Why do you do open source?
We are currently doing our bachelor's thesis on the motivations behind participating in open source projects and we would love it if you could help us by answering our one, single question: "Why do you participate in open source?"
Write as little or as much as you want, anything is helpful! https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1MtXwd4kVF6kSuC4q_4rDaUksBRckLaCfgJGP6_JKSnY/viewform
4 comments
[ 0.26 ms ] story [ 20.1 ms ] threadI'm hoping this is a breakdown in comms between team members rather than deliberate spamming of the same question.
Years ago, I found a replicatable bug in Adobe Photoshop (CS2?) that required me to delete my config everytime and set PS up how I liked it. Adobe's acknowledgement took two weeks, then a month of triage, followed by a "Yes, we'll have it fixed in the new version when it ships. You can pre-order an upgrade for only $lots" and new version shipped 6 months later.
Yesterday I found a bug in a framework I use. Within 2 hours I'd found the line of source code responsible, fixed it and was on my way again.
I have same feeling with Webmatrix.
I have reported many bugs on uservoice webmatrix site. When they come with v2 prev 1 I write 175 bugs in a text file and send them through MSDN contact page.
Later through their site their is hard to tell them every single bugs. When I tried to tell them more bugs the answer is write every bugs per thread.
I have write more then 500 bugs and the result is The application crash even today.
The same way When I report my bugs to Firefox or Chrome discussion people solve it better & FAST.