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Comment Reddit has fundamentally changed (Score 1) 36

Reddit used to have principles that aligned with the open source model. Now they are removing mods that protested their API pricing. They have changed and that is how they are killing the goose that lays golden eggs. Everyone was cheering for them to succeed. Not anymore. The good will people had towards reddit is gone. They killed it.

Submission + - Slashdot Alum Samzenpus's Fractured Veil Hits Kickstarter

CmdrTaco writes: Long time Slashdot readers remember Samzenpus,who posted over 17,000 stories here, sadly crushing my record in the process! What you might NOT know is that he was frequently the Dungeon Master for D&D campaigns played by the original Slashdot crew, and for the last few years he has been applying these skills with fellow Slashdot editorial alum Chris DiBona to a Survival game called Fractured Veil. It's set in a post apocalyptic Hawaii with a huge world based on real map data to explore, as well as careful balance between PVP & PVE. I figured a lot of our old friends would love to help them meet their kickstarter goal and then help us build bases and murder monsters! The game is turning into something pretty great and I'm excited to see it in the wild!

Comment Re:You have chocolate in my peanut butter. (Score 1) 161

Several months after "It's time to talk about Free Software Again" was published, I was contacted by a reporter from a business news magazine as a result of some Linux-related volunteer work I had been doing. The reporter started asking questions about the intersection of Linux/free software and business, and I directed him to Bruce Perens.

I don't remember the exact rationale at the time, but having led Debian during a period it was making regular releases and at the same time writing the Debian Free Software Guidelines and Debian Social Contract, I can't think of any better person I could have directed a member of the press to talk to about these issues.

Regarding codes of conduct, it's not really an area I have much basis to speak on, but the Linux Foundation's Professional Code of Conduct seems about right to me: https://docs.linuxfoundation.o...

While the corporations are doing their thing with app stores and privacy-related issues, the PinePhone and PineBook series look like they're shaping up to be a nice option that keep the values that drew me to Linux intact: https://www.pine64.org/

Comment Re:You have chocolate in my peanut butter. (Score 1) 161

From my point of view, the OSI uncovered that the Linux community was primarily made up of technical geeks who were interested in economical, reliable systems and decent jobs more so than ideologues interested in debating the moral and ethical implications of various licensing schemes.

This was accomplished both by shifting the focus to the practical from the ideological tone struck by the FSF and also when ESR returned from a meeting with Apple to pitch a license that was incompatible with the GPL as being OSD-compliant and "the community" was having none of it.

The Coherent Open Source effort by Bruce Perens reflects a continuation of what I have seen him stating over the years - that a few good licenses allowing software to be linked is the operative need when building a system.

Regarding Slackware and Debian in the 1990s, I had installed Slackware from a stack of floppies on a few systems before trying Debian, and often needed to download source code from ftp sites to get fairly basic software. Most of this software was available through dselect on Debian where it was then kept updated through releases.

Then KDE was released and Debian release cycles started stretching out, resulting in it becoming more of a barrier to getting the software I wanted. I would consider dselect/apt and the DFSG to be some of the most important contributions to Linux/FOSS of the era, though.

Comment Re:You have chocolate in my peanut butter. (Score 1) 161

I wasn't trying to write a timeline, rather to discuss the significance of the OSI back then. I was already using Linux at work in 1996 as well, but it was a smaller backwater shop running on a dual booting desktop converted into a server running at my desk. The main server even at that small shop was running Solaris.

At bigger shops, operating systems like Solaris and AIX were used for anything official until around 2004. That was the year when when a shop where I stood up the first Linux webservers, migrating from AIX made the Linux news for doing so. The OSI framing "Open Source" as being the important part about Linux was hugely helpful back then. In the late 1990s, "free software" was understood to be shareware with [UNREGISTERED] prominently displayed in the UI, nag screens and full functionality in a paid-for registered version or freeware. The quality of the freeware internet applications for Windows 3.1 was actually one of the key points that pushed me to use Linux at home back then.

By comparison, the actual work of the OSI doing things like determining whether a license met the open source definition always seemed relatively insignificant.

This was echoed by sentiments attributed to Bruce Perens last year upon his resignation from the OSI:

https://news.slashdot.org/stor...

"We've gone the wrong way with licensing," he said, citing the proliferation of software licenses. He believes just three are necessary, AGPLv3, the LGPLv3, and Apache v2.

Whether or not one agrees with the choice of the licenses, the original impetus behind the DFSG which became the Open Source Definition was to be able to ship a CD full of free software that could be dynamically linked in a Linux distribution. Debian was the first distribution to ship a wide range of software instead of just a core UNIX-like system and fortunately, Bruce and the others who helped write the DFSG rose to the occasion.

Comment Re:You have chocolate in my peanut butter. (Score 1) 161

The way I remember it, the Open Source Initiative was created as a way for us to be able to us Linux and other DFSG-free software at work. Microsoft had been telling people that Linux is a cancer ( https://www.theregister.com/20... ), implying that running anything on Linux would render it subject to the GPL.

The Open Source name also helped frame the market for companies like Red Hat with Enterprise Linux offerings. UNIX also had source code available and was licensed with support contracts available for business use, so it was a known concept for the businesses that would be using it. By contrast, the FSF website would probably read similarly to the timecube website in a corporate boardroom.

I have been using Linux at work as a top tier operating system running business-critical systems for a couple of decades now, so it looks like the Open Source campaign worked.

Comment feeling about btrfs: unease (Score 1) 236

I have a number of systems that are still running on btrfs and can't be easily migrated, and it contributes to a feeling of dread. The reason is that btrfs-balance, which is included the btrfs-maintenance service and enabled by default by the distro, has a tendency to destroy the filesystem.

Disabling that job has stopped the majority of the btrfs filesystem loss on my systems, but then I have to wonder if there is something btrfs-balance would have been doing that now isn't being done because running it corrupts the filesystem.

The only special feature I have intentionally used in btrfs is the snapshots. Fortunately, I have only ever used it for root filesystems, so none of the other features have really come into play. Filesystem checksumming seems to generate a lot of buzz, but in 10+ years of running hundreds of systems on ZFS and BTRFS, I have never seen a file checksum error reported.

The idea of btrfs watching file checksums like a hawk on an enterprise all-flash array or modern hyperconverged system brings this to mind: "Why do you look at the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ and behold, the log is in your own eye?"

Personally, I would rather have a reliable filesystem like XFS with the extended features being snapshotting with previous views accessible under /.snapshot and online resize, including shrink. Ideally, it wouldn't require a host of routine maintenance tasks to keep it going, such as how btrfs is supposed to have scrub, trim and balance jobs run regularly. Also, it wouldn't block IO to the filesystem for 30 seconds or so while deleting a number of snapshots. I would rather keep volume management of it - LVM does a nice enough job of being a volume manager for those cases where a filesystem needs to be striped across devices or mirrored off from one storage array to another for migrations.

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