It's not a matter of "like" or "not like" it's a matter of "hassle" or "no hassle". I work on OS/X and Linux, and compiling there is radically different than compiling on Windows. And while OS/X and Linux and Solaris have slight system API differences which require a little working around, Windows can have quite large differences.
So the same level of "noooo!" that applies to a windows person being asked to install linux software applies to a unix developer being asked to compile and package on windows. It's a pain -- I am so glad our developer community includes people like Mark (who can do it) and Regina (who actually really wants to do it). The only thing that would be better would be having a developer who actually uses windows as their primary development environment, then we'd catch platform differences in closer to real time. P. On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 8:11 AM, Tyler Mitchell (OSGeo)<[email protected]> wrote: > Just generally keep in mind though as well, that some open source is > only intended to run on Windows and many projects do recognise the > importance of that platform, particularly in the GIS arena. So while > many may not like, many don't seem to really mind and look at it as one > more diverse OS to support. > > Tyler _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
