On Nov 9, 2016, at 5:14 AM, Chris Dent <cdent...@anticdent.org> wrote:

> Something that feels like it gets under-emphasised in this conversation
> is that change is coming whatever we do. As a community we can either
> move quickly and stay ahead of the change and see it as a productive
> development that we can surf or we can dilly dally and get drowned by a
> wave that collapses over us.
> 
> Ecosystems must evolve and change because the world evolves and changes.
> If we try to control this stuff too much what we will be doing is taking
> the oxygen out of the system and snuffing the flame of excitement and
> innovation.

That is, of course, a series of obvious statements. We need to change or die.

What I think is missing from this conversation is that there are a lot of 
people who are used to the way things happen in the startup world, where you 
get an idea, work like crazy to get an MVP out the door, and then iterate from 
there. The problem is that OpenStack is the exact opposite of a startup; it’s a 
giant legacy application.

Don’t like the word “legacy”? Well, what would you call something that has to 
support users who haven’t upgraded in several years? What would you call 
something that can never have a greatly-improved but backwards-incompatible 
change? Sure, that might be possible in some of the add-ons for the OpenStack 
ecosystem, but for any of the core projects (yes, I said that word), that is 
simply not an option.

So yes, of course we’re going to drive off those who want to work with the 
coolest and latest stuff. This isn’t “exciting” work in that sense of the word. 

-- Ed Leafe






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