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Date:      Wed, 1 Sep 1999 18:52:28 -0500
From:      Frank Pawlak <fpawlak@execpc.com>
To:        Brett Glass <brett@lariat.org>
Cc:        "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@zippy.cdrom.com>, freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Sorry, I just couldn't let this go by...
Message-ID:  <19990901185228.A9481@quark.feynman.com>
In-Reply-To: <4.2.0.58.19990901152642.047b0250@localhost>
References:  <804.936177954@localhost> <4.2.0.58.19990901152642.047b0250@localhost>

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On Wed, Sep 01, 1999 at 04:43:10PM -0600, Brett Glass wrote:
> At 02:25 AM 9/1/99 -0700, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> 
> 

--------------------Major snip------------

Am not sure why I'm wasting time responding to this, but I couldn't
restrain myself...

> 
> No. The installed base appears to be growing, slowly. But an increase
> in numbers does not necessarily indicate an increase in market share.
> 

True where the numbers are concerned.

> Even David G., whose projections of FreeBSD's growth seem to me to be
> overly optimistic, admits that the gap between Linux and FreeBSD
> is growing. On April 15th of this year, he wrote:
> 
> >FreeBSD has in the past and continues
> >to grow at nearly the _exact_ same exponential growth curve that Linux has;
> >we're just about 2 years behind them and considering that they actually started
> >two years before FreeBSD was formed, this should come as no surprise. It's
> >definitely not an even playing field and Linux clearly has a time advantage.
> 
> I disagree with David's contention that FreeBSD is growing at
> "the same exponential growth rate that Linux has," but let's assume, for
> the sake of discussion, that this is the case. If the growth factor
> for both is g, then each will have g times the installed base than it did
> the year before.
> 
> Now, it doesn't take a mathematician to realize that, in David's model, the
> GAP between the sizes of the user bases also grows by a factor of g every 
> year. In fact, the larger g is, the more Linux pulls ahead. Simple math.
> What's more, if you assume that the total number of users of ALL OSes is
> increasing at a uniform rate, FreeBSD's market share MUST decline relative
> to that of Linux. Why? Because, having fewer users, its market share
> is impacted more by the user bases of other OSes.
> 

Huh! Buy what convoluted piece of logic does the above play out?

> No, Jordan, I do not "slam" FreeBSD or BSD UNIX in general, and you should
> not attempt to discredit me by making this false claim. I do carefully critique
> the way in which BSD UNIX in general is being marketed, promoted, and evangelized.
> 

Critique indeed!  Brett, I am beginning to lose respect for someone that used
to fight the good fight for BSD.

Your motives are at time questionable -- tongue firmly planted in cheek.

Frank



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