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Comment Re:Excellent. (Score 1) 369

Well to use H.264 you must get a license. If Mozilla gets a license it only protects Mozilla from lawsuits, NOT the rest of the Internet. It could lead to a situation like when GIF was patented, where if you had a GIF on your website you could be sued if you didn't pay for some $5000 license. I don't know if some of you are old enough to remember that, but it sucked.

Comment Re:Might as well say it first (Score 3, Insightful) 543

A big business is more liable then a small business, they have more assets to lose, assuming they lose a copyright infringement case. Lawyers like to sue people with money.

Big business historically have been the target of GPL lawsuits.

So I don't buy your theory.

GPL is a probably the best open source license for distributing software you actually want to make money from. What you do is charge a fee for people who don't agree to the GPL terms. With BSD, it's not quite as easy to do this. Notice some of the most profitable open source products (eg: SugarCRM, and MySQL) are GPL.
Software

Mozilla Donates $100K To the Ogg Project 334

LWATCDR writes "Mozilla has given the Wikimedia foundation $100,000 to fund Ogg development. The reason is simple: 'Open standards for audio and video are important because they can be used by anyone for any purpose without royalties, and can be inspected and improved by an open community. Today, video and audio on the web are dominated by proprietary technologies, most frequently patent-encumbered codecs wrapped into closed-source player widgets.' While Vorbis is a better standard than MP3, everything I have heard about Theora is that it is technically inferior to many other video codecs. I wonder if wouldn't be better to direct effort to Dirac, perhaps putting Dirac into an Ogg container. No mention was made of FLAC or Speex funding. If more media players supported Speex it would be an ideal codec for many podcasts and audio books. It really is too bad that these codecs so often get overlooked."

Comment Most definitely.. (Score 1) 474

I definitely think stuff like Turing machines and abstract computer science should be thought at the middle school level as part of science courses. In fact I recently gave a presentation to a bunch of undergraduate MATHEMATICS students and not a single one know who Alan Turing even was.

Comment Re:I have a solution (Score 3, Insightful) 405

The free software community needs someone like Stallman. I mean seeing from all the comments on Slashdot it seems very few people actually care about open source and free software. It's sad, because they like open source/free software for it's features but they don't understand the ideology which enabled this software to exist in the first place.
Microsoft

Next Version of Windows? Call it '7' 488

CNet has the news that Microsoft is currently aiming to release the next version of the Windows operating system in about three years. Previously known as Vienna, the OS is now simply known internally as '7'. After achieving a quality product, the article states, Microsoft's big goal with 7 is to recapture a regular release schedule for their operating system product. From the article: "Like Vista, Windows 7 will ship in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The company also confirmed that it is considering a subscription model to complement Windows, but did not provide specifics or a time frame. Next up on Microsoft's agenda is Service Pack 1 for Windows Vista, which is expected before year's end. The discussion of Windows' future isn't surprising, given that Microsoft has been criticized by business customers for delays related to Vista. Many business customers pay for Microsoft's software under a license agreement called Software Assurance."

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