> I'm not disagreeing with your overall sentiment here - but it's not so simple as "If the users of the product liked it, they'd maintain it" - sometimes they don't have the skills required to. Not everyone who drives is a mechanic, etc.
What I find quite unfair is that many people say that they don't have the technical skills to effectively contribute to the project, let alone develop or maintain any alternative, yet accuse the systemd team (or the GNOME team, or the NetworkManager team, or the XFCE team, or whatever) of producing sub-standard software. Given the self-asserted lack of skills, on which basis such a severe judgement is done?
Can we please go back to trusting each other, praising who actually do some useful work or at least avoiding open attacks to them? Technical disagreement is welcome, but it has to be backed by some skills to be useful.
What I find quite unfair is that many people say that they don't have the technical skills to effectively contribute to the project, let alone develop or maintain any alternative, yet accuse the systemd team (or the GNOME team, or the NetworkManager team, or the XFCE team, or whatever) of producing sub-standard software. Given the self-asserted lack of skills, on which basis such a severe judgement is done?
Can we please go back to trusting each other, praising who actually do some useful work or at least avoiding open attacks to them? Technical disagreement is welcome, but it has to be backed by some skills to be useful.