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Re: [Linux-aus] RELEASE: DON'T LET YOUR VENDOR'S ROADMAP LEAD YOU UP THE GARDEN PATH



On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 06:39:25PM +1000, Jeff Waugh wrote:
> <quote who="Con Zymaris">
> 
> > Yes, but think about the differences between FOSS and closed.
> > 
> > 1) who sets the roadmap? 
> 
> FOSS: The developers (be they company or not, in many circumstances mixed).
> 
> Closed: The company (developers, marketing, etc).
> 
> What's the difference? Are you implying that FOSS roadmaps are better at
> satisfying *users*? Seriously? The funniest example of this can be found
> wholly within the FOSS world - GNOME and KDE. Maybe users do count... But
> which users? :-)

Let me provide you with some context. 

In recent months, senior Microsoft execs have stated, on several
occasions, that a core difference between FOSS and closed source, is that
the latter has a real company, projecting a real roadmap ahead, as a great
asset for users of that vendor's platforms.

I disagree. I'm saying that architectural roadmaps, as have been used by
firms like Microsoft, are a great disadvantage to users as they have, more
often than not, left users stranded when that vendor does an about face
and flips to a new, different roadmap. Product roadmaps are less of an
issue.

So, the mere fact that Microsoft is touting their roadmaps as a
'positive', and as an advantage over FOSS, is a message that needs to be
'corrected' in the public perception. Thus this the press release.

If Microsoft hadn't opened their mouths to tout a phantom advantage,
neither would I to tear that phantom down.

> 
> GNOME "changed the roadmap" when 2.0 came out. Although it has been quite
> successful outside the technical user community, at least within it, the
> change raised some ire.

Yes, there are instances were FOSS projects 'jump', with annoying 
discontinuities. But there are, pound-for-pound, more of these, with more 
heart-breaking effects on users, in the closed space. 

You guys remember Sun pulling the plug on SunOS? Then Solaris on x86? I
can point to a million lines of VB code that I know of, which will not
compile from one version of the compiler to the next. You show me where
this has happened with GCC, or Python or PHP.

> 
> > 2) what recourse do users have to deviate from this roadmap.
> 
> FOSS: Massive engineering effort to fork, or use another tool entirely.
> 
> Closed: Use another tool entirely: go buy something else.

Assuming you can get your documents and data out...

Microsoft touted Blackbird to tens of thousands of content publishers in
the mid-90s.  Anyone who spent time and effort on that platform ended up
with nothing usable 18 months later on. Once again, show me where this has
happened, to such a large extent, in the FOSS space.


> 
> > 3) How many of these are orphaned when there is a large installed base of 
> >    generally happy users?
> 
> FOSS: "I am just a user, I can't maintain it myself! I am orphaned!"
> 
> Closed: "I am orphaned!"
> 
> > Also, for FOSS, these are per-project roadmaps, not all-encompassing
> > system frameworks which require a big retooling job to migrate to or
> > adopt.
> 
> But realistically, there are still single-point-of-failure projects in FOSS
> land... and when they change, so does everyone else. :-)

Indeed, no one claimed there wasn't. FOSS projects, however, do not claim 
that the existence of a roadmap as a marketing advantage over competing 
platforms, because, as we all know, roadmaps can change. The illusion of 
platform stability that a roadmap offers users, is therefore a dangerous 
thing.

> 
> 
> [ Anyway, I'm not arguing the validity of your point, just pointing out that
> the finger of accusation might come straight back at us. :-) ]
> 

You know my motto on that score Jeff ;-) Bring 'em on... 


-- 
_____________________________________________________________________________
Con Zymaris <conz@cyber.com.au> Level 4, 10 Queen St, Melbourne, Australia 
Cybersource: Australia's Leading Linux and Open Source Solutions Company 
Web: http://www.cyber.com.au/  Phone: 03 9621 2377   Fax: 03 9621 2477