Interview with Larry Wall 34
Alfred Bacon writes "There will be an interview with Larry Wall on The Paula Gordon Show available on Saturday at 3:00 pm EST. It is an hour long in RealAudo format broken up into 10 minute segments. Mr. Wall will be discussing Perl, Free Software and the Open Source movement. It should be worth listening to."
The Gnu/Linux project is Luciferian???? (Score:1)
Re:Is it just me or... (Score:1)
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Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:1)
Visit http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/li cen se-list.html [gnu.org] for a list of licenses that are "Open Source" licenses but not Free Software (such as Sun's Community license, Apple's APSL, etc).
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
So, you're saying that gcc, emacs, GNOME and all the other FSF software is not Open Source! Wow! You'd better let RMS know that people are treating it as Open Source by copying, modifying and distributing it.
There may be two different communities (the dogs versus the canines), but the software is the SAME! No difference. Every OS program is also FS, and vice versa.
Good for the newbie... Good for the preacher... (Score:2)
So from that perspective, this is a nice little piece... and it's news for nerds in that the interview is good for use as evangalism... pass the link around to those whom you feel are ready for the good-news brothers and sisters!
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Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:1)
Huh?! The examples are too numerous to mention, starting with Apache, released under the BSD License, and Perl, released under the artistic license. The main difference between these licenses and the GPL, which defines Free Software are:
under the GPL, you have to make any modifications to the source for a program also freely available.
Under most of the licenses which fall under the OSD, you are free to do whatever you want with the source.
I have seen numerous proprietary extensions to Apache (Raven SSL Server, by Covalent is one) where source is not available. And propietary Perl programs, where the code is in Perl, but you're not allowed to use it, unless you have paid a very hefty license fee. The GPL is not some vaguely worded manifesto, as was previously stated in this thread, bit a very precisely stated document, also drawn up by a team of lawyers (say what you will about RMS, he does nothing half-assed). Let me summarize the Free Software License (GPL) and one of the many licenses that full under the OSD.
GPL: The program, including the source is freely available. You may only modify the source code if you then make the modified source code freely available.
BSD: The program, including the source is freely available. You may modify the program in and any way, and are free to do what you wish with the modified source code.
You see, in a way, the OSD is much more free (yes, as in speech), because the OSD doesn't make constraints on what you can do, if you decide to modify a program. However, the GPL is IMO way better, because it guarantees that any improvements or modification to the source code, will also be free.
Re:The Gnu/Linux project is Luciferian???? (Score:1)
Good thing I don't take the bible too seriously.
Exactly. (Score:1)
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
You can find a list of approved Open Source licenses at http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ [opensource.org]
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:1)
Both the Apache and BSD licenses are Free Software and certified as such by the Grand Guru of GNU himself. Please go peruse the GNU and FSF pages at your leisure and round out your otherwise fine education.
ahem.. (Score:1)
What's up with all the audio ? (Score:1)
If the sound quality is poor, audio may be hard to understand. Audio is also much bigger than text. I can read faster than someone can talk, and I can skim the text for interesting bits. It's also easier to understand something that's written down, especially if it's not your first language.
Re:The Gnu/Linux project is Luciferian???? (Score:1)
Larry Wall gracefully picked up on the not-stupid parts of her questions (such as what does Open Source guard against within it's own movement) and pointed out that Open Source as he sees it promotes a diversity of ideas, such that Open Source doesn't snuff out "incipient cultures".
Great Stuff. Larry Wall is the f'in man.
Re:Good for the newbie... Good for the preacher... (Score:1)
Several times he is asked to respond to strange and/or cliched metaphors about Open Source (primitive tribe, priesthood) and himself (Prometheus, "man behind the curtain", Wizard) that put him at a loss for words -- as if they're tempting him into admitting "Yes! okay I'm just a cult leader and these are my dutiful minions" -- and he points out that what they think is counterintuitive (why give stuff away free? why let people read your code? how is there convergence in what seems to be a committee... aren't committees prone to dissent?) maybe isn't so counterintuitive...
And the interviewers start to understand the philosophical differences between closed source and open source. They really picked up on the significance of asking "Why not?". He really blows their minds with some deep thoughts about the importance of sharing software ideas.
I think that the general message they get is that Open Source isn't a business model, it's at least an ethic, and might even be a religion.
So, ./ers, if your Open Source faith is waning, or you're looking for someone to convince you that Open Source is in fact the path of the righteous, then hear the preaching of the Reverend Larry Wall of the Church of Open Source... and be amazed.
Re:Double Take (Score:1)
Re:Larry Wall Interview (Score:1)
I, for one, have sent mail a few time to the /. team suggesting an interview with M. Wall. This man is incredible in interview : look at http://www2.linuxjourna l.c om/lj-issues/issue61/3394.html [linuxjournal.com] for a good example.
