[Asterisk-Users] Free Software or not -- that's the question /* New subject */

admin stotaro at seepu.com
Sat Jan 10 13:30:29 MST 2004


I work for an interconnect that sells 3com and NEC.  When I made this
project my own and followed through to show my boss, he said, "this is going
to ruin our industry"

If that is the case then so be it.  Same with mp3s and the music industry.
Had they embraced the technology, everyone could be making a living.  Now
they have to sue as a last fight on the way out.

Really, this is like a car that doesnt run on gas.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Brian Capouch" <brianc at palaver.net>
To: <asterisk-users at lists.digium.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 10, 2004 3:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Free Software or not -- that's the question /*
New subject */


> asterisk at lists.styx.org wrote:
> >
> > And why is this unnecessary cruft included in the source
> > tree? So that Digium can leverage the Free Software
> > community into developing proprietary software for
> > them.
> >
> > Am I way off the mark?
> >
>
> I think you're unfairly impugning Digium's motives.  And I also think
> you're--again--salting your post with enough innuendo that a reasonable
> person might suspect you of flame-baiting.
>
> I suscribe to the mailing lists of several OS VoIP solutions, as I'm
> sure do many others on this list.  There is nothing out there like
> asterisk, in terms of it functionality, or the body of minds that have
> collected to work on it.  I have recently found myself embarking on a
> mini-career doing fundamental-level VoIP training to network operators,
> technology freaks, and even some small-telco tech people. I take along a
> laptop with asterisk on it and do a little song-and-dance that shows off
> some of its gee-whiz features.
>
> It is not much of an exaggeration to say that almost always people's
> mouths drop open in amazement at what all that asterisk can do.  It's
> comical sometimes how affected people are.
>
> So I have all this functionality, and I have all the source code to it,
> and I can legally keep it forever at this (mostly happy) level of
> functionality, and if Digium drops off the face of the earth, I can
> start with what's there ("we can start with what's there"; I know I
> won't be alone) and keep going should that happen.
>
> So I can look at the same set of facts that you do, but in my mind
> Digium is not the nefarious would-be crook that you imply in your
> postings, but rather a brilliant and disruptive force upon the telco
> world.  And they are a *business,* and as many of the people reading
> this sentence are bound to know, one trick of the Open Source world is
> to figure out how to keep things open and free and at the same time how
> to keep bread on the table and enough cashflow to keep up with the
> technology (VoIP in this case) Joneses.
>
> I cannot guess your motives, but I'm pretty sure that I *do* know what
> Digium's motives are, and they are innocuous and altruistic instead of
> the way you portray them.
>
> Where are you trying to take this?
>
> B.
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