On Sun, 2006-06-18 at 16:27 -0700, jdow wrote: > From: "Sean" <seanlkml@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > On Sun, 18 Jun 2006 12:23:37 -0500 > > Les Mikesell <lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> Nvidia claims that their contracts with the chip vendors prohibits > >> them from releasing details or a GPL'd driver. If it is possible > >> to put a license-agnostic layer between components that the > >> FSF can't threaten with their interpretations of 'work as a whole' > >> and without a big performance hit, the issue might go away. > > > > People argue about all kinds of things. It doesn't change anything > > about the nature, intent and legality of the GPL license. It is what > > it is, DEAL WITH IT or go AWAY, preferably both. > > I think you and Les are arguing to cross purposes. Les is simply > stating that the GPL is not necessarily good for consumers or users. > The users lose out on many features they'd like to have. The hurt > to nVidia is much less than the inconvenience to users who would like > to use Linux with nVidia cards. That arguably hurts Linux, too. ---- this is not a black and white issue - yes, 3d support for the most recent video cards is lacking. But considering the whole totality of a Linux software system, one would have to consider that Linux is doing rather well. GPL has served Linux users exceedingly well thus far. ---- > > As to who and how the GPL hurts people or companies making it good, > evil, agnostic, confused, or anything else that is a view each person > can make for herself or himself. Whether it hurts developers or not > is up to the opinion of the developer. It actually simplifies my life. > I develop for Windows and keep the Linux system alive as a server for > various networking needs. I don't feel any compulsion to develop for > two quite different environments. Besides even if I could charge for > software such as I make under a Linux environment I could not make > near as much as with the Windows environment. But I would like to > share the tools with Linux folks for roughly the cost of creating it > for Linux folks. No can do. So I don't. The losers are arguably > the Linux USERS not me. (Which leads me to an observation that Linux > users who try to make Linux into a USERs machine rather than a server > must be into self abuse in other nasty ways, too. {^_-}) ---- I decided 5 years ago to eat my own dog food as it were and switched to using Linux as my primary desktop system...I think it was approximately RHL 7.2 but I don't recall exactly. I've got a pretty clean WinXP system here available by clicking over via KVM but I rarely ever use it. I've also got a Macintosh here on the same KVM and again, rarely use it. It doesn't seem like abuse - it seems to be a rather full featured desktop system. Granted it's not perfect but neither is my Windows system nor my Macintosh. They all have their strengths and weaknesses. Your perspective on the usability of the current Linux desktop is of benefit to no one and evidently doesn't encompass having used the current state of the distribution (FC-5) on reasonably adequate hardware, because if you had, you too would be impressed. You have made it painfully clear that your aspirations exist only where it derives financial gain to jdow. Perhaps you should let us know your paypal account so we can kick in some pennies to compensate you for your presence here. Craig