On Thursday November 20, piggin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
You have to admit its good for end users though. And indirectly, what
is good for them is good for us. Take the nvidia example: end users get
either a binary driver or nothing. If we were somehow able to stop
nvidia from distributing their binary driver, they would say "OK".
Is it good for end users? It allows them to buy a computer with an
nvidia graphics controller because "NVidia supply drivers", and then
discover that support is only as good as NVidia are willing to make
it. I'm still waiting for some sort of power management support for
the nvidia controller in my notebook. If the driver and the specs
were open, I could possibly do it myself. On the other hand if there
were no NVidia drivers, I never would have made the (arguable) mistake
of buying this notebook.
Ofcourse we cannot and should not stop people from providing the
option of binary only drivers, but I'm not convinced that we should
acknowlege that people who provide binary-only drivers are doing a
useful service for anyone but themselves.