MESSAGE
DATE | 2008-04-24 |
FROM | Michael L Richardson
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] How to really mess up something good
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Ok "You can have a OS any flaver you want so long as it is >> MS"
Paul Robert Marino wrote: > Its simple > They want funding from Microsoft and the gates foudation. To get it they > must run MS Windows. Also if you remember Microsoft is willing to go to > a zero dollor licence fee for educational use if nessisary. In shure > they work out just such a deal with OLPC. > > > On Thu, 24 Apr 2008 8:44 am, Michael L. Richardson.com wrote: >> Sounds like "You can have a Ford any color you want so long as it is >> Black". >> ***** >> Check this out: www.globalabundanceprogram.com/mlr52 >> ***** >> >> >> >> ********************* >> Check this out: www.globalabundanceprogram.com/mlr52 >> ********************** >> >> >> ..... Original Message ....... >> On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 21:06:58 -0400 Ruben Safir >> wrote: >>> This just turns my stomach >>> >>> OLPC Switch to Windows on XO Is 'muddled,' Developers Say >>> >>> >>> Find a Review Wednesday, April 23, 2008 2:30 PM PDT >>> >>> Open-source developers should stop bickering, unite and jointly develop >>> a Windows user interface to make XO laptops more appealing to users, >>> One Laptop Per Child Chairman Nicholas Negroponte has urged in a public >>> note to that community. >>> >>> Developers in the open-source community did not take lightly to >>> Negroponte's comments, expressing outrage and questioning the judgment >>> of OLPC's shift from Linux to Windows for the XO laptop. Developers >>> called Negroponte's appeal "vague" and "demoralizing" for the future >>> development of Sugar, the user interface that currently works with Linux >>> on XO laptops. >>> >>> In a note on OLPC's community site, Negroponte wrote that Sugar is less >>> than perfect and needs to be developed for Windows to expand the >>> laptop's >>> appeal. The nonprofit has engaged in discussions with Microsoft to load >>> Windows on dual-boot versions of the XO laptop. >>> >>> "I attribute our weakness to unrealistic development goals and >>> practices," >>> Negroponte wrote. "Our mission has never changed. It has been to bring >>> connected laptops for learning to children in the poorest and most >>> remote locations of the world. Our mission has never been to advocate >>> the perfect learning model or pure Open Source." >>> >>> Sugar needs to be separated from the OS core and made platform agnostic, >>> Negroponte wrote. "To do that, we need to hire more developers, work >>> more together and spend less time arguing." >>> >>> This week developers began debating XO's possible shift from Linux to >>> Windows after Monday's resignation of Walter Bender, OLPC's president >>> of software and content. Bender gained a following in the open-source >>> community by promoting open-source software for the XO despite growing >>> efforts to load the laptop with Windows XP. >>> >>> In a note posted Monday at OLPC's community news, Bender said that he >>> was leaving to advance the quality open-source software for learning and >>> would continue to work with the OLPC community "by adopting the spirit >>> and methodology of the open-source movement." >>> >>> Observers contend that Bender left because he was less than happy with >>> OLPC's move from open source to Windows on the XO laptop. Some >>> developers >>> saw it as a sign that OLPC is scaling down Sugar's development. >>> >>> Drawing that conclusion from Bender's departure is incorrect, Negroponte >>> wrote: "We are scaling Sugar up, not down." >>> >>> Developers replied that his vision of Sugar for Windows is muddled and >>> that he is further dividing himself from OLPC's developer community. >>> >>> "If you are not serious about Sugar on Windows within the next year, >>> please continue to avoid 'now' and use 'might' and 'someday' when you >>> talk about it, and we'll continue to try to make Sugar-on-Linux achieve >>> its potential," wrote C. Scott Ananian in a community posting at the >>> OLPC site. >>> >>> "I approve of keeping OLPC's options open, in case your current >>> development team (myself included) cannot deliver on Sugar's potential, >>> but setting vague (and demoralizing) goals for future development -- >>> without actually devoting the resources to achieve those goals -- is >>> madness. You have only succeeded in alienating the developers you need >>> to make Sugar-on-Linux work, without actually achieving any progress on >>> Sugar-on-Windows," Ananian wrote. >>> >>> Porting Sugar, which runs on multiple Linux distributions, to Windows >>> shouldn't be hard, but the question is whether users will have the same >>> experience on both OSes, wrote Tomeu Vizoso. >>> >>> Negroponte wrote that Sugar needs to be changed from an omelet to a >>> fried egg "with distinct yoke and white, rather than having the UI, >>> collaborative tools, power management and radios merge into one >>> amorphous >>> blob." >>> >>> Vizoso wouldn't chew on Negroponte's vision of a fried egg. "My >>> understanding is that the Sugar UI is composed of inseparable components >>> because we wanted to give an integrated and coherent experience. In >>> which way are you suggesting to split Sugar?" >>> >>> >>> -- >>> http://www.mrbrklyn.com - Interesting Stuff >>> http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software >>> >>> So many immigrant groups have swept through our town that Brooklyn, >>> like Atlantis, reaches mythological proportions in the mind of the >>> world - RI Safir 1998 >>> >>> http://fairuse.nylxs.com DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI >>> Safir 2002 >>> >>> "Yeah - I write Free Software...so SUE ME" >>> >>> "The tremendous problem we face is that we are becoming sharecroppers >>> to our own cultural heritage -- we need the ability to participate in >>> our own society." >>> >>> "> I'm an engineer. I choose the best tool for the job, politics be >>> damned.< >>> You must be a stupid engineer then, because politcs and technology >>> have been attached at the hip since the 1st dynasty in Ancient >>> Egypt. I guess you missed that one." >>> >>> © Copyright for the Digital Millennium > ___________________________________________ > The average person does a lot of work in the name of laziness! > Save youre self the effort by doing it right the first time. > Do it with free speech software. >
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