Comment by MarsIronPI
1 day ago
Wow, so the only OSs with no money in them are the FOSS ones. Makes sense, though.
(No, at this point Android hardly counts as FOSS anymore.)
1 day ago
Wow, so the only OSs with no money in them are the FOSS ones. Makes sense, though.
(No, at this point Android hardly counts as FOSS anymore.)
Someone has to pay for it because it’s expensive to develop. There’s a ton of money in Linux just like there is in proprietary operating systems. There are like 4000-5000 kernel contributors and most of them are doing this work on some company’s payroll. There’s an enormous amount of resources going into Linux to the point where a proprietary OS couldn’t possibly keep up.
The real genius of Linux is the economic model, getting companies to buy into it and actually delivering value far in excess of what it costs anybody to contribute. It’s winning precisely because the value proposition cannot be matched.
Except many of those contributions never land upstream.
Hence why we usually with the cloud provider distros.
Example, what powers DGX OS isn't fully available to GNU/Linux users other than a binary blob.
That’s the wrong way to look at it. Instead, look at how much does land upstream. Linux moves at an incredible pace.
Edit: BTW the figure I cited are contributors to mainline.
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> Example, what powers DGX OS isn't fully available to GNU/Linux users other than a binary blob.
What do you mean? Are they violating the GPL by not releasing the modified source?
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