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by sph
1688 days ago
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"Three easy steps". So, if I want to fix X or at least drive the discussion forward, I need to do menial jobs for 5 years, make a name for myself before I'm allowed to tackle X? How are we surprised nobody contributes to Linux desktop software? > participate in the Matrix chat and get to know people I'm a software engineer, your plan is teaching me how to get into politics. I understand that knowing people is important, but sounds to me that knowing people is the most important thing in the Linux desktop business. Not the type of environment I'd thrive on nor I'm interested in participating in. Sounds to me this version of "open-source collaboration" is just looking for politicians that put the effort to enter and fit into tight-knit, closed groups, not an open-air bazaar of people brainstorming and improving code. |
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It's not clear what you want otherwise, if you want other projects that have a lower barrier for contribution, there are plenty of those, and they also have huge backlogs in their issue trackers. I mean just think of this from the other perspective. Say you are maintaining an open source project in your spare time. Somebody comes along and asks you to do something that would take up months of your time. And the fix is somewhat complicated so instead of spending your free time with your spouse/kids/friends/etc you would have to spend it all on that fixing that issue, for months, during which no other issues can be fixed. You could close the issue with an explanation, you could say you want it eventually and then leave it open, or you could totally ignore it and leave it open. But none of those options will ever be satisfying to the reporter, sometimes people just ask for things that are not realistic. I'm sure you can relate if you have paying customers at work that have ever asked for unrealistic timelines...