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dub | 3 years ago

Open Office losing popularity and having a shortage of developers makes some sense to me given all the progress in web-based document editors.

Something I have a harder time understanding is how it came to be that Apache Thrift and Facebook Thrift both exist as competing implementations of the same software originated by the same company.

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xorcist|3 years ago

The implied point with Open Office was not the users habits shifting, but that there was a fork in name only. The project is still under active development with a diverse set of developers but under the name Libre Office.

Only a skeleton crew of paid developers stayed with Open Office, enough to cut releases regularly but not even to fix the security issues actively exploited. All distributions moved with the developers, but there is a discoverability problem which has led to mostly Windows continuing to install the unmaintained version.

The ASF could have fixed this quickly, either by helping out with the trademark issues, moving with the developers, or at least moving the unmaintained version to the attic and steering new users towards the actively developed version.

But they collectively decided to sit on their hands as users continued to install unmaintained software rather than take the slightest risk of offending one of their members. From an outside perspective, all of this was completely unnecessary.

The Thrift situation is another example where some active stewardship could have made a difference.