On Sun, 7 Jun 2015 23:34:44 +0200
Gergely Polonkai <gerg...@polonkai.eu> wrote:

> Hello,
> 
> I didn’t really want you to believe me, I just shared my experiences,
> that’s all. I got help several times from these “Red Hat employees”
> before, although I wouldn’t say it came in an instant; I must confess
> that sometimes I bugged them or IRC before they answered my calls.
> The keywords here are patience, persistence and and politeness. I’d
> like to think I bear all these virtues and use them well. Reading
> your bug report and the original message, I think if you state your
> problems without getting personal with either them or the companies
> they work for (or you think they work for), you could have gotten
> more far.
> 
> Yes, I also think they were not very respectful, but to be honest, you
> called for it: if you threaten someone by any means, don’t be
> surprised if they strike back. It goes just like this everywhere in
> this world.
> 
> I will leave this thread alone now. Of course, if you have anything to
> discuss with me we can do that in private, and I hereby grant you to
> publish our discussions with my name if we do so.
> 
> I still hope your problem gets solved, as I can see the use case and
> the annoyance of your users.
> 
> Wishing you the best,
> Gergely Polonkai

Gergely,

It's not that I don't believe your experiences, but your rather negative 
interpretation of my motives and methods.  I'm not suggesting such developers 
can't be manipulated to do minor things by kissing ass - raging egos often can 
be manipulated that way.  How they respond when someone sticks to facts and 
relevant viewpoints is what matters - that's professionalism vs favoritism and 
bias.

I don't claim to be the most patient person, and we knew each other already, 
but my discussing Red Hat's history on that bug was not anger nor was it 
ranting.  I have a half million visitors to my blog that I have discussed all 
of this with plenty.  Ranting in a bug report doesn't make much of a dent.

Instead, I was informing others dealing with them that there was a history to 
the bug and their preferred solutions, and that some of what was being said was 
inaccurate.  I was providing important and very relevant context on it being an 
inter-DE issue, and I was disclosing their conflict of interest.  Even if this 
involves a company name or a developer's name (and I only mentioned them 
generally), it is relevant to how the bug is being addressed, and by whom.  The 
FACTS I presented just happened to be unflattering to their particular ears, so 
they thought it was fine to just delete and threaten people to remove the 
information.  Nor is this an isolated case, but merely one of a long series of 
examples.

They conduct themselves as tyrants, simply put, and this project's contributors 
seem to be whipped into accepting such treatment.  I'm surprised to see a 
considerate person like yourself defending their behavior.  I have no hatred of 
them - the internet is full of arrogant fools.  Yet putting them in charge of 
your project and doing as they say is another matter.

You also give them a benefit of the doubt I do not.  To me, their reason for 
instantly responding to and commanding all such bug reports is to control their 
direction for Red Hat and ilk.  To this end, they largely obstruct, rather than 
resolve.  Remember, these are not just good-hearted fellows donating their 
time.  They're paid by a very large corporation and do what they're told to do, 
and don't do what they're not told to do.  And that very large corporation has 
different views on direction than most users of GTK+.  So you needn't defend 
them - they have plenty of PR people  and money to take care of that.

You might start defending the interests of yourself and libre software 
development instead, as I'm sure they're not the same as Red Hat's interests.

_______________________________________________
gtk-app-devel-list mailing list
gtk-app-devel-list@gnome.org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-app-devel-list

Reply via email to