Conventional viewpoint?!
Conventional viewpoint?!
Posted May 27, 2016 20:13 UTC (Fri) by Nemo_bis (guest, #88187)In reply to: The value of drive-through contributions by jezuch
Parent article: The value of drive-through contributions
As for a SLA approach, that's an important step to take, however it comes with issues: 1) it requires someone to be "forced" to do the work mandated by the policy, which usually means you must have employees working on it; 2) CVS and issue tracker software (let alone mailing lists) may be unable to answer the question "is there a question/report/patch which is still unattended after X days?" (for instance bugzilla is able to tell you such a thing, but less mature issue trackers aren't: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T76825 ).
The classification of the 4 main kinds of drive-through contributions was interesting, but also likely to be based on a small sample of projects. Can someone point to some research on the matter? I can find some research on Sourceforge or FLOSSmetric datasets (mostly ancient), something on the Eclipse and Mozilla bugzillas and something on i18n for a few hundreds projects, but little systematic and wide-ranging research on recent evolutions. Maybe http://doai.io/10.4018/ijossp.2012100101 , http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/etd4996 , http://hdl.handle.net/10612/1796 are interesting but skimming didn't point to anything specific.
Posted May 30, 2016 19:46 UTC (Mon)
by flussence (guest, #85566)
[Link] (5 responses)
Maybe that's simply another point in the distinction between “open source” and true free software projects? Compare Op*nOffice and LibreOffice for example - the latter group *chooses* to be open, the former is merely *obliged* to be by the license it inherited, and the atmosphere around each one couldn't be further apart.
Posted May 31, 2016 9:21 UTC (Tue)
by micka (subscriber, #38720)
[Link] (4 responses)
For open/libreoffice, if what you're thinking of is the license, libreoffice is actually under dual apache/MPL and openoffice is (I think) only apache. Would you care to detail what you mean here?
Posted May 31, 2016 15:27 UTC (Tue)
by lgeorget (guest, #99972)
[Link] (1 responses)
An open source license merely gives you the right to check out and audit the code, a free software (per the definition of the FSF license allows you to use the code, modify it, redistribute it (including in its modified form), etc. : https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-poi...
Even if probably most open source software out there qualify as free (I guess), that's not quite the same thing.
Posted May 31, 2016 18:13 UTC (Tue)
by micka (subscriber, #38720)
[Link]
Posted Jun 4, 2016 18:12 UTC (Sat)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (1 responses)
Actually, no. LibreOffice is NOT Apache, which is why LO can take advantage of OOo code, but the reverse is NOT true.
LO is dual-licence LGPL/MPL
Cheers,
Posted Jun 4, 2016 22:15 UTC (Sat)
by micka (subscriber, #38720)
[Link]
Conventional viewpoint?!
Conventional viewpoint?!
Conventional viewpoint?!
Conventional viewpoint?!
The FSF is not a good reference either, one of their license (GDFL) is not free using either definition.
Conventional viewpoint?!
Wol
Conventional viewpoint?!
I (incorrectly) assumed the work was done and finished but apparently it wasn't.
Another error I made: it wouldn't have allowed to make LO ASL as new contribution wouldn't have been included.