On Sun, Aug 10, 2014 at 9:27 AM, svetlana <[email protected]> wrote:
> I feel that having development carried out by "employees" hinders programming 
> the same software as a hobby: for instance, they work in a single language, 
> and don't need localised documentation

Good localized software is a commitment of the
project/community/coders, irrespective of coder's employment statuses.

I have certainly worked on software which was localized *only because*
a company paid people to do the localization.  And, of course, I'm
sure the converse occurs as well.

As a software engineer who enjoys his work, I'm rather put off by the
idea that it is somehow wrong for me to make a living using my skills
to further a cause I believe in.  Are all employees of non-profits
somehow polluting the non-profit's ideals?

I contributed code to mediawiki as a volunteer before I became an
employee.  I did not have any problems doing so.  It is true that some
"community" projects have trouble accepting contributions from
non-employees, but this is not the case for WMF in my experience.  But
again, this is due to the values and commitment of the
community/organization, not who is (or is not) being paid.
  --scott

-- 
(http://cscott.net)

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