On Friday 16 Dec 2011 12:03:53 Rob Weir wrote: > On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 5:44 PM, Graham Lauder <[email protected]> > wrote: > > <snip> > > > The evidence actually reveals the complete opposite. A vast vibrant > > community with all the tension and foibles that brings with it, that > > produced, marketed and distributed a well featured and reliable Office > > suite to a community of probably tens of millions of users. Could we > > have done some things better, of course, nothing is ever perfect but it > > was never as bad as you and others have been painting it. > > OOo was a failure because it only worked as a recipient of corporate > charity. It was entirely a money hole for Sun and Oracle. It is > amazing what kind of crazy organization you can have if sustainability > of the ecosystem is not an issue because you have access to some magic > external source of funds.
I see, so if Sun and Oracle (and I include them even tho they fairly quickly decided the OOo community didn't fit with their corporate model, they did continue to support it in the interim.) sees fit to generously fund an open source project then it's a failure, but if IBM pays you to be involved in this Apache version and picks up a number of ex Sun devs to work on it, then that is.....another crazy organisation perhaps? What sort of failure is that then? let's at least be consistent. At the end of the day any opensource project functions because of the generosity of anyone, individual or corporate, that contributes via cash or code or time, the overall proportion of any individual contribution should not and does not define success or failure, that much to me is obvious. Therefore to continually trumpet the old OOo as a "failure" in the face, says to me that there is either some sort of other agenda or a lack of understanding of the Open Source model. ESR made the point that one of the strengths of the OpenSource model is the ability for an owner to "pass it on", for any or all reasons, to give the ability for a new driver to inject a new level of enthusiasm. Is taking that step signalling that the project is a failure, of course not, quite the opposite, it demonstrates a desire on the part of the previous owner to see the project grow and prosper, even if they had to be cajoled into it by interested parties wishing to have it continue.. > > Well, that corporate subsidy is gone. The question is how we can > create a sustainable model for this project. What worked before, > based on corporate charity, is not really relevant anymore. The > question is, what works now? I have no problem with that, in fact I'm glad we're not beholden to a single corporate entity. I'm also happy to admit that I'm glad it's at Apache. We have a different model now, but that doesn't mean the other was a failure and any talk that it was, is simply not backed by the evidence and counterproductive in terms of community building. Cheers GL > > -Rob
