etc. There might be a better OS for any particular task.

    In all of these tasks Linux is at least "good".

    we then change change perspective and see that Linux is the "best" all around OS.

    Think Olympics.. Decathalon, Gymanastics, Pentathalon, Track and field, heck even think of the Tour De France. In Gymanstice you might have some one really ggod at balance beam, another really good at floor, a third at bars and maybe horse. These folks get the gold in their specific area, but unless there' pretty good at all of them they won't get the gold for all around performance.

    The Tour De France might be a better example; You can have people that are the best in different areas; best in mountains, best in sprints, best in time trials, etc. They can win the stage they are in and good at, but the winner of the race is the best overall, even if they never win any of these areas. Coming in 2nd, 3rd even 4th consistently will win yellow jersey and hold it.

    In any of these, there might be someone who is best in a particular event, but that doesn't mean they'll win the gold. That goes to the best all around person or OS. :)
  • Is it really better to be second best in several areas than to be number one in a few areas?

    Most of the time, yes. Just for a dorky example, I'll compare a suite of M$ products versus RH. Set up the server ... well, actually, in most quantifiable tests, RH outperforms NT, at least as we were benchmarking it ... plus the RH went for $70 vs over a thou for the NT. Then there's the machines ... each one requiring their own little M$ license ... vs using the same RH CD. Now, depending on how you want to look at it, one could argue that the M$ bunch (NT, Win 95, 98) were better. Personally, I value stability and the low low low cost, hence preferred the RH. Then there's the whole 'office' suite. Let's just say that there are more than enough easy to use free and inexpensive linux suites to make coughing up a couple of hundred per 'M$ Office' package laughable. Now, as to superior, again, I value stability. The ability to seamlessly interface with the gazillions of M$ users out there is nice, but conversely, not having a team dedicated to fighting off M$-specific viruses every other week is also kind of nice.

    It all depends on what one defines as 'best'. You want a glossy POS that costs an arm and a leg, crashes on a regular basis, and needs 3-10 times the number of people to support it, just because it IS glossy? Go M$.

    While I liked the general gist of the argument, there were a couple of specific lines that I disagreed with, and though they were put in more for shock value than for accuracy.

    Linux as Almost Ready for the Desktop. It is not What defines 'ready for the desktop' in Mr.Shirky's mind? Currently running Suse at home and Solaris at work. Both are damn fine desktops.

    For any given purpose, best of breed products are either ideal or useless. Say what?!?! Best of breed products may not do everything you want, but to call them useless for anything else is way off base. I play with free agent for news groups. It isn't the best for displaying graphics. But it is the fastest, easiest and one of the best designed newsgroup readers out there. Netscape and IE both do better on the graphics, but suck on any other comparison I can think of (excluding picking up and running hostile code ... IE is neck-and-neck with Outlook in that race, leaving all others far behind).

    The description of Linux as '...an also-ran desktop OS.' is also a little insulting, and I think a little too certain. There are a number of reasons why Linux _could_ take off as a desktop OS of choice. I believe that some of them (such as being a platform for games, much more network friendly) will probably lead in *nix becoming dominant in 5-10 years.

    Overall, I thought the article well thought out, and generally on the money, but these few points needed jumping on.

  • *ahem*
    NT slams linux at SMP. Believe it. Though I'm sure that won't be the case forever.

    Seriously.. I'd like to see the NT kernel open sourced.. as well as NTFS. They *are* good, and have *great* potential. Microsoft just keeps making these godawful operating systems with them!

    I mean, originaly, when NT was called the 'unix killer'... from a kernel perspective, it was quite true. NT is superior.. but MS keeps building these shit OS things with it.
  • Linux is still a server platform and not a desktop platform, it doesn't try to be everything. Linux is still too complex and has too many non-standard features between distributions. It's just too hard for the average user to use as a desktop OS and so it's focus is being a server platform.

    Linux already has the stability and speed* to be used everywhere and beat out most competition, but unless everyone has the ability to use it, Linux won't make it into all corners of the market.

    *speed in the average case for most applications, yes I know this has been arguable...

