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| Thu, 02 Jul 2015 20:38:36 -0700 (PDT) | |
| In-Reply-To: | <20150703030409.32398.qmail@stuge.se> |
| References: | <1435510363 DOT 682 DOT 26 DOT camel AT ssalewski DOT de> |
| <20150703030409 DOT 32398 DOT qmail AT stuge DOT se> | |
| Date: | Fri, 3 Jul 2015 03:38:36 +0000 |
| Message-ID: | <CAM2RGhSb=z35RYaJQmh-S4N73ng9WOj4ySmy_05J-7KGdBv8SA@mail.gmail.com> |
| Subject: | Re: [geda-user] gEDA/gschem still alive? |
| From: | "Evan Foss (evanfoss AT gmail DOT com) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com]" <geda-user AT delorie DOT com> |
| To: | geda-user AT delorie DOT com |
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Peter hit on a number of good points there. If we were to really measure how a piece of open source software is doing I think a less crude measure would be based on how long and how many bugs have been reported and unresolved. When was the last time any one here spotted a bug in gschem? On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 3:04 AM, Peter Stuge (peter AT stuge DOT se) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com] <geda-user AT delorie DOT com> wrote: > Stefan Salewski wrote: >> maybe my impression that geda/gschem usage and development is >> nearly death is wrong? > > Look, open source software development can not die! I react quite > strongly indeed to those who throw this ridiculous expression around! > > The source code is there. Anyone who wants can pick it up and make a > change. Today, tomorrow, next month and next decade. > > Development happens when it happens. If you need it sooner you get to > do it yourself or pay for it to get done by someone else. You already > know that this is the premise. You must be able to take > responsibility for your own problems, otherwise you can not benefit > from open source and should acquire a support contract from a service > provider who might benefit from open source. > > > And using alive and dead as measure of volunteer efforts makes no > sense whatsoever. It implies that there exists a single threshold > where development moves from being alive to being dead and vice > versa. That is of course, as I wrote, utterly ridiculous. > > Development happens when someone makes a change. > > I have often experienced people who measure software project > development simply by change quantity, which I can completely > understand, because it is the most trivial metric, but it is also a > really useless metric, since number of changes say ABSOLUTELY NOTHING > about whether a codebase is improving or deteriorating. > > > //Peter -- Home http://evanfoss.googlepages.com/ Work http://forge.abcd.harvard.edu/gf/project/epl_engineering/wiki/
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