[OSGeo-Discuss] Tales from a Benevolent Dictator
Christian Willmes
c.willmes at uni-koeln.de
Sun May 15 03:06:51 PDT 2016
arguing in pro for science, to claim and use (at least in my view)
fraudulent/wrong organization for a project, like authoritarian
hierarchical structures, as (sadly and wrongly) also applied in most
educational organizations around the world, as a "suitable" governance
model, is not right.
The current hierarchical organization of the conduct of science is far
from perfect! It will change and adapt to more open structures and more
flat hierarchies and may be even go away from this hierarchical titles
(Dr., PhD, Prof., etc.) crap. Thus any entity (person, group,
company,..) can apply for research grands (by organizations,
individuals, governments, companies, ...) and conduct research openly
and transparent, without the need for a position at a university or
research center... Please look/research for "Open Science", its already
under way, nobody can really stop it from happening.
This may be ok or not for you. But this is completely irrelevant in this
context, because OSGeo is at the very first about the O for open. A
closed hierarchical authoritarian governance is just the contrary. OSGeo
should really stick to this principle of open, because it is the essence
of what it is (from my point of view). In conclusion, if you want to be
part of OSGeo, you first need to be open.
Best,
Christian
On 15.05.2016 11:15, Peter Baumann wrote:
> Hi Sanghee,
>
> according to WIkipedia [1], /*Science*//^[nb 1]
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science#cite_note-2> //is a systematic
> enterprise that builds and organizes //knowledge
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge>//in the form of testable
> //explanations <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explanation>//and
> //predictions <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predictions>//about the
> //universe <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe>//.//^[nb 2]
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science#cite_note-3> //^[2]
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science#cite_note-EOWilson-4> /
>
> These testable explanations/predictions are tested against the part of
> the universe under exploration. Among the many competing explanations
> found the one is chosen which (i) best explains facts and (ii) is the
> simplest, in that order. Everybody is free to verify/falsify an
> explanation at any time.
>
> As a painful history has shown (Giordano Bruno was burnt because he
> claimed the Earth being a ball, rather than a disk; just little later,
> Galileo Galilei was lucky enough to survive; nazis as well as
> socialism/communism suppressed scientific insights if they didn't fit
> the dogma...many more examples exist) explanations (ie, theories) should
> be established with an unbiased mind, and tests _must_ be conducted and
> evaluated with an unbiased mind. "Committees on truth" have not really
> contributed to scientific progress. This is why Freedom of Science is
> essential to human progress on insights "about the universe".
> ^
> -Peter
>
> [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science
>
>
> On 05/15/2016 05:29 AM, Sanghee Shin wrote:
>> Hi Marco and Peter,
>>
>> Sorry for my ignorance. However I couldn’t tell the difference between
>> ancient greek oracle, Bible and modern science. For me, those things
>> are the same in terms that *The Absolute* should/will be conveyed
>> through *Imperfect* human however the great virtue/categorical
>> imperative those are though.
>>
>> Kind regards,
>> 신상희
>> ---
>> Shin, Sanghee
>> Gaia3D, Inc. - The GeoSpatial Company
>> http://www.gaia3d.com
>>
>>> 2016. 5. 15., 오전 10:44, Marco Afonso
>>> <<mailto:mafonso333 at gmail.com>mafonso333 at gmail.com> 작성:
>>>
>>> Hi Marc,
>>>
>>> Software quality is not measured by votes, comunity, marketing,
>>> governance models, politics, economical interests, hypes or any other
>>> social science.
>>>
>>> Software quality can be measured using comparison tests from a
>>> scientific and independent methods.
>>>
>>> Just to say that some positions sound very biased and do not evaluate
>>> software using independent methods.
>>>
>>> How do you measure a car quality? By governance models? By
>>> comunities? By marketing or hype? By economic potencial? This all
>>> sounds very wrong.
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>>
>>> Em 15/05/2016 02:22, "Marc Vloemans" <marcvloemans1 at gmail.com
>>> <mailto:marcvloemans1 at gmail.com>> escreveu:
>>>
>>> Peter,
>>>
>>> With regard to Rob's comments: I conclude that the various
>>> commentators have repeatedly pointed out that your line of
>>> reasoning is either based on a non-representative and even faulty
>>> sample of experiences/examples (eg Jeroen and Rob) or on the
>>> software's quality and popularity in certain circles (eg Rob)
>>> without clarifying that particular correlation to its project
>>> management.
>>>
>>> In scientific terms that means your thesis/argument does not hold
>>> up. By the way, citing sources on quality still does not tell
>>> anything about above correlation, so spare yourself the effort.
>>> And comparing Rasdaman to other OSGeoprojects still makes it an
>>> odd-one-out, which no side-stepping the concerns raised can hide.
>>>
>>> Effectively, we seem to be running in circles. But ..... we are
>>> not: all commentators have been quite inviting, but you still
>>> cannot convince them with true and relevant reasons. You have
>>> even resorted to calling at least me and (hopefully not too many)
>>> others along the way 'activists'. Wording that fits lesser
>>> democratic countries, organisations and political systems. If
>>> that gives an insight into the way you look at and treat
>>> stakeholders/community members with a different view from yours,
>>> then I fear you have shown our community your true
>>> 'colors'/face/intention....
>>>
>>> That is not running in circles but straight into the abyss,
>>> somewhere in-between OSGeo and Eclipse/LocationTech and other
>>> natural allies, in an irrational and suicidal attempt ....... to
>>> achieve what exactly ????