  • Actually, have you noticed how many piles of machines, monitors, and 100BaseT cables there are lying around server closets? That's EM radiation hell. Linux runs much better in a server closet.
  • Humans are an exception. Rather than evolving to fit the niches, we just make the niches fit us instead. Not that the Bengal tigers are bad, but they just can't stand up to the kind of environmental changes wrought by humans on side and wanton killings on the other.

    Translate that into the computer world would be akin to making every user a Linux geek by a variety of means.

  • by laborit ( 90558 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @07:57PM (#682053) Homepage
    Tux grows to 40 times original size, stomps off to terrorize Redmond.

    More radiation and he'll gain the power of speech: "Hello, Mr. Gates..."

    - M
  • > Think of the chimps when Homo Erectus first showed up.

    Please don't say "Homo Erectus" here. I'm tired of having to go get the librarian to turn off CyberPatrol.
  • > I can't say I've ever noticed a benefit of EM radiation on Linux....

    Don't you sport a fine monitor tan?
  • Casting Bill Gates in the role of senator Kelly? See the diatrabes against the mutants! See the kidnapping and exposure to radiation! See him covered in slime on a beach in New Jersey! Oh wait, all the swimmers on New Jersey beaches look like that...
  • > Linux is still a server platform and not a desktop platform, it doesn't try to be everything.

    I don't think you can say that Linux was designed as a server OS. After all, Linus started it for his own desktop.

    What the deal is, Linux just tries to be an operating system. You can layer server software or desktop software on top of it. Or both.

    And that, IMO, is what is allowing Linux to "radiate" into virtually every computational niche known to humaniti.
  • Wow I can't believe I'm posting.. long time lurker but I just read this and had to point it out...
    "In one point I would still declare Linux a drawback. On vector design systems. Here Linux is still a way to go, even if Corel 9 is already out. On the rest Linux is already conquering."
    What about as an entertainment machine? Linux just doesn't have it. You need the titles and you need them en masse. Loki converting everything just won't cut it. Windows is obviously top dog here. I know this is obvious already, but like I said I needed to point out the entertainment machine angle.

    I'de like to see distributions focuced on entertainment. Multimedia Linux or something like that. If you want linux to be run everywhere, you need to slice up all the computers, and focus a distro on each thing. Servers, IT professionals, Graphics professionals, office workers, home users (entertainment =]), industrial users..

    Ok hope I made just a little sense.

    SoLo
    -
    why have a .sig?
  • It's works for nature, why not for Linux...adaptive radiation leads to evolution, and that can lead to bigger and better things, namely, establishing itself as the forerunner of the OS's...
  • Is it really better to be second best in several areas than to be number one in a few areas?

    Yes. Think of it like the OS Olympics, where Linux grabs a silver in fifteen events, while Windows, Solaris and BeOS each get five gold medals. I'd rather go home knowing I was the best all-around athlete than knowing I could only throw a discus farther than anyone else.
  • by Enoch Root ( 57473 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @12:39PM (#682061)
    It means Linux, while versatile, will never be the best at anything because of the way it is built and designed. By extension, this also applies to ANY Open Source project: Open Source makes likeable mutts instead of blue bloods.
  • So, what is the best-of-breed desktop OS? Personally, I still think OS/2 provided the nicest user-experience, but I could also understand why someone would vote for the Mac.

    In any case, I don't think the author really understands what an OS does, or where an OS ends and a GUI begins.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Note how the effect of the GPL is on these embedded devices and the use of IP in embedded devices was not even mentioned.

    If the GPL remains toothless, then these issues won't matter. If RMS and FSF ever get around to suing some people WRT the GPL, then the embedded world will rush to BSD.

    (Richie can't win....if RMS sues as he should be, then no one will use the GPL. If RMS doesn't sue, people will use the GPL but RMS sells out on his principles.)
  • "okay Gordon, put the Linux in the beam"
    "There seems to be a descrepanc...naw, well within paramters.."
    "Segmentation faulAAHHHHH!@H#H!@H#!@H#"
  • by sammy baby ( 14909 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @03:18PM (#682065) Journal

    The missive you reference was written by Tim Cavanaugh. Tim does a bunch of writing for Suck magazine [suck.com], which is one of the few consistently good web 'zines out there (and in which, there ran an entire article about what Tim refers to as scare quotes [suck.com]. Don't know if he wrote it, though.)

