Ask Shawn Gordon About theKompany 91
Lots of software houses write software for GNU/Linux, but one company that's
taking a different approach to products (and an unusual approach to licenses, too) is theKompany.com. TheKompany have released many open source projects, like PyQT/PyKDE, a Python binding to QT and KDE, and KoreLib, cross-platform C++ library for developing modular applications. They also combine Open Source licensed projects with
plugins that they're selling: Aethera, Kivio, and closed-source products: Data Architect, (ERD & advanced SQL Editor), Kapital (a Quicken clone
for Linux), among other things. Here is your chance to ask theKompany CEO Shawn Gordon questions about theKompany, Open Source, and the Linux from the commercial eye. We'll forward the best questions on to Shawn, and print his answers as soon as he gets them back to us.
My Question: (Score:1)
Thank you
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profit? (Score:1)
I have a question. (Score:1)
These are serious questions. I need serious answers.
Kapital (Score:2)
Economics (Score:3)
KKKK (Score:1)
Increasing user base (Score:5)
How do you plan on continually increasing your user base? Obviously there are many GNU/Linux users thirsty for solid end-user applications such as Kapital. But how do you plan on getting to current Windows users? Do you plan future ports of your apps? Or do you have an idea of how to get more Microsoft customers to move to Linux and use your apps (possibly a model others can follow)?
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Business models (Score:5)
Following the attacks on open source by agents of Microsoft, claiming it's anti-business, there's been quite a bit of discussion on this site concerning business models for companies dealing in open source.
I am interested that your company does both open- and closed-source programming. My question is: How does your business model balance the benefits of open-source programming with the requirement to be a profitable software business? In your opinion, is it possible for a for-profit company to work purely with open-source, and sell support (or whatever)?
Let's Have Some Fun (Score:4)
Question... (Score:5)
Kould you komment on the klearly komplikated task of selekting produkt names that konform to kurrent konventions?
Kordially,
AAiP
GPL "virus". (Score:3)
No need to do that (Score:1)
Don't print them, just post a story here.
Cheers,
--fred
Re:KKKK (Score:1)
Hence, right-wing names for produkts provides needed balance.
Re:profit? (Score:1)
However, one has to wonder whether he'll take Intuit's lead and charge folks $20 for an annual incremental upgrade.
Question regarding differences with GNOME... (Score:1)
Why not Open Source? (Score:4)
Re:GPL virus (Score:1)
Or, rather, if you have a significant enhancement that scratches an itch, does the GPL force you to first duplicate the itch in order to scratch the thing?
Business Model (Score:3)
Promoting Ease of Use (Score:5)
A question: (Score:5)
I congratulate you upon creation of several pieces of software for the Linux market, and you have successfully blended open and closed source software; however, do you think you can be profitable in a community that sometimes rejects closed source projects? Has the fascination with Free/free software hindered your business plans or has the creation of Free code libraries/bases kept good PR with Linux users while allowing profit to coexist?
CMcTortoise
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OS Target (Score:5)
Re:profit? (Score:2)
J
Competing with open source? (Score:5)
Basically, why would I buy Kapital if I can use GnuCash for free? And if it doesn't do everything I want, its opensource and I can add it. It seems like a very stiff competition. How is your company planning on attacking it?
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KIllustrator vs. Adobe? (Score:1)
One one hand, the name infringement is pretty obvious, and the legal costs are (sorta-kinda) understandable considering Adobe's financial problems. While on the other, going after open source programmers for legal fees for legal services used against them is rather harsh.
What's your take on it?
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Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Re:Business models (Score:2)
Does your willingness to build on software that is free/open come from a purely practical motivation, or do you also have social/political reasons for doing so?
If you do support some of the social/political motivations for developing free/open software, how does that play into your decision to do some of your development in the proprietary model? (e.g., how would you feel if your code ended up in the hands of a BigCorp willing to be obnoxious with its 'ownership'.)
Re:KKKK (Score:2)
Re:Question regarding differences with GNOME... (Score:2)
Re:Question regarding differences with GNOME... (Score:1)
2) KDE had started to build around CORBA (using MICO) but abandoned it for a simpler, lighter-weight protocol. CORBA may prove be a better choice in the long run or it may be overkill. But, right now, KDE has been built around DCOP and KParts for nearly a year while it looks like GNOME 2.0 still won't be putting Bonobo into widespread use.
