Software wars
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Software wars are software authors and idealistic users arguing over which software is best for a purpose and should thus be used by everyone for that task.
In March 1998, Li-Cheng Tai created a map, a general overview of the world of software as a computer graphic and titled it Software Wars. Li-Cheng Tai stopped updating it in 2003. It was updated by Steven Hilton in 2006. The detailed graphical index of market history shows past and ongoing market competitions between free software and proprietary software, including Microsoft and Apple Inc.. It is an example of the Evil Empire genre of humor that is endemic in hacker culture where Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, is represented in a way that is almost the exact opposite of the low-key, soft-spoken image he holds in the popular press. Gates is instead shown either as the ruler of the evil Galactic Empire of the Star Wars movies or, as in this case, as one of the Borg of the Star Trek: The Next Generation television series. This particular example of Evil Empire humor is most notable not for its view of Gates, which is stereotypical at best, but for its well-researched and accurate portrayal of real and complex economic and market battles emerging since the Internet made globally-distributed free and open source software development strategies economically feasible. The newest version of the map lacks hyperlinks, but its keywords and their relationships to each other provide a rich starting point for anyone interest in researching the history and economics of information technology.
Similar "wars" also take place between the proponents of various hardware platforms such as the PC and the Macintosh.
[edit] Specific software wars
- Browser wars, Microsoft and Netscape had a rearmament cycle for a while, both trying to create the authoritative web browser.
- Editor war, unix editor users are divided into two big groups. The users of vi and the users of emacs.
- Desktop wars, KDE and GNOME desktop environments has the same effect.
- Operating system advocacy