YES

Story: Is the diversity of Linux its greatest strength? Total Replies: 5
Author Content
r_a_trip

Nov 08, 2013
6:47 AM EDT
n/t
lqsh

Nov 08, 2013
8:59 AM EDT
competition fuels innovation
Bob_Robertson

Nov 08, 2013
10:15 AM EDT
The lower the barriers to entry, the greater the competition, the faster innovation lowers costs (not just price, "ease of installation" is a cost, learning curves are costs, etc) and improves service.
flufferbeer

Nov 08, 2013
11:36 AM EDT
@lqsh + @Bob_R,

> competition fuels innovation

Yep, and I think what might happen is that the better Linux innovations will rise to the top and become a part of the most popular distros. And this will happen on a grassroots basis WITHOUT necessarily being mandated from the distros' financial owners, who themselves probably have vested monetary interests in directing what their distros should or should NOT include!

2c
Fettoosh

Nov 08, 2013
12:40 PM EDT
Quoting:Is the diversity of Linux its greatest strength?


No, its openness and the GPL are its strongest, diversity is a consequence of both.

Bob_Robertson

Nov 08, 2013
12:51 PM EDT
> the distros' financial owners

One of the reasons I liked Debian even before my first installation.

> diversity is a consequence of both.

Yep. Participation is not retricted, and the GPL means the code is there for anyone to see. Low barriers to entry.

Aren't you glad no one needs a "Coder's License"? (yet)

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