Would you pay for Open Source Software

Recently Peter Toft wrote a blog entry (in Danish) entitled Hånden på hjertet: Vil du betale for Open Source?, which roughly translates into
Honestly, would you pay for Open Source?

The blog post and the associated comments are all in Danish, but those who answered yes can be split into three groups (I’m generalizing a bit here, read the comments, if you want the details)

  • Yes, and I do occasionally. Either through one-time donations or buying merchandise.
  • Yes, and I have some sort of monthly subscription/membership, like jointhegame.kde.org/ or FSF.
  • Yes, but I don’t know where to throw my money.
    If I had to support the development of all the (open source) software I use, it would ruin me, because I use so many open source programs. If there was a central place I could pay, and have my money distributed, that would work for me.

I myself belong in the first category, mainly through merchandise purchases.
But I must admit that I do share some of the thoughts of the people in the last category. If I want to donate my money to pay for developer hours and I don’t want the hassle of shopping around, to locate and distribute money to all the many projects deserving support, where do I go?

So I would like to bring Peters question to the wider audience of Planet Ubuntu. (If you found this blog post through some other means, feel free to share your thoughts as well).

Would you pay for Open Source Software?

If yes, what would/do you pay for?
A specific product, monthly subscriptions, merchandise or something else?

If no, why not?
Is free the most important aspect of Free Software?
Are there to many places to throw your money, so you choose not to at all?

Would you be interested in donating to some sort of foundation, whose sole purpose it was to pay Open Source developers to work full time on what ever project they were working on?
Photo by: Philip Taylor

Ubuntu og de andre distributioner

Jeg så Stefano‘s blog indlæg hvor han vha. Google. trends undersøger forskellige Linux distributioners popularitet over tid (ud fra frekvensen af søgninger på Google).

Jeg tænkte jeg ville gøre det samme, bare for Danmark. Lad mig med det samme gøre klart at jeg godt ved at dette på ingen måde er videnskabeligt og der er en masse fejlkilder. Men så længe man ikke glemmer det kan man jo godt lege lidt alligevel…

Her er resultatet man får når man søger på de fire distributioner som Stefano også har brugt i sit indlæg:

Her i Danmark ser det også ud som om Ubuntu er den mest populære distribution ud fra denne Google trend. Det bemærkes dog at Ubuntu først har slået igennem senere herhjemme – først i starten af 2005 – i modsætning til 3. kvartal af 2004 for den internationale søgning. Det ses også at Gentoo er nærmest lige så populær som Fedora og SUSE i Danmark – i modsætning til den internationale søgning, hvor Gentoo ligger lidt under de andre.

Jeg tror ikke man kan tale om at Ubuntu har skadet de andre distributioner, men der er nok ikke tvivl om at Ubuntu er blevet den mest populære distribution og det har sikkert også resulteret i nogle brugere der er skiftet fra f.eks. SUSE til Ubuntu. Men det er der jo heller ikke noget galt i og så længe flere bruger open source software mener jeg at indbyrdes ‘religions krige’ er spild af tid… Så længe folk bruger Emacs som deres editor er jeg fuldstændig ligeglad med om de kører Ubuntu, Debian, Gentoo, Fedora, SUSE, BSD eller noget helt syvende :)

Debian GNU/Linux 4.0 released

Debian GNU/Linux 4.0 released

I’m not running Debian currently, but it does have a special place in my heart. Debian was one of the first Linux distributions that I ran on a more permanent basis and my current Linux distribution, Ubuntu, is based largely on the work of the Debian community.

So, I guess what I want to say is a warm welcome to Debian Etch and a big congratulations to all the volunteers who made it happen.

Intet er så slemt at det ikke er godt for noget

Min hjemme pc røg sig en tur ved en dårlig blanding af en strøm-afbrydelse og en fejl jeg lavede. Så jeg har brugt det meste af dagen idag på at geninstallere den. Det betyder at det hele ikke virker, men betyder også at jeg kan gennemgå hvad jeg skal beholde og ikke skal – og at jeg bl.a. har fået installeret apache2 og fundet ud af at der er en gallery pakke til debian. Cool stuff.