what nerds will call news
Posted on April 17, 2008
Filed Under law |
Several people were not checking facts on CNET, so I felt the urge to jump in. In response to this writer:
Errr… Very very Wrong: reader comment from lordastral
Java = Sun Microsystems, not a M$ product. You can download versions for windows, solaris, linux, and mac here…
http://www.java.com/en/download/manual.jsp
Active Directory will work with openLDAP, so you are wrong again.
http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-enterprise-47/openldap-vs-active-directory-compatibility-622540/
Sharepoint is not windows only, but…
the only two browsers been certified for SharePoint are Internet Explorer & FireFox.
Konqueror was not developed by Apple. Apple used the KHTML rendering engine that was already in use by Konqueror.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KHTML
Kerberos Windows Only? Are you smoking weed?
http://www.mit.edu/~kerberos/#what_is
Apple is not open source friendly, and never has been. Their policy of bricking iphones should tell you that.
My question about OSX in this instance is that since OSX integrates features from BSD and other opensource code, can they legally restrict the use of the OSX operating system? If this comes to court, perhaps GNU will weigh in on the OpenMAC's side, and bring in some heavyweight opensource community lawyers up against Apple.
I posted:
not that I'm an expert: reader comment from robertbeverly
But a little peruse finds this
the GPL is said to grant the recipients of a computer program the rights of the free software definition and uses copyleft to ensure the freedoms are preserved, even when the work is changed or added to. This is in distinction to permissive free software licenses, of which the BSD licenses are the standard examples.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_General_Public_License
Wanna bet this is why OSX is not built on Linux. Oh my, atari (or checkmate), looks like Apple might have lawyers too.
How interesting that we are now illustrating distinctions between software licenses in the news.
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