11-20-2008 09:41 PM
11-23-2008 12:33 AM
Is it just me, or this sound like "Our 100% clean water (with even more stuff mixed in, good and bad) is available to everyone. Our clean water is free for all!"
11-23-2008 04:33 AM
we publish 100% of our code, and 100% of our bug fixes. It *is* true that we delay some bug fixes going into Labs
We are writing a HECK of a lot of code, and quite frankly it's not easy to keep Labs, which is intended as our experimental place, perfectly stable all the time.
11-23-2008 06:46 PM
we publish 100% of our code, and 100% of our bug fixesI could not find any GPLed (or open source) release of Alfresco 2.2.x. From your statement above, it is clear that it is available somewhere but all I could find was the "community" versions (2.1 and 3.0 labs) as well as the SVN repository itself. And as far as i can tell, you may only retrieve the latest "HEAD" version from the Subversion repository, which means that you don't have access to any particular branch or tag (e.g. 2.2.0).
11-23-2008 09:38 PM
Has it ever occurred to you that one reason the Labs release is occasionally unstable is because of the frenetic pace of development, and not out of any devious design to thwart the community?
would you prefer that Alfresco completely open 95% of its code and make a few extensions proprietary (maybe 5%)?
11-23-2008 09:48 PM
Could you please tell me where to get the GPL source code for Alfresco 2.2 or any version of Alfresco other than 2.1 and 3.0 labs? Again, I ask this not to start doing business with the community versions but just to be able to answer these questions when asked during a training session.
11-23-2008 10:55 PM
It is not a problem in itself that your EE is not conforming to OSI, but it's a problem that you call it "open source". You have been an OSI board member. You should know that OSI issued an open source definition to (among other things) make the business of "copycats" more difficult. It's a pity that nowadays you do exactly what you once fought.
I am aware that there is a myriad of different open source approaches out there that are all legitimate. Where did you get that idea from that I could question Apache's legitimacy? I am personally much closer to Apache than to GPL. Where did I question the legitimacy of a commercial open source model? I am not at all fitting this cliché. Open source cannot survive without a supporting business model. Nobody wants you to not feed your children. Huu, I've cried so many tears when you wrote that. [Matt note: I'm very sorry to have caused you tears. 🙂 ] But is there any high profile open source business model that questions the OSI definition? I am not aware of any one (except Alfresco's)… though there might be others. You know others?
You and your management colleagues like bashing Microsoft. But in this (and only this) respect you behave worse than Microsoft does. They at least admit that they sell "shared code" and not "open source". I think that to remain credible you should state on your product presentation website and in your marketing material that only your community edition is 100% open source and that enterprise edition is not.
I think that in your last post the open source model that you are currently after has become reasonably clear. You are however again inconsistent and misleading in that on your website you say that only "enterprise edition" is production ready, not community edition. Here in this thread you want to make us believe that every community download (you have 50.000+, drupal has 2.000.000+) is a production installation and that therefore the "community edition" is fully production ready.
I personally prefer an open source approach like that of MySQL, Zimbra or SugarCRM. But don't try to twist my words. I prefer an approach where the core product is stable and open. Not an approach where a useless trial edition with severe restrictions is "open" just to give a taste of a proprietary enterprise edition.
You can be sure that the open source community will continue to bash you even stronger when you try to do that (while maintaining your open source tag). If that's what you are after then I definitely prefer your current approach.
You asked me, so here is what I personally think: Red Hat makes 10-12 $ with support and 1 $ with licenses.
If I was a software company today I'd never try to build up a COTS business model around licenses. A market position based on software licenses is simply far too easy to be threatened by tomorrows competitors. Even the most intelligent license conditions will never give you a durable competitive edge. You have done it to Documentum, someone else will do it to you. All high volume COTS ultimately has a marginal cost very near 0$. Not so low volume custom additions. Simple economics in my opinion. Not something you can escape.
As Alexander, yourself, myself and many others agree: If the community really wants a stable edition then we could provide one ourselves. That's what we're definitely going to try. Whether we'll manage: no idea. We know that for us (other than for you) it's quite some work to be done… But it may well be worth trying even if you stop us at some point by doing the same. (I'd admittedly love to die that way.) And as I already said in another post: We'll contribute everything back that might be developed on our side! No interest whatsoever in getting out of sync…
11-24-2008 04:49 PM
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