Adam Tauno Williams wrote: <snip>
But you run into a issue of scarce resources - someone would need to define and *test* that category on an *ongoing* basis. As a software developer I can tell you that *ongoing testing* is the most expensive [in resources] part of the entire process. Seriously. On projects I've worked on I've vetoed many a otherwise good feature/idea because "who is going to maintain it?" Testing requires *lots* of time from very [scarce] knowledgeable people.
But this is the crux of the entire argument. Given this limited set of resources, somewhere a group of developers have made a decision on how to allocate those resources in the design of a product. But there are users (call them customers if you like) that are saying "we don't like the product". And they seem to be a vocal and persistent set of users that have been with SuSE for a long time and are not trollers. The canonical open-source response is "well, open source is all about choice and you can go and hack your distro all you want and put in whatever you like". This is simply unrealistic for the vast, vast majority of users. The risk is then to drive people away from SuSE, and end up with a distro that only the developers are using. Is this acceptable? -- Tony Alfrey tonyalfrey@earthlink.net "I'd Rather Be Sailing" -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org