On Saturday 14 August 2004 04:38 am, robin fell wrote:
On Sat, 2004-08-14 at 02:42, John Check wrote:
My point is people shouldn't be sidetracked
unnecessarily because of poor
process and lack of communication.
Sadly not all developers have the project management skills to build a
product from the code.
Well, it's a different set of skills. I for one, don't have the temperment for
programming, but I have a few things to bring to the table WRT legitimizing
linux audio. It takes all kinds, that's why I don't care when people say
things like "code talks & bullshit walks" (at least not the first 2 times).
It's pithy and not untrue, but there's more to productivity than code.
Anecdote: I just came from a party/jam session with 5 guitar players.
My main performance axe for ensembles is bass. I brought a guitar too, but it
was like bringing coal to Newcastle.
I've observed strong management behaviours on the
projects that IMO have
been successful (and I can think of 4 such projects right off the
cuff). This organisation encourages me to remain involved, whereas the
lack of it has led me to drop a few tools.
I cut my developer teeth on FlightGear, which is a truly incredible example of
open source development at work. It's a bit esoteric but their talent pool is
astounding.
Oh, hey I
remember you! You're one of the few people who get the
distributed processing thing.
What's not to grok? Turn that old PII300 into a reverb :)
Yah, eventually I'd like to see a VST plugin counterpart. Oh hey, that dual
opteron box with the RJ45, line cord and remote GUI that replaces $15k worth
of 'lectro spaghetti... Can you say cha-ching?
Once we have a foot in the door it's time to sell the R*l*nd and Y*m*h* stock.
For now, I need to focus on improving the documentation situation, but things
are shaping up real nice from where I sit.
R