The Limits of Linux's 'Live Free or Die'

Posted by henke54 on Jan 19, 2010 5:05 AM EDT
Datamation; By Serdar Yegulalp
Mail this story
Print this story

Linux’s main merit, as a kernel and an ecosystem, is its open source nature. That means the software that runs on it has little choice but to be open source. This doesn’t mean closed-source software is unavailable on Linux—just that it’s got the deck stacked strongly against it. Because of this, software companies who don’t primarily deal in open source have shunned Linux. It’s something of a chicken-and-egg argument to say who shunned whom first. And perhaps it’s academic: does it matter who took the first step away from the table? Still, here’s the key problem: There’ll always be a big gap between Linux advocacy and Linux reality as long as it remains biased toward the near-complete exclusion of binary-only / closed-source / proprietary software on Linux.

Full Story

  Nav
» Read more about: Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community, Linux

« Return to the newswire homepage

This topic does not have any threads posted yet!

You cannot post until you login.