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Talkin' 'bout a revolution
BY SCOTT ROSENBERG | Last month I wrote a column suggesting that, down the road, faced with legal troubles and infinite customer-support headaches, Microsoft might borrow a page from the "free software" movement and release the source code to its Windows operating system. The piece evoked an impressive outpouring of thoughtful comments from readers, applauding or deriding the idea's merits and debating the unlikelihood of such a radical move on Microsoft's part. Arguing that the suggestion made sense, David Wollman offered an analogy from the natural world:
Chris Warth offered some additional reasons for Microsoft to give serious consideration to releasing its source code to the world:
Craig Zerouni went even further than I did, proposing that the government should force Microsoft to release its source code, since "the OS constitutes a true natural resource, like air or water ... A world OS is a natural monopoly which people need to exist in order to promote computing." He hastened to add: "By the way, I am a running-dog capitalist. This is not ideological, it's technical." A few readers pointed out that, since Microsoft has already announced that Windows 98 will be the last release in that line of technological descent (afterward, we'll all be shunted onto Windows NT), the company should consider freeing the Win98 source code once it's become superannuated. Bear Giles suggested that if Microsoft released the Windows source code, the company would put an immediate stop to years of complaints from developers that the company is withholding information on key, "undocumented" features of the operating system to give its own programmers an unfair advantage:
But Andrew Bertola maintained that Microsoft would "cower at the idea" of releasing the Windows code precisely because doing so would reveal the presence of long-rumored and long-denied "hidden calls":
Readers offered many other arguments why a Windows source-code release is a horrible idea. "While open source software seems appealing to those that are not intimidated by looking at code, it scares the hell out of those that are -- and there's a hell of a lot more of them than there are hackers in the world," wrote Frank Miller. Mark Dykun, an independent software developer, expressed horror at the problems Windows developers would face at supporting multiple versions of the operating system and offered this rallying cry: "No to free source code -- one owner, one code stream and one company to blame when all is said and done." Other readers more friendly to the free-software concept offered a different reason that an open-source Windows would never work: Good programmers, they said, will shun it. Ken Erfourth wrote:
Similarly, from Aaron Campos:
Strangely, though, the very next e-mail I received, from Greg Miller, informed me of the existence of a Linux-style project to build an independent, open-source version of Windows called Freedows. Jason Filby wrote to tell me about ReactOS, a similar project. Others pointed out the numerous efforts in the Linux world (the Gnome Project, the K Desktop Environment) to build desktop interfaces for that operating system that are similar in feel and function to Windows. I still think it's highly unlikely that Microsoft will ever go down the
"free software" road unless its business takes a big turn for the worse.
But it's always fun to speculate. Thanks to all the readers who joined in.
Just as the Net allows software developers to collaborate across time and
space, it allows us to speculate collectively, too.
Come to Table Talk's Digital Culture area and talk about Windows, Netscape and free software.
Free
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source code to Windows
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movement
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on the Net isn't made by Microsoft. Or Netscape. It isn't made by any
traditional company at all. How'd that happen? |
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