Microsoft and the Future Imprecise

[Update: 8/11/07]
Well it turns out to be not so indefinite as I thought.

Yesterday while I was in New York these emails arrived at license-discuss – submitting the Ms-PL and the Ms-CL:

Subject: For Approval: Microsoft Permissive License
From: “Jon Rosenberg (PBM)”
Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2007 09:16:05 -0700
Fri, 10 Aug 2007 09:16:05 -0700

Microsoft is pleased to submit the Microsoft Permissive License to the OSI for consideration as an OSI approved license. Microsoft believes that this license provides unique value to the open source community by delivering simplicity, brevity, and permissive terms combined with intellectual property protection.

The three sections below provide the information required for the discussion portion of the approval process. We look forward to working with the OSI on this submission process and discussing this submission with the open source community.

Jon Rosenberg
Director, Source Program
Microsoft Corporation

[Full text]

and

Subject: For Approval: Microsoft Community License
From: “Jon Rosenberg (PBM)”
Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2007 09:16:42 -0700
Fri, 10 Aug 2007 09:16:42 -0700

Microsoft is pleased to submit the Microsoft Community License to the OSI for consideration as an OSI approved license. Microsoft believes that this license provides unique value to the open source community by delivering simplicity, brevity, and clearly delineated reciprocal terms.

The three sections below provide the information required for the discussion portion of the approval process. We look forward to working with the OSI on this submission process and discussing this submission with the open source community.

Jon Rosenberg
Director, Source Program
Microsoft Corporation

[Full text]

This means it was really only about two weeks delay – not at all unusual in a company Microsoft’s size.

I assume the Ms-RL will not be submitted as it would clearly fail – it basically enables viewing of source code only.

As much as everyone is wary of Microsoft’s entry here, I think it is great to see these licenses submitted and reviewed.
[/Update]

[Original: 8/8/07]

One of the announcements at OSCON was from Microsoft, who announced that they would be submitting some licenses to the OSI for approval. (See the story on EWeek, InfoWorld, and InternetNews).

This has lead to some spirited debates and questions about just what it would mean for any Microsoft license (I have yet to see confirmation from Microsoft on which licenses will be submitted) to be OSI approved, including:

My questions are much more basic:

  1. When, exactly, will Microsoft submit licenses to the OSI for approval?
  2. Which licenses will they submit? (Ms-PL, Ms-CL, and/or Ms-RL)

I went back and listed to Bill Hilf’s keynote again – he refers to the over 500 projects released under shared source licenses, and the question he has long gotten about why those projects weren’t released under OSI approved licenses.

He then announces that:

today we are, today we – we are submitting them right now -we’re working with the OSI right now to get them into the approval process, it’s an important step for us

What does that mean? Getting “them into the approval process” would seem to involve following the approval process as clearly spelled out on the OSI site – but I haven’t seen anything on license-discuss yet . . .

Yahoo! GO on Blackjack

Yahoo!’s mobile client, GO, is now available (beta) on the Samsung i607 aka Cingular Blackjack.

Go here to enter your mobile number, and they SMS you a link to download the CAB file.

Once you download and install the CAB file, at first launch it downloads a bunch of other stuff – perhaps it is keeping track of versions of specific apps?

It’s got a series of modules, many of which take advantage of your Yahoo! ID:

  • Flickr, including browsing your contact’s photos
  • Mail, assuming you use Yahoo Mail
  • Local and Maps
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Weather

It’s very nicely designed, once you get used to the Yahoo! purple, but I don’t see it replacing Google Maps on my phone any time soon. It does give a nice flickr interface and since you can set up news watchlists could be a good way to read mainstream news.

More OSCON Goodness

The OSCON folks always do a great job of making available conference materials outside the conference experience – and this year is no exception.

First, check out the Presentation Materials page on the OSCON site. If you were attending, but couldn’t make every session you wanted to see (with 14 parallel tracks this is unavoidable) or if you were unable to attend, this page is the place to pick up slides and other materials.

(This being OSCON, some folks include code- but it is still mostly slides).

This year, the presentation materials page also includes video for some of the major talks – including James Larsson’s “Pimp My Garbage” – Leather Fetish Pong and all.

If you want just video, head to oscon.blip.tv where you can get just the sessions that were videotaped.

Or, if you’re using Miro (and you should be), just search Blip.tv (it is one of the choices in the search drop-down at the bottom of the interface) for OSCON and then save those search results as a channel.