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Re: [Fsfe-uk] Fwd: OSS Watch inaugural conference, 11 December 2003


From: Andrew Savory
Subject: Re: [Fsfe-uk] Fwd: OSS Watch inaugural conference, 11 December 2003
Date: Fri, 28 Nov 2003 11:54:34 +0000

Hi,

On 28 Nov 2003, at 10:45, Alex Hudson wrote:

Personally, I would think that an "open source" conference should not
have proprietary vendors.

This is the source of the misunderstanding. We're not talking about an "open source" conference - that's the sort of thing AFFS should organise ;-) - we're talking about a conference run by an advisory service which is all about informing people of the choices involved in using open source software. One of those choices is most certainly "don't use it", and so it makes a lot of sense to have a representative of the alternative there to talk about it.

I genuinely believe that an honest representative of proprietary software would have an awful lot to contribute to any open source conference, since a major part of switching to open source is interoperability. Proprietary vendors are as well placed as anyone to tell us how easy it is(n't) to integrate their products and OSS products in a mixed economy.

 If people want information on proprietary
software, then there are plenty of conferences for them - people are
more than able to get both sides of the story.

Well, this conference is about giving them both sides of the story, so let's not try to boot out one side, eh?

 I think the point was
that it's unfair that a conference about free software would also have
to talk about proprietary software to be seen as balanced when the
reverse is not true.

But, you know, I think this is actually a very flawed argument (and not just because we're not talking about a conference about free software). One of the best things about Free Software is that it's about a "level playing field", proving that we can compete on quality and service rather than by lock-in and unfair trade practices. By inviting "the opposition" to our events, we show that we have nothing to fear and nothing to hide and that we feel we can compete with them on any turf.

And don't forget that to be successful you have to know your enemy. Most evangelists seem to have spent too little time in the real world lately, and are far less effective as a result.

I agree totally that to be balanced, you need to recognise that
alternatives exist. I would be worried, though, if Microsoft were able
to use the platform at OSSWatch conference to promote their
technologies. I don't believe that's balance, or recognising the
alternative - neural promotion of free software doesn't require
promotion of proprietary software.

Like I say, it's about representing the mixed economy, and you can only do that with a mixed selection of speakers.

I like the side of "neural promotion" though. Tell me more! :-)


Andrew.

--
Andrew Savory, Managing Director, Luminas Limited
Tel: +44 (0)870 741 6658  Fax: +44 (0)700 598 1135
Web: http://www.luminas.co.uk/
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