More attribution
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Author | Content |
---|---|
techiem2 Mar 09, 2010 7:12 PM EDT |
This one IS Jonathan. :P |
Scott_Ruecker Mar 10, 2010 2:01 AM EDT |
Have you ever had one of those says? ;-) I have.. Fixed. |
jacog Mar 10, 2010 7:21 AM EDT |
That aside, awesome article! Very interesting "from the horse's mouth" reading. |
tracyanne Mar 10, 2010 7:39 AM EDT |
I think this is very interesting, in the light of all the angst over Mono.Quoting: As in life, bluster and threat are commonplace in business – especially the technology business. So that interaction was good preparation for a later meeting with Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer. They’d flown in over a weekend to meet with Scott McNealy, Sun’s then CEO – who asked me and Greg Papadopoulos (Sun’s CTO) to accompany him. As we sat down in our Menlo Park conference room, Bill skipped the small talk, and went straight to the point, “Microsoft owns the office productivity market, and our patents read all over OpenOffice.” OpenOffice is a free office productivity suite found on tens of millions of desktops worldwide. It’s a tremendous brand ambassador for its owner – it also limits the appeal of Microsoft Office to businesses and those forced to pirate it. Bill was delivering a slightly more sophisticated variant of the threat Steve had made, but he had a different solution in mind. “We’re happy to get you under license.” That was code for “We’ll go away if you pay us a royalty for every download” – the digital version of a protection racket. |
bigg Mar 10, 2010 7:46 AM EDT |
I especially like the part about the patent on patent trolling. I sure wish I'd have thought of that! |
techiem2 Mar 10, 2010 8:23 AM EDT |
Yeah, I thought it was quite interesting as well. Apple/MS: You're stepping on our (probably invalid) patents! Pay us monies! Sun: Take a look at this list. Do you REALLY want to start a patent fight? Apple/MS: Um...uh....nevermind... |
hkwint Mar 10, 2010 11:12 AM EDT |
This also shows if you have nothing to offer in return. Novell, Sun etc., they have patents themselves which affect Apple / Microsoft. Sun didn't have patents which affected Kodak, TomTom probably didn't have patents which affected Microsoft - and the list goes on. Therefore OIN is a good thing I guess, if TomTom-like companies join OIN they'd have some 'ransom'. |
Scott_Ruecker Mar 10, 2010 1:03 PM EDT |
I am sorry guys for getting the Authors wrong on these articles..you would think I would know better..you'd think..;-) |
techiem2 Mar 10, 2010 1:48 PM EDT |
hehe. Well, the first article the author wasn't really obvious. This article it was kinda obvious if you noticed the actual url, but he doesn't actually have his name in the article anywhere. |
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