@abbub: Amen brother re: your general attitude towards the situation, MPAA, RIAA, and so on.
@jetracer: re: There is a trend towards licensing vs owning something and I think it sucks. If I buy a music CD (which I haven't in years, out of principle), darn it, I own that CD. If I want to make a copy to listen in my car, I'm going to. If I want to rip it and put in on my ipod, that's what I'm going to. The RIAA actually wants to you to buy multiple copies in this case. The licensing thing gets ridiculous.
@amithony: Amen, I'd release the stuff to public domain too. And some of the companies have actually done that. It's amazing and speaks highly of them. I haven't dug into all the alternatives, but yes, minimig looks pretty cool. Great piece of work.
In general, my beef is with these companies and authors whose livelihoods we supported for a long time. And sure, maybe some didn't become as rich as others, but I'd say most creators with a solid product and decent business plan made money. And so the community PAID for that software to be produced. Sure, we paid after the fact. And sure the company assumed the risk by fronting the money --- but they were rewarded for doing so. So when there is no more money to be made, isn't it time to give that software back to the people who paid for it to be produced??
The other thing that really amazes me is how people can abandon months/years of hard work and have no desire to preserve what they've done. Example: CBS aired a short-lived series in 1983 called "Whiz Kids", which featured young school kids solving crimes with the help of their home-brew computer. It was an attempt to take advantage of the buzz surrounding the movie "War Games." In any event, it only made it one season and was taken off the air. Within the past five years or so, there's been a desire by at least some old fans to have it brought to DVD. Now while there is about zero chance of that happening, someone managed to contact the co-producer of the series. The co-producer said, "Wow. Yes, I remember that show. But I don't have a copy." He even indicated that the original company that produced it is unlikely to have a copy, perhaps jammed in some corner of a warehouse, unlabeled.
Now how does a company, the actors, the producers, the camera men, everyone involved, spend tons of time, money, energy on producing a show across 6 months, and nobody has a copy of the work? To me, it's absurd. It's absurd because these people should have more respect for the work they've done, for what they've produced. Luckily, some evil pirates scanned some VHS tapes in, and have made all 18-episodes available online -- if even in questionable quality.
How can an author write a book, spend hours upon hours writing that book, and at the end of the day not say, "I'm done making money on this, let's give it away online for free." Getting this stuff into PDF couldn't be easier today. I keep mentioning authors because information is the KEY to preserving this technology. Reverse engineering stuff is hard --- original documentation, source code, or info surrounding the product/software/OS/hardware AT THE TIME IT's MADE is extremely valuable.
Thanks for discussion
Keith