A brief history of computers and free software: where is the money?
The world of computers has changed. Sub-notebooks are becoming immensely popular, mobile phones based on Google’s Android software are about to come out (T-Mobile have just announced their G1 will launch on October 22), and computers are looking increasingly like small devices that fit in our pockets. The end of 2008 might see the dawn of a new revolution in the computer industry and in people’s lives. Maybe 2009 will be remembered as the year when the “world went mobile”. What does this mean for the (free and non-free) software industry? Where will we be, technologically and (more importantly) culturally? Where will the market (and the money) be?
The direction taken by the software industry is influenced heavily by the events and revolutions that shaped it—the same (unannounced) revolutions that changed all the rules, and shaped the market and disrupted considerably the existing business models and decided the fate of once-invincible corporations. This is especially true for the branch of the computer and software industry that targets the masses, which is what I will focus on in this article.
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