I'd love to see a history of FOSS in its "golden era" (early aughts) to the early teens. There was this great momentum at the time, giant advances in the Linux desktop and server, and a large focus worldwide on open standards (XMPP became, briefly, the standard chat protocol).
This progress stalled. My theory is that it's in large part due to OSX convincing FOSS developers "it's UNIX" and with FOSS devs on Macs, Linux desktop advances slowed down.
It's been long enough now that we are back to the pre-golden era world where people don't understand the risks of vendor lock-in and proprietary protocols. To me this means there's an opportunity for a new golden era, if we can get people to appreciate why the "freedom" part of FOSS is so important.
@kyle I wrote my rational for why things have stalled here: https://mattfucentral.blogspot.com/2020/02/what-is-preventing-adoption-of-open.html
But honestly it is because the ideologies are too radical and don't take into consideration things that other professions are never questioned on.
@kyle cheers to that - the 'freedom' part is exactly why I've supported @purism with my orders this year, and why every project I've worked on in 2020 is #GPL or #MIT licensed.
I guess I did release my vim config as #unlicense "code" but... yeah