Linked by lemur2 on Thu 26th Jan 2012 22:42 UTC
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There's not, and there could not be a 'management' to drive the development process. KDE could not force a 'stability release' among its developers.
There's not, and there could not be a 'management' to drive the development process. KDE could not force a 'stability release' among its developers.
why not ... wait that might require some discipline. "
Evolution doesn't require discipline, or any kind of organisation or overview, or even any notion of purpose or intent, in order to produce complex and high-performance organisms.
FOSS development progresses in a process described as a "meritocracy", which in some ways is quite similar to the processes of evolution, which in turn has been summarised as "survival of the fittest".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meritocracy#Open_Source
Edited 2012-01-27 08:45 UTC
Indeed, discipline is an issue when you depend on volunteered work spread around the globe.
However, you have to understand that KDE includes many many sub-projects. These sub-projects are in different status and their own developers and maintainers know the necessary steps for their own projects better than ayone else. So even if KDE 'could' force a feature freeze on a specific release, that wouldnt make any sense. Those parts which need polish are already being polished.
Edited 2012-01-27 09:09 UTC





Member since:
2007-06-21
KDE is developed by hundreds of volunteers, working on their own prefered directions.
There's not, and there could not be a 'management' to drive the development process. KDE could not force a 'stability release' among its developers.
However, 'stability and performance' is the path kde is actually taking. In the past few releases, most of the effort has been put into polishing various parts, not adding new features.