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[Fsfe-uk] Bruce Prerens' ideas for a 'UserLinux' non-corporate distro
From: |
Paul Mobbs |
Subject: |
[Fsfe-uk] Bruce Prerens' ideas for a 'UserLinux' non-corporate distro |
Date: |
Sun, 7 Dec 2003 10:46:19 +0000 |
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http://userlinux.com/white_paper.html
UserLinux: Repairing the Economic Paradigm of Enterprise Linux
Bruce Perens <address@hidden>, Perens LLC
FIRST DRAFT: Please send corrections.
Copyright 2003 Perens LLC. You may translate, excerpt, and reformat to fit
your presentation, and you may republish the result, but you may not edit the
material to change my opinion or take my statements out of context.
**The Problem**
Enterprise users have embraced GNU/Linux. But the very aspects that make Linux
desirable, its low cost, Open Source nature, and the way it gives customers
more control over their software, are under attack by Linux vendors bent on
increasing shareholder value. Businesses are paying more as Linux
distributions demand a per-seat cost and service lock-in for software that
they didn't develop and that others support. Many of the early adopters of
Linux are small but profitable industries with extremely sophisticated needs,
and commercial Linux distributors simply can't afford to pay much attention
to them while larger markets are waiting.
This has hampered the adoption of Linux. For example, a very large
multinational bank recently informed me that they had called off a
10,000-system Linux deployment becuase "Linux is now more expensive than
Windows". An ISP complained that the cost of Enterprise Linux is greater than
the annual profit of one of his servers.
We, the Free Software developers, created this software to empower everyone,
and for everyone to share. But today's Enterprise Linux is a lock-in play,
designed to draw the customer into expensive subscriptions and single-vendor
service. Customers are made to agree not to pass service bulletins on to
others. While this is within the letter of the licenses that we crafted for
our software, it's outside of their spirit. We have no problem with payment
for service, when service is rendered. But the $1000 per year or greater that
many customers now pay for their Linux systems goes not for service, but for
a brand and the endorsement of a few application providers like Oracle.
The economics of Open Source work worst for commercial Linux distributions.
They are attempting to generate profit from a product that they don't own,
and to which they can't add much value without departing from the factors
that make Linux desirable. This has forced even the best of them to depart
from the ethos of Open Source with lock-in plays or pay-per-seat proprietary
content. And the worst of them used to be called Caldera.
<SNIP>
==========
"We are not for names, nor men, nor titles of Government, nor are we for
this party nor against the other but we are for justice and mercy and
truth and peace and true freedom, that these may be exalted in our nation,
and that goodness, righteousness, meekness, temperance, peace and unity
with God, and with one another, that these things may abound."
(Edward Burroughs, 1659 - from 'Quaker Faith and Practice')
Paul Mobbs, Mobbs' Environmental Investigations,
3 Grosvenor Road, Banbury OX16 5HN, England
tel./fax (+44/0)1295 261864
email - address@hidden
website - http://www.fraw.org.uk/mobbsey/index.html
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