Archive for the ‘Socialism’ Category

Right-wing Socialism – Video


Right-wing Socialism
Right-wing socialism oxymoron or yet more left-wing propaganda? ~ Expand for links ~ Website: http://www.rockingphilosophy.com Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/RockingMrE Twitter...

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Right-wing Socialism - Video

History Assignment Socialism – Video


History Assignment Socialism
Created using PowToon -- Free sign up at http://www.powtoon.com/ . Make your own animated videos and animated presentations for free. PowToon is a free tool that allows you to develop...

By: MrHistoryAssignment

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History Assignment Socialism - Video

Capitalism vs Socialism – CAPTIONED – Video


Capitalism vs Socialism - CAPTIONED

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Capitalism vs Socialism - CAPTIONED - Video

British Fascism, Socialism & Independence (1) – Video


British Fascism, Socialism Independence (1)
Adrian talks about Socialism, Neo Capitalism, and what really is Independence?

By: endtimes777

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British Fascism, Socialism & Independence (1) - Video

Open source is socialism at its best

Open source is a system where the line between a project's users and its owners blur. It is socialism at its best. Because it doesn't preclude commercialization, the 'open source' concept has the power to change other industries in dire need of changing, such as healthcare. We're already seeing it influence education.

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Open source has advanced at least one new business model entirely ... the idea of crowdsourcing. Through our computers, we can now farm out just about any soft task to many hands and get a result that is faster, and cheaper than hiring a group of people dedicated to the task.

Yet the power of open source comes from the fact that it is freely distributed. I've been thinking about this since a recent discussion I had with Nicolas Pujol, a former mySQL and Dell executive who has penned a book called, The Mind Share Market: The Power of an Alternative Currency. (He agreed to give away a handful of Kindle copies to Open Source Subnet readers. Details on this book giveaway are on the Open SourceSubnet homepage.)

Between Pujol's ideas and my own pondering, I'd say that open/crowdsourced models create two tiers of value: free and commercial. It has a third influence, too. It forces non-open products to imitate the free tier by offering a "freemium" tier of their own.

Free: Creator offers it with no strings attached. You can typically contribute to the project, or at least modify it and control how it's used in your world. No one is on the hook to help you. Most of the tools that fill sourceforges fall into this category. Developers have no plans for launching a business -- they simply want to share the cool thing they created.

New commercial: Product or service is valuable enough to you that you agree to pay its creators, or a third-party, for a high-level of support. Your right to modify it for your own use is unrestricted. Red Hat, mySQL are examples.

Freemium: You use the product for free and the product's owners agree to support/maintain it for you, fixing bugs and adding new features. You agree to allow advertisers to reach you though the product may be closed, giving you no rights at all to modify or control it. Web sites for newspapers and magazines, Google/search engines, Facebook have all established themselves with this model.

Traditional commercial: You pay for the product and owners maintain it. You can often modify its use in your environment, but have no access/control over the core of the product and must wait for the vendor to perform fixes/add new features.

Because of the power of "free" open source has forced closed, traditional commercial entities into not only offering products for no cost, but in offering really good, useful services for 'free" to users. Though Microsoft has always given away loads of free software these were previously mostly add-ons for its products. Would Microsoft have ever created fully free online versions of its Office apps without AJAX-based Google Docs and OfficeOrg? Certainly not.

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Open source is socialism at its best