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The new struggles facing open source

4 pointsby boynamedsueabout 10 years ago

1 comment

slimsagabout 10 years ago
The &quot;struggles&quot; mentioned in the article aren&#x27;t issues with open-source projects at all in my opinion.<p>&gt; “Newbies Not Welcome!” signs like Chu’s aren’t a great way to accommodate the influx of those who want to participate but don’t yet know how.<p>Yes, if you don&#x27;t know how to contribute good code to the Linux kernel or other open-source projects, you&#x27;re going to need to learn to do that on your own time. Nobody has time to walk someone every step of the way in fixing an issue or adding a feature -- otherwise we would just do it ourselves.<p>&gt; Ultimately, open source isn’t about code. It’s about community, and as Bert Hubert suggests, “community is the best predictor of the future of a project.” That community isn’t fostered by jerk project leads or corporate overlords pretending to be friendly foundations. It’s the heart of today’s biggest challenges in open source -- as it was in the last decade.<p>Open-source, as the name implies, _is_ about source code and not about a community. It&#x27;s about you, your friends, and anyone else you know being able to get a copy of the source code and being able to modify it however you want to.