According to eWeek, Oracle is working to but both Sleepycat software<br>and JBoss. The URL:<br><br>http://blog.eweek.com/blogs/eweek/archive/2006/02/10/5864.aspx?kc=ewnws021306dtx1k0000599<br><br>This shows the importance of GPL. The kind of funny stuff that has been<br>going on (Oracle buying InnoDB) can't happen as easily with GPL software,<br>although a deep-pocketed company can certainly buy all the key<br>DEVELOPERS of a GPL'ed project (this has happened.) At least with<br>GPL'ed software, other people can come along and fill the void, or an<br>end-user can hire someone to fix bugs or add features.<br><br>There is a defensive strategy for technology users, that I like to call the<br>"good enough" principle: find a software stack that meets your needs,<br>is reliable and that you have the legal right to use, even though it may not<br>have all the latest "bells and whistles", keep a snapshot/image of this<br>"good enough" system, confine all software development to the
"good<br>enough" system until such time that you can migrate to a newer <br>"good enough" system. If you eventually have to migrate to the latest<br>wiz-bang hardware, you may have to re-compile the operating system<br>(GPL'ed code) and all the software (also GPL'ed.) This effectively keeps<br>you immune to the games proprietary software vendors play. It also <br>highlights the importance of the GPL'ed GNU tools. This strategy is<br>predicated on both Linux and GNU tools being able to port to the <br>new hardware.<br><br>Cheers,<br><br>Adrien<br><br><br><p>
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