MESSAGE
DATE | 2020-02-11 |
FROM | Jean Louis
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] State of the GNUnion 2020
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* DJ Delorie [2020-02-11 23:26]: > > ams-at-gnu.org (Alfred M. Szmidt) writes: > > You make the incorrect assumption that the health of the GNU project > > should be measured in how many new projects are adopted or released -- > > instead of what our goal is to provide a free operating system. > > Are we DONE producing that operating system? No? If not, why not?
I am running here Hyperbola GNU/Linux-libre system, so it exists.
And I was using GNU/Linux operating system since 1999 with success Now it is 21 years. You may find various installable GNU versions: https://www.gnu.org/distros/free-distros.html
> Aren't all those developers who finished their packages working on > other, new packages?
Isn't that up to them to decide? There is and should not be any coercion.
> Why aren't the package counts continuing to increase, if the > developers are otherwise unoccupied?
You are probably referring to GNU packages. You may invite those new packages or new software to GNU, or contribute, and everybody is free to help the GNU project, see: https://www.gnu.org/help/help.html
And if you see the FSF endorsed free operating system distributions, as long as the free software is being distributed, the purpose is also being fulfilled, both for FSF, as purpose for FSF is among others to distribute free software, and for GNU project, as purpose was always to create a fully free operating system.
> I think, package activity *is* a valid metric if the goal is "all > packages in the OS are free."
As GNU operating system already exists, in my opinion, what should be measured as main statistic is number of free GNU operating systems actually installed on a computer.
That is the purpose.
However, that statistics is harder to measure. Thus what is measurable is download statistics.
You could inquire with various free distributions about the download statistics.
> If a set of developers finish a package, and don't start on a new > one, I think that says something interesting about the health of GNU > and its community.
Maybe "health" is not a proper adjective, as GNU is not a human body, it is operating system.
In that sense, if I look only into those GNU operating systems which are endorsed by the FSF, they are releasing and distributing free software. Trisquel, Hyperbola, Guix, etc. they are releasing, distributing, maintaining free software.
Then if we wish to speak by using the adjective "healthy", I see the GNU project very healthy, there are ways to submit bugs, improvements, close security holes... and
YOU are free to contribute to make it healthier.
Jean
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