Quotes By Miguel De Icaza
We have a lot of existing customers which are also considering Linux desktop migrations and rolling out some of these programs, so we're learning from them.
Miguel de Icaza
After releasing Mono 1.0, we started work on a new edition of Mono that will be released later in the year.
Miguel de Icaza
I was interested in Java the beginning, but the problem with Java is you do have to switch your platform.
Miguel de Icaza
Every piece of software written today is likely going to infringe on someone else's patent.
Miguel de Icaza
We cannot choose one desktop over the other - Gnome or KDE - because there's users for both code bases.
Miguel de Icaza
So if we're going to build new applications that require a large time investment, like say movie editing - today that doesn't matter for the enterprise desktop, but eventually it will when we get closer to consumers - you really need to have a cross-platform story.
Miguel de Icaza
With .NET once an API is published it's available to all programming languages at the same time.
Miguel de Icaza
Some scientists use TeX or LatEX but for most people Word is the thing that writers use these days.
Miguel de Icaza
They have a beautiful security system and we're emulating the whole security infrastructure.
Miguel de Icaza
The software patent problem is not limited to Mono. Software patents affect everyone writing software today.
Miguel de Icaza
We've been using C and C++ way too much - they're nice, but they're very close to the machine and what we wanted was to empower regular users to build applications for Linux.
Miguel de Icaza
I think that by October the whole company has to migrate to OpenOffice, and then I think it's by June next year we all migrate to Linux - you don't want to migrate 6,000 people both operating system and office suite in a single jump.
Miguel de Icaza
Running the test suite like this allows us to catch problems when they are just introduced.
Miguel de Icaza
We all love Linux, but it's also a fact that some people might not be able to migrate.
Miguel de Icaza