I guess I should have been more specific, I meant more along the lines of community 
driven business application projects and not the more general category of 
"enterprise level projects" as I wrote.

Postgres is an interesting example of a community driven project that is pretty 
independent. On the infrastructure level there are quite a few projects, like 
many under the Apache umbrella, that would be similar I guess.

The trick with business applications is that there is no industry standard to 
implement to, in other words there is no spec or standard from W3C, OMG, ANSI, 
Sun/JCP, etc that says "this is what constitutes an implementation of the 
GSBPBMS 1.0 (Global Standard Best Practices Business Management System) 
specification. It sure would be nice if such a thing existed....

Early on with OFBiz I researched a lot of standards from various groups like 
OMG, OAGIS, OASIS, and so on that would not define an entire system, but at 
least parts of a such a system. The UBL standard might be worth supporting, but 
there is the issue that not only might it be hard to find sponsors or 
volunteers for building it, but it might be hard to find users (beta or 
production) for it...

BTW, another interesting thing that Postgres and various ASF projects have is 
an origin as a product developed or owned by a company (either open source or 
commercial) that later became community-driven, or in other words a more 
publicity friendly alternative to abandonment of the software. ;) In a way it's 
unfortunate that OFBiz did not benefit from that sort of past as we might have 
been able to avoid some of the significant growing pains that were part of the 
more evolutionary process that brought the project (especially the framework, 
but very much also the applications) to where it is now.

-David


Si Chen wrote:
Postgresql is a good example.

On Jul 24, 2006, at 1:52 PM, David E Jones wrote:


Chris,

Exactly. If anyone knows of any I'd love to see how they're doing things... it's not an easy course in general, and I'm not sure if there are really many community driven enterprise level projects.

-David


Chris Howe wrote:
Are there any open source projects that are not driven
by a single company that successfully implement
feature freeze releases AND would have the complexity
of feature advancements that OFBiz does (this would
exclude most, if not all, Apache projects as most of
them are one trick ponies, so to speak)?  If there
are, maybe we should see how they best accopmlish
this.
--- Si Chen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
David,

Without coordinating a feature freeze between the
major contributors, it would be very very difficult, especially for less
experienced  "volunteers", to maintain the release branches and
fix the bugs.    From my personal experience trying to create the
opentaps releases,  a good release can only be created if the original
version is  reasonably stable and if the core developers
significantly support  the effort by helping to push the bug fixes from
trunk to the release  branch.

On the issue of stability:

1.  I propose that we put this
http://jira.undersunconsulting.com/ browse/OFBIZ-500 back into the main code base. It
addressed a  typecast issue with field-to-field.

2.  I think we should take a vote: how many people
would like to keep  current code "as is", so the "OID" data type (used
for storing images  and content) works with Derby and not PostgreSQL,
versus making a  change which would make it work with PostgreSQL and
not Derby?

3.  I'll just keep my fingers crossed about the
Geronimo transactions  manager then.

Si


On Jul 24, 2006, at 10:13 AM, David E Jones wrote:



Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature

Reply via email to