GPL's cloudy future
One of the things about getting older is that you learn to ignore things until you have to do something about them. It’s a learned efficiency, I suppose, rationing your increasingly precious time out to the unceasing demands upon it. I finally realized I have to do some serious thinking about cloud computing.
“Hang on a minute, don’t you work at Google ?” I hear you say. Well, yes, but in my defense many of the people who work at Google don’t have anything to do with cloud computing. Some of us have to keep the conference rooms clean, write Open Source/Free Software, things of that nature.
But several recent events have stirred my aging brain into action. These events included the departures of two of my colleagues, who were leaving their current, extremely stable employment to join increasingly risky cloud computing startups. That’s not so strange here in Silicon Valley. I remember some wacky people leaving nice safe enterprise computing jobs to go do something strange with “Web 2.0″ startups, and look how that turned out. One of them drives a Ferrari now (but he always was a bit of a show-off). The third event was from a rather more unlikely source, the Free Software Foundation’s (FSF) annual General Meeting, LibrePlanet, held in Boston.
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