Off-topic digression follows. On 2014-03-05 05:04, Tom Davies wrote: > Imagine a schoolkid getting beaten up every day by a bully > > How do you convince people of the truth? What happens if all the kids > gang up together?
In this analogy, who is the bully and who is the kid out of luck? I understand, you intend the bully to be the corporation and possibly the end-users, and the kid to be the free software project. All too often with free software projects (more so in the past decade than the one previous), it seems like there are multiple groups of antagonists. One group is usually a corporation, and the other is a group of bullies who make up the consensus of the developers and/or community support list. Both sides give the impression that they want nothing to change, nor do they care about common use cases which reveal problems. The end user who simply encounters a problem and would merely like to do whatever they are able to help troubleshoot something and improve the situation gets hostility from all sides. The end-user becomes conditioned to not want to provide any feedback whatsoever. The community then arrives at the delusion that there is no problem, and becomes further entrenched and hostile towards the next end-user. Meanwhile, end-users encounter this situation multiple times, year after year, with many other projects, eventually develop an aversion to any interaction with free software projects. At the very least with the community portion, anyways. On the other hand, if a project became too popular too fast, it could collapse from having too many users without adequate momentum. So I suppose actively discouraging people from using the software by bullying anyone who mentions any problem keeps the project alive at a certain stage. Quite a perverse dichotomy. Most unfortunate. Slightly amusing. Regardless -- and sometimes against my better judgement -- I still ping random projects from time to time when I encounter a problem, have an idea, or even a question, in the hopes that I get a friendly response and am welcomed to the opportunity to help make a difference. :) Although increasingly rare these days, it does happen, and those are the moments when I feel empowered, inspired and elevated, if only for a brief time, until I contribute a useful bug report or patch. That was the experience which initially drew me to free software, back when few people knew that free software existed. -- View this message in context: http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/LO-4-2-1-1-docx-file-partial-text-and-images-tp4100085p4100115.html Sent from the Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