  • Hmm... I guess that means my room is a server closet. I have 3 computers, 2 monitors, some extra power supplies, and a bunch of homemade equipment. All running 24/7.

    One time I had an audio cable hooked up to my line-in, but the other end wasn't hooked up to anything. Oddly enough, a strange beeping came from my speakers, perfectly synchronized to my home-made LCD clock.

    I'm sure the FCC would lock me up if they knew.

  • Well, the FCC doesn't care. All that stuff is properly accepting the EM radiation as it should. But if I were walking by and operating my radio [kenwood.net], I'd probably be able to pinpoint which room in your house was your computer room - from the outside.
  • I may be nuts, but I think it's very possible for a "likeable mutt" to wind up being the best overall, far and away, because these "likeable mutts" have no real Achilles' heels. The Bengal tiger is nearly extinct; human beings are still undergoing population explosion.

    From a genetics standpoint you are correct. I used to work at a company that delt in selective breeding. While working on one project, I was looking at the genetics charts and came to a sudden realization. The perfect animal is the perfectly average animal. This was quickly confirmed to me by several of the geneticists.

    You see, genetics is a bit like a balancing scale. You can't make something physically stronger and then expect that it won't be at a disadvantage in say its immune system. Or make it prettier, but not expect that its feet and legs will get softer. This is how genetics works. In order to create an animal that is as perfect as possible in all areas, it must be completely average. Of course no such thing exists in nature or really in captivity because the environment affects 80% of the animal's genetic outcome.

  • Anyone looking for a particularly exciting option in an operating system knows that NOTHING out of the box is going to work. Windoze NT won't run on big iron. It won't go very far with SMP. And nothing you or I can do will make it any better. But with Linux and other OSS software we, and other experts, are able to do what we can to fit the OS to our designs. Just the fact that I can build a kernel to fit my machine instead of packing around dozens of DLLs and drivers and flipping a silly disk in and out and rebooting when I want a change gives Linux the Blue Ribbon. You can have your box if I can have a Linux that I can customize.
  • You mean as directly in the path of Bill? I think it will survive as it has the proper proper sheilding (un-buyable).
  • Well, the FCC doesn't care. All that stuff is properly accepting the EM radiation as it should. But if I were walking by and operating my radio, I'd probably be able to pinpoint which room in your house was your computer room - from the outside.

    But it's in the basement. Would it still work then?
    Ah, I love the look of alligator clips and signal junctions duct-taped to the wall. Not to mention all the nice blinkenlights on the hubs. (can't wait till I get DSL!)

  • Sure.

    You gotta figure that all that EM radiation would degrade your DSL performance, right? All I know is that my network goes spaz when I'm putting out 100 watts....

  • by Ektanoor ( 9949 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2000 @12:01AM (#682073) Journal
    What saves Linux is exactly the fact that no one enforces even the licenses. Problems and fights? Correct. But if we stick into the ONE License so we get several problems. First that many people if not most people would like to have a more direct rewarding system. Reward through GPL soft is an art. An art between you not violating its principles and getting money supporting people working on it. It is difficult to deliver soft without getting a penny and getting its reward through development/implementation/support of this software in very concrete tasks. Many of my colleagues consider me a jerk. However I now get much more than implementing/devloping/supporting Windows environments...

    Besides GPL is a philosophy. And most licenses, in one way or the other reflect some sort of philosophy. Are you telling me that everyone should go to the ONE philosophy? Well I am a GPL partisan. Because I know on how to live with it. But should I enforce GPL on everywhere I go? NO! That's raw communism. That's the Wonderful New World, the Animal Farm. GPL should be presented as one of the best type of licenses but not the ONE license. I prefer to have Microsoft alikes roaming around here than building a new "Stalin skyscrapper" of ideals that are far from being perfect. To use GPL in full force you need to be a hacker. On all aspects. But not everyone wants/can be such.
    Licenses should be many. Yes there should be interagreements between them. But let's hope no one manages to enforce a "ONE" license.
  • by radja ( 58949 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2000 @12:17AM (#682074) Homepage
    and it's easy to get a mutt cheaply (or even free) at your local pet asylum. You usually have to fork out quite a bit of cash for a 'real breed' dog. unless you get a copy (=puppy) from a friend/neighbour/whatever.

