Fri Sep 12 11:33:59 GMT 2003 Open Source kills companies
Links: Q&A: SCO's McBride on his open letter to the Linux community
Darl McBride:
What we're trying to say is, No.1, intellectual property is very important in establishing this [Linux] platform and to just take this "don't ask, don't tell" methodology [toward IP], we don't think that works. If we're going into a new business environment around Linux, well, let's ask the question right upfront: Does the free business model work? Everything we've looked at, whether it's free Internet, free telecom, free music, all of these things tend to, for one reason or another, not work over an extended period of time. Clearly, the free model just about killed our company, and I would argue that it's going to kill a lot of other software companies if the GPL [General Public License] is able to gain a foothold and run rampant throughout the industry.
OK. And trains killed steamboats, and automobiles almost killed trains. Yet, without paddle boats running up and down the Mississippi river, life goes on.
By the way, Darl, companies like SCO did awful damage to the industry my maternal grandfather worked in: business forms. Gosh, the ledger systems they used to sell, the complicated (and really quite clever) multipart forms he designed and sold made him a pretty good living. The damn computers wreaked havoc in his company, Daryl. Oh, there's still business there, but it's nothing like it was.
Computers took my paternal grandfather's work, too. He was an engineer who made a good living designing bridges and the like. I mean a GOOD living, Daryl: somewhere we have a tax return from the thirties showing him reporting something around $30,000 in income, which was rather good money for the times. My father told me of watching his dad do calculations for the launching of a ship from drydock; he said it was a project that took many days. Wiped away by computers, Daryl: nobody does those kinds of manual calculations now.
Yes, Daryl, free software can destroy businesses like yours. That's especially so when a company has been greedy, has ignored the needs of its customer base, has refused to adopt new technology, has alienated and ignored its own dealers and has generally seemingly done everything possible to drive its business away, even long before Linux had any foothold at all. Recognize anyone in that picture, Daryl?
Times change, boopy. Get used to it.
More Articles by Tony Lawrence - Find me on Google+
Have you tried Searching this site?
Unix/Linux/Mac OS X support by phone, email or on-site: Support Rates
This is a Unix/Linux resource website. It contains technical articles about Unix, Linux and general computing related subjects, opinion, news, help files, how-to's, tutorials and more. We appreciate comments and article submissions.
Many of the products and books I review are things I purchased for my own use. Some were given to me specifically for the purpose of reviewing them. I resell or can earn commissions from the sale of some of these items. Links within these pages may be affiliate links that pay me for referring you to them. That's mostly insignificant amounts of money; whenever it is not I have made my relationship plain. I also may own stock in companies mentioned here. If you have any question, please do feel free to contact me.
Specific links that take you to pages that allow you to purchase the item I reviewed are very likely to pay me a commission. Many of the books I review were given to me by the publishers specifically for the purpose of writing a review. These gifts and referral fees do not affect my opinions; I often give bad reviews anyway.
We use Google third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our website. These companies may use information (not including your name, address, email address, or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and to know your choices about not having this information used by these companies, click here.
Click here to add your comments
Don't miss responses! Subscribe to Comments by RSS or by Email
Click here to add your comments
If you want a picture to show with your comment, go get a Gravatar