On Dec 28, 2009, at 12:51 PM, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:
> Quality of code in general: How well-designed is the code architecture, for
> maintenance and debugging?
>
> Developer Community: Is there a developer community around this software,
> with multiple people from multiple institutions contr
Telling people to use what others are using is just simple propaganda to
stifle competition
+++
>> Respectfully, inviting people to an open discussion is exactly the opposite
>> of telling people and propaganda <<
I feel like I'm being misunderstood. I'm not saying if a lot of people use
it it. must be good. I'm saying if there is 1 developer listening to his 1+
users in an open community forum (actual forum, mailing list, chat room,
etc) then the product is healthier than the open source product with no
co
On Tue, 29 Dec 2009, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:
I think you may find yourself somewhat in the minority in thinking Apache is
bad software. (I certainly have my complaints about it, but in general I find
it more robust, flexible, and bug-free than just about any other software I
work with).
But
Francis Kayiwa wrote:
IMHO good open source software is driven by people with an itch to fix.
The community develops and can be cultivated around this itch rather
than "world domination". The project _MUST_ well documented [0] ideally
actively maintained. The support of this software will mos
I think you may find yourself somewhat in the minority in thinking
Apache is bad software. (I certainly have my complaints about it, but in
general I find it more robust, flexible, and bug-free than just about
any other software I work with).
But aside from getting into a war about some partic
On 12/29/09 7:40 AM, Thomas Krichel wrote:
Brett Bonfield writes
I think Jonathan and Nicole nailed it with community health,
I beg to differ.
If you requiree a healthy community to start working with a piece of
software, how do you want a grassroots project to start? Obviously a
Nicole Engard writes
> That's why I added in 'user' to the community.
No matter how many people use Apache based web sites, it
does not make it Apache software better.
Telling people to use what others are using is just simple
propaganda to stifle competition.
Cheers,
Thoma
Mon 12/28/2009 12:43 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] good and best open source software
What qualities and characteristics make for a "good" piece of open source
software? And once that question is answered, then what pieces of
library-related open source softwa
On Tue, 29 Dec 2009, Thomas Krichel wrote:
Requiring an upfront healthy community is particurly problematic is
a small community such as digital library work.
On the other kind, there is widely adopted software that I got
cajoled into maintaining, that consider bad. Apache is one of
them.
Something I tried to write about in my article in LJ, is, yes, every
project needs to start somewhere. But you need to evaluate your own
capacity, and compare that against the maturity of the software and the
community. You need more internal capacity to deal with immature
software with an imma
Thomas,
That's why I added in 'user' to the community. If there is an active
communication medium with one or two developers communicating with the
user community than there is health there. So I always say to look at
the developer & user community to make sure it's active as one of the
gauges of
Brett Bonfield writes
> I think Jonathan and Nicole nailed it with community health,
I beg to differ.
If you requiree a healthy community to start working with a piece of
software, how do you want a grassroots project to start? Obviously a
small project will start with one or two devel
While I think the author draws to strong of a line between Open Source
and Closed Source, there is a good book about evaluating Open source
software by Bernard Golden called "Succeeding with open source" [1].
Edward
[1] http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55124574
Brett Bonfield wrote:
I really li
I really like this topic, and I like how you're thinking about it. I
tried to ask similar questions in an article I published in July:
http://inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2009/w-e-b-s-i-t-e-find-out-what-it-means-to-me/
I think Jonathan and Nicole nailed it with community health, though
this le
I'm with Jonathan on the community health, one of the things I stress
when teaching my open source classes is that the developer and user
community is essential to the success and life of the product.
Nicole C. Engard
On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 12:51 PM, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:
> Quality of code i
On Mon, 28 Dec 2009, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
For my own education and cogitation, I have begun to list questions to
help me address what I think is the "best" library-related open source
software. [1] Your comments would be greatly appreciated. I have listed
the questions here in (more or les
Quality of code in general: How well-designed is the code
architecture, for maintenance and debugging? [This not only matters if
you plan to do in-house development with it, but matters for predicting
how likely the product is to stay 'alive' and continue to evolve with
the times, instead o
What qualities and characteristics make for a "good" piece of open source
software? And once that question is answered, then what pieces of
library-related open source software can be considered "best"?
I do not believe there is any single, most important characteristic of open
source software
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