Free is never free
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Interesting perspective. It does make a lot of sense too. I can definitely see how that would be the case. I guess as an IT person, it would make sense to apply some of the same ideas to ones career?
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@jmoore said in Free is never free:
@scottalanmiller said in Free is never free:
Those that do tend not to stay an SMB for very long.
Yeah that makes sense. If you make the right decisions over a long period of time then you should be growing steadily. Fascinating subject.
Yeah, statistically it's interesting because while the market is primarily SMBs, it's one of those things that changes over time.
It's like the stat about marriage. "50% of all marriages end in divorce." This makes it sounds like if you get married that you will have a 50/50 chance of divorce. But it leaves out that people who have gotten divorced before have a really high chance of getting divorced more than once. So while 50% of MARRIAGES end in divorce, only 25% of MARRIED PEOPLE get divorced!
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Oh for heavens sake guys.
This has nothing to do with whether open source is a bad thing. Re-read the article before you lampoon it.
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
Oh for heavens sake guys.
This has nothing to do with whether open source is a bad thing. Re-read the article before you lampoon it.
Please, what did we miss?
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
Oh for heavens sake guys.
This has nothing to do with whether open source is a bad thing. Re-read the article before you lampoon it.
They did and brought up valid critique... not sure why you think they are "lampoon"-ing it.
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"Paid software is awful because reasons"
Really tired of the herd like mentality.
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
Oh for heavens sake guys.
This has nothing to do with whether open source is a bad thing. Re-read the article before you lampoon it.
What was the point? It was presented that free was not free, but was likely costly and carried risks. But only risks that also applied to closed source or non-free software was presented. What did we miss?
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
Really tired of the herd like mentality.
But the herd mentality is what we were fighting. We provided logic and proof to an article that was misleading and clearly trying to herd people into fearing low cost simply because "free is never free" which is clearly false. It's too late to complain about people thinking for themselves, you attempted to herd, it didn't work. You think YOU are tired of this, we are tired of unfounded FUD being spread trying to push an agenda. We all felt it, hence the reaction. You didn't provide valid points, your post was misleading and incorrect.
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
Really tired of the herd like mentality.
They brought up valid critique to an article you wrote based on knowledge and information from the industry... and they are following the herd mentality?
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
Sometimes you do get a generous gift, sometimes you really do get a good deal but most of the time, its a trap for later down the line.
So, how are we to have taken this line, for example? I specifically asked you to provide examples of your post being true.
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@coliver said in Free is never free:
@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
Really tired of the herd like mentality.
They brought up valid critique to an article you wrote based on knowledge and information from the industry... and they are following the herd mentality?
And when they specifically question the industry standard herd mentality?
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
Really tired of the herd like mentality.
I definitely never said that, pretty sure Scott didn't either. My postings were specifically targeting the fact that paid software has every pitfall you mentioned, Plus all of the other problems paid software has.
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
No one said it was awful. There are many cases where paid software makes sense. But the fact that you paid for it often isn't a factor in if it makes sense or not, which is what you're arguing. "Because I paid for this piece of software it was the correct software for my company." Which is the wrong way to think about it.
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@breffni-potter said in Free is never free:
"Paid software is awful because reasons"
I think you only sense that this was said because you were trying to promote that "unpaid software is awful because reasons" and so you feel that pointing out the flaws in that statement led to the opposite statement. But that's not what happened. No one said paid software was bad, only that it carried all of the risks that you listed and a few more. It seems unlikely that you got the impression that anyone was saying that unless you were saying the opposite - had you only been trying to point out that open source still carries some risks then I think you would have seen the truth in the reactions that yes, it does, but closed source non-free software carries the same risks and more.
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I think everyone agrees that free software, or open source (your post seems to mix the two making it difficult to discuss as they are different things at different times) has risks, but this is a common thing that people trying to push an agenda say all the time, that things really aren't free and introduce costs and risks that exists not just in closed source but moreso in closed source as if they are unique to software being free. Then ignore that in comparison to other things, the cost might be not only low, but negative.
In this way, even doing "nothing" is not free, because it will cost you something. It's great that people want to always figure out the cost of action, but this only makes sense when we also include the cost of inaction. Assuming that we must do something, we have to determine a baseline against which to compare. Things that "cost" more than the baseline cost us money. Things below the baseline save us money.
Much of what we do in IT is designed to save companies money. So the concept of "Everything costs something" is misleading, as much of IT actually pays us to do it. This creates all kinds of conceptual problems when we approach things in this way. Because we start seeing costs where savings might exist. And that is hitting us here.
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If it doesn't cost you anything, often YOU are the product.... except with FOSS
With FOSS I dont think the same maxim holds true.
FreePBX, for example, is not like Facebook. FOSS means a group of developers contribute and benefit from a common set of code. Everyone wins, for the most part.
A free hosted service, like Facebook, isnt free. You are the product, your attention is sold to ad marketers.
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I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that you probably meant something like this.
Software that doesn't have a sales force that's willing to educate the buyers for what seems like no cost typically aren't what users end up wanting. Users really want a solution where they over pay for a product because that overpaying includes things they may or may not need.
It was clear that you were going after the fact that free software often doesn't have someone standing by to hold you hand to install something/figure out problems you run into during/after purchase.
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@bigbear said in Free is never free:
If it doesn't cost you anything, often YOU are the product.... except with FOSS
With FOSS I dont think the same maxim holds true.
FreePBX, for example, is not like Facebook. FOSS means a group of developers contribute and benefit from a common set of code. Everyone wins, for the most part.
A free hosted service, like Facebook, isnt free. You are the product, your attention is sold to ad marketers.
And think about people contributing to Facebook, they make posts for free. Or people posting on MangoLassi helping to fix someone's problem. It's really free.
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@scottalanmiller said in Free is never free:
@bigbear said in Free is never free:
If it doesn't cost you anything, often YOU are the product.... except with FOSS
With FOSS I dont think the same maxim holds true.
FreePBX, for example, is not like Facebook. FOSS means a group of developers contribute and benefit from a common set of code. Everyone wins, for the most part.
A free hosted service, like Facebook, isnt free. You are the product, your attention is sold to ad marketers.
And think about people contributing to Facebook, they make posts for free. Or people posting on MangoLassi helping to fix someone's problem. It's really free.
Well, it's free, but you have to look at ads. So you are being paid to be an audience.