Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 30th Aug 2006 17:05 UTC, submitted by jcpinto
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Member since:
2006-08-24
There are exceptions of course (I mentioned the only one I know of: Emacs), but "being around" for years doesn't mean the projects are alive and in good health. I mean, many latest versions hardly present new features. Where is the lunch money? Do I get something if I do it?
Yes it is suicidal: how many "distro-men" suffered from health problems due to excessive work? (I know of two) How many quit trying to get something from nothing?
How many sincerely wanted to do something great but bad things happened? (Libranet comes to mind).
Even if you charge something life is very tough, so you can imagine how tough it is if you just offer the code.
Who is going to support you?
Let us imagine that
I start now a project, get a bunch of people
(without a clue) working in it and then, after everyone fails to see the point, we leave it in SourceForge for years. Some guy changes the color of the Icons: new Version! The project is active!
Do you want examples? There are thousands.
Now: lots of code has been around for years. It doesn't matter.
That's what happens.