Hmm... (Score:1)
Larry Wall? (Score:1)
Double Take (Score:1)
Now that would bring in some advertising $$
krystal_blade
larry's funny (Score:1)
-andy
perl.au (Score:2)
"hello, this is larry wall, and i pronounce perl, perl"
Larry Wall Interview (Score:2)
Hold on... (Score:1)
Sung to: California Uberalles by the "Dead Kennedys"
I am the Zealot RMS
My hair is long I am a mess.
I am aiming for the EU next...
Cathedral power will soon go away
I will be Fuhrer one day
I will command all of you
Your kids will install HURD in school
R-M-S Uber alles
R-M-S Uber alles
Uber alles Open Software
Uber alles Open Software
OSS fascists will control you
Hundred percent G-N-U
You will code for the master race
And alway wear the happy face
Close your eyes, can't happen here
Big Bro' on white horse is near
The hippies won't come back you say
Code for Free or you will pay
R-M-S Uber alles
R-M-S Uber alles
Uber alles Open Software
Uber alles Open Software
Now it is 2004
Knock knock at your front door
It's the slash-bot secret police
They have come for your uncool niece
Come quietly to the camp
You'd look nice as a drawstring lamp
Don't you worry, it's only a shower
For your code here's a pretty flower
Die on another post by Katz
Slashdot is filled with rats
You will croak, you little pests
When you mess with R-M-S
R-M-S Uber alles
Uber alles Open Software.
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
What goals are those? Everyone has their own set of goals, and the only one I can find universal to the Free Source community is "share your individual creations." There's no way that statistics and popularity contests can affect this goal.
The community does not equate to the FSF. Not everyone is an ideologue. Larry Wall has consistantly represented a large portion of the community, and there's no reason to complain about him giving an interview just because he won't be talking about changing the world through licensing.
Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:4)
What is to stop the community losing sight of it's goals when it becomes obsessed with user statistics & popularity contests? The community should be about word-of-mouth propogation, not mass media hype. The message that open source software from the FSF sends out is only achieved through direct use, not by glitzy advertising campaigns & talking heads.
The community approach has worked very well so far, why shouldn't work in the future?
KTB:Lover, Poet, Artiste, Aesthete, Programmer.
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
~luge
Re: (Score:1)
Is it just me or... (Score:1)
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that was a little stupid. (Score:1)
To actually start a comment out by fulfilling godwin's law [uiuc.edu], and hence proving yourself wrong before you made your point, is so increadibly dumb that, I am hoping, that it is the reason you got mod'ed up to (3), was which means we need a new catagory:- (Score 5: Hey come look at this idiot!)
Re:Religious nutcase (Score:1)
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
First: the FSF isn't involved with Open Source. Please, please, please be careful about confusing that with Free Software. Most of the people on both sides of the naming issue tend to be very prickly about it.
And how does an interview with Larry Wall, who's a cool guy, turn into publicity? Chances are, someone will here the interview, be interested, and start looking into things in more depth. That's basically what happened to me, a couple of years back. ^_^
-RickHunter
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
Any word can be abused. The number of proprietary software products that label themselves as "free" is staggering. It's a very specious argument to disparage "open source" as a term open to abuse when the alternative is a term much more abused.
Re:hehe - dead kennedys rule (Score:1)
jon katz would do well to listen to the dead kennedys. i feel like jello really connected with me. i think katz cares, but i also think he is really disconnected from the culture he is trying to represent.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Re:Mass Media perverts the message, IMHO. (Score:2)
I didn't call him a "member". The Free Software Movement(tm) is distinct from all other software movements, but the movement IS NOT the software.
Open Source software (as defined by the OSI) includes just about any software to which the source is available
Please read the OSD. Many restrictions are placed on the software licensing before it can be acknowleged "Open Source". The OSD is the same as the Free Software definition of the FSF, only worded legally and precisely, instead of a vague and changing series of essays.
For example, many "Open Source" licenses allow corporate sponsors special rights, including the ability to close the code
Licenses don't do this, copyright law does. Any time he would want to (brain tumor for example), RMS as the copyright holder could release a version of emacs under a proprietary license. But he couldn't affect any existing copies of emacs, nor could ANY Open Source license affect any existing copies of OSS software.
no constraints can be placed on anyone who gets the source, except that they must also share the source.
You're describing copyleft, not free software. Many software licenses fully acknowledged by RMS to be Free Software licenses do not compel the user to share the source code. Examples include BSD and MIT licenses. Notably missing in RMS's definition of Free Software is the requirement that it be copylefted under a GNU license. In fact, there is only ONE Open Source license that RMS does not acknowledge as free (Artistic), but that is only because the license is vague, not because it is restrictive.
If your argument is that Copyleft is not the same as Open Source, then I will fully agree. Ditto for any assertions that the Copyleft Movement(tm) is not the same as the Open Source movement. But by the same token, Copyleft is not the same as Free Software!
These are radically different- Open Source does include Free Software, but the reverse is very clearly not true
Please list one (just one) Open Source Software program that is not also a Free Software program. It is possible, I'll admit, but it would take a mighty good lawyer to follow the OSD while violating the Free Software definition.