Linked by Razvan T. Coloja on Mon 3rd Jan 2011 23:30 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 455906
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[4]: Haiku could change the world when ...
by Valhalla on Wed 5th Jan 2011 09:43
in reply to "RE[3]: Haiku could change the world when ..."
Valhalla,
I understand what you say and even agree with most of it. The point that I was trying to make is simply that Haiku is a developer centric project, not a marketing driven one, and that this is not likely to change (see the statement that I quoted).
I understand what you say and even agree with most of it. The point that I was trying to make is simply that Haiku is a developer centric project, not a marketing driven one, and that this is not likely to change (see the statement that I quoted).
True, but are there any spare-time developed open source projects that are NOT developer centric (meritocracies)? Without the developers the project is dead, marketing on the other hand is not essential although it can be very beneficial.
RE[5]: Haiku could change the world when ...
by koki on Wed 5th Jan 2011 13:31
in reply to "RE[4]: Haiku could change the world when ..."
"Valhalla,
I understand what you say and even agree with most of it. The point that I was trying to make is simply that Haiku is a developer centric project, not a marketing driven one, and that this is not likely to change (see the statement that I quoted).
I understand what you say and even agree with most of it. The point that I was trying to make is simply that Haiku is a developer centric project, not a marketing driven one, and that this is not likely to change (see the statement that I quoted).
True, but are there any spare-time developed open source projects that are NOT developer centric (meritocracies)? Without the developers the project is dead, marketing on the other hand is not essential although it can be very beneficial. "
Again, we agree. I was not claiming otherwise, but rather replying to the message stating that Haiku could change the world if they got a clue about marketing (http://www.osnews.com/thread?455803). I was not implying anything beyond that.
By the way, developer centric does not necessarily mean meritocracy, but I digress.




Member since:
2005-10-17
Valhalla,
I understand what you say and even agree with most of it. The point that I was trying to make is simply that Haiku is a developer centric project, not a marketing driven one, and that this is not likely to change (see the statement that I quoted).