On 4/2/21 5:00 AM, Giuseppe D'Angelo wrote:
(Is there a conflict of intents here because of the massive support to
the Qt Project? I can't see how -- if anything, one could say that the
commercial decisions may drive the decisions in the Qt Project,
certainly NOT that the Qt Project has the power to "sabotage" the
commercial decisions!)

Well, when you dropped RHEL 6 you sabotaged commercial support for it.

Try fully ripping out QML. Not just conditionally compiled out. Not just "don't use it." Fully rip it out of the OpenSource product and all support for it such that QtC has to add it back in for every release.

>The combination of monitor+Qt is by definition part of the environment (as far as the end-user application is concerned). Changing a monitor is changing the environment.

No, it's not.

> But wait, don't your practices tell you that you should've run a risk analysis, filed in the holy 29 documents (all named with fancy acronyms,I'm sure), get an independent certification and applied the new cover sheet on your TPS reports (didn't you get the memo?) before approving the purchase of a new monitor model on a life-critical workstation?

That statement makes it painfully obvious you never learned Software Engineering.

No. Replacing one monitor with one of equal or higher capability does not meet definition of RISK. "Screens look like crap" does not meet the definition of RISK.

"Unable to read data placing patient at risk" does meet the definition of RISK.

Replacing with a lesser capability monitor does meet the definition of RISK because a 640x480 screen may not fit everything that was on the larger monitor.

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