    //rdj
  • Can you see an ad answering to the antilinux one of MS? Do you have the same funny imaginations about how to express degenerative basics of Windows? Please, paint it and show it all of us!:)
  • Richie can't win....if RMS sues as he should be, then no one will use the GPL. If RMS doesn't sue, people will use the GPL but RMS sells out on his principles.

    I don't think you've accurately reflected Stallman's thinking. This is no dilemma in RMS-land, where principles always win over practicalities. Just look at his attitude to the Open Source movement, he recognises their approach is more practical but rejects it as unprincipled.

    And it is lucky for us. The only reason there exist any alternatives to closed, proprietary software is because he is such a stubborn, uncompromising bastard.

  • >The only reason there exist any alternatives to closed, proprietary software

    Last time *I* checked, the BSD software license is free and open, and was in existance before the RMS concieved GPL.

    >he is such a stubborn, uncompromising bastard.
    Methinks that is the point of the AC in question....there is bound to be infringements.

    An example:
    on a GPL violation/and a lack of action. [kenseglerdesigns.com]

    Here's an udpate for everyone on the Virgin Webplayer
    / Merinata GPL violation.

    This is in response to my original posting to the
    Linux kernel mailing list; I'm including that post
    here:

    >I've read through months of archives, trying to find
    a
    >good place to report this, but have not been able to
    >find anything.
    >
    >Where is a good place to report GPL violations
    >concerning the Linux Kernel?
    >
    >I recently got a virign webplayer
    >(http://www.virginconnectme.com/). It runs Linux as
    >it's operating system. There's no mention of Linux or
    >the GPL in the license that is included in the
    manual.
    >In fact the license in the manual concerning the
    >"Software" is rather restrictive. And there's no
    >mention of how to obtain the source for the kernel.
    >
    >The people who sell the machine to virgin, is Merinta
    >(http://www.merinta.com/). You can verify that the
    >machines virgin use are running linux
    >(http://www.merinta.com/news/release000411.html).
    >Merinta, from what I understand from posts by
    >(presumedly) employees of Boundless (their mother
    >corporation) have many GPL violations according to:
    >http://www.kenseglerdesigns.com/cgi-bin/UltraBoar d/UltraBoard.pl?Action=ShowPost&Board=vwg eneral&Post=17&Idle=0&Sort=0&Order=Descend&Page=0& Session=
    I like the idea of all these new Internet devices
    >coming out, running Linux. But it worries me that
    >they'll all ignore the GPL as they go. Making it more
    >difficult for fututre improvements in the kernel
    code.
    >
    >
    >
    >I'm not on the Linux kernel mailing list. So please
    CC
    >me directly at jelwell@yahoo.com.
    >
    >Thanks,
    >Joseph Elwell.

    In my investigation to determine whether Virgin's
    Webplayer, manufactured by Merinta, I've documented
    the section of the License Agreement that deals with
    the Software installed; that ships with the Virgin
    Webplayer.

    Section 2.2 of the member agreements reads as follows:

    2.2 Webplayer Software License. Subject to the
    provisions of this Agreement, we grant to you a
    limited, non-exclusive, personal, non-transferable
    license to use and display the Webplayer Software in
    object code form only, solely as part of and as
    necessary to use the Webplayer and the Virginconnect
    Services. Except for the license granted to you above,
    we (or our licensors) retain all right, title and
    interest, including all intellectual property rights,
    in and to the Webplayer Software. You may not attemp
    (or authorize any attempt) to defeat, obstruct or
    block any or all of the Webplayer Software
    functionality, or to decompile, reverse engineer or
    disassemble the Webplayer or the Webplayer Software.

    Below is a listing of the filesystem that is currently
    (roughly 7/28/2000); some sections I've not filled in
    due the immensity of the files listed in those (and
    subdirectories of those). If someone asks me nicely
    -with reason - I'll fill those sections in:

    Some highlights of the filesystem (which make me
    believe they're also running a GNU system (which
    wasn't mentioned on their press release - but is of
    course heavily implied when they say the machine runs
    the "Linux operating system".):
    /usr/lib/libg++.so.2.7.2
    /usr/lib/libg++.so.2.7.2.8
    /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.2.7.2
    /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.2.7.2.8
  • As anyone with experience with radiation and cancer know, radiation can also kill (usually excessive amount are fired at cancerous cells. An old technique, but limited in effectiveness).

