| >Again, I am not against open source, as I actually am an heavy user of it. But based on personal experience there are only a few markets where I see a possibility to earn money from it, at a sustainable level for what is expected in western civilizations. So, you don't believe me when I say that you can get paid by a major corporation to work on open source software, to make that software do what the corporation wants, and to give [some of] those changes back to the community? I mean, these are plum jobs. Not something just anyone can get. But, these jobs are also where the majority of open-source software comes from. edit: If you are saying that it's difficult to be an "ideologically pure" open-source programmer and make a living from it, we are not in disagreement. My point is there are a lot of jobs in and around open-source, though; I've gotten paid to work with (and sometimes make small changes to) open-source software for almost half my life now. I in no way qualify for the 'plum' jobs I described where you work full-time writing said software. But eh, really, the same is true for most systems programming. Most programming work is CRUD apps. Only a few really good people get to work on systems programming, even in the proprietary software world. The open-source model means that those of us who keep shit running (or those who write CRUD apps) can modify small portions of more complex programs when we find problems that are within our ability to solve. |
Yes, that is my point.