3) Waldo Bastian had a straightforward comment [slashdot.org] in yesterday's article on Mono:
We try to make KDE fit the needs of our users. I haven't seen a single request for .NET from our users. In fact, I haven't seen a single person who could tell me what it is, what it does, what problem it tries to solve or for what kind of things it should be used.
what ever happened to the database libraries you g (Score:1)
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Why would a company specialize on Corvette parts when the Ford market is so much bigger?
Re:OS Target (Score:1)
Since it's GPL'd - you can use it...
YoGy
Re:Linux in trouble (Score:2)
Aren't you afraid.. (Score:1)
stability and speed (Score:1)
What I would like to see, is a desktop that is as full featured as KDE, but faster, and more effecient. Stability is a must. This will also help corperations and home users to want to move to linux. They can enjoy the end user experience.
What is the Kompany doing to improve speed and responsiveness to this desktop environment? Is speed and stability a top priority? I'll be honest, it doesn't look that way from an end users perspective.
My Question (Score:1)
Jason
yes, this is a joke
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
The things that I find nicely with Kapital that it's pretty affordable package, WITH support (not mailing lists support - subscribe, beg for help, hope to get some help, unsubscribe), and what I really liked is that theKompany asks me what features do I want in the next version!
Sure, with GnuCash you get the sources, but you'll have to learn the code, asks if your planned addition is not going to conflict with the guy from China who is announced that he's adding this feature, but he is not free right now as he got other things to do, and on top of that - it's not sure that your addition would be welcome by the project leader..
So yes, I do know that there are advantages for open source - but there are sides for the coin, and I really don't mind paying $25 for an application which gives me support and asking me for what features I want..
YoGy
Re:Let's Have Some Fun (Score:2)
If I had two wishes I could make this holiday season, the first would be for all the children of the world to join hands and sing in the spirit of harmony and peace. And the second would be for 30 million dollars a month to be given to me, tax-free in a Swiss bank account.
You know, if I had three wishes I could make this holiday season, the first, of course, would be for all the children of the world to get together and sing, the second would be for the 30 million dollars every month to me, and the third would be for encompassing power over every living being in the entire universe.
And if I had four wishes that I could make this holiday season, the first would be the crap about the kids definitely, the second would be for the 30 million, the third would be for all the power, and the fourth would be to set aside one month each year to have an extended 31-day orgasm, to be brought out slowly by Rosanna Arquette and that model Paulina-somebody, I can't think of her name. Of course my lovely wife can come too and she's behind me one hundred percent here, I guarantee it.
Wait a minute, maybe the sex thing should be the first wish, so if I made that the first wish, because it could all go boom tomorrow, then what do you got, y'know? No, no, the kids, the kids singing would be great, that would be nice. But wait a minute, who am I kidding? They're not going to be able to get all those kids together. I mean, the logistics of the thing is impossible, more trouble than it's worth!
So -- we reorganize! Here we go. First, the sex thing. We go with that. Second, the money. No, we got with the power second, then the money. And then the kids. Oh wait, oh jeez, I forgot about revenge against my enemies! Okay, I need revenge against all my enemies, they should die like pigs in hell! That would be my fourth wish. And, of course, my fifth wish would be for all the children of the world to join hands and sing together in the spirit of harmony and peace.
Thank you everybody and Merry Christmas. --Steve Martin
parent not a troll (Score:1)
You and I may know about the problems of the MS way, but some people reading this don't. They might not be aware of all the trouble it was to free (re write from scratch!) the source code to X, Netscape, BSD and on and on so that everyone could use it without paying fees, signing non disclosure agreements and surrendering all rights in general. To them, some of this MS BS might make sense. Let the Kompany add it's best to the message.
rapid application development and linux (Score:2)
as a commercial developer, do you consider RAD tools to be as important to linux as they have been to windows? and where are we in terms of having the tools a commercial developer needs to push product out the door?
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
Second, does it matter if your addition is accepted by the project leader in an open source product? Not in the least. Make your changes, make them available to everyone, and then sit back and let the masses decide.
You're making it sound more complex than it is, just to make a point.
