On 2012/03/28, at 17:34, Chuck Hill wrote:
> The sun set on WO a long time ago (well, assuming you think that it ever really shined on WO). For new projects, WebObjects and Wonder is still my choice until I find something _better_ not just newer. I am not moving to something newer and worse because WO is old (though I might move to something newer and worse if using WO is an impediment to getting new work). When I find something better, I am gone. I've been looking since 1999 or so... I look on WebObjects more as a completed library, not an EOL product with no future. Wonder is the source of new features. Granted, that means no bug fixes that can't be done in Wonder, but what software do you use that does NOT have bugs?
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> Chuck
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> On 2012-03-28, at 8:02 AM, John Huss wrote:
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>> Technologies come and go; there is a lifecycle for everything. That is a fundamental attribute of software development. The fact that WebObjects has endured for so long as a relevant and useful piece of technology is amazing. But like all technologies, it can't last forever. The sun is setting (or has set) on WO. It's time to move on; that's what programmers do - our toolset evolves over time - usually it changes dramatically every 5-10 years. This is just another evolution whose time has come.
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>> It is sort of sweet and heart-warming to see the outpouring of affection for WO, but the reality is that it's time to move on. The best thing you can do for WO now is to gain experience with other technologies and then help people migrate to them. Cayenne should be at the top of this list. On the HTML side, I'd love have someone find out how hard it is to migrate WO components to Tapestry.
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>> The reality is that WO is LEGACY technology. It should be treated as such. That means you continue to maintain your apps that use WO, you find a new technology, and you write your new apps in something else.
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>> John
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>> On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 8:18 AM, Pascal Robert <
email@hidden> wrote:
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>> Le 2012-03-28 à 08:44, Q a écrit :
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>>>
>>> On 28/03/2012, at 9:38 AM, Pascal Robert wrote:
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>>>>
>>>> Le 2012-03-27 à 19:30, Mike Schrag a écrit :
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>>>>>>>> "I think we should use the funds to pay people to fix issues that the majority of users are having. The issues will be voted by the community and the most voted issues will become the highest priorities."
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>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That is not how Wonder was created and now how I expect that it will continue. If you have a problem, learn how to fix it. Then put it in Wonder.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the past, we had Apple sponsorship and most of the big additions to Wonder between 2007 and 2010 came from Apple… We don't have that sponsorship anymore, and personally I don't think we will survive if we don't pay people for major stuff. I don't think we will survive anyway, but that's another story…
>>>>> Apple funded a VERY small percentage of the contributions to Wonder. Almost all of the contributions I made came from mDimension donating their time, bandwidth, and hardware for the good of the community. Frankly, if Apple hadn't funded the things they did, I would have done them anyway, because I just enjoyed making things.
>>>>>
>>>>> This approach of paying for fixes seems like you're just going to end up with a collection of bounty hunters instead of a community. On top of that, there's no way you're going to be able to afford to pay the market cost for this work. mDimension easily donated a couple hundred thousand dollars of time if you applied their real hourly rate to the work. So on top of encouraging people to only give if they get paid, they're going to be paid crap, so why would anyone even bother?
>>>>>
>>>>> I really don't think things are stagnant because of the lack of money. They're stagnant because the remaining people in the community don't care enough to contribute. I don't buy any of the "I don't know how to do X" or "I don't have time to do X." You have to want it. I didn't know how to write nearly any of what was in WOLips before I started working on WOLips, and likewise with Wonder. I learned WebObjects working on Wonder. I'm would wager that everyone who worked on Wonder was in the same category. Contribution is also positive reinforcement. The coolest times in Wonder for me were always when one person contributing got someone else energized to contribute and amazing things were made.
>>>>>
>>>>> The real question is: Who is currently NOT contributing because they're just waiting for a payday to do so? If you're perfectly happy enjoying the fruits of the community while not giving back to the community, look in the mirror for the reason it's dying. Either give a shit, or don't be sad that it dies.
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>>> I agree with mike's statement, and can relate. I have worked on many different parts of WOLips, Wonder and numerous other projects, and more often than not I had no idea where to start, all I knew was what I wanted to achieve. You just have to know what you want to do, and don't give up until you succeed or know that it can't be done. Some of the code I have contributed took me over a year to get right (arguably some of it still isn't), and there are other things I have been working on sporadically (because it's not something I need yet) for close to 4 years now that could be great, or may never be finished, I still don't know which. I won't even mention the number of experiments I have abandoned because they couldn't be made to work the way I had hoped. Nobody could justify paying for that time, particularly to someone who had no idea how to do it in the first place, and with possibly nothing to show for it at the end.
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>>> For me it has never been about getting payment, recognition, or privilege. The sole reason I have spent thousands of hours of my own time working on code for the sole purpose of giving it away is one of moral duty and respect for the people who did it before me and still do it today. They have spent innumerable hours they could have used to do paid work, donated resources and sacrificed time with their families and friends, so that we could benefit from their generosity. People like David Terán who gave more of his life to this community than you would think possible. I do it, because they did it before me, it's my payment for using their work.
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>>> My advice for the community is to stop getting hung up thinking up ways to better market and grow the community. Instead simply remember what made it what it is, good people, supporting each other and donating their time and effort to make it better than it was yesterday. Step up, do something, make a difference, do it now, no matter how small, in whatever way you can.
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>> Did the community grow by simply supporting each other (and I won't say that people support each other, and I'm not aware of any community where everyone give and take)? How a shrinking community is going to get better? Especially after that most experts left it or can't contribute? Did we have new leaders who risen up in the last two years? Do we have new sponsors like mDimension or Apple were? How can we find sponsors when most of the community are small (one or two guys) shops?
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>> Anyway, I'm giving up (no, WOWODC 2012 won't be cancelled).
>>
>>
>>
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> Chuck Hill Senior Consultant / VP Development
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