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by corrral
1451 days ago
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To quote myself: > Between Red Hat's maneuvering and Poettering's choices, though, it's not trivial to avoid them. I'm just explaining why some people dislike Poettering's work, while typically having no strong opinions about the careers of every single other author of init and sound daemons, whether or not they like the software. It's a combo of 1) disagreeing with their choices and methods, and 2) the fact that those choices and methods have made his stuff much harder to avoid than the alternatives. That is why people don't like him (and, indeed, probably the main reason so many people know his name at all) |
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That doesn't follow unless you consider "developing a software that becomes popular" to be a method or a choice. Again, I don't know what you expect them to do or what other choice you expect them to make. Should they have suddenly quit once it was clear that it was going to become popular? What good would something like that do?
>That is why people don't like him (and, indeed, probably the main reason so many people know his name at all)
This also doesn't follow, it doesn't make sense and is extremely unprofessional. It isn't good for anyone's mental health to hold grudges like this. In order to attempt to have an unbiased view, you have to be able to separate the work from the person. Though I realize asking for this is probably an unwinnable battle in open source. Now that he doesn't work for Red Hat anymore it will be interesting to see people keep trying to blame both him and Red Hat for this.