Adobe's Flex and a Curious Definition of "Open" for RIA Platforms
In my RSS hunt & aggregate daily routine, I stumbled upon an article that initially made me groan. It did so as I thought to myself "here we go, another Proprietary vs Open Source debate, the never goes anywhere" and I was hoping that it for once left Microsoft out of the discussion heh.
Well I'm actually glad in many respects I read this as Miguel de Icaza has set the record straight around the codec license issues surrounding Silverlight + Linux (aka Moonlight).
In the United States and Europe if you want to redistributed this media software (and avoid getting sued) you must have a patent license with MPEGLA/Thompson. In the case of Moonlight, Microsoft has agreed to pay the fees related to distributing the codecs for Linux and taking care of the patent fees. It also happens to come in the form of giving us their tuned code for video decoding, as opposed to using the reference VC-1 implementation (which is known to be quite slow, but is available for download to MPEGLA licensees).
It for me reiterates, we are/can be a positive influence in the overall open source community, but sadly our praise isn't amplified as much. It's a red flag in front of the anti-Microsoft bull, but what the heck, I enjoyed reading Miguel's post and it gave me a warm and fuzzy feeling that I'm glad the company I work for can help move projects like Moonlight forward.
I'm sure there's going to be complaints...
See the article here:
Adobe's Flex and a Curious Definition of "Open" for RIA Platforms
https://www.oreillynet.com/onlamp/blog/2007/12/adobes_flex_and_a_curious_defi.html
Comments
Anonymous
December 12, 2007
If you really want to be a force for good, distribute the source code of the codec implementations, or pay the licensing fees for free and open implementations. The free and open source world is far more than just a set of people willing to use x86-only, Linux-only, 32-bit-only binary blobs.Anonymous
December 13, 2007
Yeh, "Monopolight" didn't give me the sense that there is any balanced perspective there. I also don't understand the business about demanding source code involving someone else's (not Microsoft's) IP. I didn't come here to be grumpy though. I notice in your post that all of the links are to chromatic's article. Is there a different link appropriate for the quote apparently from Miguel. My eyes are getting old and I couldn't figure out how to find it in the old post from Miguel that chromatic links to.