I have joined libreoffice for contributing to development.

Amit

On Sat, Jul 27, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Amit Choudhary <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Tom,
>
> I have been programming since 1987. I have all my degrees in computer
> science/networking. I have worked for companies like Cisco systems, Juniper
> networks and have turned down offers from companies like Google and
> Microsoft for one reason or other.
>
> This whole software industry is going in the wrong direction. Actually, by
> now we should have been done by all the software (all the necessary
> software developed and installed and used, no bugs, etc.
>
> We need to beat Microsoft because we do not want to pay for Office suite.
>
> The best way of doing this is to release stable versions only and this can
> be done by increasing the QA cycle period.
>
> I do not release buggy software unless it has been approved by management.
> And I have not released any software that's gonna hurt the customer even if
> I have to get into discussions with managers, directors, etc.
>
> This whole idea of releasing software frequently is a scam, because work
> doesn't get done properly in a small time window. No one gets any time for
> innovation and everyone is just interested in the release. And in the end,
> the software dies down because the frequent release does not fix things
> properly and introduces new bugs and over time all these quickfixes kill
> the product.
>
> THERE IS NO DEMAND FROM CUSTOMERS FOR FREQUENT RELEASES. THE DEMAND IS
> FROM PEOPLE WHO ARE SOFTWARE ANALYSTS AND THEY WANT SOMETHING TO DO AND
> HENCE THEY WANT FREQUENT RELEASES. IT IS A BIG SCAM.
>
> I use around 5-6 external softwares and if everyone is releasing something
> every month then it becomes a headache to me.
>
> RELEASING ONLY TWICE A YEAR IS VERY FOOD.
>
> THE BIGGEST RISK OF RELEASING FREQUENTLY IS THAT ORIGINAL PROBLEMS ARE NOT
> SOLVED PROPERLY AND QUICKFIXES MAKE MANAGING THE SOFTWARE COMPLICATED AND
> IN THE END THE DEVELOPERS GIVE UP AND THE PRODUCT IS SHELVED.
>
> AND ALL THIS HAPPENS WITH PAID SOFTWARE TOO.
>
> Amit
>
> On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 4:07 PM, Tom Davies <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hi :)
>> I think with Base it's better to stay with older branches.  The 3.6.7
>> might be better.  if the 4.0.3 works for you then stick with that.
>>
>> Sadly there are still not many devs working on Base.  It's not flashy
>> enough!
>> Regards from
>> Tom :)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> >________________________________
>> > From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
>> >To: [email protected]
>> >Sent: Friday, 26 July 2013, 10:31
>> >Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] 4.0.3
>> >
>> >
>> >Unfortunately, the "3rd digit rule" doesn't work as goog as expected...
>> >    I use report builder in base, 4.0.3.3 version. Download 4.0.4 and
>> >report builder no more works (crash in opening).
>> >
>> >    thanks anyway for developers work, I remember this is a free sw, at
>> the
>> >end....
>> >
>> >    Federico Quadri
>> >
>> >    Tom Davies <[email protected]> ha scritto:
>> >> Hi :)
>> >>   That 3rd digit is roughly the equivalent of "Service pack".  So
>> >> usually the higher it is the more stable it is.  Of course even just
>> >> bug-patches and fixes can sometimes introduce unexpected problems
>> >> that might not get caught by QA.
>> >>
>> >>   The best answer, imo, is to keep a very stable version that you
>> >> are happy enough with on all the machines you look after especially
>> >> ones that have limited access or that you can't reach easily.  Then
>> >> on 1 machine find some way of being able to test-drive an occasional
>> >> beta-test versions before it gets released.  Preferably do about 1
>> >> per branch.  The problem is that things you might care about deeply
>> >> might not even be getting used by other people at all.  So it's only
>> >> you that might notice.  So if you didn't test-drive then the problem
>> >> might never be found.  Also it's better to do your testing on a beta
>> >> release rather than a full release because it's during the early
>> >> beta stage that the most devs are the most focussed on the 1 single
>> >> version and trying to solve the most problems quickly.  Also it's
>> >> when the fewest other people are making bug-reports.
>> >>
>> >>   There are various ways you could make sure you have access to 1
>> >> version for use for work that has a dead-line and another version
>> >> that you can just use to try things out and make sure it all works.
>> >>
>> >>   Regards from
>> >>   Tom :)
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> ________________________________
>> >>>    From: Amit Choudhary <[email protected]>
>> >>>    To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
>> >>>    Sent: Friday, 26 July 2013, 3:35
>> >>>    Subject: [libreoffice-users] 4.0.3
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>    Hi,
>> >>>
>> >>>    I was using 4.0.2 and then I downloaded 4.0.3 but 4.0.3 is not
>> >>> as stable as
>> >>>    4.0.2. So, now I am downloading 4.0.4.
>> >>>
>> >>>    I am more interested in stable and feature rich (optional)
>> >>> software rather
>> >>>    than frequently released software.
>> >>>
>> >>>    Stablility is very important because a non-stable software /
>> software
>> >>>    having many bugs results in loss of time and frustartion.
>> >>>
>> >>>    Amit
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >
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>

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