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Comment Re:GPL offered protection from competitors (Score 1) 370

Instantiating a fully open core, on which to deliver proprietary add-ons, is a harder model: it requires the implementation domain to actually have such a division, and it requires a lot of investment in that core ... probably more than any one company is prepared to spend, merely to release it utterly to anyone's use. There are a few cases where this has worked, notably of course the Apache projects (and most notably, httpd): many companies collaborated to create the core, so they could build value on top (mostly in the form of web sites/applications, rather than httpd add-ons per se, but the economics are the same). But such opportunities are rare.

Comment Re:Security theatre (Score 1) 379

Careful requirements are certainly important, but so also is competence. No requirements document was ever complete. There will always be decisions to be made beyond the document, and they have to be made with proper respect for the fundamental objectives. The BP is correct: "To have a company intimately involved with *security* not apparently able to manage their own security in a manner that protects the country and their customers is a joke." If not something worse.
Programming

Prevayler Quietly Reaches 2.0 Alpha, Bye RDBMS? 444

ninejaguar asks: "Slashdot did an article on an Open Source product called Prevayler, which could theoretically resolve all the problems associated with OO's rough courtship with Relational databases. Slashdot covered Prevayler when it was still 1.x. Despite fear, doubt, and memory concerns, it has reached 2.0 alpha. Is anyone currently using this non-database solution in production? If so, has it sped development because of the lack of OO-to-RDBMS complexity? Was there a significant learning curve to speak of? The LGPL'd product could be incorporated into proprietary commercial software, and few might know about it. Is anyone considering using it in a transactional environment where speed is the paramount need? And, are there any objections to using Prevayler that haven't been answered at the Prevayler wiki? Would those who use MySQL find Prevayler to be a better solution because it's tiny (less than 100kb), 3000 times faster and is inherently ACID compliant?" Update: 09/24 19:25 GMT by C :Quite a few broken links, now fixed.

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