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Message
From: Erez Birenzwig<erez_birenzwig@y...>
Date: Thu May 13 09:24:05 CEST 2004
Subject: [oc] One issue about free hardware
> On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 02:55:03PM -0700, Erez Birenzwig wrote: > > Hi Richard, > > > > When was the last time you read all of GCC code ? Or Python ? > > Or Perl ? Or Apache ? I can keep going.... > > > > Well, RMS wrote gcc, so I would hope that he read it too! :)
About GCC, I guess I owe an appology to Richard, so I appologize for not knowing that you wrote GCC, which I use about once a week.
I guess it's also a good oportunity to thank you :)
> > > To conclude, I think that open source EDA tools is nice, but in reality most > > of the participant in this list, are either working for EDA companey, > > electronics engineers or students, for good EDA tools that can compete with > > commercial ones, you need a lot of know-how, and a good background. It's > > a lot harder to design and write then a new window manager or a new shell for > > windows. The problems are at a different scale, and most of the code is > > propriatry and not accessible. This makes the task very hard and you need very > > dedicated people to do that, espacially because the community is not as large. > > > > I was still in diapers when the GNU project started but I'm assuming that's the > same argument that RMS ran into, ie 'Why develop a free Unix, it's going to be > hard and there are already commercial ones out there?'. > > I wonder what a good term would be for the things that are currently described > as 'IP' in the hardware field. Ie a common phrase is something like 'the memory > controller is someone else's IP'. Maybe proprietary core vs free core? > > -- > Alex Harford > http://www.alexharford.com > alex-spam@a... Tel: (604) 738-5674 > _______________________________________________ > http://www.opencores.org/mailman/listinfo/cores >
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