Bill Moran wrote: > So, I think it's a good plan from every angle. Furthermore, I think that > anyone who doesn't think it's a good plan either hasn't reviewed it > thoroughly, or has some strange axe to grind.
There actually is one potentially negative downside I can think of. Right now, it's trivial to evaluate the software - download and play. One of the best bits about free software is that there is no risk at all in trialling software beyond the time spent. By adding in this barrier, there's more hassle involved getting the software and getting a functional first impression (at least for platforms where binaries aren't readily available or compilable elsewhere). One not very well thought out idea - some kind of virtual machine setup, or equally targeted installation, that would make it trivial to evaluate the software, without easily letting itself be installed for a production use. Beyond that, it boils down to a PR issue of making it very crystal clear exactly what is and isn't free. -- Frank Sweetser fs at wpi.edu | For every problem, there is a solution that WPI Senior Network Engineer | is simple, elegant, and wrong. - HL Mencken GPG fingerprint = 6174 1257 129E 0D21 D8D4 E8A3 8E39 29E3 E2E8 8CEC ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express Download DB2 Express C - the FREE version of DB2 express and take control of your XML. No limits. Just data. Click to get it now. http://sourceforge.net/powerbar/db2/ _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users