---- Andrew Flegg <[email protected]> wrote: 
>If you're doubting Graham's bona fides as a developer, I have to ask
>how long *you*'ve been in the Maemo community. I read the thread you
>linked to and I'm sorry to say my impression was the same as Graham's.

Sorry, but not all of us have had the "privilege" of being here and active on 
this forum and mailing list since the dawn of tablets.  Expecting everyone to 
know someone, and revere them when they're being rude is just one problem this 
whole "community" has had for a while now.  Sorry, but if you walk away from 
something (a job, a marriage, or a community), you don't get to come back 
months or years later and bad-mouth people and expect reverence.  You shouldn't 
expect it even when you ARE active if you're being rude.  Anyone who has to ask 
"Do you know who I am?" needs to be replied to with "A pompous 
self-aggrandizing windbag?" every once in a while.

Even "noobs" (in this community and programmers in general) know it's not 
always a simple task to pick up complex programs from others.  Anyone following 
the forums in the past year, and seeing the hurdles it's taken to get garage 
ownership moved (Pali with power-kernel, for example), would know it's not a 
trivial thing to do.  So yes, someone suggesting both things are simple, or 
that developers have infinite time to do these things, I view with some degree 
of speculation.  Especially when they've not been active to my knowledge in the 
past couple years, and are saying such things while talking down to others and 
bad-mouthing the community at large with comments like "I'm glad I stopped 
reading the forums".

>Are there other examples/smoking guns? I assume you're *not*
>suggesting that there's a great global conspiracy, but instead people
>advocating a similar platform for those looking for a transition?

There are plenty, but then I wasn't bookmarking every time I saw it to document 
it for a later argument I wasn't planning on having in the first place.  I'm 
sure if you look through the complaint logs they'd be easy to spot from the 
high report rate.  For that matter, a good number of the worst comments have 
probably been moderated or self-edited out of existence.  So to some extent, 
you're asking me to prove a point after some of the evedence has been removed.  

No, it's not a global conspiracy.  It's been a small handful of people doing it 
for the most part, and some of them have even been suspended or banned.  But 
they're a very vocal minority, and have been stirring up the debate; advocating 
for Maemo to go away in preference of their own platform.

Again... Understand my motivation here. I'm not trying to get people "banned" 
or strung up or anything.  I'm not here to argue a point, or convince you in 
some way that I'm special or right about everything going on.  My goal in even 
replying (with 3 sentences) was to corroborate that this HAS been happening in 
the forum.  To provide another data point so that people here that may have not 
been reading the forums would know there IS a small but active bunch out there 
pushing this agenda.

I'm half sad I even bothered to do that much, since all I got for it was people 
rudely putting me down and implying I was in some way a dolt for not providing 
a smoking gun, or "knowing" how "easy" it is to take over projects from 
developers as they leave.  With attitudes like this, is it any wonder people 
drop the mailing list and consider it irrelevant?  I'm debating doing the same, 
as it seems to have all the worst qualities of the forums without any of the 
positives.

>Have you got a better idea? 

Wow... Could you be more condescending?

There have been several ideas floated, by several people.  But that's been in 
the forums, which apparently nobody reads any more, so I guess they're all 
worthless ideas anyway.

The one I most advocate is setting up a self-funding system (option 1 from 
"your" list).  I also like the idea of merging the project/repositories/forums 
into an existing NFP like Debian.org.  Weather or not we need to form our own 
_personal_ NFP or not isn't something I've taken time to consider.  There are 
enough out there that provide umbrella status that it's probably just as easy 
to get under one of them.  But I haven't shot the argument down for out own 
yet, since I haven't had time to hear why others seem to think it would be 
important for us to form our own.

>The options as I see them aren't mutually exclusive:

Agreed.  My concern was that a vocal minority (given historic low voter turn 
out) may be able to remove one of those options from the table, either by vote 
or by arguing out the clock until there's not enough time to choose one of the 
options.  That threat, I think, is still out there.




As for your side note on Cordia:

Cordia and N9 seem to have a foot in both worlds.  Like many such hybrids I 
suspect they'll be ill received in both communities, which is a shame.  Both 
look like nice devices and/or projects. I'd really prefer a middle-ground 
between them though.  The N9 is functional, with a polished UI and is "end user 
ready", but seems a bit restrictive because of overly closed bits (much like 
the N900).  The Cordia looks a little too reliant on "the community" to get 
basic functionality in place (much like OpenMoko).  Ideally I'd prefer a system 
with an open but stable base, and enough of a minimal UI to practically use 
that base functionality.  If it can make/answer calls, connect to wifi, charge 
the battery, and have a simple X-based open desktop with big icons, that's 
perfect.  It just seems every device out there hits a plateau just shy of that 
point.  It either has tons of features, eye-candy, and is crippled by 
closed-sourced road-blocks, or can't reliably do basic things like make
  calls or connect to wifi reliably.  The N900 had a sprinkling of both, while 
OpenMoko fell sharply in the later camp.
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