Re:Promoting Ease of Use (Score:2)
User friendliness is all relative. As for myself, I find DOS/Windows very hard to use myself, as compared to Linux. A lot of day-to-day operations/commands have to be performed in an MS-way, and I can't customize. And I find that very hard to use. When I want to uninstall an application from my Windows machine, I can never be sure if all components have been uninstalled properly. Try to dig into that system32 directory to see...
We bought a house two-years ago, and there's already a RainBird sprinkler installed. There are only 8 buttons on the control panel. But the user manual has been lost. And guess what, I found that sprinkler control panel extremely hard to program, and this is a product that is targeted to everage person out there. I have been able to program that sprinkler properly only after I downloaded the user manual of that model that has been discontinued.
The point is, there's no such thing as "absolute" user friendliness.
Re:Let's Have Some Fun (Score:2)
how you spend your time (Score:4)
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
>Okay you're falling into possible dependency hype. If you use any of the more recent distributions of Suse, Debian, or RH, installing Gnucash 1.6 is trivial. In addition, the GNUcash developers are putting out a CD with everything on it (all libraries, etc).
It's not that trivial! If you don't have Gnome installed (lets say just for the case that you hate all Gnome stuff and KDE and you just use Window Maker) - you still got dependecies problems- both in Redhat, in SuSE. CD shipment - well, shipment costs - so lets say CD + S.H costs $15 - what does this matter if I just add $10 and get direct support without mailing lists chaos (and trust me - it is chaos for end user)..
second, does it matter if your addition is accepted by the project leader in an open source product? Not in the least. Make your changes, make them available to everyone, and then sit back and let the masses decide.
yes it does - lets say that I added a whiz bang features that the project leaders didn't want to include - I have 2 choices: 1. publish somewhere my additions and hope everyone uses it, or 2. ask the linux distributions to add it - think it's that easy??
YoGy
BlackAdder Development (Score:3)
I took a look at BlackAdder, but was quite dissapointed in the actual functionality (Python/Qt integration is buggy) and available database widget set. When do you think that BlackAdder will have the kind of high-powered RAD functionality offered by products like JBuilder, Forte and Visual Studio?
-Josh
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
YoGy got few points here - but I wish both products will succseed..
Why are you always talking about Ximian ? (Score:3)
Re:Why not Free Software? (Score:3)
Does theKompany believe that software should be Free? Also is that a reflection of the KDE community or a minority stance?
--Ben
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
I use GNOME, so I have no clue how or even why you'd want to use Gnucash with KDE. I'll restate my above fact so it's more clear: "If you are a GNOME user and are running a recent distro, installing Gnucash 1.6 is fairly trivial (although bandwidth may be required)."
Second, what you state was exactly what I said. They're are plenty of times I've wanted a particular feature added to something that I did myself. Stick the code (easily added via `patch`) on an ftp site or even sourceforge, email the devel list about what my feature is and why the project admin and I disagree with it's inclusion in the "official source" and then sit back and let nature take it's course. If you prefer a more proactive approach, fork the project source and run your own version.
Partnering with Financial Institutions (Score:3)
Have any of these instituions been completely unwilling to cooperate?
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
KDE is great IMHO, but does that means I won't use any software just because it's written with GTK or uses GNOME libraries? why? I belive both Gnome and KDE got advantages and disadvantages - and I think most people here agree with me on this point..
So, for example - I preffer XChat over KSIRC, why? because I think it's great! I use Jpilot instead of Kpilot. Why? because it got more features and it's more mature and enhanced, compared to what Kpilot gives me today...
As for your second point - I kind of agree, but I still prefer sometimes the way to direct an email to the project maintainer then the mailing lists..
Re:Linux in trouble (Score:2)
Re:what ever happened to the database libraries yo (Score:2)
http://www.trolltech.com/company/announce/30pre
Database Programming
Qt 3.0 will include a platform- and database-independent API for accessing SQL databases. The API has both ODBC support and database-specific drivers for Oracle, PostgreSQL and MySQL databases, and custom drivers may be added. Database-aware controls that provide automatic synchronization between GUI and database are included in Qt 3.0. The Qt Designer has full support for these new controls, resulting in a RAD solution for database applications
The truth is more important than the facts.
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Project Status (Score:5)
First, I would like to bestow a heartfelt "thanks" to you and your company for all the wonderful work you do. Too often, you've had to defend yourself against the trolls who don't get economics 101. It's not often enough that I see people thanking you for the contributions you have given us. Thank you.
