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Date:      Wed, 23 May 2001 06:15:51 -0300 (BRT)
From:      Hebert Bernardo <root@foo.com>
To:        David Johnson <djohnson@acuson.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Advocacy <advocacy@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Perens' "Free Software Leaders StandTogether"
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSO.4.21.0105230611370.19504-100000@foo>
In-Reply-To: <3B0AB396.1F4DC07A@acuson.com>

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On Tue, 22 May 2001, David Johnson wrote:

Hi, i would like to accomplish your point of view on this matter, you`re
damm right!!
:-)

> Technical Information wrote:
> > 
> > One of the biggest mistakes that anyone can make in this industry is to
> > assume that technical superiority is enough to assure the success of a
> > product.  How many technologies have we seen fall by the wayside in the
> Pardon me for intruding with some pop sociological and political
> analysis of the Linux and BSD communities :-) This is all gross
> generalization and prone to bad logic.
> 
> Hackers and geeks are fiercely independent They demand complete control
> over their personal domain. Unix is attractive to them because it places
> them in control of their computer. Open Source unices are even more
> attractive because it offers them even more control.
> 
> Individualists tend to fall into two broad political types. One type is
> "hermit". They expect all other people to be equally individualistic.
> They have no desire to tell others what to do. "If I can do it, so can
> everyone else." They don't coalesce into communities very well. Warfare
> with other communities and individuals is rare.
> 
> The other type is "tribal". They group everyone else into the ranks of
> "elder", "us" and "them". It is okay to tell lower ranks what to do, and
> it is accepted that lower ranks may very well tell the upper ranks to
> "shove off". Community(tribe) is central, but because they are still
> individualists, they choose their own tribe and sometimes change tribes.
> Warfare with other tribes is common.
> 
> BSD land is mainly "hermit". It expects the newbie to be able to learn
> how to do stuff on his own. Help is available but hand holding is not.
> Warfare between the BSD systems is very rare. The BSD license fits
> perfectly. "Do whatever you want with the code." BSD users could care
> less what system other people use.
> 
> Linuxland is mainly "tribal". There are tribes within tribes, and they
> all fight each other to some extent. If a newbie gets snubbed in one
> subtribe, they find another. The GPL license fits perfectly. "Contribute
> your code back to the tribe". Linux users often take great offense if
> some else isn't using the same extact distro.
> 
> Just some random musings...
> 
> David
> 
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