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Comment Re:I never ever commented on the SCO issue in any (Score 1) 187

We knew what was going on when you ran your anti-IBM campaign, sometimes even positioning yourself as arguing on behalf of our community. It was a way to lend credence to IBM and MS arguments during the SCO issue. To state otherwise is deceptive, perhaps even self-deceptive.

Florian, you would not be devoting all of this text to explaining yourself if you didn't feel the need to paint your actions in a positive light. That comes from guilt, whether you admit it to yourself or not.

Go write your app, and if you actually get to make any money with it you can give thanks, because it will happen despite what you worked for previously. Keep a low profile otherwise because your credibility is well and truly blown and you can only make things worse. And maybe someday you can really move past this part of your life. But I am not holding out much hope.

Comment Re:android = windows (Score 3) 113

If the malware didn't need root to enable itself as a device admin, then you don't need root to disable it. Most Android malware that makes the news is not the alleged "malware" installed by carriers, and besides, that's easily avoidable by buying Nexus or Google Play Edition devices and avoiding VZW and Sprint.

Comment PPA (Score 2) 113

Because that is putting time and effort into developing features to support competitors.

Canonical put time and effort into the Personal Package Archive system, which supports competitors to the official Ubuntu repository. Each PPA is a Debian repository with a public key to verify packages, and a Canonical-managed PKI ties them together. True, a lot of that comes from the Debian project, but Canonical still polished it into PPAs starting in Ubuntu 9.10.

Comment Re:So you have to install an app... (Score 1) 113

Yet because Apple rejects useful applications such as MozStumbler and any web browser that isn't a Safari wrapper, users end up having to deal with a platform that allows use of unsigned binaries without payment of a recurring fee to the operating system publisher. They have nothing to do with each other technically and everything to do with each other politically.

Comment Showing how they're equally fragmented (Score 2, Insightful) 113

My laptop came with Window 8, which has a radically different interface

You could always install Classic Shell, an aftermarket launcher for Windows, to put the S back in Window 8.1 and give you an interface that's closer to Windows 7. Android likewise has aftermarket launchers.

of course I pulled out the HDD, installed an SSD and put Linux on it

Which is like installing a custom ROM on an Android device: there's ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY that all peripherals will be supported. I still haven't got my laptop's Bluetooth working in Xubuntu.

Oh, and there's 32-bit and 64-bit

And ARM vs. MIPS vs. Atom.

and Home and Pro and Basic and Ultimate and...

That's more a matter of which OS component repositories you're allowed to access than actual OS fragmentation.

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