Am 18.07.2013 um 09:59 schrieb Mickael Istria <mist...@redhat.com>:
> Eclipse Foundation is IMO the only organization which is able to be efficient 
> at listening to the "market" of IDEs


I strongly disagree with this statement. There are many organizations as well 
as companies out there that can perform this equally efficient if not better. 
In fact, there used to be a company in the past. Also, anything the Foundation 
does is an investment as well. Simply put, in the end someone has to pay for 
it.  

BTW, when doing competitive analysis I also disagree with an earlier argument 
that some ide isn't free and therefore doesn't count. There are a bunch of 
people out there that would rather spend a two digit amount for something that 
helps them get their work done more efficiently. 

Anyway, just looking at the raw numbers, the issue is obvious. There were *a 
million* commits in the "eclipse" project (what I consider "platform") within 
three years back in 2004. It was only a good third in the last three years 
(2010-2012).
http://dash.eclipse.org/dash/commits/web-app/summary.cgi

Those commits went into a lot of things truly important for innovation higher 
up the stack (SWT, Text, JFace, Resources). SWT has been in maintenance mode 
since important committers left. Oracle is investing a lot into JavaFX. There 
is some shift towards the web. There is a lot innovation happening at Orion. 
Also, the diversification into areas such as M2M, Polarsys, etc. help the 
Foundation maintaining a steady interest in the Foundation model. But what does 
this mean for the IDE? 

Frankly, I think Orion is too early. There is still much attraction in native 
IDEs. We all have good ideas to improve the Eclipse IDE in ways we can. I've 
put energy into a proposal to address the preference issues within the 
packages. There is progress on this end. I've also put quite a bit energy into 
improving things in the past as well. There is only so much you can do as a 
single contributor not even working full-time on things. But I got frustrated 
along the way. Too much of the platform is still dominated and controlled too 
strictly by that one single company. Contributions got turned away because of 
the "lack of resources" argument and associated maintenance costs long term. To 
some point those arguments aren't completely invalid. I'm at a point of being 
resigned when it comes to contributing to the platform. 

Without a team that is sufficiently funded for an interesting time period, it's 
only the small steps we can do. I'm wondering if those small steps will be 
enough for the IDE to have a future. Well, being a German I am actually more 
concerned than wondering but I consider this a better thing than not caring at 
all. I really appreciate the time and energy people are spending on this 
discussion. 

-Gunnar

-- 
Gunnar Wagenknecht
gun...@wagenknecht.org





_______________________________________________
cross-project-issues-dev mailing list
cross-project-issues-dev@eclipse.org
https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/cross-project-issues-dev

Reply via email to