Mickael,

 

These are general comments, and are certainly not meant as a criticism of
you or Red Hat. You guys are very helpful in a lot of critical areas. That
said.

 

I could imagine the Eclipse Foundation doing something along these lines.
But I am not really sure it is of much value if there are no resources to
work on things. The status quo for quite some time has been that there are
insufficient resources helping on the platform to make the progress we all
want. Actually, it's not just the platform: it is pretty much everything
under the topic of code and processes involved in the "common good". Has
something changed in these areas to warrant the EF to make such an
investment?

 

In addition to the above, it seems that a lot of the user issues I've seen
are specifically related to the Java IDE. We can talk all we want about how
Eclipse is a general platform and there are many tools and languages
supported, but for the vast majority of users the Java development tools is
what they mean when they say "Eclipse". The Java IDE is another area which
has felt under-resourced for a long time. Are there resources - including
user experience resources - available to make significant enhancements
there? 

 

Complaining about the status quo is always good sport. Actually showing up
with the developers necessary to make and maintain those changes is how we
tell who's serious around here. I am certainly not going to have the EF
promote a bunch of changes to the release train process, the EPP packaging
process, end-user feature analysis, etc. unless the people and companies
calling for change actually commit some long-term resources for both the
enhancements and operations needed. Or alternatively they can demonstrate
that the people currently keeping these processes together are happy to make
some changes.

 

If anyone wants to educate me about how there are new resources available,
or how existing resources can be re-allocated to make some significant
progress please feel free to contact me either publicly or privately. I
would _love_ to see improvements in all of these areas. 

 

Mike Milinkovich

mike.milinkov...@eclipse.org

+1.613.220.3223

 

From: Mickael Istria [mailto:mist...@redhat.com] 
Sent: July-17-13 11:53 AM
To: mike.milinkov...@eclipse.org; Cross project issues
Subject: Re: [cross-project-issues-dev] Preferences (topic was touched in
"Eclipse smells kind of dead" thread)

 

On 07/17/2013 04:29 PM, Mike Milinkovich wrote:

If we're looking for user feedback, reading the article and comments here[1]
would be helpful.


Gathering the feedback and reacting to it based on end-users request is not
something Eclipse contributors generally excel at doing. The main
entry-point for contributors is Bugzilla, which doesn't reflect the real
concerns of most users. I guess having the Foundation gathering such
external feedback and create reports per project saying "Here is what people
like and didn't like about your project in the last 3 monthes" could help
project to identify what is critical for better adoption.
Is this something we could imagine the Foundation to provide ? Does it make
sense?

-- 
Mickael Istria
Eclipse developer at JBoss, by Red Hat <http://www.jboss.org/tools> 
My blog <http://mickaelistria.wordpress.com>  - My Tweets
<http://twitter.com/mickaelistria> 

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