My question lies in the status of your projects. I'm sure some people here on Slashdot don't know about all of the software that you're working on. It would be neat if you could give us a status report on your projects as well as a brief summary of what they do and what we can expect in the future.
I'm especially interested in the integration of your work with KOffice. I know that you donated the base version of Kivio to KOffice (again, thanks) and I was wondering if you had similar plans for Aethera, Kugar and/or Rekall.
Best regards,
David
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
Um, because there isn't a program of comparable functionality and price point available as a native KDE app yet, maybe? As to how, it's not that difficult - it's not like KDE and Gnome disagree on the basics of existence. In the worst case you just have a lot of duplicated libraries around. My Mandrake box came with both KDE and Gnome apps on a KDE desktop; after switching to the Ximian Gnome desktop the KDE apps still work just fine.
I don't understand folks who feel the need to go with one desktop or the other - use the best of both worlds, people! Heck Netscape/Mozilla doesn't look exactly native to either desktop, so you're already going to have to master the awe-inspiring difficulty of two different widget sets, three sets is only marginally worse. Plus, with themes you can make Gnome look like KDE, or vice versa.
My question (Score:5)
KDE / Closed Source (Score:2)
In fact, that's part of the reason I like it, and by the same token I'm glad to see your company making software even though it's closed source. (Certainly VMWare has shown us that closed source software can be equally high-quality to open source, though that's not generally the case.)
Re:Promoting Ease of Use (Score:2)
Dude, give me a break. Compare Compiling and installing nvidia drivers by hand, to sticking in a CDROM and pointing and clicking. Compare using
xvidtune to stretch your X viewable area to the extents of your monitor, to right clicking on the desktop and pointing and clicking. Compare using apt or rpm (and dont quote me frontends to those, because frontend's SUCK) to sticking in a CD and pointing and clicking.
"But you have to reboot for all of those!" I hear you say. Is it easier for Joe Idiot to reboot, or to remember to su every time he needs to do one of the above?
A lot of day-to-day operations/commands have to be performed in an MS-way, and I can't customize.
Now ask yourself how many of those "day-to-day" commands are A) caused by using linux or B) not of any interest to Joe AOL. All of them.
My point is that the target audience for linux is not the desktop user, it's the power user who wants to hack everything he sees. To me, attempting to jam "user friendliness" into an OS that has never meant or required user friendliness is like jamming a square piece into a round hole.
(And I have one of those rainbirds too. I think they fucked up that thing's design bad. They attemped to make it for every body to use, but they failed. Bad design doesn't prove your point about user-friendliness though.)
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Which superpower would you choose ? (Score:1)
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
Those are reasonable concerns to have about an open source project, and I've had those problems with other projects in the past. I would like to point out that in my experience the gnucash folks have been very good about accepting user submissions, even as far as providing some hand-holding towards getting it into shape as far as coding standards, etc. So those concerns may not be as applicable to this particular project.
The install is definitely a bitch, though, if you're trying to stay on the bleeding edge of development. For most people, it's probably worth it to wait and pay RH, SuSe, or Debian to package it.
Is a common Office XML file format desirable? (Score:2)
I've read a lot of OpenOffice.org documentation and it looks very promising. Do you see any limitations to the way they do it or difficulties in merging paths?
A perfect world in Office software for me would be a variety of applications, but everyone working on easily interchangeable data (forget filters altogether).
Thanks, dara
Oh c'mon, you can't ask a question like that... (Score:1)
How far and how high can you fly? And also, how fast?
When you're invisible, does that also imply that you are silent?
And does the strength of 100 men bit carry over into all parts of the male anatomy?
You can't ask such a relevant and important question without providing the necessary details to enable us to make an informed decision.
Re:Why not Free Software? (Score:1)
this seems particularly notable given that GNOME was created in part to make a Free desktop, not just an Open Source desktop.
Yes, and Gnome shows this by having for-profit corporation (Ximian) backed by venture-capital as central part of all things Gnome. Way to go! *cough* not *cough*...
KDE is free desktop licensed under GPL. It's toolkit (Qt) is licensed under GPL. Why continue talking about is KDE free or not, and what does KDE developers feel about it. It's just as free as Gnome is (without "pollution" of venture capital though), learn to live with it.
