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There are end users that care of freedom in a broad sense. I'm one of
them, using Linux-based systems since late 90s :)

And we aren't so few, because the number is growing and specially in
this worldwide economical crisis. You can see by objective stadistics
that the adoption of FOSS is bigger in economically poorer (I dislike
the "poor" term in essence, but..) countries than economically richer
ones.

The need of a corporate entity that monopolizes the support is
contrary to the spirit of Open/Free Source. The same work can be done
by local companies, improve competing and also those smaller companies
can contribute in developing the product too.

You can also follow the Mozilla approach, but that's a very different
and difficult topic.

On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 2:18 PM, Augustine Souza <aesouza2008@gmail.com> wrote:
On 6/15/11, Allen Pulsifer <pulsifer@openoffice.org> wrote:
...
End users do not care about
who's right, who's wrong, who's been slighted, who is more pure, etc.  They
just care about products and technologies that are going to meet their
needs.

Painting quite a poor picture of end users? Are they really like that?
Or do we say so to support our argument?

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