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posted by janrinok on Thursday November 17 2016, @07:28AM   Printer-friendly
from the temperature-in-Hell-plummets dept.

http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/11/microsoft-yes-microsoft-joins-the-linux-foundation/

NEW YORK—At its first Connect event in 2013, Microsoft released Visual Studio 2013. In 2014, it announced the open sourcing of .NET, and in 2015, the open sourcing of the Visual Studio Code editor. The big news this year? Microsoft, the company that has built an empire on proprietary, closed-source software, has joined the Linux Foundation as a platinum member.

Microsoft has been a big contributor to Linux over the past several years, primarily focusing on improving support for its Hyper-V hypervisor. Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation, said that in becoming a member, "Microsoft is better able to collaborate with the open source community to deliver transformative mobile and cloud experiences to more people."

Microsoft's increasing commitment to open source has been met with some cynicism (and please, beloved commenters—try to refrain from "embrace, extend, extinguish" posts, as the very concept is preposterous when it comes to Linux), but with projects such as Visual Studio Code and .NET, is starting to win hearts and minds. The company does appear to be a reasonably good open source citizen, not merely publishing source code repositories that are occasionally updated from an internal development branch, but actually performing development in the open, accepting community contributions, and seeking community consensus when it comes to new features.


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by Thexalon on Thursday November 17 2016, @02:41PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Thursday November 17 2016, @02:41PM (#428114)

    I don't think they're going for Embrace-Extend-Extinguish here. I think they're going for a different strategy, which I'm going to call Stupify-Sabotage-Sink. It works something like this:

    Stupify - Throw previously unseen sums of money at open-source developers and organizations, so they'll give you a voice in the discussions of what to do next.

    Sabotage - In the discussions of what to do next, convince them to take foolish system architectures and/or poorly designed UIs, so that the developers involved with the project will waste thousands of hours on something that either doesn't help or actively make things worse.

    Sink - After they've wasted boatloads of time on pointless coding, use how far behind the times they are as the reason why everyone should use your spying mechanism^W^W operating system.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
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