>>>
>>> Vriendelijke groet,
>>> Marc Vloemans
>>>
>>>
>>> Op 14 mei 2016 om 15:00 heeft Rob Emanuele
>>> <<mailto:rdemanuele at gmail.com>rdemanuele at gmail.com> het volgende
>>> geschreven:
>>>
>>>> Hi Peter,
>>>>
>>>> This is the second time I've heard you defend your position by
>>>> simply saying the greatness of the project justifies whatever
>>>> model you'd like for project governance, and mention some
>>>> independent study that claims your software is "way faster" and
>>>> "wins all benchmarks". These are bold, general and unqualified
>>>> claims that I would greatly like to understand in a more
>>>> detailed way. Please site your sources.
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>> Rob
>>>>
>>>> On May 14, 2016 5:43 AM, "Peter Baumann"
>>>> <<mailto:p.baumann at jacobs-university.de>p.baumann at jacobs-university.de>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> OpenHub knows 66 code contributors, and they do not even
>>>> know (and list) all over time. Hence, cannot see anyone felt
>>>> discouraged. Typical rasdaman contributors are interested in
>>>> design by innovation and not design by committee, and that
>>>> community spirit has made rasdaman a leading tool that wins
>>>> all benchmarks over GeoServer, SPARK, etc.
>>>> -Peter
>>>>
>>>> PS: suggesting a fork just because OSGeo follows a narrow
>>>> principle that does not accommodate rasdaman makes me frown
>>>> about the ideals behind :)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 05/12/2016 02:57 PM, Ian Turton wrote:
>>>>> I've been trying to stay out of the arguments about
>>>>> governance models because I prefer to write code than worry
>>>>> about licences or governance. But it may help if I share a
>>>>> some anecdotes (which is almost data) about a couple of
>>>>> FOSS projects that came out of academia when I was in
>>>>> charge. One of these you may well have heard of GeoTools,
>>>>> which forms the base library of GeoServer, UDig, GeoMesa
>>>>> and others, the other you may not know GeoVista Studio.
>>>>>
>>>>> Both these libraries started out as academic projects that
>>>>> solved a research problem, both were open sourced as a
>>>>> result of the university claiming all the intellectual
>>>>> property of it's staff for ever (so why not give it away?)
>>>>> in both cases I (and James Macgil) were benevolent
>>>>> dictators when the projects launched, it was a simple
>>>>> governance model that left us able to get on with coding
>>>>> and researching and meant that things went the way we
>>>>> wanted. GeoTools started to get some users and people
>>>>> started asking for bug fixes and new features etc while
>>>>> James & I had actual jobs to do and wanted to spend time
>>>>> with our families and go on holiday etc. So we got some
>>>>> more people involved such as TOPP and Refractions and we
>>>>> sort of lucked into a PSC and GeoTools went from strength
>>>>> to strength and now has a PSC that spans the globe (which
>>>>> makes meeting times hard to find but is otherwise awesome).
>>>>> In fact for a while GeoTools and GeoServer managed (or
>>>>> thrived) with no input from me or James at all. However
>>>>> GeoVISTA studio, only went open source grudgingly (the PI's
>>>>> didn't want to give up control really) and never really
>>>>> gained more than a few users because we didn't allow other
>>>>> people to influence the direction of development (after all
>>>>> the university/PI was paying for the development) and thus
>>>>> there were only ever two or three developers. As BD I had
>>>>> no real interest in attracting new users (previous
>>>>> experience had taught me that's hard work). Once James and
>>>>> then I moved on to other jobs development stopped (though
>>>>> apparently someone downloaded a copy last week)
>>>>> <https://sourceforge.net/projects/geovistastudio/files/>.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'll leave you to draw your own conclusions but my feeling
>>>>> is that to make the move from an academic to successful
>>>>> FOSS project you need to move from dictatorship to
>>>>> committee run projects. If nothing else it allows you some
>>>>> down time from running the project while never needing to
>>>>> give up having a say in the running.
>>>>>
>>>>> Ian
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> PS Some recent emails have tried to suggest that governance
>>>>> doesn't matter if you have forkability but I think that is
>>>>> a flawed view - but if it is true maybe we could just fork
>>>>> RASDAMAN and be done with the discussion? :-)
>>>>> --
>>>>> Ian Turton
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> Discuss mailing list
>>>>> Discuss at lists.osgeo.org <mailto:Discuss at lists.osgeo.org>
>>>>> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Dr. Peter Baumann
>>>> - Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs University Bremen
>>>> www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
>>>> <http://www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann>
>>>> mail:p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
>>>> <mailto:p.baumann at jacobs-university.de>
>>>> tel:+49-421-200-3178 <tel:%2B49-421-200-3178>, fax:+49-421-200-493178 <tel:%2B49-421-200-493178>
>>>> - Executive Director, rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793)
>>>> www.rasdaman.com <http://www.rasdaman.com/>, mail:baumann at rasdaman.com <mailto:baumann at rasdaman.com>
>>>> tel: 0800-rasdaman, fax: 0800-rasdafax, mobile:+49-173-5837882 <tel:%2B49-173-5837882>
>>>> "Si forte in alienas manus oberraverit hec peregrina epistola incertis ventis dimissa, sed Deo commendata, precamur ut ei reddatur cui soli destinata, nec preripiat quisquam non sibi parata." (mail disclaimer, AD 1083)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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>>
>>
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>
> --
> Dr. Peter Baumann
> - Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs University Bremen
> www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
> mail:p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
> tel: +49-421-200-3178, fax: +49-421-200-493178
> - Executive Director, rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793)
> www.rasdaman.com, mail:baumann at rasdaman.com
> tel: 0800-rasdaman, fax: 0800-rasdafax, mobile: +49-173-5837882
> "Si forte in alienas manus oberraverit hec peregrina epistola incertis ventis dimissa, sed Deo commendata, precamur ut ei reddatur cui soli destinata, nec preripiat quisquam non sibi parata." (mail disclaimer, AD 1083)
>
>
>
>
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