http://www.perlmonks.org?node_id=90451


in reply to Microsoft is against Perl!?

An interesting scenario:
Given that Microsoft has funded ActiveState for a while, and now, now ActiveState is popular, the following conditions apply:

Given the above conditions, it's reasonably safe to assume the following:
Now, if Microsoft rocks the boat and states that Perl is not to be installed/finds some way to break the way that Perl operates on Windows in a patch, it is feasible in a good many cases that the following will occur:

As far as I can see it, Microsoft are trying the old trick of 'forcing the issue' and trying to break the competition.
However, in this case, the competition can be tried for free, is already established, and heavily invested in.
So, it's feasible that MS, in their hurry to try and shut away the Open Source phenomenon, they are in fact forcing people to consider it as an alternative.
I'd find it very funny if that's how it worked out. :)
As an aside, in a sense, it's true that Open Source is Viral, not just in the licensing, but in it's development. People who become exposed to it, often embrace it (contract it) to some extent, and it grows on them as they become used to it. They then mention that it works, and introduce others to the concept. Some of these 'infections' produce mutation (new coders adding to the open source, and improving it's fitness)
Microsoft, on the other hand, I think of as a 'Cancerous' development. They take existing methods, and alter them to operate in a way other than they previously did, wreaking havoc in an otherwise established system, often completely breaking it.
There is no 'infection' and rapid mutation to increase fitness of cancer. It just grows, and breaks more that isn't cancerous.

Anyhow, maybe that's a little harsh/dark, but it's how I feel about them these days.

Malk

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Re: Re: Microsoft is against Perl!?
by spacewarp (Pilgrim) on Jun 25, 2001 at 20:51 UTC
    Microsoft, on the other hand, I think of as a 'Cancerous' development. They take existing methods, and alter them to operate in a way other than they previously did, wreaking havoc in an otherwise established system, often completely breaking it. There is no 'infection' and rapid mutation to increase fitness of cancer. It just grows, and breaks more that isn't cancerous.

    I agree with this completely. The first linux I played with was RedHat 5.2. I've since used 6.0 and 6.2, and 7.0, and through all of them, I have seen no major usability changes. I've been able to effortlessly switch between them.

    So, it happens that I'm working on an NT server and the word comes from on high to upgrade the machine to 2000.

    Win2k, "built on NT technology", cost us two days of downtime while we tried to figure out differences in the OS. Admittedly, we might not have been as prepared as we should have been, but honestly! If they can't even maintain the usability of their *own* operating system, how they expect to keep their customer base?


    What's more, I'd extend the analogy. Micro$oft isn't just cancerous with regard to the software they produce, but with the industry as a whole. I can't help but be reminded of a medical battle, watching the anti-trust case procedings. We try to treat it, the treatment doesn't work, the cancer worsens. I just hope that this cancer isn't ultimately fatal to its host.

    Spacewarp

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