Starcraftmazter said:
Doesn't matter. Psotfx - whom was one of the lead phpbb3 developers retired from the project about mid-way through, and it's still here today, and by far the best forum software ever made.
One project out of how many failed FOSS projects out there?
Just because there is one success story doesn't mean it retroactively applies to ever other one. The majority of FOSS software doesn't even leave Alpha/Beta stages.
Starcraftmazter said:
Yes, software developers working on one piece of software living in different parts of the world was indeed a problem...maybe 20 years ago.
It still is.
People can't read minds. It becomes harder when there is no face to face contact. That means, unless the entire software design is very well documented, people are going to get different ideas regarding the direction of the project.
That's not to say it cannot be done well. It can, and indeed has, been dealt with effectively.
Starcraftmazter said:
Yeh there is. Games are different to application software, it's a pretty simple concept.
Indeed the
nature of the software is different. That said, the software design/engineering practices are universal across all development. You're still going to need to sit down and work through the SDLC in rough. It is just the
means you use to achieve those steps that vary between different forms of software. The central tenets remain the same.
Give me one process in the design/development phase of games development that you cannot replicate using the open source model.
Starcraftmazter said:
I do not agree that the quality of applications depends on any tools the OS developer releases.
Not my argument here, but I'd thought I'd add my two cents.
Bad documentation = Bad development
Fact of life.
Why do a lot of Windows applications suck? I hope you read my mind.
Starcraftmazter said:
Grab a medal then. I prefer to run the real versions, and not the ports though.
How is it less real when you compile it for a different (similarly POSIX-compatible) OS?
It's almost like if I'd compiled a similar application in another flavour of Linux on SPARC - is it any less real?
Starcraftmazter said:
Ehhh...critical environment? Ubuntu is marketed as a desktop operating system to replace winblows. Hardly a critical environment....
Contradicting yourself now, are we? You just mentioned that it was 'the favourite server OS'. Oh please...