    One can draw an analogy: would the radiation in mutating Linux also call to kill it?

  • I've been using KDE 2.0 since the 1.93 release and I am convinced that it will definitely give major headway into the desktop market.

    KDE's features are so powerful, slick, and incredibly accessable. I've configured it such for some users that they couldn't tell the difference between KDE2 and the Windows UI (other than the fact that it's look *so* much better!) - which is important because it gives such a seamless transition between Windows and Linux.

    KDE's internal model is also great. Unlike those *other* desktop environments, it's written in a language that supports objects directly - rather than using something hacked together. (Sorry for the jab - I love KDE! :-) I foresee it as being incredibly extensible and incredibly powerful for rapid application development (which is really good for commercial applications to take hold on the platform).

    If you're using GNOME or haven't switched over yet, I *highly* recommend doing so. KDE2 is definitely worth it and a HUGE milestone for Linux on the desktop.

    Props and thanks to the KDE2 teams! :-)

  • Linux is just going to get more and more modular over time... At some point you will be able to load whatever memory manager or schedualler the same way you load a network code driver now.

    When Linux becomes this modular, then having a custom modual to process certain resources a certain way will no longer require a fork. At this point companies will be able to totally customize Linux for their environment and still be running Linux.

    Standard Linux with custom moduals equals best of breed performance, wholesale price!

    No Forking Allowed!!!
  • Free [fsf.org] software is both infinitly configurable and arguably best. Anyone can take a plausable solution and make it into exactly what they or their organization needs. The result is better for everyone and forms the next plausible solution.
  • ... that, and we've got guns :)

    -Chris
  • By extension, this also applies to ANY Open Source project: Open Source makes likeable mutts instead of blue bloods.

    I don't really see where that analogy was drawn from... The only place it mentioned Open Source was the first sentance, and that was to describe LinuxWorld, not Linux.
    If you're going to draw that kind of conclusion, it should read something more like:

    By extension, this also applies to ANY Unix project: Unix makes likeable mutts instead of blue bloods."
    Reason for that is that he went on and on about Linux the OS, not Linux the model of OS ideals. But, he also took that argument down, in the bit about Solaris, and how it's great at high-availability, but not a game machine at all..
  • Well, after that earlier article about "sneaking Linux installations", which was VERY inflammatory, it just seems like almost all of the Linux-article postings on /. lately have been aimed at provoking heated zealous defense of the platform.

    I guess the same goes for the Apple articles as well.
  • Well, concerning this topic, I just had to think of the most recent Microsoft advertisment, which, btw, made me laugh tears! Have a look: http://www.koehntopp.de/kris/msad.jpg
  • indeed.. you got the amusement mutt, that you teach stuff like fetch your paper, grab a frisbee etc. people come up to you and are interested. wow.. such a nice doggy.. doesn't look like much at first sight, but can do lotsa cool doggy stuff

    then there's the full-breed poodle. fur cut to look nice and win prizes at dogshows. basically just stands around looking pretty.

    Damn, a good analogy goes a long way, and this one is getting better and better ;)

    //rdj

    Now go moderate someone who actually has something to contribute to the discussion.

  • Regarding scare quotes: check this [brunching.com] out.

  • Shirky assumes that selection pressure or incentive to improve for individual linux ports will drop off when radiation splinters Linux development effort across every available platform.

    A number of events could derail constant radiation: a slow-down in the radiation of available platforms, or a high incentive to improve on one platform.

    New platforms without an established OS present the best opportunity for high incentive to continue evolution on one platform.

    Since windows is so entrenched in the desktop environment, and does a "good enough" job for the vast majority of its user base, there is currently little pressure to force linux to surpass windows as a GUI OS.

  • Open Source makes likeable mutts instead of blue bloods.

    It also makes a few dislikeable mutts. But hey, if you don't like it, write your own!
  • "Teenage Mutant Ninja Penguins"

  • Read this quick summary [xrefer.com].

    Methinks Clay's been reading the popular science books and jotting down the interesting words again...

  • No, that is why Linux is designed in layers with clear API's between the layers.

