John Alvord jalvo@mbay.net
At 02:11 PM 2/11/2002 -0800, you wrote:
Maybe you could shed some light on the current License flamefest. Would BSD versus LGPL have made any difference to you progress as a company? You have contributed so much in the past, a formal statement of intentions could reduce the perceived problem...
I'm not sure Lindows.com has earned a voice in the license debate yet or even if we had a voice could add anything meaningful that hasn't already been said. There are many others who have for years shepherded WINE to this stage. I'm confident they'll do the right thing. Licensing is a topic on the wineconf 2002 agenda. I'll be sending a list of topics to the list shortly for feedback. Thanks to those who have offered suggestions.
From a more general perspective though, I believe there needs to be much more investment in many areas of WINE and more broadly Linux to get to the next level (say from 1% penetration to 10%). Anything that gets more people involved, more organization, more developers, more capital, more companies, and more ideas will ultimately be a good thing.
When I was at MP3.com, we had the MP3 summit every year. We invited everyone including our direct competitors, tangentially related industries and even our antagonists. We'd not only invite them, but also encourage them to speak. Our thinking was the more people that we got making "neural connections", the more success MP3 would have (and ultimately MP3.com). Companies were created, merged, and bought because of the MP3 Summit. Products were dreamed up and built because of the MP3 Summit. It wasn't about our company, it was about bringing all the smart, passionate people together (even if they had opposing viewpoints) and watching the magic happen. I believe Linux and WINE (at least on the desktop) are at similar stages.
-- MR
Lindows.com michael@lindows.com 858-410-5941
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