*WooOooOoSH!* (Score:1)
Amongst our major weapons are fear, dount... fear, and uh, uh, uhm, doubt.
Re:Why not Free Software? (Score:2)
Well lets compare Ximian to the Kompany:
Ximian's desktop IS Free. They sell it too. And they want to make money. Nothing wrong with that.
Difference is that they dont distribute non-Free code (so far). They believe in selling Free software, whereas the Kompany believes in selling commercial software ( they also give away some Free software for free ).
Get it?
Re:OS Target (Score:1)
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
Simply count the number of people who have the ability to add their own features to a pre-existing software project. Now, count the number of people who DON'T have that ability - I'll count myself in there as well. My hunch is that the number of people who CAN'T do such a seemingly basic task (as you seem to think) FAR outweigh the number of people who can.
There's your formula for competition.
Don't begrudge these people the opportunity to make a profit. If they make a good product, let them charge for it. Yes, there's great open source stuff out there, but that doesn't mean that that's the only way things should be. If the price/performance is good on this, it'll grow, and take off. *Some* shrinkwrapped products in stores, things like financial software, word processors, etc., is good because it keeps the idea of Linux in front of average Joe user shopping at Best Buy.
Why KDE? (Score:1)
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
So as long as a sufficient number of people who can add features do, the free program will match or better the commercial program.
To work out which will turn out better needs to take into account a lot of factors,
commercial:
investment into the project,
return on investment,
profit margin,
etc.
free:
community involvement,
time investment by community,
skill and experience of community
both:
code architecture,
usefulness of supporting libraries.
your formula is way too simple.
Re:Question... (Score:1)
Hey give him a break. At least he doesn't work for Krusty Klown Kollege.
AtheOS (Score:2)
I've notices previously that Korelib boasts support for AtheOS, which amazed when I noticed it. Now as someone who has been using AtheOS since 0.1.4, I have a few questions:
o What exactly is Korelib?
o How and why did you include AtheOS as a supported platform?
o What are your future plans for The Kompany and AtheOS?
Ooh ohh I got a funny one (Score:2)
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
Re:Question... (Score:1)
--
PaxTech
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
because some companies have a good vision of what's to come.
Re:OS Target (Score:1)
which supports all your base and platform, does it belong to you?
i'm sorry, i've been working for 24 hours straight and this seems funny to me, is it?
Re:I have a question. (Score:1)
Derived from Venture (an attempt) and capitalism (an economic system based on individuals' attempts to aggregate capital).
Venture capitalism is a system in which persons with large amounts of money invest in a company which is just getting on its feet, giving it a chance even though it is not as yet generating profit.
A venture capitalist takes calculated risks. Usually, venture capitalists try to find new, untapped areas, and invest smaller amounts of money to, so to speak, "test the waters."
It seems to me that a small software Kompany would not need a heluva lot of capital. I mean, they don't need big buildings & stuff...
Aethera/Magellan (Score:1)
KDE is NOT as free as Gnome (Score:2)
The GUI toolkit is almost as fundamental to applications developers as the C library and the kernel. Imagine where Linux would be today if everybody developing a commercial application for Linux would have to pay several thousand dollars to some small company somewhere? I think most of the commercial supports of Linux would have gone with BSD or something else instead; even developing for Windows is cheaper than that. Well, dual licensing the GUI toolkit is very close to that situation.
I fully agree with the goals of the GPL. But in some cases, for strategic reasons, another license is more sensible. The core GUI toolkit used for a desktop seems to me is such a case. That's why I think KDE's reliance on a GPL'ed toolkit ultimately dooms it to failure, no matter how nice the desktop itself may be.
Re:Promoting Ease of Use (Score:2)
However, the times that I've tried it, I've quickly reverted. There may be special circumstances in which that is a desireable thing to do, but in my experience it is much more trouble than it is worth.
OTOH, I'm quite curious about one fact: My Linux screen seems to hold more than my windows screen at the same resolution. I really haven't been able to figure this out. Originally I thought it was because my Linux machine had a better monitor, but then I switched my Windows machine over to dual-boot, and the Linux screen still held more. This has to be some sort of illusion, but I don't know what.
