It's more imperative that professional tools be owned by their craftsman. And i use professional to mean "commercial activity in the service of others"
Free software is just as much about mitigating risks, sharing liabilities and participating in the future of the tool development. For startups it's access, but larger firms should look for stability and control
Of course, you have to pay up front for free software development. Not so for off the shelf products
@doctormo @nicemicro @rysiek
There is a time cost to learning a new system. And a lot of people don't want to pay that cost to wean themselves off a proprietary software.
(A lot of "poor UI" complaints are really "UI is not identical to what I trained on").
But that has to be weighed against the risk!
At any moment, a proprietary single-supplier can choke you right out of business, by suddenly deciding to charge (or charge more) for access.
That's my main business reason for FOSS tools.