fsf-community-team
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[fsf-community-team] Argument from economic nessesity


From: Simon Bridge
Subject: [fsf-community-team] Argument from economic nessesity
Date: Mon, 14 Dec 2009 16:11:57 +1300

Something popped up on the NZLUG lists today - anyone want to respond?
(Note, this is the argument from economic nessesity, which we see idn
various forms often. Good practice. The trick is not to get drawn into
side issues.) Here it is:

> Playing devil's advocate here, and there questions are in no simple
> way to convey to new-comers to the game
> 
> I'm not saying that making money should be the primary concern, but it
> should rank up there... Without some sort of stable, fixed income, how
> are full-time coders (needed for quality-control; see current
> news-crisis) supposed to get paid (customization only goes so far), or
> any expense be paid on marketing or any of the other day-to-day
> operations required for a successful, growing enterprise (paying for
> office-space, power, taxes, etc)?
> 
> Re philosophy: I understand the what & why, but it still does not
> address some fundamental issues: I cannot eat, send the kids to
> school, or pay my rent with good intentions/philosophical principals.
> Eventually I'll reach a point where I'd have to supplement my income,
> and selling shrink-wrapped software with a limited shelf-life is a
> simple & effective way to address such shortcomings (albeit a
> cop-out).
> Until we can take the financial aspects seriously & prove ways of
> maintaining a successful business, very few are going to take it
> serious.
> 
> The problem with the FSF campaigns where that they had a negative
> message attacking their opponents, and people are turned off by that
> approach (honey vs vinegar), and they're preaching to the choir.
> ms are MASTERS of marketing & manipulation, and often it more
> important to make people good about their choice of purchase than
> actually providing a good product (see vista & win-me; TOTAL rubbish,
> but people still bought it by the millions, despite being TOLD it's
> absolute rubbish)
> 
> If FLOSS plans to "grow up", "go mainstream/highstreed" & be totally
> user-accessible (and not just a really cool tool for
> techies/hobbyists), then it may have to get it's hands dirty
> 
> 
> There are those out there that have managed to build successful
> FLOSS-based businesses; they usually operate on the basis of providing
> hosted services (which RMS seems to have a beef with), or the
> customization of existing FLOSS systems.
> I've not really found much deviation from these models, and IMO, it's
> an *extremely* limited scope compared to the entire economic
> landscape.
> 
> Is there something I've missed? (I'm, pretty sure there's a lot)
> 





reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]