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:2)
The open source version takes a long time to get to 80% functionality. Then it becomes popular with a large mass of people, some of whom are able to contribute. So then it starts to improve rapidly. Also, during the initial period there are lots of changes of direction as sub-optimal choices are re-made into more optimal versions, and flexibility is moved closer to the core. So when it takes off, there are few radical changes needed. And the eventual program is more flexible, more powerful, etc. than the commercial one would have been. But it takes it a long time to become as easy to use, and well documented.
This means that there is a fairly large space of time available to the commercial product. It the commercial company is seen as friendly by the community, and the prices are seen as reasonable, then there is less backing for the free version, which gives them a bit longer.
And, of course, this is an oversimplified abstraction from the process. But that's one part of what's happening.
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Re:KDE is NOT as free as Gnome (Score:2)
XFree is now working on CygWin, or nearly so. The X Window version of Qt is GPL. Gtk is supposed to be ported to windows (my successes with it have been indifferent, but my windows machine is Win95, which may not be fully supported by CygWin...it didn't used to be).
It could be quite humorous if Linux application started showing up on Windows, running under emulation. (Might put an end to the "Linux has no software" argument, too.)
Of course, KOffice, e.g., might not run as fast under emulation. But it could easily be cheaper than upgrading MSOffice. (And might run faster, too.)
Maybe Linux programs could detect the OS, and flash a dialog box that said "For best operation, run this application using Linux",
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Re:KDE is NOT as free as Gnome (Score:2)
Well, obviously, if you have an X11 server and a UNIX emulation layer, both should work. And Gtk+ seems to work acceptably for some applications (Gimp, AbiWord).
In any case, the real open source competition to MS Office is neither Gnome nor KDE, it's StarOffice/OpenOffice, which already runs well on Windows (much better than it does on Linux).
Re:stability and speed (Score:2)
It's decently fast (not fustratingly slow), on a PowerMac 4400/200 (200 MHz 603ev) with 96 MB of RAM. The slowest thing is app launching, and even that has improved dramatically since 2.0 (especially Konqueror). Once apps are started, I haven't noticed any thing slow about them. KDE 2.1 features a good spinning disk progress indicator in the taskbar while apps are starting, 2.2 additionaly has an (optional) flashing icon that follows your curser to let you know the apps starting. I know users who run KDE 2.1.1 on Pentium 166 with 64 MB without serious speed problems.
Before you complain, please give KDE 2.1.1 a shot. Also, please get more then 64 MB of RAM, it will help greatly. I don't forsee KDE memory requirements increasing from that number anytime in the near future -- as there no plans to add major new features that will slow things down -- just things like improvements on existing things, additional optional features, plugins, and the alike.
Re:I have a question. (Score:2)
There are only so many operating systems that are even remotely viable. If you choose to write for Windows you will be competing with Microsoft eventually. It does not matter what your software does or how innovative it is. If it becomes viable Microsoft will enter the market and crush you with a free alternative which has a thousand highly trained programmers working on it. If you are making a "mee too" product you are competing against very well established companies which are already controlling the market and the mindshare of users.
You have a much better chance of success trying to be the big fish in a small pond. If you are able to succeed in the linux market and build a brand identity and a reputation you can then attempt to make inroads into the Mac or Windows markets.
Of course one out of three businesses fail in this country and your chances of actually surviving a few years is bleak at best but your bet chance to make it is going to be in the niches where Microsoft does not play.
Unless you are already established and have billions in cash it's suicidal to try and compete with Microsoft. Look at the long trail of dead companies MS has left in it's wake and how dominant they once were in their fields you think a small fry like the Kompany has a chance?
Re:KDE is NOT as free as Gnome (Score:2)
More and more OSS apps start appearing in windows version, also : Gimp, perl, python, ...
I believe this is a winning move, and I hope this trend will increase. When windows user will daily use OSS applications, the switch to an open-source OS will be less thraumatic. In the meanwhile, the augmented user and developer base will allow for a better development of OSS applications.
Re:Competing with open source? (Score:1)
I notice you left out debian. You seem to recognise that the problem is not with gnucash but with your package manager. Perhaps you should be using debian if you cant handle the dependancy problems. I apt-got it just fine.
Confused. (Score:1)
Korelib is released under the GPL. You actively encourage contibution to this project from the community.
How do you maintain the copyright if not all of the code is your own ?
Do you expect contributions to be submitted in terms other than the GPL ?
How can you use community modified versions of Korelib in a commercial product like Kapital ?