Spend some time thinking about it, and when you have a better idea of what that "something" actually is, tell us all about it. We're all listening.

In my case "something" is: i feel that contributing into AOLServer project feels like asking permission from AOL, is AOL willing to accept or even consider whatever additions i am offering. In most case they will be rejected because of stability, direction, code style or pure "messed up code". I understand that AOL pays core developers but i think this is what makes me feel this is not open-source project, this is AOL project with open sources. It is not bad and AOL benefits from this greatly, so many free QA/testers but still, AOLserver goes in the direction at least i do not agree with. I think AOLServer should not be pure webserver, just another webserver even running by AOL, still just another webserver, it has potential to be full-blown application server.

I support my patches and develop different version of aolserver,
allowing differnet protocols, for example HTTP or SIP over UDP, but i am
sure AOL will not accept them, so i keep them to myself. There are many
small improvements can be done and i 've done a lot of them, binder for
example, many modules. They are public but still, core is what AOL provides.

I am not saying the word "fork", but it may happen.


If you're being intentionally vague about what "something" is, and
"something" refers to me and my leadership of this project, then please
just say so.

You are great project leader, no doubt, you just work for AOL, it is very noticable.


-- AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/

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