<disclaimer>I am NOT trying to represent MontaVista here in any way.. I'd
have these same issues if I was working for them or not. I really didn't
want to bring MontaVista into this due to previous incidents.</disclaimer>
I suppose you could make similiar claims. However, there is a very
important and subtle difference. MontaVista is NOT in any position to
tell developers using 'MontaVista' kernels that they must STOP using our
kernel, since it is GPL'ed.
Bitmover, however, is VERY MUCH in a position to tell developers to STOP
using Bitkeeper. As a matter of fact, it's in your license.
> Regardless, to put minds at ease, we're fine. While we would welcome
> more revenue (who wouldn't?), we've never had a layoff in our 4 year
> history and aren't planning any. In addition, we've managed to support
> you and the PPC team for almost 2 years without it being a problem,
> I'm not sure why it should become a problem now. Oh yeah, tack on MySQL
> as well, that's been under BK for longer than Linux/PPC. Of course, if
> you are worried about it, since Monta Vista has gotten so much benefit
> out of BK, they could help ensure the continued development by buying
> a support contract. Hint, hint.
>
> What if we do go out of business? What's wrong with that? If we go
> under, BK reverts to a pure GPL license. That can't be a problem,
> right?
But potentially not for 6 months, during which time the use of bitkeeper
is legally dubious, and probably not possible without altering the binary
(i.e., if openlogging.org goes down), opening up another mess.
> Seems to me it's a win/win. We either stick around and support it because
> the business model is sound, or we go under and you get it like any other
> open source product. Yeah, it's better if we stick around because BK
> is pretty complex, but if the open source crowd can handle the kernel,
> gcc, X, etc, they can handle the BK source base, so I really don't see
> the problem here. What am I missing?
If you don't stick around, OR get unhappy with us using BK, we have a
problem. Yes, you have some very nice fallbacks, which I thank you for,
but the fallbacks are still going to cause a great deal of pain.
The real problem is what if you have 300 kernel developers that suddenly
start costing you support costs of $5,000 a month?
According to the license, that's only 4 months before the 'group of
licensees' using BK for the kernel cost you $20,000, at which point the
BKL allows you to cut them off.
If Bitmover ever has to tell someone to quit using BK under the BKL, that,
IMHO, is a lose/lose situation, for everyone.
-- Troy Benjegerdes | master of mispeeling | 'da hozer' | hozer@drgw.net -----"If this message isn't misspelled, I didn't write it" -- Me ----- "Why do musicians compose symphonies and poets write poems? They do it because life wouldn't have any meaning for them if they didn't. That's why I draw cartoons. It's my life." -- Charles Schulz - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/