On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 10:21 -0400, tytso@xxxxxxx wrote: > And let's be blunt. If in the future the Android team (which I'm not > a member of) decides that they have invested more engineering time > than they can justify from a business perspective, the next time > someone starts whining on a blog, or on Slashdot, or at a conference, > about how "OMG! Google is forking the kernel!!!", or "Google is > making the lives of device driver writers for the embedded world > difficult", it will now be possible from a political point of view to > point and the hundreds, if not thousands, of e-mail messages of LKML > developers wanting to redesign this effort and saying "Nyet! Nyet! > Nyet!" to the original patchset, to point out that Google has a made > an effort, and gone far beyond what is required by the GPL. Not only > has the source code been made available, but hundreds of engineering > hours have been made trying to accomodate the demands of LKML --- and > LKML has said no to suspend blockers/wakelocks. In the spirit of being blunt, so what? We say no for good technical reasons. Also when did it become sensible to push features after they were shipped? It never works to develop stuff like this out-of-tree and then push for inclusion. You always get to rewrite (at least 3 times). If Google indeed decides it doesn't want to play upstream, then sad. But I don't see how we would be unjust in complaining about it. There is more to our community than the letter of the GPL, and you should know that. So I really don't see the point of your argument (was there one besides the management gibberish?). -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html