Bill Davidsen wrote: > I fail to see how my using Skype takes anyone else's freedom away, there > are dozens of phone vendors, my choice of Skype does not impact their > choice in the slightest, they pick up a phone and call me. That's any > phone, land line, cell, SIP, you name it and they can use it. Or do you > mean my choosing to use a phone of any type blocks their freedom to use > mental telepathy or whatever? And that way they have to pay for the phone call. :-/ If they want to talk to you over VoIP, they're locked into Skype and thus proprietary software. (Well, I guess they could use your phone number to call you through a SIP PBX, but then both they and you have to pay for the call.) > As for abusing my bandwidth, don't I see you telling people to use > bittorrent? How is helping move Fedora I get for free good and helping > move VOIP I get for free bad? Oh, because Skype is not open source, that's > right. I actually see HTTP mirrors as the best solution, but indeed, giving bandwidth to Fedora is helping Free Software, giving bandwidth to Skype is hurting it. > I think you have bought into the 64 bit thing just like the Open Source > crusade. At this point 64 bit does not provide any significant benefit for > most users, in terms of better performance or must-have applications which > need more than 4GB for the application. What it *does* provide is a chance > to litter your system with tool chains and libraries so you can build > applications which are open source but have no 64 bit binaries. Oh, and > you can find out who made what assumptions which make the app not work > right in 64 bit. Applications which are Free Software just need to get packaged in Fedora, then they automatically have 64-bit binaries. The real solution is to get all the software with appropriate licensing into the repository. Kevin Kofler (happy user of KDE 4, currently 4.2.3, and PulseAudio) -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines