From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-ID: To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Subject: Re: [9fans] Is IBM ThinkPad R60e notebook compatible with Plan9? From: Lyndon Nerenberg Date: Thu, 10 May 2007 23:08:58 -0700 In-Reply-To: <5d375e920705102248k42a46917p410d84fd4448df01@mail.gmail.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Topicbox-Message-UUID: 64704790-ead2-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 >> and will proactively slow me down because I have answer >> questions about 'why doesn't this compile? what the f*** are you >> doing here? where is this function you call (that I haven't written >> yet)?' etc. Even ignoring those questions takes time. > > Has this ever really been a problem or it is pure speculation? This is based on many years of hands-on experience. > First you ask not to be bothered by anyone, and now you want people to > email you so you can "let each other know where we're stepping on each > other.'" I'm sorry, but I just don't get it. Continuing the IMAP analogy, for me to put up fragments if client-side IMAP message caching code would not do any good to anyone who isn't intimately familiar with that specific problem space. Typically the would-be downloader sees "IMAP" and latches on with the hope they will find a tool that will help them sort and filter their mail. But when they double-click on imcache.c they get some strange pop-up dialog from Windows instead of the IMAP email client they were expecting. Avoiding that requires an access filter. A semantic filter that keeps the programming-naive away is a wonderful idea -- spam filtering for programmer wannabes :-) -- but it aint out there yet. This could be a work-in-progress that you could keep on /n/sources/contrib. Meanwhile, I want to keep my IMAP code within the group of people I know actually *know* how IMAP works, so that I can actually develop the code. I don't have a problem with releasing code for people to look at, play with, compile, sell, whatever. That's why my escaped goo has a BSD license on it. But I'm not going to put out any work I create unless and until I (I, *I*, *me*, not anyone else) decides it's ready to be seen in public. And nobody (*NO*body) has the right to tell me otherwise. > Plan 9 is the only "open source" project where this kind of ridiculous > practices exist. Why on earth Plan 9 has to be different and drive > everyone around crazy is beyond me. Maybe we aren't trying to solve penis envy? --lyndon