On Wed, 1 Oct 2014, Louigi Verona wrote:

Also, I would like to say this - bottom line is that most apps on Linux are not 
known
for ease of use. And that has a systematic cause, no doubt about it. In my view 
the
cause is that this is mostly software done for oneself rather than for the 
audience.
Additionally, GUI takes a lot of time to develop and Linux hobbyists are 
generally
developers, not designers. That's it, really.

Yes, To add to the point, Just as the author of the talk is developing a phone, so is ubuntu. I was following the progress for a bit and what stands out to me is that almost all of the people who showed up and wanted to add code were interested in porting the the sw to another device (the one that person has) rather than improving the look, feel, experience or even the functionallity. It seems a part of it is that developing for other people can be pretty thankless. One hears about the problems and dislikes, but even when these grumbles have been addressed or fixed, there is rarely any thanks. This is even more noticable for those users who have switched over from proprietary sw who's attitude is more along the lines of "why haven't you fixed this yet?" to much more abusive language than that.

On a community developed project, how the developers "feel" about their work is much more important when they are paid for the same work (even the same people).

Just dabbling in development has made me much more understanding and appreciative of the work that others do. I am much more willing to "make do", much more willing to hear "no I am not going to add that". Much more willing to use two (or more) tools to do the same job that might be done with one if designed so.

The whole idea of "we can make something beautiful with a wonderful experience and so users will use it and be free" doesn't ring true. An open source project can put a product out like that yes, but as soon as they do it will be copied and even before that, it will not be chosen because it is "free of malwere", but rather because it goes with my feeling this week and next week it is back to some closed device because my friend has one. In the end, "open" devices would have to be made by people just as "cut-throat" as a closed shop. so what is really gained?


--
Len Ovens
www.ovenwerks.net

_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-dev mailing list
Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev

Reply via email to