    That way you can change the schedualling without having to rewrite your device drivers!
  • No thanks, GNU Huuuurl is an over designed system that will never be used in an actual production environment. It turns out that micro kernels really suck and take about 30 years to write.

    I don't want my schedualler to run in user space, I want it to run in protected mode.

    Oh yeah, the Huuuurl isn't even Linux binary compatible... the new standard for UNIX systems...
  • It would actually be trivial for MS to write an API that runs on top of Linux and provides all the normal W2K services to Windows programs... Wine has been trying to do this for years, but never had the documentation to get everything perfect.

    This way Windows apps would all still run just fine on their OS, as well as all the Linux binaries.

    Kinda like the way that Apple is running freebsd under their OS X.

    I expect to see MS do this around 2003.
  • What saves Linux is exactly the fact that no one enforces even the licenses.

    Well, that's a sad statement if true. If the only way for you and me to get along is for us to violate each others rights consistently, then that can hardly be called civilization.

    First that many people if not most people would like to have a more direct rewarding system.

    Besides GPL is a philosophy. And most licenses, in one way or the other reflect some sort of philosophy. Are you telling me that everyone should go to the ONE philosophy?

    No, but everyone must have compatible philosophies if we are to coexist and accomplish anything together. To take your example of communism, if you are an ardent communist and therefore believe that everything I own belongs to us both in common and so you're free to take it without my permission, whereas I'm an ardent believer in Lockean property interests and will defend my personal property to the last breath, then can we possibly coexist? If you are a BSD fanatic and ardently believe that everyone should be free to steal your code and incorporate it into closed software, whereas I'm a GPL fascist and demand that only other GPL fascists use my code, then can we possibly coexist? We'd be constantly violating each other's rights and biting each other's heads off.

    Yes there should be interagreements between them. But let's hope no one manages to enforce a "ONE" license.

    By the nature of these liscenses, no interagreement is possible. The only solution is to agree on a common liscense that neither side likes but is willing to accomodate, like the LGPL or maybe the Artistic liscense. To do otherwise is to pursue your own bigoted political ends at the expense of meaningful progress.
  • Nah, you've got it backwards. Linux is doing the "radiating" not absorbing radiation.

    kashani
  • by Gendou ( 234091 )
    Whoops, clicked the wrong story. *cringe*
  • by Tony Shepps ( 333 ) on Monday October 23, 2000 @12:50PM (#682098)
    1) Business 2.0 recently had this missive [simpleton.com] shot at it from a disgruntled freelancer. I am inclined to believe it, at least in part.

    2) How does one become a "professor of New Media"? I guess I'm just surprised to see academes recognize a movement [outside their own].
    --

  • The radiation refered to is a spreading outward from a point or center into new environments. A diagram would look like a circle with rays i.e. a child's picture of the sun. That is the meaning of radiation in this context, not nuclear radiation, even though both are concerned with mutation, they are different concepts.
  • Anthropology has long said much the same thing about humans: as general-purpose creatures we never will be the fastest, have the sharpest claws, climb the fastest, run the fastest, or have the quickest reflexes. We win by not being the best, but by being the most general-purpose and therefore the most adapative.
  • mutation beats specialization?

    I dunno. That means that Linux has to compete with several other OS's on different areas. So whenever someone's thinking about some new application in any area, they'll think "Hey, we could use so-and-so. Or we could use Linux". Is it really better to be second best in several areas than to be number one in a few areas?

  • by rgmoore ( 133276 ) <glandauer@charter.net> on Monday October 23, 2000 @12:53PM (#682102) Homepage

    That's not necessarily so. Take a look at OpenBSD, for instance. It's certainly Open Source (and Free Software for you FSFers), but it's also aimed quite narrowly at enhanced security applications rather than general utility. There are plenty of projects out there that are quite narrowly focused; it's just that their narrow focus tends to prevent them from getting the kind of really big publicity that Linux gets. You could even argue that OSS/Free Software is a perfect solution for the large number of problems that have too narrow a userbase to support a commercial product. If anything, I'd say that most OSS/Free Software projects tend to be too narrowly focused, since they tend to start out as attempts to scratch a particular programmer's itch rather than to be a generally useful program for a large enough group of customers to justify for profit development.

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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