On Fri, Oct 03, 2008 at 03:12:35PM +0200, Mathieu Bridon (bochecha) wrote: > Hi, > > > I missed this thread yesterday due to being on a plane, but that RHM > > article is exactly what I was going to point to for the purposes of > > establishing a date of the "remix" phrase being used. > > > > And yes, I do remember when Jack left me a voice mail that said "dude, > > Fedora 7 needs to be all about the remix". :) > > I'm not sure I understood very well, but is this thread about knowing who > between Ubuntu and Fedora is the first one who used the term "remix" ? > > If it's not, maybe I should read it more carefully, but if it is, how > could that matter ? o_O The term remix has been around for a long time before any Linux distribution started using it. It started with the corporate music business, and progressed down to professional and then indie DJ's, and now to any kid with a few minutes of spare time and an audio application that lets them do mashups. Heck, some artists give their raw tracks away and ask their fans to produce them. (I really dig the Nine Inch Nails fans' "The Limitless Potential" album for some cool remixes of "Year Zero" tracks.) That's a lot like the overall progress of our culture, moving the power and concepts of building on pre-existing science and art from the hands of the few to the hands of the many. Yesterday, I was looking through some comments responding to press about some of the Fedora remixes that are starting to trickle out. And there I saw a couple of people -- not a lot, just a couple -- floating the idea that somehow Fedora was copying other distributions' remix concepts. And honestly, it *did* bother me, because we have been working on this since 2006, and even made a big deal about it in the run-up to Fedora 7 in May 2007. The entire reason we were in the driver's seat on making remixable distributions -- as with so many other features -- is that we do all our work in the open, freely distributable and modifiable by everyone. Developing these remix tools freely and openly is how we've always made Fedora, and we're going to continue to embrace that idea. I'm not saying that no one else should do it -- on the contrary! Wouldn't that be hypocritical, to encourage remixes and then say that no one else should do the same? What I *am* trying to say is that the whole concept behind the remix culture is that you *give credit* where it's due. When I remix Nine Inch Nails, I don't claim to have written the music, I just take the tracks that Trent, et al. created, and put them together differently. So it strikes me as a little bit "Johnny come lately" when I see other people not only claiming to have invented the concept but somehow intimating that it should be exclusive. In this age of rumor being taken for fact, the loudest voice overpowering the written record, and hyperlinks replacing evidence, it's important that we keep history and reality in mind. -- Paul W. Frields http://paul.frields.org/ gpg fingerprint: 3DA6 A0AC 6D58 FEC4 0233 5906 ACDB C937 BD11 3717 http://redhat.com/ - - - - http://pfrields.fedorapeople.org/ irc.freenode.net: stickster @ #fedora-docs, #fedora-devel, #fredlug
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