Nov 26 2006
Alfred George Revell
Alfred George Revell was born at 10.30 am today. We’ll call him Alfie.

Nov 26 2006
Alfred George Revell was born at 10.30 am today. We’ll call him Alfie.

Nov 21 2006
Hello,
I wonder if there’d be fewer heart attacks among the travelling salesman fraternity, and other frequenters of filling station chiller cabinets, if you put less salt in your products.
It was an odd sensation as my entire face puckered into that of an old woman, as the salt in your Chicken and Mushroom slice immediately rid my body of water through osmosis.
Any chance you could lighten up on the use of salt? It might make me more inclined to buy again and, perhaps, save thousands of children from crying into their pillows in memory of their now departed salesman fathers.
Yours,
Matthew P Revell.
Nov 08 2006
In the most recent LugRadio, we discussed licence proliferation.
Our main conclusions were that:
We already face a battle in explaining the benefits of free software to non-enthusiasts: licensing is something that rarely makes it onto the radar outside our community. We can make the job easier by talking about concrete benefits but the conversation becomes increasingly difficult with every caveat introduced by yet another licence.
When licensing writing, music, visual art, we don’t need to be lawyers or even all that familiar with the Creative Commons licences. Instead, we need a rough idea of the rights we want to grant and the protections we want to retain. The Creative Commons licence picker translates those desires into the most appropriate licence.
On the show, we suggested licencepicker.com as a way to help users know where they stand and guide projects in making an informed licence choice, without the need for a law degree. It’s great to see that members of the LugRadio community have picked the idea up.
To better cope with the licences that we have, licencepicker.com could offer a clickable list of common FOSS applications, each with a summary of the licence under which it is released.
The genie is already out of the bottle, though. We have more licences than most people could name and we’ll undoubtedly see more. Although many people may agree that licence proliferation is unhelpful, each new licence’s creators believe that their modifications are necessary.
Perhaps we can learn a lesson from environmentally led government policy: the polluter pays. We need to raise awareness, within the community, of the pain that licence proliferation causes. As attitudes change, so it will become more difficult for projects to create yet another licence. If the pain of introducing a new licence becomes more equitable with the damage it causes to the user’s understanding of their freedom, there’s a chance that projects and companies will settle for an existing licence.
Free software is hobbled if we don’t understand the rights it grants us. Mark Shuttleworth highlights licence proliferation as one of the big challenges we face in making “free software ubiquitous on the desktop”. I see three ways to attack the problem:
These suggestions aren’t perfect, the list isn’t exhaustive and this all needs discussion. For example, some would argue that a licence picker would make it easier for projects to choose yet more obscure licences.
Nov 01 2006
“Why, when you read the Bible, are you not left in awe? Why doesn’t a book written by an omniscient being leave you with a sense of wonder and amazement? If you are reading a book written by the all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving creator of the universe, wouldn’t you expect to be stunned by the brilliance, the clarity and the wisdom of the author?”
Quote from GodIsImaginary.com.
Nov 01 2006
451 Group is a US IT analysis firm, with some interest in open source matters.
Their oddly named CAOS Theory blog provides daily links to open source related news stories. There’s often a bias towards enterprise IT, as you might expect from a firm of analysts, but they also appear to understand the many motivations behind FOSS.
As a slight disclaimer, I have to admit, other than reading their links list each day, I know nothing about 451 Group.
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