On 6 March 2015 at 17:11, Kevin Kofler <kevin.kof...@chello.at> wrote:
> Stephen John Smoogen wrote: > > It is a two way street. You own the device. They make the OS. Each is > > their own 'ball' if I am using your original metaphor appropriately. Each > > sees the other as the field the ball gets played on. If you don't like > the > > field that your ball is playing on you are free to ask for something to > be > > changed. If it doesn't get changed you can go find another field to play > > on. And vice versa. > > The idea that the OS manufacturers get to control what you do with your > machine is a totally proprietary attitude that absolutely goes against the > spirit of Free Software. This control-freakiness is exactly what we hate > about proprietary software! > > Kevin Kofler > > Here is my point . Here is where you guys think it is ----------<30 light years>----------------> . The point I am worried about is that Chris and you are treating this as a binary problem versus a spectrum one. I am more worried about the general case of the process of this 'request for change'. If all it is going to take to make a team do something would be a lot of email requests.. what happens when every person you ever peeved off starts a thread on moving KDE back to 3.5 because the current software interferes with their hardware. If it is their ball and you have to do whatever they say... I can see a LOT of petty wars brought up, fought and no one winning. [And no one say 'common sense' will prevent that. When most every email has been assailing the others decision as lack of common sense.. we already threw that out.] I would say that this is madness.. but I am afraid that someone will kick me in a well and say that this is Fedora. -- Stephen J Smoogen.
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