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-
- @unnumbered Special Report: Apple's New Look and Feel
-
- You might have read about the new look-and-feel copyright lawsuit,
- Apple vs. Hewlett Packard and Microsoft. Apple claims the power to
- stop people from writing any program that works even vaguely like a
- Macintosh. If they and other look-and-feel plaintiffs triumph, they
- will use this new power over the public to put an end to free software
- that could substitute for commercial software.
-
- In the weeks after the suit was filed, USENET reverberated with
- condemnation for Apple. GNU supporters Richard Stallman, John Gilmore, and
- Paul Rubin decided to take action against Apple's no-longer-deserved
- reputation as a force for progress. Apple's reputation comes from having
- made better computers; but now, Apple is working to make all non-Apple
- computers worse. If this deprives the public of the future work of many
- companies, the harm done would be many times the good that any one company
- does. Our hope was that if the user community realizes how destructive
- Apple's present actions are, Apple would lose customers and have more
- trouble finding employees.
-
- Our method of action was to print 5000 buttons that say ``Keep Your Lawyers
- Off My Computer'' and hand them out at the West Coast Computer Faire. The
- center of the button shows the rainbow-apple logo with a Gigeresque mouth
- full of ferocious teeth. The picture was drawn by Etienne Suvasa, who also
- drew the cover for the GNU Emacs manual. We call the picture ``Apple's New
- Look and Feel''.
-
- We gave out nearly 4000 buttons at the show (saving the rest for
- afterwards). The result was a great success: the extent of anger at Apple
- was apparent to everyone at the show. Many of the invited speakers at the
- show wore our buttons, spoke about them, or even waved them from the
- podium. The press noticed this: at least one Macintosh user's magazine
- carried a photo of the button afterwards.
-
- Some of you may be considering using, buying, or recommending Macintoshes;
- you might even be writing programs for them or thinking about it. Please
- think twice and look for an alternative. Doing those things means more
- success for Apple, and this could encourage Apple to persist in its
- aggression. It also encourages other companies to try similar
- obstructionism.
-
- [It is because of this boycott that we don't include support for Macintosh
- Unix in GNU software.]
-
- You might think that your current project ``needs'' a Macintosh now. If
- you find yourself thinking this way, consider the far future. You probably
- plan to be alive a year or two from now, and working on some other project.
- You will want to get good computers for that, too. But an Apple monopoly
- could easily make the price of such computers at that time several times
- what it would otherwise be. Your decision to use some other kind of
- machine, or to defer your purchases now, might make sure that the machines
- your next project needs are affordable when you need them.
-
- Newspapers report that Macintosh clones will be available soon. If
- you must buy a Macintosh-like machine, buy a clone. Don't feed the
- lawyers!
-