Originally posted by perpetualrabbit
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Apple Rolls Out WebKit2, But No Linux Love Yet
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Originally posted by deanjo View PostHere is a newsflash for ya, the same can be said for even for GPL licensed projects. If the leads don't like what you are contributing they are free to reject it. If you want to see a perfect example of how this happens in opensource Google Con Kolivas, Rieser, Aaron Plattner etc and see how even in the GPL world when someone tries to improve the eco system of linux innovations are rejected on a pure discrimination of "I don't like it", not because of legal or technical merits just because of conflicting views.
So i'm just going to note that you pretty much agreed with my point that it is developer unfriendly and leave it at that.
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Originally posted by smitty3268 View PostThat's a straw man. Listen, we could go back and forth for 100 posts about how that's a different situation (hint: those developers would have to control the internet and block all legal distribution points for it to be comparable - IOWs, they'd have to be China). But I'm not going to get sucked into some fake argument you're cooking up here.
So i'm just going to note that you pretty much agreed with my point that it is developer unfriendly and leave it at that.
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Originally posted by monraaf View PostSo Apple doesn't care about Linux and open source, what else is new? As Steve Jobs once said in an interview "We have always been shameless about stealing great ideas". So that's what they do, and make a lot of money of. If you don't want Apple or any other company 'stealing' open source code, use GPL.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW0DUg63lqU
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Originally posted by deanjo View PostNo the situation is that people are blinded to what ever they want to believe but in real life practice the situation is entirely different. The blind conception of "my shit don't stink because I use GPL" is nothing but self delusion.
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Originally posted by smitty3268 View PostWhy do you keep bringing up the GPL? It's like you're intentionally trying to go after another target because you know Apple's policies suck. Let's compare them to Microsoft, now that's a developer friendly company. Don't try to call me some GPL fanboy, because I'm not.
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Originally posted by perpetualrabbit View Post. For instance the font hinting patents they have hinder the linux font engine to present good looking fonts, although I forgot what the issue exactly was. Something with cubic curves in fonts and also some patent having to do with font hinting. Also their legal steps against HTC are about trivial (non-)inventions that should not have be possible to patent in the first place. That lawsuit is seen by many as directed against google's android. Therefore it is a threat to linux and open source in general.
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Originally posted by deanjo View PostLMFAO, Microsoft places just as many limitations on developers as any other company. One only has to look at their terms of redistribution to see that or look at what they say against projects such as wine.
MS may try to keep people from copying their own products (yes, apple does this as well, and much more vigorously). But they have never once - please, try to give me an example here - declared that a company that has spent millions of dollars developing a product that they can't allow their users to run it on top of windows. Not once.
Heck, for my taste MS is even a little too developer friendly - i think the platform would be better if they didn't put such a priority on maintaining binary compatibility with decades old code, but I can see why a 3rd party developer might like it.
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Originally posted by deanjo View PostI would also like to point out that patents do not stifle innovation. They stifle duplication.
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Originally posted by smitty3268 View PostWow. Just..... wow. Do you really believe the stuff you're spewing out right now? You mentioned apple used to pay you, is that actually still the case?
MS may try to keep people from copying their own products (yes, apple does this as well, and much more vigorously). But they have never once - please, try to give me an example here - declared that a company that has spent millions of dollars developing a product that they can't allow their users to run it on top of windows. Not once.
Heck, for my taste MS is even a little too developer friendly - i think the platform would be better if they didn't put such a priority on maintaining binary compatibility with decades old code, but I can see why a 3rd party developer might like it.
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