At 06:39 PM 2/13/2002, Tony Bryant wrote:
It just forces a different way of making money - charging for your time, not charging for your IP.
Which puts programmers "on a treadmill." Stallman states, in "The GNU Manifesto," that this is intended to be a way of effectively "banning" good salaries for programmers.
Alas, businesses that try to give away the code and charge for time are rarely more than marginally successful and usually fail.
One has to wonder why it matters what other people do with Wine. Wasn't Wine developed because we wanted to run some windoze apps on linux? Who really cares what codeweavers, transgaming etc do to it. Just as long as I can still run my windows apps on linux, I'm happy. If lindows sells a few copies of what is effectively free, what skin is it off our noses?
Exactly my point. The developers should be glad that they code that they've released is being used by as many people and in as many ways as possible! This is the great thing about the MIT/BSD licenses.
--Brett