Re: Lets (not) break all the things. Was: [pgsql-advocacy] 9.6 -> 10.0 - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Joshua D. Drake
Subject Re: Lets (not) break all the things. Was: [pgsql-advocacy] 9.6 -> 10.0
Date
Msg-id 57364F9A.40109@commandprompt.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Lets (not) break all the things. Was: [pgsql-advocacy] 9.6 -> 10.0  (Josh berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>)
Responses Re: Lets (not) break all the things. Was: [pgsql-advocacy] 9.6 -> 10.0  ("David G. Johnston" <david.g.johnston@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
On 05/13/2016 01:42 PM, Josh berkus wrote:
> On 05/13/2016 01:04 PM, Joshua D. Drake wrote:
>> On 05/13/2016 12:03 PM, Josh berkus wrote:
>>> On 05/13/2016 11:48 AM, Robert Haas wrote:
>>>> On Fri, May 13, 2016 at 12:12 PM, Joshua D. Drake
>>>> <jd@commandprompt.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Anyway, all of this is a moot point, because nobody has the power to
>>> tell the various companies what to do.  We're just lucky that everyone
>>> is still committed to writing stuff which adds to PostgreSQL.
>>
>> Lucky? No. We earned it. We earned it through years and years of hard
>> work. Should we be thankful? Absolutely. Should we be grateful that we
>> have such a powerful and engaged commercial contribution base? 100%.
>
> Lucky.  Sure there was work and personal integrity involved, but like
> any success story, there was luck.
>
> But we've also been fortunate in not spawning hostile-but-popular forks
> by people who left the project, and that none of the companies who
> created hostile forks were very successful with them, and that nobody
> has seriously tried using lawyers to control/ruin the project.

I can't get behind you on this. Everything you have said above has to do 
with the hard work and integrity of the people in this project. It isn't 
luck or divine intervention.

>
> And, most importantly, we've been lucky that a lot of competing projects
> have self-immolated instead of being successful and brain-draining our
> contributors (MySQL, ANTS, MonetDB, etc.)
>

Actually there are people that have been drained out, I won't name them 
but it is pretty easy to figure out who they are. The people that are 
left, especially the long timers are here because of their integrity and 
attachment to the project.

This project builds good people, and the good people build a good project.

I am not going to buy into a luck story for something I and many others 
have invested decades of their life into.

JD




-- 
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