From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Is LISP dying? Date: 1999/07/23 Message-ID: <3141715753773968@naggum.no> X-Deja-AN: 504356546 References: <7m8bm7$dni$1@nnrp1.deja.com> <7mksar$hp5$1@nnrp1.deja.com> <3794D66E.D801C30F@ne.mediaone.net> <3141675096194126@naggum.no> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp * Greg | How is this different from closed source "proprietary" stuff? that's the point. any company will want to protect its assets, and if you can only sell support, you will only protect different assets than if you could sell licenses, although in both cases, internal cultures would grow that would protect and sustain themselves. | It's of potential value to have all the warts exposed- at least you know | what you're getting (or at least its possible to know). no, sorry, you won't. immersing yourself in free software takes much more time than immersing yourself in the published interfaces of some commercial system, and if you immerse yourself too deeply and start to use stuff that was never intended to be used from the outside, which happens all the time in Emacs, for instance, you can't upgrade when new versions come out and you can't necessarily install packages. that's what one would call adding _new_ warts to your use of the system, if not to the system itself. I used to think that I needed to walk through the sources of stuff that I put on my machine, but it became impossible after only a few years: it's too much work, and it has no direct rewards. I also used to modify my Emacs quite a bit, and since I excised MULE from 20.3, it took too much effort to keep track of changes (it turns out that semantic collisions are much more important than syntactic collisions, which CVS could take care of -- code you haven't changed could be changed incompatibly with other changes you have made, wreaking serious havoc), so now I haven't been able to upgrade to 20.4-sans-MULE, even though 20.4 has been released. | > remember, if people are going to get paid to offer commercial support | > instead of for the product or the license to the product, they'll | > make sure you need the support and that the authors are the only | > people who can make any useful contributions. | | Only if they can control the source. really? do you argue that others who want to offer commercial support should rewrite the whole system in a better way or language, only to splinter the development teams and make it wholly impossible to keep track of each other's developments? that's, uh, brilliant. | If the source is open, a wrecked architecture can more easily be reborn | because none of the clean-room reverse engineering foolishness is | required. if it's reborn, you get feature wars between the two architectures, and both waste a lot of time and effort, meaning: a lose-lose competition. (remember: people get their money from implementing features and providing support, not from selling licenses, but nobody will pay two different providers for the same feature, meaning that whoever don't get paid need to replicate the efforts of others for free, or if they have enough loyal users: may be paid to replicate _some_ of the features.) | But again, if the software architecture is open its more likely the | Emperor's new clothes will be detected or not. sure, but what happens? you get a splinter group every time someone thinks he's spotting some Emperor skin. look what happened when MULE hit the fan: a whole bunch of people stayed put at 19.34, many developers and testers left because they couldn't get it to work, and didn't have time to deal with the incompetents who broke everything that used to work outside of Japan, and RedHat included my "MultiByte Survival Kit" in their distribution of Emacs 20.2. and while 20.2 MBSK .elc files could be loaded into 20.2 pure, a change was made so that 20.2 MBSK .elc files could not be loaded into 20.3, but 20.2 pure .elc files could, obviously only to discourage further branching. | We should be careful of talking too much about the lack of progress/ | creativity- huh? I'm talking about the consequences of _unbridled_ creativity. most creative people discover that they need to channel their creativity into areas where it can bear fruit. or put it another way: anyone can be both creative and "creative" if there is no demand to be productive, too. some would argue that the problem most cities have with some of their youth stems from the utter lack of useful avenues to express youthful creativity. | I remember in the 1980s some columnist or other said all the applications | had been written; we had word processors, spreadsheets and database apps- | what else was there? I'm sure it's helpful for your own position to pretend that this is what you are up against, but it isn't. please stop being stupid and listen to the criticism instead of dismissing it out of hand, OK? | I believe the significance of the open source stuff is in the mass | opening of apps to public scrutiny and input. I fully agree that public scrutiny of software is a good thing, but I don't think "input from the public" will ever work any better than it has for all the "features" that Microsoft keep adding under pretense of "customer demand". | I hope Bill tastes ashes seeing the industry slip from his unbridled | control- drawing away just out of reach ever further the harder he tries | to grab it again. this will happen if software is seen as works of art, visible out in the open, but not for random people to "modify" or "improve" at will. art is copyrighted for a multitude of reasons: I want software to be similarly protected from the onslaught of the unschooled masses, but I also want them to appreciate it and learn from it so as to be better prepared to create their own works of art. in other words, I think this open source stuff will work provided that people can still charge money for licensing use and can still protect their works, _and_ we also get a realistic means to pay for the benefits we receive from using other people's works, because it will be harder to steal large amounts of source code when it is open than when it is closed, and if people can't get paid and they still can see that their source was stolen or used, they will simply stop making source available as a means of self-preservation. now, to reiterate my positive position: I think source access is good, but it has to be seen as an investment on the part of whoever gets it, and it appears beneficial that it be given out on a personal basis, not to the public in general. on the other hand, there is a use for some sort of "public library" model of source code, too, or perhaps "museums of modern code" or whatever it would be cool to call it. letting people in general at source for the express purpose of letting them modify it and redistribute their modifications seems like a genuinely bad idea to me, but it took me many years to realize that the benefits do not need to be thrown out with the bathwater just because some aspects of open source are clearly counter-productive. I suspect it will take others some time to figure out why free software isn't the solution, but was an argument that had to be made, why open source isn't the answer, but exposed the question that needed to be asked, and why the computing society still need to work on ways to accomplish its goals, especially as they get clearer as goals and not only political mission statements for particular solutions. #:Erik -- suppose we blasted all politicians into space. would the SETI project find even one of them?