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Comments on: Meet Mark Radcliffe: The man who rules open source law

Also on Radio Two 

Posted Thursday 30th August 2007 22:29 GMT

Bloody hell, he gets about. Musician, broadcaster, novelist, and now open source expert. Looks very different to how I remember from "The White Room", but then again he has been on the radio a lot, and radio producers don't mind if you grow a beard.

Mark & Lard 

Posted Thursday 30th August 2007 22:29 GMT

Bring them back.

hmmm.... beard 

Posted Thursday 30th August 2007 23:12 GMT

you sure that's not Sean Rowley?

Is it a fish? 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 07:39 GMT

Is is a foul?

A little objectivity 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 08:38 GMT

"some of the open source world's most rabid^H^H^H^H^H vocal members went after his attribution licenses"

Yet again Vance shows himself to be reasonably-well researched but less than objective on the subject of Linux.

No, Mr Vance, those that don't share your opinion aren't necessarily "rabid".

In a commodity market, brand is of paramount importance - consider why Heinz commands the lion's share of the baked bean market. Linux, BSD, etc are commodity markets.

CPAL seems like a reasonable way forward in principal in the present world. But FLOSS licences need to be as future-proof as possible: the question of logo attribution needs to be considered carefully, especially while US patents are granted for future products that will force users to actively watch advertising to use said products.

Logos have a psychological impact not shared by simple text; that's why they exist. The OSI is quite right to be cautious about setting any precedent here; that's their job. The question has to be asked: just what is wrong with the present system where developers and corporations are accredited in simple text, anyway?

Remember that logo attribution was an important factor in the XFree/Xorg fork. XFree's subsequent widespread rejection & the shift to Xorg has been a very positive move for the Linux market.

Conrad

Is that a picture of Scoff Cruddle 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 08:54 GMT

inserted by mistake?

DJ? 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 10:13 GMT

Yeah, he certainly does get about a bit. And there was me thinking he was just a very bad and seriously-annoying DJ.

(For a while, MR was my vote for most annoying DJ. Then Chris Moyles came on the scene. Why, oh god why does the BBC employ these worse-than-student-radio morons? Even Nicky Campbell and Chris Evans weren't this bad.)

Stop!!!!!!! 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 10:15 GMT

Carry on.

No Neeeeed 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 13:55 GMT

Mark & Lard - bring em back damn it

The Shirehorses 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 15:32 GMT

One of the best novelty bands ever, I can't wait to hear Radcliffe & Maconie doing Boy Division

RE: DJ? 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 15:37 GMT

You've obviously forgotten Kevin Greening and Lisa I'Anson then?

Stop...! 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 15:58 GMT

... Carry on.

Fancy a brew? 

Posted Friday 31st August 2007 18:08 GMT

Stop,

I was having a drink then

Carry on

Whatever happened to Fat Harry White in his soft top Bedford Rascal?

10 pence short

The Shirehorses anyone?

Mark... 

Posted Saturday 1st September 2007 07:26 GMT

Big up nuff respect in the open source-meister area!

Biggidy biggidy bong!

Radcliffe sure has changed since he hung around with the Boy Lard....

Moyles the most annoying DJ? 

Posted Saturday 1st September 2007 16:00 GMT

Maybe Moyles is annoying, but 7million people disagree. Nearly 12% of the current UK population. OK.

Also, a clever feature of modern 'wireless sets' is the option to choose what to listen too. Or there's that magnificent DAB that the BBC seem so intent to spend their TV licence cash upon, with a multitude of channels. And the 'listen again' feature to listen to the ginger headed shouter whenever you choose.

Competition/Advertising. 

Posted Sunday 2nd September 2007 12:37 GMT

I think this will encourage companies to adopt free and open software.

Let's say company ``A'' is using a prominant piece of software, and they are modifying/enriching the product to better meet their needs, why wouldn't they opt to include their corporate identity to the product? They are a developer/contributor of the product.

Now. Company ``B, C, ...'' sees that this software product really is advantageous, and decides to adopt it. Since A, B, C, ... are competitors in the same market, they'll also want to get their name listed. As adoptors they also contribute, and thus earn equal status with the rest of the contributors.

Further out, once this practice gains the attention of the enterprise market, it will become a thing, to be a contributor of relevent free and open software products. It's a social thing, a publicity thing, and something that would happen anyway should a large organization contribute significantly to the cause.

Ultimately, I think that what will happen with this, is that lots of organization will contribute, exploding the development of free and open software, and instead of full-blown logo saturation (say a two minute logo slide show every time you start the application), it will settle into acknowledgement of contribution, and the right for the company to promote on its own, the status as a free and open software contributor.

That's how I see it.

Bird or bloke? 

Posted Monday 3rd September 2007 07:46 GMT

Mark & Lard were the one thing that kept me going at work sometimes. Utter brilliance.