Hi all,
I won't any more time on posting Apache vs. MIT debates on the forum, but I do want to read the article mentioned by Si Chen to possibly gain a new perspective on the desire to switch license models as soon as possible in order to find out what the hubbub is all about. I am just coming at this from (in my mind) a practical point of view. It was mentioned that by being under the Apache umbrella we would attract more experienced contributors or just more contributors as a result of the change, therefore giving some contributors that now participate a break. These contributors are free to do what they wish already, no one is holding their feet to the fire, they most likely contribute out of pure passion for programming or a passion for the project or some other personal reason, so how would the ASF realy change anything in that perspective? (reading between the lines here, please correct me if I am mistaken). My contention is, if the contributors associated with ASF projects were interested in the further development of OFBiz then they would already be "on the bandwagon" by now. This theory is alluded to in one of the replies to my post, as well as the fact that we see some dead ASF projects out there as well as vibrantly evolving projects like Tomcat. -->QOUTE ?Alternatively, one could consider another type of project: look at Tomcat. It was donated by Sun to the ASF for a number of reasons, from an organization which already had the funds and setup to do its own marketing and development without the ASF's help.?<-- Let?s take a look at this statement and think on it a bit. I do not believe we can use Tomcat as an example for comparison, although very successful, it is a TOOL to deploy applications such as OFBiz and the like. Sun also has other commercial application servers as well to distribute and support to further the growth of the company (hopefully lots of growth, I just sold all my Cisco stock for Sun). In my humble opinion OFBiz does not fit into the same category as Tomcat, Ant, Maven and so on. OFBiz is an entirely different animal, so these issues might be something to consider when we think of spending resources and time with the hopes of ?gaining mindshare? and ?emergent opportunities?. It appears to me that there is not much guarantee for ROI here considering the time needed to convert to Apache 2.0. please take a look at the high profile customers who already use OFBiz as I stated before, the big time is just around the corner (I believe). It already makes me want to bite my own leg off in regards to people who have branched out and made GPL offshoots of OFBiz, although those who have engaged in those projects have committed quite a bit back to the community, why would you even branch out and change the creators vision of a project and modify the way that it is be distributed instead of contributing all of your changes back to OFBIZ if you want to post them to a project!.... Sorry Big thorn in my side :( These are just my opinions and I thought that I would share them with everyone to ponder on in good spirit, and I write them with the greatest of respect for all involved with OFBiz and the sub projects as well. Dale Key _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.ofbiz.org/mailman/listinfo/users |
On Dec 8, 2005, at 7:25 PM, [hidden email] wrote: > I am just coming at this from (in my mind) a practical point of > view. It > was mentioned that by being under the Apache umbrella we would attract > more experienced contributors or just more contributors as a result of > the change, therefore giving some contributors that now participate a > break. These contributors are free to do what they wish already, no > one > is holding their feet to the fire, they most likely contribute out of > pure passion for programming or a passion for the project or some > other > personal reason, so how would the ASF realy change anything in that > perspective? (reading between the lines here, please correct me if > I am > mistaken). motivation that I think drives this project. OFBiz is sufficiently complex that it is almost impossible to participate and really work on the software in anything less than a full-time capacity. I think everyone in the core team of OFBiz right now is to some extent basing their personal income and maintenance on OFBiz-related efforts. So, technically no there is no one holding my feet to the fire... except an ex-wife, half a dozen credit card companies and other banks, a landlord, and so on. ;) Naturally to stick with something like this long enough to be effective it does require some passion for it, but I don't think any of us is lucky enough for that to be a sufficient motivation to allow us to be here. > My contention is, if the contributors associated with ASF projects > were > interested in the further development of OFBiz then they would > already be > "on the bandwagon" by now. This theory is alluded to in one of the > replies to my post, as well as the fact that we see some dead ASF > projects out there as well as vibrantly evolving projects like Tomcat. This is a good point, though the interesting part is that this is already the case. In fact, it is just these people that are affiliated with ASF and interested in OFBiz (or doing projects based on it) that are helping push this forward. Will it attract more developers? Who knows... I think it will increase exposure and credibility and those who are interested but just didn't know it before may very well start doing OFBiz-based projects and then eventually move into a more serious contributing role. > It already makes me want to bite my own leg off in regards to > people who > have branched out and made GPL offshoots of OFBiz, although those who > have engaged in those projects have committed quite a bit back to the > community, why would you even branch out and change the creators > vision > of a project and modify the way that it is be distributed instead of > contributing all of your changes back to OFBIZ if you want to post > them > to a project!.... Sorry Big thorn in my side :( something that we want to allow. At least they are contributing back to the project and helping with certain things, and without their GPL- based derivative work they may not be involved with the project at all. So, I still appreciate their contributions in spite of still believing that this is not only less useful to OFBiz, but will also eventually turn out to be more expensive and less profitable than joining with the community here.... Naturally only time will tell though. In the mean time, I'm grateful for whatever help we can get. Thanks for your comments, I'm glad to see there is interest and thought about these things... -David _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.ofbiz.org/mailman/listinfo/users smime.p7s (3K) Download Attachment |
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