Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
does a bug exist if nobody has found it
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
does a bug exist if nobody has found it
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
in the post of "small" open source, guess what kind of open source i am talking about.
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
slavery was legal
Comment on
TypeScript imagines type safety in a dynamic runtime
Reply in thread
i think you forgot to look at the image
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
LOL yes let's listen to a person who read a stupid opinion (im not saying you are stupid) on the internet and now propagates it everywhere he sees the "open source" keyword. If you read by comment i'm explicitly talking about software libraries, the only support you get for libraries is documentation. nobody listen to me nobody is selling support for small libraries which is what this post is about, on any meaningful level. prove me wrong
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
That would maybe be nice in theory, except nobody
Everybody wants to pay, nobody is giving them a chance to by providing sound means, trying to sell open source charity instead which the legal departments absolutely hates. It's not true that businesses don't want to pay, what they don't want is to donate. These are very different things.
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread
Yes it's called experiential value, like an artist doing sketches, developers sketch their program. Open Source is not meant for production use. The industrial software library development should be done by professional software engineering companies in a socially responsible way.
Comment on
The fate of “small” open source
Reply in thread