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204.5-Million lines of code equals one great Linux distribution

Started by dhilipkumar, Nov 20, 2008, 08:26 PM

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dhilipkumar

Million lines of code equals one great Linux distribution

Maybe, just maybe, the best things in life really are free. Take Linux, for example. It's a great, free operating system that you don't have to spend a dime on. You can use it to run the New York Stock Exchange's servers; you can use it to run your desktop; and you can use it to run your mobile phone.

The latest Linux Foundation's report, Estimating the Total Development Cost of a Linux Distribution reminds me again of just how truly valuable and remarkable this 'free' operating system really is. In this study, the Foundation analyzed how many lines of code are actually in Red Hat's community Fedora 9 Linux distribution, and how much it would cost, in today's dollars, with today's software development costs, to have written it as a proprietary operating system.

The Foundation started by using Linux and security programmer David A. Wheeler's methodology from his 2002's groundbreaking study, Linux: More Than a Gigabuck: Estimating GNU/Linux's Size. The results of applying these tools to 2008's Fedora 9 Linux came out to a total of 204,500,946 physical SLOC (Source Lines of Code) and a cost of $10,784,484,309. But, lucky you, you can download it for free from the Fedora Web site and you won't need to spend a penny on it.

Have you ever thought about what an insane bargain Linux really is? You can, and many of you do, spend wheelbarrows of money on Windows and for what? To get an operating system that requires monthly updates to keep it barely secure and additional cost anti-virus and anti-malware programs to try to keep it secure.

Of course, many people to have to pay money for Linux as well. But, it's an option. Once you've learned Linux, the only currency you need to keep Linux and its applications secure and working well is the knowledge in your head.

We're really very lucky. Thanks to Linus Torvalds and Richard M. Stallman's thought that it's better to share intellectual wealth rather than hoard it, we're blessed not just with an operating system, but with thousands of top-notch open-source software programs that let us do our work, connect with the world, listen to music, watch television and play games. Linux: it may just be the best software deal in the history of the world.