Thank you for the video, I am using Linux Mint Debian edition and love it, I think Linux should make a thumb drive installer and charge a £5.00 each to install Linux the easy way for new people that need just more help.
Linux may embrace the cor fundamentals of "free and open source" as a philosophy, but the operating systems today have so much integration with proprietary drivers and software, that the GNU network is closer to the definition you describe. Linus Torvalds may have been the founder of Linux itself, but has since lost his core principals and even took a series of courses to better address the public before being accepted back as a chairman. Richard Stallman is the only engineer who i would agree goes on a "free and open source" business model. If you wish to talk of the significance of an Operating System in the aspects of freedom, Please specify, or it will be seen as misleading the public. Debian as of kernel 6, alongside integration of the RUST programming language, integrated proprietary drivers to better support current hardware. This means that the core of the Linux OS most users find today, will be PROPRIETARY. Even with documentation for an OS, it will leave blanks at the tree in which the branches extend to a proprietary plug-in. While the markets fluctuate arguing semantics, ill stick as close as i can to open source without crippling my capabilities online, but also hoping the world removes head from backside long enough to see the big picture. Thanks! ~Fenny~
Thank you for the video, I am using Linux Mint Debian edition and love it, I think Linux should make a thumb drive installer and charge a £5.00 each to install Linux the easy way for new people that need just more help.
Linux for life
Linux may embrace the cor fundamentals of "free and open source" as a philosophy, but the operating systems today have so much integration with proprietary drivers and software, that the GNU network is closer to the definition you describe. Linus Torvalds may have been the founder of Linux itself, but has since lost his core principals and even took a series of courses to better address the public before being accepted back as a chairman. Richard Stallman is the only engineer who i would agree goes on a "free and open source" business model. If you wish to talk of the significance of an Operating System in the aspects of freedom, Please specify, or it will be seen as misleading the public. Debian as of kernel 6, alongside integration of the RUST programming language, integrated proprietary drivers to better support current hardware. This means that the core of the Linux OS most users find today, will be PROPRIETARY. Even with documentation for an OS, it will leave blanks at the tree in which the branches extend to a proprietary plug-in. While the markets fluctuate arguing semantics, ill stick as close as i can to open source without crippling my capabilities online, but also hoping the world removes head from backside long enough to see the big picture. Thanks! ~Fenny~