Well as the discussion was in another thread , Spec is licensed as MIT
inside Pharo , the new GPL license seems to affect any present and future
contributions from Ben. So I will say yes it looks like Spec is here to
stay, I may not be a fan of Spec design but they are many Pharoers out
there that they are and since Pharo community is quite democratic looks
like Spec is here to stay. The Pharo team wont be able to add in Pharo any
GPL affected contributions of Ben ( assuming Ben continuous to develop Spec
which I doubt) but Pharoers can continue to contribute to the Pharo MIT
Spec . So it looks like the effect is minimum if you exclude the fact we
lost the most major contributor to Spec.

So far the idea is to push forward both Spec and Morphic and personally I
really like this idea as it lets people more options on the GUI front which
can be only good thing since anyone this way can use the right tool for his
or her own needs. It would also be a lot of shame if Ben's hard work goes
to waste even though he decided to give up pharo, we have to respect his
choice but also his work make sure his effort don't go wasted as he built a
tool that many people find useful.

So yes you can keep using Spec and I am sure we will all appreciate any
contribution you make to Spec :)


On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 10:15 PM, Martin Saurer <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Dear all,
>
> A few weeks ago, I read about the dispute on Spec, which has escalated,
> and as a result of that, Ben has left the Pharo/Smalltalk community. It's
> always sad when a long term member leaves, but live is going on.
>
> From my (somewhat business minded) point of view one question is currently
> unanswered:
> Is there a future of Spec (without Ben)?
>
> I'm asking this because I'm the author of a web frontend engine which can
> be bound to a programming language (like Pharo) to create desktop-like web
> applications. Currently there is an implementation for the J programming
> language as well as a rough (but working) implementation for Pharo. My
> plans for the (far) future is to bind the frontend engine to Pharo in a
> more elegant way probably by extending Spec. So one may write a desktop
> application in Spec, and a corresponding web GUI is automatically created
> as well.
>
> So I'm currently a little unsure whether to go with Spec or going back to
> the good old Polymorph.
>
> Is somebody of the core team able to clarify the situation?
>
> Many thanks in advance.
>
> Martin
>
>
>
>

Reply via email to